by Stuart Woods
“No. Did somebody call Lieutenant Bacchetti?”
“Who knows? You think you need the help?”
“That depends on your attitude,” Stone said. His badge and ID card lay on the table between them.
“Not my call,” the detective said, standing up and stretching. “That’s my watch commander’s, but just between you and me, I think you did the world a favor by what you did. There’s a few greasy spots on the Brooklyn Bridge, but what the hell?”
The door opened, and Dino walked in. “First, Central Park, now Brooklyn,” he said. “Is there a precinct left where you aren’t up to your dick in homicides?”
“Dino, it was a hit. They tried to kill me. Twice.”
“Yeah, I saw your car outside. Nice to know that armored glass helps.”
The detective spoke up. “I forgot to ask: How come you drive an armored car?”
“It’s not an armored car,” Stone said. “It’s lightly armored. It will repel small-arms fire. I was car shopping, and it was in the showroom, and I thought, what the hell, why not?”
“Well,” the detective said, “it was a good idea, because if that had been regular glass between you and the shooter, it would be your brains spattered all over the Brooklyn Bridge instead of the two guys on the motorcycle.”
“You get an ID on them yet?” Dino asked.
“Nah. They weren’t carrying anything. Maybe their prints will ring the bell.”
“Don’t count on it,” Stone said to Dino. “The guy that Holly shot in the park still doesn’t have a name, does he?”
Dino shook his head. “He ain’t going to, either. C’mon, let’s get out of here.”
“I don’t have to talk to anybody else?”
“Nah, I had a chat with the watch commander. They’ll call you if there’s anything else they want to know.”
The two walked out of the precinct together, and Stone took another look at his car. “Follow me to the Mercedes garage?” he asked.
“Why not?” Dino replied. “It’s not like I have to work for a living.”
The car sat in the middle of the shop, surrounded by half a dozen Mercedes-Benz mechanics in blue coveralls.
“This is my first one of these,” the service manager said. “We’ve sold a few of these cars, but it’s the first time one of them ever came back with bullet holes in it.”
“How about the bumper?” Stone said.
“We’ll have one here tomorrow, but it’s got to be painted. The armored glass is going to take longer, maybe two or three weeks. It has to come from Germany, and there’s customs and all of that.”
“Put regular glass in it,” Stone said. “I’ll bring it back when the armored stuff comes in.”
“In that case, we’ll have it together by the end of the week,” the service manager said.
“Can we go now?” Dino asked.
Stone signed the service order and followed Dino back to his car.
“You thought about how you’re going to explain this to your insurance company?” Dino asked as they drove away.
“I don’t think I’ll mention it to them,” Stone said, “because I didn’t mention to them in the first place that the car was armored. I thought it might upset them.”
“Stone, maybe you ought to take Holly and get out of town for a while,” Dino said.
“That’s an attractive idea,” Stone replied, “and I’ll talk to Holly about it, but I don’t think she’s going to want to go. She’s mad now, and she’s going to get madder when I tell her what’s happened.”
“Better mad than dead,” Dino said. “Whoever’s doing this has wasted three men trying, and you may have pissed him off by now.”
“You think it’s Trini?” Stone asked.
“You got somebody else in mind?”
“Maybe,” Stone replied.
31
DINO SLOWED DOWN as he turned into Stone’s block, pointing ahead at a cluster of people outside Stone’s house. “You must be dead, because you’re attracting flies.”
Stone groaned. “Stop here.” Dino pulled over. Stone got out his cell phone and called his secretary.
“The Barrington Practice,” Joan Robertson said.
“Joan, it’s me.”
“Are you all right?”
“Yes, I’m right outside. I want you to go to the garage, count to five, and open the garage door. As soon as we’re inside, close it.”
“Okay. Bye.”
“Slowly,” Stone said. Dino edged his unmarked car up the block and, when he saw the garage door start to move, accelerated. He turned into the drive, crossed the sidewalk, and braked before he could run into the rear wall. The door closed behind them.
Stone had seen at least two television cameras in the mob. “Come on in, I’ll buy you a drink.”
“I can’t get out anyway, without running down a few members of the fourth estate.”
“What happened on the Brooklyn Bridge?” Joan asked. “It’s all over the TV.”
“Come on upstairs, so I won’t have to explain it more than once,” Stone said.
Holly and Ham met them at the top of the stairs. “You okay?” she asked.
“I’m fine, except I just killed two men.”
“That ain’t good,” Ham said.
Stone led them into his study and poured everyone but himself a drink, then he explained what had happened. “Holly, I think we’ve got to get out of town.” He held up a hand. “I know you don’t want to get any farther from Trini than you already have, but that crowd outside makes staying here impossible. We won’t be able to move without them tagging along.”
“Why don’t you go up to Connecticut?” Dino asked.
“Can’t do that. Some of the people who’ve been following us know about the house.”
“Yeah,” Holly said, “but they’re FBI. You think they’re trying to kill us?”
“I doubt it, but somebody on their team may be talking to somebody on Trini’s team, or we may be dealing with another team entirely.”
“And what team would that be?” Dino asked.
