Book Read Free

Primary Threat

Page 3

by Jack Mars


  Outside of the gates to this warehouse was a slum. It was a concrete wasteland, dismal shops all crammed together, liquor stores, check cashing, and payday loan places. Crowds of women carrying plastic bags waited at bus kiosks in the daytime, drunken men on street corners held beer cans and cheap wine in brown paper bags all day and into the night.

  Right now, Murphy could hear the sounds of the neighborhood: passing cars, music, shouts and laughter. But it was getting late, and things were beginning to quiet down. Even this neighborhood eventually went to sleep.

  So yes, in the near term, Murphy had time. But in the larger sense, time was not his friend. He was a former Delta Force operator and a probationary employee of the FBI Special Response Team. He had performed well so far, including what was considered a brilliant performance in a smoking hot gunfight up in Montreal during his very first assignment.

  What no one understood was how brilliant that performance really was. He had played both sides, and before the battle, convinced former CIA operative Wallace Speck, the so-called “Dark Lord” himself, to wire two and a half millions dollars to Murphy’s anonymous account on Grand Cayman.

  Now Speck was in federal prison and facing the death penalty. That left a question looming large in Murphy’s life: Was Speck talking to his captors? And if so, what was he saying?

  Did Speck even know who Kevin Murphy was?

  “Don’t kill me,” the man in the chair said.

  Murphy smiled. Nearby to the man was another chair. Murphy’s sports jacket was draped over it. Underneath the jacket were his holster and his gun. In the pocket of his pants was the large sound suppressor that fit the gun like a hand fits a glove.

  Made for each other. How did that old TV ad go? Perfect together.

  “Kill you? Why would I do that?”

  The man shook his head and began to cry. His big upper body heaved with sobs. “Because that’s what you do.”

  Murphy nodded. True enough.

  He stared at the man. Sniveling bastard. He hated guys like this. Vermin. The guy was a cold-hearted murderer. A bully. A wannabe tough guy. A man with the words BANG and POW! tattooed across his knuckles.

  This was the type of guy who killed helpless innocent people—partly because that’s what he was paid to do, but also partly because it was easy, and because he liked doing it. Then, when he ran across someone like Murphy, he fell all to pieces and started to beg. Murphy himself had certainly killed a lot of people, but as far as he knew, he had never once killed a noncombatant or an innocent party. Murphy specialized in killing men who were hard to kill.

  But this guy?

  Murphy sighed. He had no doubt he could make this guy crawl across the floor like a worm, if he wanted.

  He shook his head. It didn’t interest him. All he really wanted was information.

  “Some weeks ago, right around the time our dear departed President first disappeared, you killed a young woman named Nisa Kuar Brar. Don’t deny it. You also killed her two children, a four-year-old girl and a babe in arms. The four-year-old was wearing Barney the Purple Dinosaur pajamas at the time. Yeah, I saw pictures of the crime scene. These people you killed were the wife and daughters of a cab driver named Jahjeet Singh Brar. The whole family were Sikhs, from the Punjab region of India. You bluffed your way into their apartment in Columbia Heights by claiming you were a DC Metro cop named Michael Dell. That’s pretty funny. Michael Dell. Did you think that was funny?”

  The man shook his head. “No. Absolutely not. None of that’s true. Whoever told you all that was a liar. They lied to you.”

  Murphy’s smile broadened. He shrugged. He almost laughed.

  This guy…

  “Your accomplice told me. A guy who was calling himself Roger Stevens, but whose real name was Delroy Rose.” Murphy paused and took another deep breath. Sometimes he got worked up in situations like this. It was important he stay calm. This meeting was about information, and nothing else.

  “Any of this starting to ring a bell with you now?”

  The man’s shoulders slumped. He sobbed quietly, his body shaking.

  “No. I don’t know who that…”

  “Shut up and listen to me,” Murphy said. “Okay?”

  He didn’t touch the man or move closer to him, but the man nodded and didn’t say another word.

  “Now… I already interviewed Delroy at length. He was helpful, but only up to a point. Things got a little messy, so at the end of the day, I’m willing to believe he told me everything he knew. I mean, who would go through all that suffering just to… what? Protect you? Protect someone else like you? No. I think he probably gave me everything he had. But it wasn’t enough.”

  “Please,” the man said. “I’ll tell you everything I know.”

  “Yes, you will,” Murphy said. “And hopefully without a lot of foolishness.”

  The man shook his head, emphatically, energetically. For a moment, he was like a mechanical doll, one that you wind up and its head shakes until the key in the back winds down again.

  “No. No foolishness.”

  “Good,” Murphy said. He walked to the man and lifted the bloody rag from his eyes. The man’s eyes gaped and rolled in their sockets, then settled on Murphy.

  “You can see me, right?”

  The man nodded, very helpful. “Yes.”

  “Do you know who I am?” Murphy said. “Yes or no. Don’t lie.”

  The man nodded again. “Yes.”

  “What do you know about me?”

  “You’re some kind of Special Forces dude. CIA. Navy SEAL. Black ops. Something like that.”

  “Do you know my name?”

  The man stared straight at him. “No.”

  Murphy wasn’t sure he believed him. He threw out a softball to test the guy.

  “Did you kill Nisa Kuar Brar and her two children? There’s no sense lying now. You’ve seen me. All the cards are on the table.”

  “I killed the woman,” the man said without hesitating. “The other guy killed the kids. I had nothing to do with that.”

  “How did you do the woman?”

