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Missing Person: A Riveting Kidnapping Mystery- Book 2

Page 6

by James Hunt


  “I need a ghost drive installed on this,” Sam said, holding the USB in front of her. “It’s for the Joza case.”

  Jim Flanagan wore a white polo shirt, his name tag perfectly centered on his pocket, and wore small-framed rectangular glasses. “Everything that’s sent up here is for the Joza case.”

  “Well, this one is urgent.”

  “They’re all marked urgent.” He had light-brown stubble on his tan skin, and his fingers worked the keyboard deftly.

  Sam stepped around the desk, getting a look at the code that filled his screen, and he immediately stopped his work and lowered the screen of his laptop so she couldn’t see. “You know I don’t even understand what the hell that is, right?”

  “It’s protocol,” Jim answered. “Just like it’s protocol for me to go through that stack of requests first. I’ll get to yours as soon as a I can.”

  Sam bent to a knee and inched intimately closer to Jim. He was one of the few IT guys that kept himself showered, and for that she was thankful, because the thick cloud of biowaste clung to the air.

  “It’s important, Jim. I need to get this down to Multz and Hickem before the hour is up. You know I don’t skirt the rules, but I think we both understand what we’re dealing with. So are you going to help me or not?”

  Jim Flanagan removed his glasses and pinched the bridge of his nose, and then without a word, he reached for the form that Sam had laid on his desk.

  “Thank you, Jim.”

  “Just find the bastard, will you?” he asked, holding out his hand for the thumb drive. “The knowledge that there are people out there like him in the world makes me sick to my stomach.”

  “Yeah.” Sam stood, watching Jim plug the drive into the USB port on his laptop. “Me too.”

  “There you are!” Hickem screeched to a halt as he passed the tech room’s entrance. He palmed the door to slow himself down but only poked his head inside. “C’mon. I need to update you and Multz. Let’s go.”

  Sam looked back at Jim on her exit. “How long do you think it’ll take?”

  “Depends on the file size, and what I’m seeing here looks pretty big,” Jim said, scrolling down his screen. “Give me thirty minutes.”

  “I owe you one, Jim.” Sam disappeared from the room and jogged down the hall to get caught up with Hickem, who was already at the staircase, heading down to Multz’s office.

  There was giddiness to his steps, and Sam wasn’t sure it was a good thing. But she held off the worry until she knew the facts. But if they’d found Grant, her mission was over before it even had a chance to begin.

  “Shut the door,” Hickem said, unable to hide the smile on his face as Sam walked into the office.

  “What’s this about, Hickem?” Multz asked.

  “He’s stateside.” Hickem paced back and forth, bursting with energy that made it impossible for him to stand still.

  “Who?” Sam asked, slightly confused.

  “Joza! The CIA tracked him on a flight out of Russia. They lost him during a layover in Paris, but they believe he’s here.”

  “You think Links reached out to him?” Multz asked.

  “I think it’s Links’s only play,” Hickem answered. “Which means that they’ll most likely be together. Talk about killing two birds with one stone.”

  “Do we have any leads on their location?” Sam asked, her heart starting to race.

  “We think they’re northeast of the city, close to the Canadian border in case they need a quick escape.” Hickem finally ended his anxious walk and ran his hand through his hair, the exhaustion from the excitement finally catching up to him. “God, this is huge.”

  “We’ll start backtracking flights, see where he might have gone,” Multz said. “Sam, I want you to grab a team from the bull pen and start figuring out a timeline. Hickem, can you fill her in on what the CIA told you?”

  “Why don’t we each take a team,” Sam suggested, not wanting to get bogged down with a new project. “We can cover twice the ground.”

  “I don’t care how the hell you two do it. I want some concrete analysis on where that bastard is heading and how long it’s going to take him to get there.” Multz sat down and waved the pair out of the office.

  Hickem kept his eyes glued to his phone on the walk back to the bull pen, checking for updates from the CIA. “There were thirty flights that went from Paris to the United States since Joza landed in France. So far, it looks like our best bets are landing sites in New York, Boston, or Chicago.”