“I don’t know, and I don’t want to find out the hard way.”
“Then let’s go to Florida,” Holly said. “I have a perfectly good house, and if we get rumbled there, we can go to Ham’s place.”
“Sounds good to me,” Ham said. “You two can sleep in the hammock on the porch. Hasn’t been anybody there to feed the mosquitoes.”
“You make it sound irresistible, Ham,” Stone said. “How quickly can you two get packed?”
“Ten minutes,” Holly said.
“Dino, can you give us a ride to Teterboro?”
“Sure.”
Stone picked up a phone and called Atlantic Aviation. “Please top off my inboard and outboard caps,” he said. “Be there in half an hour.” He hung up, then dug out a chart, called Flight Services and got a weather report, then filed a flight plan. He went upstairs, threw some things into a couple of duffels, and came back down to find everybody waiting for him. “Okay,” he said, “let’s run the gauntlet.”
They trooped downstairs and got into Dino’s car while Joan stood by the garage door switch.
“I’ll be on my cell phone,” Stone said. “Hit it.”
Joan opened the door, and Dino started backing up. He switched on his flashing lights and hit the whooper for a minute, and the crowd scattered. As he pulled away from the house, reporters ran alongside the car, shouting questions, while photographers fired their strobes. They lucked their way through the traffic light at the corner and, with the help of the lights and whooper, were soon out of range.
At Teterboro, Dino faked his way through the security gate and pulled up to Stone’s airplane, which had been pulled up front. The fuel truck was finishing the top-off.
Stone stowed everybody’s luggage in the rear compartment, then did a preflight inspection of the airplane.
“Wish I was going with you,” Dino said. “I could use some sun.”
“I’ve got plenty of
room for you and your wife,” Holly said.
“I’ll ask her.” He shook Stone’s hand. “Call me in a couple of days, and I’ll let you know if things have cooled off.”
“Will do.”
“By the way, we were followed out here by a black Lincoln Town Car. I wasn’t sure until we made the last turn.”
Stone laughed. “Let them try to follow us now.” He got onto the airplane, showed Holly and Ham how the door worked, then settled in the pilot’s seat, with Holly beside him. “Everybody buckle up.” He worked his way through the checklist, got a clearance from the tower, and taxied to runway 24. He did a run-up, then called the tower and was cleared for takeoff. A moment later they were climbing through a thousand feet, with the setting sun to their right, bright orange through the New Jersey haze.
Stone climbed to flight level 250, switched on the CD player, and, having gone through his cruise checklist, relaxed. He noted that Holly and Ham were both already dozing.
With the autopilot flying the airplane, Stone began to think back over the events of the day, but the scene that kept flashing through his mind was the memory of the motorcycle propelled across the meridian of the Brooklyn Bridge into the path of the cement truck. He tried not to think of the aftermath.
Finally, he checked the airplane’s Garmin AirCell phone to be sure he had a signal, then he called a New York cell phone number, pressing a button on the audio panel to isolate his headset from those of Holly and Ham.
“Yes?” a familiar voice said.
“Lance, it’s Stone.”
“Nice to hear from you,” Lance said smoothly. “I’ve been hearing about you on the news. Are you okay?”
“Just fine, thanks.”
“What’s that noise in the background?” Lance asked.
“Just road noise,” Stone replied. “I’m in the car.”
“Where you headed?”
“Out of town.”
“Where?”
“If I wanted to get Holly and myself killed, I’d tell you.”
There was a long silence before Lance spoke again. “That’s an odd thing to say,” he said finally.
“I suppose it is,” Stone replied, “but you’re the only person in all this who has the resources to make what’s been happening happen.”
Another long silence. “That’s not an outrageous conclusion to come to, but why do you think I would want you dead?”
“I’m still thinking about that,” Stone said. He pressed the end button on the phone and put it back into its cradle. It was dark now, and the lights of the cities and towns of the Atlantic seaboard stretched out before them. He was glad to be leaving them behind.
32
STONE WOKE, DISORIENTED, with the sun streaming through the windows. He was alone in bed, and he couldn’t hear anyone downstairs.
He found a robe in a closet, put his cell phone in a pocket, and walked downstairs. Nice place, he thought, looking around the living room and the kitchen. He opened the sliding glass doors and stepped outside. Dunes stretched away to his left and right, and the Atlantic Ocean was only yards away. The air was warm and soft, and the small surf made a pleasant noise.
He looked up and down the beach and found himself alone, so he shucked off the robe and ran naked into the sea, running as far as he could, then diving in and swimming away from the shore. Fifty yards out, he turned and swam back in, found his robe, and went back into the house. He found juice, cereal, and milk in the kitchen and made himself some breakfast. He was having coffee when the telephone rang. He let the machine get it.
“Stone, it’s Holly,” she said. “If you’re awake, pick up.”
Stone picked up the phone on the kitchen counter. “Hi.”
“What time did you get up?”
“Just a few minutes ago. I had a swim and some breakfast.”
“Great. Make yourself at home. Daisy and I are at work, and I’ve got a lot of mail to clear up. Did you bring a gun with you?”
