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Into the Crossfire

Page 23

by Lisa Marie Rice


  It was 2 A.M. and the residential area was quiet, the vast darkness of the ocean across the road silent and oppressive.

  She was holding her cell phone in her hand, gazing at it longingly. Sam. Sam was at the other end. All she had to do was close this connection and call him. He’d come running. Oh God, Sam. For just a moment she yearned with all her heart to be able to listen to that deep, reassuring voice. Sam would know what to do, would know how to help her father.

  But that cold implacable voice had been very specific. Don’t make any calls. Keep the line open or your father will pay.

  She couldn’t risk it. She’d give anything in her power to communicate with Sam, but not if her father was going to pay the price. A small voice somewhere inside her said that her father was going to pay a horrific price, anyway. And so would she. But she had to play this according to the rules set down by that sadistic bastard.

  The man had been willing to casually slice her father’s face open just to make a point. If he felt that she wasn’t obeying his orders…

  It didn’t bear thinking about.

  She hopped up and down, chilled to the bone in the dark night, checking the time feverishly, obsessively. Twenty minutes. He’d said she had twenty minutes to get to the mall parking lot and five had already gone by. Another couple of minutes and they couldn’t possibly make it in time.

  Ah! Bright headlights and a taxi sign on the roof, traveling fast on the empty road. Inside a minute she could see the taxi sign clearly and heaved a sigh of relief as the yellow cab pulled to the curb. She rushed out, wrenching the cab door open.

  “I’ll pay you double if you can get me to the Westwood shopping mall parking lot in Fleetridge inside of fifteen minutes.” Her voice was high, hysterical.

  The driver looked like a student, clean-cut and very young, a bit astonished at the wild woman flinging herself into the backseat.

  “You got it,” he grunted, taking off so fast the tires squealed against the asphalt.

  She stared out the window at the black ocean disappearing from sight as the driver turned inland, making good time on the empty streets.

  Sam, she thought again. She wanted to hear his voice with a ferocity that astonished her. A tear rolled down her cheek and she brushed it away impatiently. Tears wouldn’t help. Nothing could help.

  She shuddered as she thought of her father in that man’s hands. Her dad was barely kept alive with all the love and care in the world, and all the tricks the medical profession could pull out of its bag. Being held against his will by a violent man capable of hurting him…it could kill him. She might be speeding toward a place where she would only find her father’s corpse and a violent thug willing to harm a helpless old man. A thug who wanted something from her, though she had no idea what.

  She imagined he wanted her computer files, even though there was nothing in her hard disk that could possibly be of any use to anyone besides her and her clients. When the man discovered this, discovered that she didn’t have what he wanted, whatever it was, he’d kill her. She was speeding toward her father’s possible death and her own certain one.

  The young cab driver reached the parking lot and entered with a dramatic turn, slewing slightly on the gravel of the soft shoulder. The lot was empty except for a dirty off-white van, a man standing outside the driver’s door. The lot was illuminated with streetlamps except for the one directly above the van, so she couldn’t make out the man’s face.

  “There you go,” the driver said cheerfully, stopping the meter. It read $15. “Fifteen minutes on the dot.”

  Nicole didn’t trust her voice. She simply threw a twenty and a ten at him and climbed out of the car on rubber legs.

  Nicole crossed the parking lot slowly, her legs barely holding her up. By the time she reached the man standing by the van, he had his hand out.

  It wasn’t the intruder. There were at least two men involved in this, then.

  Deep down, there had been a faint hope that somehow she could outwit the intruder, even if she couldn’t outfight him. She wasn’t going to be taken by surprise. Maybe she could whack him over the head with something while he wasn’t looking or…her imagination stopped there. But it wasn’t going to happen. There were two men involved and she wasn’t going to come out of this alive.

  “Phone.” This man’s voice was just as calm, just as cold as the other man’s. Cut out of the same mold. Alert, icy and deadly.

  Her hand shook as she held the cell out to him.

  The man gave a short jerk of his head. “Get in.”

  Never get into the car.

