Middle Of Nowhere b-7

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Middle Of Nowhere b-7 Page 17

by Ridley Pearson


  When the two weren't calling out on their cellular phones, the devices were ringing. ABC radio broke the story nationally ten minutes into the ride, ensuring that even more press would be awaiting the two at the Denver airport. Two cars and a television van dogged the limousine, pulling alongside, reporters leaning out of the cars and shouting for one of them to put the window down and answer questions. The limousine's cellular phone rang; it was the television van following right behind them. The driver hung up.

  Boldt's cellular rang. "Lieutenant Boldt?" a man's voice asked.

  "Speaking," Boldt answered into his cellular.

  "John Ragman, Colorado Department of Corrections. We spoke this afternoon."

  "Yes."

  "There's something here I wanted to share with you. It concerns

  … the inmate you interviewed out at Etheredge."

  "I'm listening."

  "You run the man's surname through our system and you get more than one hit. You follow me?"

  "Yes, I think I do."

  "You're on a cellular-I can hear it. Digital?"

  "No."

  "So maybe I shouldn't say much more. The reporters-often scan the analog frequencies."

  "Yes, I understand. The person you want to talk to is a Sergeant John LaMoia." Boldt gave him the direct number. "I'll call LaMoia from a land line out at the airport to be caught up, or I'll call you directly if I can't reach him… if you two haven't spoken."

  "Got it." Ragman added, "You're gonna like what I've got. Or maybe not, I guess. But either way, you need it, Lieutenant."

  Boldt disconnected the cell, waited for Daphne to get off her own phone, and told her, "There's another Flek in the Colorado system, maybe a relative."

  "Maybe currently living in Seattle?" she deduced.

  "One has to wonder," Boldt agreed.

  "Hence Flek's reluctance to cooperate with us," she said. "Protecting a brother, a cousin?" She had felt something odd about his demeanor. Now, maybe she had an explanation for it.

  "Worth pursuing," Boldt said.

  "That call I just hung up from?" she said. "The number called from the pay phone at Etheredge? It looks like maybe it's a cloned cellular phone. That bill has dozens of calls being disclaimed by the customer."

  "A cloned number offers anonymity. It makes sense," Boldt agreed.

  "Which means we'd have to catch this guy in the act to connect him to Flek-relative or not. And we'll lose that chance, because he'll be warned off by all this media attention."

  " Beat the Clock," Boldt said. He remembered the quiz show from his youth.

  "You think we made a mistake, Lou? Interrogating him? Tipping our hand? Maybe we'd have been better to sit on him. Intercept the activity."

  Boldt believed she was probably right, but also knew there was no looking back during an investigation. He didn't answer directly. Instead he said, "We work this relative of Flek's and we work this cell phone that was called. We work it fast before too much of this makes it onto the evening news. Maybe we get lucky."

  "Since when?" Daphne asked.

  CHAPTER 30

  Upon returning to his job, LaMoia thought the excessive workload facing him must have been some kind of cruel joke, perhaps cooked up by Boldt to prove how hard things had been for him during LaMoia's absence. There were nine active investigations on LaMoia's desk. He had responded to two of the crime scenes and taken reports from the other seven. At the same time, he was wearing the hats of Burglary detective, Special Assaults detective, and Homicide sergeant. And he'd only been on the job for two days.

  When some guy identifying himself as Ragman called from Colorado Corrections and mentioned Boldt by name, LaMoia focused his attention on the message being relayed-the name of a possible accomplice.

  He scribbled the name Bryce Abbott Flek into his notebook

  Ragman said, "Brother Flek owns a pink sheet the length of your arm. A juvie gone bad. His more recent history here puts him in double jeopardy. One more felony conviction and the guy does fifteen without parole."

  "Flek," LaMoia repeated, reading from his notes. Having spoken to Boldt earlier, he knew about the failed interrogation out at Etheredge. He had asked a friend at InterCel to identify the cellular phone number called from the prison, and then had spoken with Matthews ten minutes earlier to deliver the bad news: The number had indeed been cloned.

  Ragman warned, "His jacket is littered with references to what one officer called 'the volatile nature of his personality.' There's also a reference to a psych evaluation in here, although I don't have my hands on it. Way it looks to me: This is a dog that bites. Little brother is tame by comparison. This one took out two uniforms trying to arrest him back in ninety-three- both hospitalized, one with a broken neck."

