Michael almost hung up. But he couldn’t. His fingers were slippery with sweat now. He clamped harder on the phone.
“Two million, bro. Worth the price of admission, let me tell you.”
But Michael knew this wouldn’t be the end.
Still, he had to do something. “You come here. Bring it. Bring Jaimie. We’ll talk then.”
“Gonna take you some time to work out the details, friend. Put in a call to your bank. I have a number for an account in Belize for you to wire it to. These days, it should take a couple of minutes tops, once you say the word.”
“It’s after hours, bud. Tell you what. You come here and we’ll talk.”
“I’m not going there.”
“Then we’re done here.” And Michael disconnected.
CHAPTER 52
Tess had finished a late dinner when she got the call—searchers had discovered a camping area above Mowry, on a hiking trail in a remote area. There was a stake in the ground and a chain, and footprints that appeared to match the partials they’d seen down below, where the truck had crashed off the side of the road. It looked as if Jaimie had been kidnapped and held there.
Tess thought that was probably true.
Whatever had happened, Jaimie and her kidnapper were gone.
It sounded like a crime scene to Tess. She spoke to the head of the team, a neighbor and a former cop himself, James Tarbel. They agreed that since it was dark, they could easily trample whatever evidence there was. The next day they would send a detective and crime scene techs.
She sat there in the dark, thinking. She was sure it was Wade Poole, sure he had Jaimie. But where were they now? Why did he take her up here?
It had been a temporary hiding place, but it could have been more than that, from the description. She guessed—and she could be wrong about this—he had photographed her to scare her family.
Now she thought she knew why Poole had kidnapped Jaimie.
Poole knew about the family—he knew what they were doing. He’d killed George Hanley because of it. Because they’d disagreed on what to do with the evidence. Hanley wanted to turn it over to the authorities. But he’d made the mistake of letting his old partner, his son-in-law, in on the deal.
Poole didn’t care about bringing the DeKovens to justice.
Tess was pretty sure that all Wade Poole cared about was money.
She got ready for bed, but couldn’t sleep. Finally, she decided to go back to Jaimie’s one more time and see if there was anything to point to where Wade Poole might go next.
It was full dark now, and cold. When Tess drove onto the ranch, she saw immediately that something was different.
Should have secured this as a secondary crime scene, she thought.
Tired. Too much going on.
Tess stared at the spot where the ranch truck had been—the old, root beer—colored GMC.
It was gone.
She stood there, arms crossed, feeling the chill down to her bone. Cold at night in the desert, especially in the spring. The heat was absorbed by the earth and the atmosphere felt thin and chilly. And dark. She heard horses stirring in their stalls, here a grunt and neigh. She had her Maglite and her service weapon, and that was it.
The barn door was closed. It had been open before.
Tess held the Maglite in her left hand and drew her weapon. She felt the familiar adrenaline rush. Where she’d been tired and sleepy a moment ago, she was all nerve now. Every sense bristling.
Maybe he’d taken the truck.
Or maybe not.
She made her way around the barn. The couple of windows were too high, and no way to get up to them. She heard a snort. It wasn’t a frightened sound, more like a horse just…sighing. She listened through the wall and heard a rhythmic munching.
A horseman, though, wouldn’t scare these horses. A ranch guy—and Wade certainly looked as if he’d spent time on a ranch somewhere—would not raise any alarms.
Tess decided not to take any chances. She called for backup, and within ten minutes a couple of deputies arrived from the substation in town.
They took it slow. They were careful. Weapons drawn, one going low—Deputy Walsh—and one going high–Tess. And one standing on the other side of the double doors, Deputy Agel.
Tess pulled the right hand door to the side—it slid on a groove.
Agel, from the left, covered them. Yelled, “Police! Don’t move!”
One single lightbulb cast light from the rafters. No hayloft—Tess had seen the separate feed shed away from the barn.
The horses looked over their stalls. Four on one side and three on the other. The last stall empty. Or someone hiding in it.
Walsh duckwalked out from under Tess, aiming to the right. Tess to the left, along with Agel. Checking each stall.
“Clear!”
“Clear!”
“Clear!”
The last stall was empty.
But they had something—confirmation.
Backed in to the far wall at the end of the aisle was Wade Poole’s stolen Ford truck—the front bumper mashed against the wheel well.
“Looks like he’s been in a fender-bender,” Tess said.
She called it in. “No license plate,” Tess told her detective sergeant. “He must have put it on the farm truck.”
She gave him the VIN number and waited.
Twenty minutes later it was confirmed. The white Ford F-350 belonged to a construction site in Nogales, Arizona—Redline Construction. The truck had been stolen eleven days earlier.
“They didn’t lock it up?” Usually construction sites, even out in the boonies, set up chain-link fence enclosures for temporary parking lots.
“Apparently not. Where do you think he’s headed?”
Tess didn’t know. But she could guess. “Wade Poole is after the DeKoven family. I think he’s planning to shake them down. So I would send a TPD unit to Brayden DeKoven’s address, and Pima County should check out Michael DeKoven’s place out on the Spanish Trail.” She rattled off both addresses.