  “I’ll take New York,” Sam said.

  “Leaving me two, huh? Nice.”

  “You and I both know the majority of the planes that are going to land from Paris will hit New York. You might have two cities, but I’ll have more ground to cover.”

  “Somebody’s hungry.” Hickem looked up from his phone, smiling as they entered the bull pen.

  “I just want to get this done.”

  Sam stood off to the side as Hickem gave the update on the case. Like Hickem, everyone shared the same sense of awe and urgency now that they had both men within their grasp. Everyone wanted to be the hero. Everyone wanted to catch them. Sam just wanted to get that USB back to Grant.

  The teams broke off, Sam taking the cluster of desk jockeys nearest to her, and he started having them scour the net. Her eyes found the clock every thirty seconds, the time crawling forward.

  Process of elimination worked in their favor, and twenty-five minutes into the search, one of Hickem’s people got a hit.

  “Eastern European male, sixties, spotted with a large group of individuals coming out of Boston.”

  Hickem circled around to the kid quickly. “Do we have vehicle descriptions for what they might have used to leave?”

  “Unclear, still searching.”

  Hickem clapped heartily, trying to rally his team to the finish line. “Let’s go, people! We’re close! I can smell it!”

  Sam eyed the clock one last time and then turned to the team. “Everyone restart your search from their new point of origin. I’ll be back.” Sam made it to the opposite end of the floor before Hickem stopped her.

  “Where are you going?”

  “Tech,” Sam answered quickly. “Running an inquiry for Multz.” She escaped the bull pen before anyone else decided to flag her down, checking the time on the way.

  It had already been thirty minutes, and she prayed that Jim had been able to get everything together. By the time she reached the tech room, Sam’s heart was pounding, and sweat had broken out beneath her shirt. The blazer she wore trapped in the heat, but it at least covered up the sweat blotches under her arms.

  Jim spotted her the moment she entered the room, and without a word, he lifted his hand, the USB drive gripped between his fingers. “Remember, you owe me.”

  “More than you know.” Sam grabbed the drive, still breathless.

  “Good luck.”

  With the drive in her pocket, Sam hurried back down the stairs. All she needed to do now was convince Hickem about what happened.

  If Hickem was any good at his job, and she knew he was, the man would have a hefty dose of skepticism with the news that Grant had contacted her. She just had to make him believe that she was still on his side.

  Hickem was hovering closely over the people on his team, turning his head from screen to screen like a hawk on a branch in search of prey.

  “Hey!” Sam yelled twenty feet before she was even near him, phone clutched in her hand, holding it up to him. “I just got a call from Grant.”

  “What?” Hickem stared at the phone, which she pocketed. “How long?”

  “Not long enough to track,” Sam answered, watching the others in the room slowly pull their eyes away from their screen. This was what she wanted. A lot of people. Group thinking was a hell of a thing. “He gave me a location. Wants to meet.”

  Hickem paused before he answered, studying her. “Why?”

  “He said he thinks he found a way to Links,” Sam answered. “Bu
t he wants to meet in ten minutes, so we need to scramble.” Sam spun around, addressing the bull pen. “Anyone who isn’t designated as emergency support, I want you to report to your team leads and prepare for field assignment.” She quickly clapped her hands. “Come on, people, let’s go!”

  The room erupted into a flurry of movement. But when Sam turned back to Hickem, he was motionless. Bodies hurried past him, the rushing waters of action unable to move the boulder set in their path, and were forced to break around him as he stared Sam down.

  “He called you just now.” There was no question in Hickem’s voice, only accusation.

  “Yeah, when I went up to check on my request.” Sam furrowed her brow, doing her best to play the part despite the hammering in her chest, and then she cracked a smile. “C’mon, Hickem, you really think—”

  “I don’t think you know a damn thing about what I think.” Hickem stepped forward, his big body made even more ominous by the slow movement. “Of all the people Grant contacts here, he decides to call you. Why do you think that is?”