  "Broken neck?" LaMoia repeated, yanking his feet off his desk and sitting upright in the chair. "You have aliases for this mope?"

  "You got a sharp pencil? It's a long list. Better yet, what if I fax you as much of this as I can?"

  "Is he on WestCrime?" LaMoia inquired.

  "NCD," Ragman said. The National Criminal Database. "You guys lined out with that yet?"

  "You bet. We've got access to WestCrime, NCD, and all the federal databases."

  "Then you're set on the aliases," Ragman said. "I'll still fax you the liner notes, in case that stuff didn't get posted to the database. The way it shakes out: He's a thief with a fondness for anything electronic, a violent son of a bitch when he wants to be, and I guess that's most of the time. Just so you and your boys know to wear vests."

  "Got it," LaMoia said, drawing a thickening ring around the name Bryce Abbott Flek to where it dominated the page.

  He called Boldt, who said, "Can't talk on the cellular. I'll call you back from the airport." The line went dead.

  He accessed the NCD database and downloaded both Flek brothers' criminal records. Bryce Abbott Flek operated under six aliases, all ending in "ek," or "eck." LaMoia typed in the various names, all separated by commas. He tried SPD records, King County records and state records. No arrests. He tried the man's Colorado motor vehicle registration-a 1991 blue Dodge van. A subsequent request with the licensing bureau kicked five unpaid in-state parking tickets, all within a three-block area of Ballard. The first of these parking tickets was dated a year earlier, the same month as David Ansel Flek's conviction. The pieces started falling into place. LaMoia grew increasingly excited.

  Fingers drumming, he considered various means to pinpoint the address and locate Bryce Abbott Flek. One option was to drive around the three-block area looking for that blue van with Colorado plates and put it under surveillance when they found it. He would then wait for Flek to show up and hope to follow him back to an apartment, put that under surveillance. The time and manpower requirements seemed enormous.

  He tried a friend at US West. No go: Not one of Flek's aliases kicked for a current listing. No great sur prise-if the man was using a cloned cellular, why bother with a Ma Bell installation?

  If Flek was renting a room or an apartment, LaMoia had no way of finding out where. There were no tax records and no utility bills, at least not that he could locate. He racked his brain for some other way to find the guy, and to find him fast, before the news leaks Boldt had warned of reached Flek, and he heard of his little brother's contact with Seattle police. If and when that happened, Flek was certain to go underground, perhaps not surfacing again. He debated whether to put out the word on the street-he had Flek's mug shot, courtesy of the NCD database. He thought of liquor stores and Domino's Pizza, delivery boys. He called a friend at a credit bureau-no credit cards, no loans, no bank accounts under any of the aliases.

  In the end, using the patrol force to search Ballard for any blue vans appeared the best choice. He put the word out over the Mobile Data Terminals network- notifying nearly two hundred patrol cars simultaneously.

  An hour before Boldt and Daphne's plane touched down at SEATAC, LaMoia was notified by an SPD radio car that a blue van with Colo
rado plates was currently fueling at a gas station in Ballard, not five blocks from LaMoia's current location. LaMoia had issued the Be On Lookout for the van with little hope. To his surprise, he had been notified of four blue vans in the past thirty minutes. This radio call represented the first mention of Colorado plates. Within minutes, LaMoia confirmed the registration: Bryce Abbott Flek.

  About that same time he double-parked his fire-engine red 1968 Camaro with a view across the street. The gas pump's black hose hung from the van's tank like an elephant's trunk, the driver nowhere to be seen. He spotted the cruiser patrolling a block away, hailed them over the radio and ordered them to park out of sight. He then radioed dispatch and ordered all SPD patrol cars kept out of a ten-block area surrounding the gas station. He didn't want anything, anyone, alerting Flek to their presence. When he requested additional unmarked cars, the dispatcher had the audacity to laugh at him. "Request is noted," the uncharacteristically amused dispatcher announced. LaMoia understood the subtext: In terms of winning unmarked cars and plainclothes detectives as backup, he was in this alone.