“You remember them?” Messina said. Added, “I guess you would, huh? That’s handy.”
He still wasn’t used to her, still saw her as a freak. But she was a useful freak.
“I would set up surveillance if he’s not there yet,” Tess added. She made a mental note to call Cheryl Tedesco. Cheryl would want to know what was going on, and might even be able to move things along at TPD.
“We have an Attempt to Locate in both counties now for a brown 1978 GMC pickup.” He read off the license plate belonging to the white Ford.
“Sounds good. I’m on my way.”
“What address?”
“Michael DeKoven’s.”
Tess thought, if she were Wade Poole, that was where she’d go.
Tess was almost to the Vail exit outside Tucson when her detective sergeant contacted her again.
“We have a description of the truck, but the license plate isn’t the same.”
He’d switched plates again? The license plate didn’t come back to the ranch truck or the stolen Ford. Somewhere along the line, he’d stolen another plate.
One jump ahead.
“Where is he?”
“He’s on Spanish Trail. Pima County Sheriff’s unit is following.”
“Ask them not to alert him.”
“Will do. I’ll tell him to turn off.”
Tess’s heart was beating so hard she wondered if it would burst through her chest cavity. Wade Poole was armed and dangerous. If he was cornered, he would not hesitate to kill.
He was a killing machine.
Wade saw the Pima County Sheriff’s car coming in his direction. He saw the body of the car feint slightly—a reflex action—and continue on smoothly. He guessed that someone had put out a BOLO on the ranch truck. He watched in his rearview as the radio car slowed and pulled off onto the verge. Knew it would turn around and pursue. There was no place to go to ground. But he was close to Michael DeKoven’s castle on
a hill—probably not three miles overland. He could see the lights up on the hill. He thought about ditching the truck, but he wanted Jaimie as a hostage. He kept his gaze glued to the rearview mirror. The curve in the road hid the sheriff’s car. Any minute he expected headlights to appear. But they didn’t.
Maybe he was hypersensitive. He kept driving. The turnoff was up ahead, and he wanted to keep Jaimie with him. He glanced at her. She leaned as far as she could away from him, up against the passenger side. From her posture you’d think she was cowed, but he saw the hatred in her eyes. Even in the dark of the night, he could see it. He would not take her for granted. Hatred like that could overcome a lot.
Momma didn’t raise no fools. He’d have to watch her every minute.
Wade knew that Michael would call back. He was sure that Michael would be frozen, that he wouldn’t know which way to jump. The rich little turd couldn’t get help from law enforcement. He couldn’t get help from anyone. Michael thought that he could draw Wade to go to him, that on his home turf he’d have the upper hand. But Wade had all the cards.
Tess’s Tahoe was a plain wrap. But she knew, if anyone had antennae for a plain wrap, it would be Wade Poole. She pulled off the road at the little general store, now closed, and waited. She knew where Wade was headed. Meantime, the Pima County sheriff’s deputy who had spotted him rolled in. He introduced himself as Wiley Moran.
They discussed what they were going to do. There was time for backup.
But that wasn’t the only consideration. Wade Poole was loaded for bear, and Jaimie Wolfe was almost certainly his hostage.
“What do you think Poole would do if he was turned down?” asked Deputy Moran.
He knew the right question to ask. Tess had been a deputy not too long ago, and she knew how important it was to think a situation through. Especially if you were ambitious, and Deputy Moran clearly was.
Tess said, “He’d kill them both.”
Deputy Moran’s eyebrows rose in an arch. He didn’t have to ask a question.
Tess said, “He’d kill them and take off. Cut his losses.”
“And if he couldn’t get away?” Moran asked.
“He would kill as many as he could. And then he’d kill himself.”
Deputy Moran nodded. “That’s what I figured.”
Tess liked him. He had been very quick to stop and take stock of the situation, and had not turned around to go after Poole. He’d thought his actions through with the information he had at the time.
One word from her, and he’d pulled over to the side of the road. He could have been a much different type.
Tess was glad she’d found him.
“He knows you pulled off,” Tess said. “Either he thinks you were just patrolling—routine—or that you’d been called off. Any way you look at it, he’s going to be wary. But at least we haven’t scared him off. I’m thinking I should go ahead. My Tahoe’s unmarked. He won’t necessarily be looking for a car like this.”
“Then I’m going to have to wait for backup, ma’am.”
“You’ll call it in?”
“Yeah. SWAT.”
“SWAT,” Tess said.
He was right. They would need SWAT.
Deputy Moran said, “I’m worried about the hostage.”
“Me, too.” Tess was certain Wade Poole planned to shoot Jaimie if Michael DeKoven didn’t cooperate.
“Think we should get closer?” Moran asked.
Tess decided to share her real fear with Deputy Moran. “We think that Poole is going to extort money from the DeKoven family. He’s using Jaimie as a hostage, but what would scare a guy like DeKoven the most? What ultimate threat?”
“That he’d kill her right in front of him,” Moran said. “As an example.”
Tess nodded. “I agree.”