  “Because he trusts me.” Sam knew that in situations of interrogation, it was best to tell the truth when you could. The lies came in the details, but if you laid the foundation of the lie on a bed of truth, then it was easier for the people you were trying to convince to swallow it. “You said it yourself. He and I had a connection.”

  “And what does that connection mean to you? Does it mean more to you than being a marshal? Does it mean more to you than stopping a traitor that was willing to sell out the family that was under your protection to a man that wanted to kill them? Does it mean more to you than your freedom?” Hickem leaned forward. “Is he worth all of that?”

  It took every fiber of control in Sam’s mind not to shake, not to break or show any sign of a tell. She forced her tongue into motion to form the word that she didn’t want to say but knew she had to. And the lie tasted bitter.

  “No,” Sam said.

  Hickem maintained his closeness, still studying her, and then nodded. “All right, Cohen.” He finally turned, walking away, and as he left, Sam felt isolated in a room of at least one hundred people.

  So far, the area had remained clear. No cops. No real traffic. No problems. He didn’t think Sam would do something like that to put Mocks in danger, but people did strange things when they were put in a corner.

  Two cruisers passed the alleyway entrance where Grant waited, heading toward the drop site. He backtracked in the opposite direction, taking advantage of his location’s multiple exits.

  The sleepy northern side of Seattle was suddenly awake with car engines, sirens, and the thump of chopper blades. Grant glanced toward the sky as he hurried toward the drop-off point.

  With his hoodie up and his shades on, Grant moved quickly and inconspicuously along the sidewalks, even passing a few cop cars heading for whatever bogus location that Sam had fed Hickem and the others. But he didn’t test his luck. All it would take was one pair of eyes to spot him and undo everything.

  The address that Grant had given Sam was close to an intersection. It was busy, which was good. The more people for the police to watch made it easier for Grant to slip in and out.

  The building itself was an abandoned bagel shop. He wasn’t sure when it closed down, but the faded For Lease sign hanging in the window was brittle from the sun.

  Grant found a spot on a bench on the opposite corner of the intersection, where he had a clear view of the shop. He slouched, pretending to be asleep.

  The light at the intersection changed a dozen times, and Grant finally spotted Sam walking down the street from the source of the cop cars and choppers.

  Sam turned the corner, and Grant resisted the urge to move, and he watched her slow at the front of the bagel shop, checking the address. But as she lingered there on the sidewalk, Grant knew something was wrong.

  Instead of leaving the package on the front step as they discussed, she walked through the small alley between the bagel shop and the tax collector business next door.

  Grant waited on the bench, hoping that she would come back out, but after five minutes, she was still gone. She had wanted him to see her, and she wanted him to follow.

  Mindful of the fact that she might have been tailed, Grant skirted around the intersection, using the crosswalks to go all the way around instead of straight across the square.

  Car horns and the chatter of pedestrians grew noisier as Grant stood across the street from the bagel shop. He looked down the alley where Sam had disappeared, but he still couldn’t see her.

  Everything had been thrown together so hastily that Grant never even considered creating a backup plan. He just knew that it needed to be finished quickly.

  Finally, Grant crossed the street and jogged into the alleyway, splashing into the puddles that had yet to evaporate. He inched along the side of the bagel shop, craning his neck around to the back side, where he found the package laid out just as they discussed.

  Grant made it three steps toward it, when Hickem flung the back door to the bagel shop open and stepped out, gun aimed at Grant’s chest.

  “Don’t move.”

  Grant raised his arms in the air. “So she told you?”

  “She didn’t tell me,” Hickem answered. “I thought that she might be up to something when she wandered off.” He gestured to the wall. “Put your hands flush against it, slowly.”

  Grant pivoted, being mindful of his speed as Hickem had requested, and then Hickem pressed the pistol to Grant’s back as he patted him down.

  Hickem grabbed hold of Grant’s arms and put them behind his back, snapping the handcuffs over his wrists. “You know, I understand what you’re trying to do, Grant. Really. But I can’t have you risk our national security for one person.”