  One of the cardinal rules for State Department families in countries where kidnapping was a major industry. Never get into the car. Make a run for it. Attract attention by screaming. Carry Mace and use it. But never, ever get into the car. If you got into the car, you were as good as dead.

  Wonderful advice. Only one thing. The clever men and women running the State Department Security Force seminars never told their listeners what to do when a loved one was being held hostage.

  Never get into the car.

  She got into the car.

  The man threw her cell phone on the ground, crushed it with his boot heel, kicked it into the scrub off the lot and got behind the wheel.

  Never get into the car.

  Nicole was in the car and her last hope of reaching Sam was lying in shards on the dark asphalt.

  Chapter 13

  Sam walked into his office, which looked like Mission Control. Every single light was on, the banks of computer monitors all lit, and four men were sitting around his desk. Harry, Mike and two guys he had no trouble at all identifying as Feebs.

  All looking grim.

  “Show me what you have,” Sam said, sitting down behind his desk.

  Silence for a moment, then Mike stirred. “Nothing good. First let me introduce the two newcomers. They’re—”

  “FBI,” Sam said. “Yeah, I could tell.”

  Two bland looks. “It’s the shoes,” Sam explained. If they’d been from military security they’d have been wearing boots. If they’d been CIA, the footwear would have been top quality.

  A moment’s silence. The taller one, obviously senior, nodded. “Special Agent Ross and this is Special Agent Vanzetti.”

  Sam didn’t care if they were Special Agents Mulder and Scully. He’d never liked the Feebs. He just wanted them to cut to the chase.

  “So give me the lowdown.” He looked each in the eye.

  But it was Mike who answered. He’d been staring at a laptop screen. He turned it around so Sam could see it.

  It was a page scanned from a military jacket. Prominent in the upper left hand side of the page was an unsmiling photograph of the man who’d broken into Nicole’s office.

  The man was wearing a black beret, had a skull with two crossed knives flash on his shoulder. Ranger tab on the left sleeve.

  Dishonorable discharge, for selling military arms off base.

  It was all there, the massive threat to Nicole.

  Sam’s jaw tightened and he bit down hard on his back teeth as he read carefully. The man’s name was Sean McInerny, 75th battalion. Saw action in Iraq and Afghanistan. Dishonorable discharge in 2005.

  Sam looked up at the four men. “A Ranger, like you said.”

  Special Agent Ross replied. “That’s right. We’ve been chasing him for a couple of years. After he got his discharge—”

  “Dishonorable discharge,” Sam interrupted.

  “Yeah.” Special Agent Ross’s jaw muscles jumped. “After he got his dishonorable discharge he simply dropped off the face of the earth. We suspect he’s become a contract killer. There was a partial found at the site of what was made to look like a mugging but was an assassination of a bank CEO. And a security tape caught a half profile at another killing. We were lucky this time, your tape caught him full face. We have no idea where he lives. There is no record of any Sean McInerny renting or buying a house or a car, or using credit cards or enterin
g or leaving the country. We don’t know where he is. He’s off the grid.”

  “You do know where he is,” Sam pointed out coldly. “He’s here in San Diego, obviously on a job. Have you checked the hotels?” He kept outwardly calm but inside he was raging. A Special Forces soldier as a gun for hire. The news couldn’t have been worse.

  “We’ve done this before, believe it or not,” Ross said. “We’re making the rounds now with a photograph, because if he’s in a hotel, he’s using an alias. We want him worse than you do.”

  I doubt it, Sam thought grimly. They were just doing their job, wanting to bag a bad guy. It would go on their record, maybe snag them a promotion. He wanted to keep his woman safe. Big difference. He opened his mouth to say something when his cell vibrated, three times in quick succession.

  Every hair on his body stood up. He could actually feel them brushing against his shirtsleeves and shirt front, tiny little spears of terror. He froze, unable to move, unable to breathe, panic exploding in his head in a surge of white-hot light.

  The two Feebs didn’t notice, though Harry and Mike were looking at him strangely. Sam shook his head sharply and they got the message. Not now.