He said, “The message would be that DeKoven would be next. I think we should get closer. I think we’ve got probable cause.”
“Or at least ‘possible cause,’” Tess said.
Moran laughed at that. “‘Possible cause.’ Sounds good enough to me.”
Tess looked up the road. From where they were they could see Zinderneuf’s lighted windows. The Moorish-slash-Pueblo-style building dominated the landscape. At one time, there was no Thunderhead Ranch, there were no homes anywhere nearby. That was before some of the land was sold off and subdivided. At one time, Zinderneuf had dominated the valley. But now it didn’t look all that different from the McMansions farther down the road. Clinging to the top of a hill, lighted windows. Except that Zinderneuf was all by itself.
“Wouldn’t take much to climb up there.” Moran nodded toward a shallow wash that crossed under the road and meandered between two scrub-covered hills. “We follow the wash around that hill and then go up cross-country.”
There was a moon already, and it was almost full.
Moran called in and said they would be observing, and when SWAT came, they would identify themselves. The estimated time for the SWAT team was inside twenty-five minutes.
They followed the arroyo along the hillside and found a horse trail leading up. They kept low to the ground and tried to stay as quiet as possible, stopping often to listen.
It took them about fifteen minutes to traverse the distance. They reached the blacktopped area where Tess had first seen Michael’s expensive Fisker Karma. It must be garaged now. Jaimie Wolfe’s ranch truck was parked closest to the gate. Poole and his hostage hadn’t been here long.
They worked their way toward the side of the house. The only noise was the sound of crickets. A bat fluttered past them and dipped down into the pool and up. Tess saw low decorative lights at intervals through the sparse mesquite limbs. They followed a dirt path along the ridge, lighted occasionally from recessed lamps set into the low wall of the pool area. The pool reflected the lights from the house. Across the way, screened by a garden and a royal palm, the guest house was dark. Tess wondered if Michael’s estranged wife and children were in residence. It was a little early to be asleep. They might be out somewhere.
They duckwalked along the desert side of the house and under a massive eucalyptus tree. Two windows were lighted on the far end, casting rectangles of light on the bushes and cactus. There was a space of about two and a half feet below the window, so they crawled under, careful of the thorns. They reached the corner and followed that around. No windows on that side. On the far side was an entrance—locked, and a porch overlooked the city lights. They went from dirt to flagstone paving and came upon a kitchen entrance. Tess checked the door: unlocked.
She looked at Moran and he looked at her. She tilted her chin in the direction of the city, and he gave her a curt nod: they would wait for SWAT.
They followed the porch around to the garden entrance, with steps down to the pool.
The house had been large for its time but not by modern standards. The buildings followed the profile of the ridge. Everything was quiet. No movement across the long pool area or at the guest house. The wife’s house was still dark. Tess hoped she was gone.
The only sound was the hum of the pool filter. The adobe walls to the house were probably two feet thick.
They circled the house again. Heard voices from one of the rooms on the east side.
Getting louder. Garbled. Angry?
Tess and Moran looked at each other. Weapons at the ready, drawn and at their sides.
“Possible cause.” It had been a joke, but now it wasn’t.
Then they heard a crash, echoing through the thick walls—
A gunshot.
They couldn’t wait. They were going in.
CHAPTER 53
Michael had been in his study looking at his bank accounts online when he heard a door open and close.
He almost called out Martin’s name.
But Martin had wanted to go to a show at the convention center in downtown Tucson, and Michael hadn’t felt like it. He was too tied up in knots. He looked at his watch. The show had only been going for about thirty-fiv
e minutes—no way it could be Martin unless he decided not to go at all.
He thumbed his phone and tapped in Martin’s number.
“How’s the show?” he asked when Martin answered.
“It’s okay. The production values need some work—”
“Something’s come up,” Michael said. “Got to go.”
He kept quiet, his ear tuned to the front door. It was the front door. Jaimie knew the combination to the keypad by heart. Maybe Poole had been lying. Maybe Jaimie was fine, and maybe she’d run here so he could protect her.
But he didn’t think so.
He could feel his stomach tighten. Could almost feel his organs shrink, as if they were clenched in gelid fingers—fingers of the dead. Blood seemed to race from his extremities, and adrenaline poured through him. An electric river of fear.
He’d never been afraid before.
Even when his father raped him.
Even when, a couple of times, he thought someone might catch on to what they were doing. There was always that danger of slipping up. Which made it scary, but also fun.
But now he knew that the man called Wade Poole was in the house. He had Jaimie and he was creeping around, looking. Opening doors—he heard one creak—and coming his way. Seeing the light under the door. The light to his office.
Part of him yelled Run!
But he was no coward. He’d killed people and watched the light die in their eyes. He wasn’t going to run now.
Not many people could summon up the wherewithal to kill. He was one of them. He could look in someone’s eyes and kill them—and enjoy it.
He got up slowly. His Ruger .44 was in the locked drawer of his desk. He got the key out and wriggled it into the lock. Had trouble with it. Felt the first stirrings of panic. His hands weren’t shaking, exactly, just a little tremor—
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