“Yep, I brought the Walther.”
“Good. I don’t like to think of you being unarmed, what with all that’s happened.”
“Neither do I. Can I carry in this state?”
“Not with the word ‘retired’ on your police ID. When you get dressed, come to the station and ask for my secretary. She’ll fix you up with something.” She gave him directions. “Use my car. The keys are in a bowl on the kitchen counter.”
“Sounds good.”
“I won’t be here when you come, and I won’t be home until around seven. Can you amuse yourself?”
“I’ll try.”
“See you then.” She hung up.
Stone took a shower and dressed in light clothes, then drove into town and, following Holly’s directions, found the station and asked for her secretary.
A middle-aged woman came to the front desk to get him. “Morning, Mr. Barrington. Would you come this way, please? We’re all ready for you.”
He followed her through the squad room to the rear of the building, where she stood him before a wall and took a photograph of him with a Polaroid passport camera.
She handed him a form and a pen. “Please sign at the bottom.”
Stone signed. She went away and came back with a laminated ID card and a badge in their own wallet.
“Congratulations, you are now a consultant lieutenant with the Orchid Beach Police Department, without pay.”
“Thank you.”
He went back to the car, opened the glove compartment, and took out the Walther in a Galco Executive shoulder holster. He got into the light harness and put his windbreaker on over it. “Now I’m armed and dangerous,” he said aloud to himself.
That evening Stone, Holly, Ham, and his girlfriend, Ginny, a lovely redhead, were at a table at the Ocean Grill, in nearby Vero Beach, sipping vodka gimlets.
“Stone,” Holly said, “do you think Lance could have had anything to do with the people who’ve been trying to kill you and me?”
“It crossed my mind,” Stone said. “Certainly, he has the resources to do it.”
“I can’t think of a motive, can you?”
“Not so far. I can’t think of anything we know that we shouldn’t know. I think it’s a better guess that somebody in the FBI is talking to Trini about us, but I can’t see the FBI sanctioning the killing of two citizens. The whole thing is baffling.”
Ham spoke up. “I think it’s Trini, one way or another, and I don’t think he needs the FBI to help him. From what Holly has told me, he could have followed her to your house, so he would know about you. And just because the Feds are following you, that doesn’t mean that Trini’s people can’t follow you, as well. Lance doesn’t have any reason to kill two people who are supposed to be working for him.”
“Apart from that,” Holly said, “Lance just doesn’t strike me as the killer type.”
“There are all sorts of killer types,” Stone said.
“Too true,” Ham echoed.
Their dinner arrived and they turned the conversation to other things.
They had just arrived back at Holly’s house when Stone’s cell phone vibrated in his pocket. “Hello?”
“Stone, it’s Lance.”
“Good evening.”
“Our last conversation set me to thinking. I ordered a DNA check of our three anonymous assassins, and I just got a call from my people with the results.”
“You have a database to check the results against?”
“Yes, but they’re not in our database, or the FBI’s.”
“So the tests were useless?”
“As far as identification goes, yes; but the tests turned up some other useful information.”
“What kind of information?”
“It was possible to conclude that all three men were Arab—very likely Lebanese or Syrian.”
“You can tell that from DNA?”
“Yes. Also, they were related—not brothers, but certainly cousins.”
Stone looked at Holly. “So you’
re saying that the people who are trying to kill Holly and me are a family of Lebanese or Syrian assassins?”
“You make it sound like something out of The Arabian Nights. More likely, the three cousins are members of the same terrorist cell, that’s all.”
“What do you mean, that’s all? That’s more than enough. Why would a terrorist cell have an interest in Holly and me?”
“I think it’s fairly obvious,” Lance said.
“Well, you’re going to have to make it even more obvious if I’m going to get it.”
“Think about it: Trini Rodriguez is dealing with an Arab group on this money-laundering thing, right?”
“Right.”
“So he tells his contacts that you and Holly are a threat to their transaction.”
“Okay, now it’s obvious.”
“What is also obvious is that by killing three of them, you’ve probably annoyed the other members of the group, so I think you and Holly should stay in Orchid Beach until the FBI has thrown a net over these people.”
“Wait a minute. Why do you think we’re in Orchid Beach?”
“Because you filed a flight plan for Vero Beach, which is the airport serving Holly’s hometown.”
“You figured that out, huh?”
“Yes, but I doubt if your Lebanese friends did. Anyway, I thought you’d like to know that I’m not trying to kill you.”
“And do I know that? You could be making all this up.”
“Stone, use your head. The reason you should know I’m not trying to kill you is that you’re still alive.” He hung up.
Stone turned to Holly. “You’d better sit down,” he said.
33
HOLLY LISTENED TO Stone’s report of his conversation with Lance. When he had finished she shook her head. “I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.”
“Neither do I.”
“I mean, the part about the Arab assassins would be funny if you and I hadn’t already killed three of them. I wouldn’t believe it, otherwise.”
“Neither would I.”
“And he said they wouldn’t know we’re in Orchid Beach?”
“He said that he figured it out, but they wouldn’t.”