  The Quik Stop gas station teemed with activity. Some customers pulled up to the pumps; others parked, shopping for a soda, a bag of chips, or a quart of milk. But by his count, every customer arrived and left by automobile. He observed no bicycles, no pedestrians. This latter realization prompted a second study of the back of a big man already a half block behind the Quik Stop and moving away. The man wore a thigh-length leather jacket, blue jeans and high-top running shoes. The telltale sign that got LaMoia's adrenaline pumping had nothing to do with clothes but instead, the lack of anything carried. No paper or plastic bag. No soda. It seemed conceivable the man had purchased a pack of cigarettes or something small enough to be pocketed- it was no crime to leave a Quik Stop on foot-but his recollection of the case file suggested otherwise: The burglar was believed to monitor police radio bands, probably on a portable scanner, and LaMoia had impetuously cleared the area around the Quik Stop by ra dio, naming the gas station's location. Foremost on LaMoia's mind: Where had this guy come from? He had not seen anyone arrive on foot in the last few minutes.

  More to the point, according to his criminal records, Bryce Abbott Flek stood six foot one, and weighed in at two hundred pounds. That fit well with the man now nearly a block away.

  LaMoia needed someone to watch the blue van while he pursued its apparent owner on foot, but he didn't want the car's police radio to communicate about it. The real Flek, whether or not he was the man on foot, might be listening in, wandering the aisles of the Quik Stop, wondering how to play his situation.

  Realizing he had to take a chance, LaMoia grabbed the radio's handset and informed the dispatcher he was switching to one of the four "secure frequencies" used by SPD. Illegally modified scanners could not intercept these digitally secure frequencies. He requested the dispatcher to assign a patrolman from the nearby cruiser to take up a position with a view of the blue van and to report any activity. Naming the cross street behind the Quik Stop-the intersection where the blue-jeaned pedestrian was headed-LaMoia requested that two cruisers position themselves as backup, bookending the street. This done, he took off on foot.

  He did not run, but instead walked with a brisk, long-legged stride, calculated to quickly close the distance between himself and his mark. He had not thought to bring along a portable radio from the squad room, and so he was on his own-"cloaked," "in the dark." Only his cellular phone connected him to the world outside of Bryce Abbott Flek-if that was in fact whom he was following.

  By the time his suspect reached the intersection and turned right, LaMoia had closed the gap to half a block. Following several weeks of inactivity, LaMoia felt awash, invigorated by the pursuit, hungry for confrontation. He loved his job. There was nothing quite like slamming a mope up against the wall and slapping a pair of bracelets around his wrists, taking another piece of infectious waste off the streets, out of the game. Duty called. He felt positively electric with anticipation.

  The first blow came from behind-a devastating show of force, unexpected and overpowering. An openpalm smack to the back of his skull, delivered with such ferocity that his chin bruised his chest, and a whole series of muscles at the nape of his neck ripped loose. He heard his gun clink to the sidewalk, the dull sound of metal on cement, useless where it lay. That blow to the head stunned the muscles of his upper back and numbed his spine to where his arms suddenly weighed upon him like sandbags. He attempted to turn around to fight back, but his arms hung at his side, swinging like gorilla limbs, and the man behind him directed him otherwise, smashing his face into the brick wall twice and then working a volley of rabbit punches from just above his hip points into the center of his back ribs. The man hit, intending to do harm, intending to quickly eliminate LaMoia from the field of play, swinging through the punches at the brick wall, with only LaMoia's flesh and bone in between. The man's knee bruised LaMoia's coccyx, and the heel of his foot found LaMoia's instep to where, as he let go, the sergeant sank to the sidewalk, bloody and broken, a mass of misfiring nerve endings, his lungs burning, his legs unable to support him.

  He never even saw the man's face.

  CHAPTER 31

  Shying from the obnoxiously bright light, Boldt rushed through the emergency room's automatic doors, met there by the on-call physician who had tended LaMoia's injuries. Daphne spoke to a nurse. Upon being informed of the assault, they had made the drive from SEATAC in just over ten minutes-roughly half the usual time, even in good traffic.