  “Two people.” Grant’s cheek scraped up against the rough siding, and he winced as the cuffs tightened around his wrists. “I can get Links. You just have to trust me.”

  Hickem spun Grant around, slamming him back against the wall with an added force. “I did trust you, Grant.”

  “Let him go, Hickem.” Sam appeared from around the corner, gun up and aimed at Hickem’s head. He slowly lifted his hands. “Sorry, Grant. I saw him follow me and knew that he’d stick around until you showed.”

  “God dammit, Cohen, you’re really going to throw your career away over this?” Hickem backed up as Sam moved closer. “It’s not worth it.”

  “Take the cuffs off,” Sam replied. “Now.”

  With Sam’s finger on the trigger, Hickem let Grant free then tossed the cuffs to the ground.

  Grant rubbed the tender flesh around his wrists then gestured to the bag. “Is it even in there?”

  “Yeah,” Sam answered, her gun still on Hickem. “I didn’t have time to switch it out after he started to follow me.”

  “So what now, Bonnie and Clyde?” Hickem looked between Grant and Sam.

  “Grant is going to leave, and I’m going to take you back to the location. What you choose to do once we arrive is up to you.” Sam quickly glanced at Grant. “You won’t have a lot of time, so you better move.”

  Grant discarded the bag and then pocketed the USB. “Thank you.”

  “Even if you can bring him in, it won’t absolve you of what you’ve done,” Hickem said. “Neither of you.”

  “This isn’t about me.” Grant sprinted from the alley and into the road by the bagel shop. He didn’t look back. He didn’t stop running.

  No quarter would be given, and Grant wouldn’t be surprised if officers were told to shoot on sight. The hounds had been released, and he was the fox that needed to find a hole to hide in.

  8

  After a few miles, a cramp bit at Grant’s left side and forced him to stop. He winced, trying to breathe and stretch, but the cramp refused to wane. Knowing time was short, he settled his pace at a quick walk.

  The address was on the outskirts of the city, which boded well for Grant’s low profile. But while the miles chewed up beh
ind him eased his stress, he wasn’t out of the woods yet.

  Grant found a water fountain near a running trail, and he drank from the cold stream thirstily, filling his stomach until he felt queasy.

  A siren caught his attention, and his heart jumped. But the noise was nothing more than an echo from the inner parts of the city. The authority that it belonged to was nowhere in sight.

  The water helped some, and Grant stretched, massaging the cramps plaguing his legs. The hot spasms of pain had slowed him to a limp. He was going on nearly a day and a half with no rest, and it was finally catching up with him.

  Grant kept the USB in his palm, staring down at it every few minutes to remind himself that it was there and what was at stake.

  God only knew what Mocks was going through now. But he was confident that Links would keep her unharmed until the money was transferred. They’d already agreed to a proof of life. Links wouldn’t jump the gun by maiming her before it was necessary. He was too patient for something like that.

  The muscles along Grant’s legs started to loosen up, and he broke into another jog, letting his steps find a rhythm. After a few blocks, he was on autopilot, just like his days at the academy when he was up before the sun, running in his sweats with the rest of the recruits, all of them sweating and puking, desperately trying to avoid finishing last.

  Drenched in sweat, Grant clutched a rusted chain-link fence as he caught his breath, staring up at the abandoned five-story apartment building that was the address that Links had given him.

  The building looked like a relic from after the second world war. It had been uninhabited for quite some time, at least as far as paying tenants were involved. There was more than enough evidence to suggest that it was frequented by the homeless as a means of escape or shelter.

  The windows were boarded over, the grounds littered with trash, and a litany of graffiti covered the walls. But when Grant turned the knob of the front door, it opened without resistance.

  Light penetrated the darkness inside, and a wave of heat and the stench of rotten eggs bombarded Grant’s senses as he entered the foyer. His shadow grew long down the hallway, and he waited for his eyes to adjust.

 

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