  Ross was checking something on the laptop, pointing to the screen and Vanzetti was talking quietly into his cell. He switched off and turned to his partner. “We’ve just checked all the hotels and motels in the metropolitan area. Nothing.”

  Sam clenched his jaws. Even if they’d started checking immediately, they’d only had a couple of hours. The fact that they’d already checked with all the hotels and motels in the area meant that they’d called in local law enforcement officers, too. Probably the entire SDPF. This was a huge manhunt. All the more reason to get them out of his hair. Right. Now.

  His cell was in his hand. He wanted to call Nicole with it so badly it felt like it was burning against his palm.

  Sam stood and the two Feebs looked up, startled, then stood, too. A big, theatrical yawn as he stretched. He put on a sheepish look. “Didn’t sleep well last night,” he confessed to them. He’d slept maybe four hours in the past forty-eight, but he couldn’t sleep now if you pumped him full of a triple dose of Valium. Every cell in his body was on red alert. He wanted the two Feebs out on their asses, now. “Sounds like you’ve got an army out looking for this guy, this Sean McInerney. I’m sure you’ll get him real soon. When you find him, I have a few words to say to him.”

  He knew what he wanted them to see. A genial guy who’d had a scare a couple of hours ago, but now only wanted to get back to his bed, where a beautiful woman awaited him.

  There was no way for the Feebs to know that under that amiable persona was a man sweating with terror, guts cold and roiling because something was going down now.

  Harry and Mike watched, baffled, as Sam subtly urged the two special agents to the outer door and saw them off with a brisk handshake.

  “Sam,” Harry said uneasily when the door closed behind them. “Don’t you understand that the guy who broke into Nicole’s apartment is a—“

  “No time,” Sam gritted. “Got a signal from my cell phone—means my home security’s been breached. Someone going out. Nicole’s on the move. No way would Nicole leave my apartment without telling me unless she was forced to.” He had Nicole’s cell phone number on speed dial. It was busy. Goddamn. “Harry!” he barked. “Triangulate this number for me, fast.” He rapped out Nicole’s cell phone number. Harry put his crutches to one side, sat down at one of the computers and bent over the keyboard.

  Sam switched on a monitor connected with his home computer and saw the big, dark empty lobby of his own apartment complex appear.

  “Shit,” Mike breathed. “You’re hacking your own building’s security.”

  The cameras were high quality. It had been a condition for buying the apartment. No jerky stills every four seconds to save money. Sam went to ten minutes ago, when he’d heard the signal that Nicole was leaving his apartment. He could see everything, including the night guard behind his U-shaped desk. It was 0200 in the morning but the guard was alert, not reading, not dozing, checking in a regular loop the array of monitors glowing brightly on the desk.

  Good man.

  The guard must have heard something. He turned toward the bank of elevators, hand on his holstered weapon. And there she was, Nicole, looking desperate, nearly running across the lobby. She stopped just outside the huge glass doors, at the limit of the lobby cameras’ range. Sam watched her, shaking, slender arms crossed over her waist as if hugging herself for comfort as she waited for something impatiently.

  Mike had drifted over to stand by Sam. Harry watched the screen, face sober.

  Sam called her again. Busy. She wasn’t talking into it. She was keeping the line open because…he felt air leave the room. She was keeping it open because someone was keeping tabs on her.

  Her head lifted as she saw something outside, then she ran out of the cameras’ range. A faint glow could be seen beyond the building’s gates. A light on top of a yellow vehicle.

  “Outdoor cameras,” he ordered and Harry typed so fast his fingers were a blur. It was Harry’s building, too, and he knew the codes inside out. The outside cameras flashed onto the monitors, showed Nicole opening the passenger door of a taxi. The plates were in shadow.

  Sam called again. Busy.

  “Keep that cell phone triangulated,” he ordered Harry.

  “On it.”

  The only thing that would force Nicole out would be a threat to her father.

  “Mike,” he said, striding to the gun locker hidden away in a coat closet. He punched in the code fast and opened the armored door. “Check on those two officers guarding Nicole’s father.”