  The doctor spoke breathlessly, also trying to keep up with the lieutenant. "Fluid in the right lung, bruised kidneys, contusions, partial concussion, fractured ribs, bruised coccyx. If I hadn't gotten the report from the officers who delivered him, I would have said he'd been hit by a vehicle from behind."

  They stepped into the oversized elevator and the doctor hit a floor button. Boldt felt ready to explode. "So nothing permanent," he said. "Nothing disabling."

  "A good deal of pain, a long convalescence, and he's back to normal," the doctor said. "The guy's got a hell of an attitude, Lieutenant. He's making jokes as we're wiring his jaw shut."

  "His jaw?" Daphne said.

  "Didn't I mention that?" the doctor asked as the elevator toned its arrival. "Broken mandible."

  "Jesus," Boldt hissed.

  Daphne reached out and squeezed his forearm in support. He turned to face her. "I'm the one who put him there," he wanted to say. He charged out of the elevator, and hurried toward room 511.

  A powder blue blanket hid most of him. Lying flat on his back, without a pillow. A variety of monitors. A dozen bright yellow numbers, some flashing.

  At first Boldt thought they had the wrong room because he didn't recognize the man lying there. Then he realized they had shaved LaMoia's mustache to deal with the cuts and abrasions, and to stitch up a spot where a tooth had come through his cheek. Boldt had to look away, he was so overcome with emotion.

  Boldt didn't always deal well with his anger, and he was very angry now. A rational thinker, he tried to avoid anger altogether by compartmentalizing explanations and analyzing situations, though he frequently failed. LaMoia was too close a friend for Boldt to see him solely as a wounded sergeant. Boldt had connected Ragman to LaMoia-and from the sketchy details he had, Boldt believed himself responsible for the injuries.

  "How long like this?" Daphne whispered to the doctor, but so that Boldt could overhear. She wanted to bookend this for Boldt, to show him it wasn't forever, to make it finite.

  "The lung will keep him here for a day or two. We'll get him pretty healed up by then. He'll be home with just a couple bumps and bruises in no time. Six to eight weeks, it never happened."

  "Try telling him that," Boldt said.

  "Medically speaking," the doctor replied.

  The body in the bed grunted, its bloodshot eyes open now and fixed on Boldt, who slowly made his way to the injured man's bedside. Boldt saw a familiar morbid humor in those eyes, and for som
e reason this made his anger all the more palpable. How dare LaMoia make light of this! How dare he try to forgive him- Boldt knew what that attempted humor was about.

  "Flek?" Boldt asked.

  The man's lips moved, but Boldt couldn't hear.

  The doctor warned, "He shouldn't attempt to speak. Please. In the morning, maybe."

  But LaMoia grunted, drawing Boldt's ear closer to his lips.

  "Good drugs," the man whispered.

  Boldt felt tears spring from his eyes. "Jesus, John, I'm sorry." He dragged his arm across his face, trying to hide his reaction.

  LaMoia just grunted in response. The doctor pulled Boldt away and checked the monitors.

  "It's rest for you," he said to LaMoia, addressing an I.V. pump and increasing the rate of flow. "And stop flirting with the nurses," he added.

  "Never," LaMoia whispered, meeting eyes with Daphne, and trying to smile.

  "Healthy as ever," Daphne said.

  CHAPTER 32

  " The Flek brothers," Daphne said. "You want to hear this?" Boldt sat at his office desk, still preoccupied by his hospital visit to LaMoia. He nodded yes, all the while thinking about LaMoia's empty office cubicle just around the corner.

  "We have a pretty classic Svengali here. Bryce Abbott Flek, the older brother, has been in and out of trouble- in mostly-since he could ride a bike. The bully in school. Truant. Petty theft-bicycles, cigarettes from the candy store. A couple juvie arson arrests. Possession of a switchblade. Grand larceny auto at the ripe age of fourteen. Liquor store robbery, fifteen."

  "Model citizen."

  "One troubled kid. Trailer park life in the Colorado oil fields. Statutory rape charges when he was eighteen-turned out it was consensual, charges dropped. He beat up a lot of people. One hell of a volatile personality. It's endless."

  "You don't need to sound so excited," he said. Daphne's professional curiosity about the criminal mind exceeded one's reasonable expectations. She was always looking for ways to interview suspects ahead of their arrest-while they still showed their true colors.

 

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