  “Roger that.” Mike was in uniform, radio mike attached to a loop on his shoulder. He spoke quietly into it, static cutting in and out.

  Sam stared at the small arsenal he had. Don’t bring a knife to a gunfight. Match your weapon to your mission. Holy, sacred words that had been pounded into his head by every drill instructor he’d ever had. Matching your weapon to your mission was essential if you wanted to stay alive.

  The mission was Nicole. But what was he facing here?

  He tried to call her again, on the faintest hope that she’d closed the connection. Maybe now that she was in a taxi…

  No such luck. Busy. She was following orders.

  “Harry,” he called over his shoulder. “Where’s she going?”

  “Heading out along the causeway. Maybe coming into town? No, she’s moving inland. Taxi’s moving real fast. Over the speed limit.”

  Mouth grim, Sam turned back to the locker.

  If you didn’t know your enemy, then you couldn’t go wrong with a long gun and a pistol. He chose an HK–91 with an already-mounted scope. He already had his Glock 19, good for close-in work. NVG. Three magazines for the HK, hanging off a belt. Who knew how much firepower he’d be needing?

  He bent and put a small block of C–4 and three detonators inside a backpack. A lot of problems could be solved by C–4. Flashbangs, four grenades.

  He had a full tactical suit in the locker, they all did. He stripped down to the skin and built a warrior from the skin out. Nomex suit, body armor.

  Mike was stripping out of his cop uniform.

  “Whoa, whoa, can’t come with me,” Sam growled to Mike as he zipped up. “You’re a police officer. This is an unsanctioned mission.” He met and held Mike’s eyes. “Internal Affairs will eat you alive if you come in with me. Stay out of this, it’s my fight.”

  Mike lifted out his precious Remington 700. “Fuck that,” he said, picking up three 4-round magazines. “You’re not going in alone.” He met Sam’s eyes. “And I’m not going to let McInerney take that great woman down.” His jaws clenched. “No way.”

  “It’ll cost you your job.” Mike loved being a cop.

  “Fuck that,” Mike said and calmly suited up.

  Mike’s head was made of concrete. Once he made his mind up, Sam knew, there
was no changing it. Mike was risking his job, they were both clear on that, Mike above all. Knowing Mike couldn’t be talked out of it, Sam allowed himself a little spurt of relief. Nicole was more likely to come out of this alive if Mike had his six.

  Armed, they both turned to face Harry. He was standing, barely upright, leaning heavily on the crutches, white-faced with the effort, yet quivering with desire to go with them. The three men looked at one another, understanding one another perfectly.

  Harry couldn’t go. Sam knew that Harry would give a kidney to be able to go, but he couldn’t. In his condition, he’d only be a drag. Possibly get them killed. Sam knew that if Harry had been in even a slightly better condition, he’d have insisted on coming.

  His two brothers. Mike, willing to give up a job he loved for him, and Harry, sick because he was too weak to help.

  Harry made a low growling noise in his throat and sat back down at the computer. At least he could help that way.

  Sam was closing the locker door when Harry called out. Sam turned his head. Harry’s mouth was tight, his pale, thin face drawn with worry.

  “What?”

  “Lost her. The cab drove to the parking lot of the Westwood shopping mall and then she switched her cell off. It’s completely dead. There’s no way to track her now.”

  Sam strode over to the monitor and punched in the LoJack code. “Yes, there is. I put a micro LoJack in her portable hard drive. She keeps that in her purse. She has her purse with her, I saw it on the security tape.”

  They watched as the system processed the new info.

  “Boy, that really breaks the girlfriend rule. She’ll give you hell for that, if she ever finds out.” Harry shook his head.

  “I’ll take it, as long as she comes out of this alive.”

  The monitor flashed a map, the grid of streets around the south part of town. A bright point was moving steadily south. “She’s on the move again.” Nicole, honey, Sam thought, heart heavy. Where are you headed? Where the fuck are they taking you?

  Mike was speaking softly into the shoulder mike on the shirt he’d discarded.

 

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