  “I pulled her into the bedroom and strangled her with a length of computer cable. Ethernet Cat 5. It’s strong, but not sharp. It does the job without a lot of blood.”

  Murphy nodded. That was exactly how it was done. No one without inside information about the crime scene would know that. This guy was the killer. Murphy had his man.

  “What about Wallace Speck?”

  The man shrugged. “What about him?”

  Now Murphy’s shoulders slumped.

  “What do you think we’re doing here, you moron?” he said. His voice echoed through the darkness. “You think I’m out here in this concrete shoebox with you, in the middle of the night, for my health? I don’t like you that much. Did Speck hire you to kill that woman?”

  “Yes.”

  “And what does Speck know about me?”

  The man shook his head. “I don’t know.”

  Murphy’s fist pistoned out and connected with the man’s face. He felt the bone across the bridge of the man’s nose break. The man’s head snapped back. Two seconds later, blood began to flow from one nostril, down the man’s face and across his chin.

  Murphy took a step back. He didn’t want to get any blood on his shoes.

  “Try again.”

  “Speck said there was a black ops guy, special ops. He had an inside track on the whereabouts of the President’s Chief of Staff. Lawrence Keller. The special ops guy was going up to Montreal, he was part of the team that was supposed to rescue Keller. Maybe he was the driver. He wanted money. After that…”

  The man shook his head.

  “You think I’m that guy?” Murphy said.

  The guy nodded, abject, in despair.

  “Why do you think that?”

  The man said something in a quiet voice.

  “What? I didn’t hear you.”

  “I was there,” the man said.

  “
In Montreal?”

  “Yes.”

  Murphy shook his head. He smiled. He laughed this time, just a bit.

  “Oh, buddy.”

  The guy nodded.

  “What did you do, ditch when it got hot?”

  “I saw where it was going.”

  “And you saw me.”

  It wasn’t a question, but the guy answered it anyway.

  “Yeah.”

  “Did you tell Speck what I looked like?”

  The guy shrugged. He was staring at the concrete floor.

  “Talk!” Murphy said. “I don’t have all night.”

  “I never spoke to him after that. He was in jail before the sun came up.”

  “Look at me,” Murphy said.

  The guy looked up.

  “Tell me again, but don’t look away this time.”

  The man looked directly into Murphy’s eyes. “I haven’t talked to Speck. I don’t know where they’re holding him. I don’t know if he’s talking or not. I have no idea if he knows who you are, but if he does, he obviously hasn’t given you up yet.”

  “Why didn’t you run?” Murphy said.

  It wasn’t an idle question. Murphy was facing the same choice himself. He could disappear. Now, tonight. Or tomorrow morning. Sometime soon. He had two and a half million dollars in cash. That would last a man like him a long time, and with his… unique skills… he could top it up once in a while.

  But he would spend the rest of his life looking over his shoulder. And if he ran, one person who might creep up behind him was Luke Stone. That wasn’t a pleasant thought.

  The guy shrugged again. “I like it here. I like my life. I have a little son that I see sometimes.”

  Murphy didn’t like that, the way the guy slipped his son into the conversation. This cold-blooded killer, a man who had just admitted to murdering a young mother, and who was an accessory to the murder of two small children and only God knew what else, was trying to play the sympathy card.

  Murphy went to the chair and pulled his gun out of the holster. He screwed the sound suppressor onto the barrel of the gun. It was a good one. This wasn’t going to make a lot of noise. Murphy often thought it sounded like an office stapler punching through stacks of paper. Clack, clack, clack.

  “You have no reason to kill me,” the man said from behind him. “I haven’t told anybody anything. I’m not going to talk to anybody.”

  Murphy hadn’t turned around yet. “You ever hear of tying up loose ends? I mean, you do work in this business, don’t you? Speck might know who I am, he might not. But you definitely do.”

  “You know how many secrets I’m sitting on?” the guy said. “If I ever got taken in, believe me, you would be the least of what interests them. I don’t even know who you are. I don’t know your name. I saw a guy that night. Dark hair, maybe. Short. Five foot nine. Could have been anybody.”

  Murphy turned and faced him now. The man was sweating, the perspiration popping out on his face. It wasn’t that hot in here.

  Murphy took the gun and pointed it at the center of the man’s forehead. No hesitation. No sound. He didn’t say a word. Every line was etched clean, and the man seemed to be bathed in a circle of bright white light.

  The guy was talking fast now. “Look, don’t do it,” he said. “I have cash. A lot of cash. I’m the only one who knows where it is.”

  Murphy nodded. “Yeah, me too.”

  He pulled the trigger and…

  CLACK.

  It was a little louder than normal. He hadn’t figured on the echo in the big empty space. He shrugged. Didn’t matter.

  He left without looking twice at the mess on the floor.

  Ten minutes later, he was in his car, driving on the Beltway. His cell phone rang. The number was blocked. It didn’t mean anything. It could be good, it could be bad. He picked it up.

  “Yes?”

  A female voice: “Murph?”

  Murphy smiled. He recognized the voice instantly.

  “Trudy Wellington,” he said. “What a lovely time of night to hear from you. If you tell me where you’re calling from, I’ll be right over.”

  She almost laughed. He heard it in her voice. Get them laughing. That was the way into their heart, and into their bedroom.

  “Ah… Yeah. Get your mind out of the gutter, Murph. I’m calling from the SRT offices. There’s a crisis and we’ve been pulled in. Don wants a bunch of people in here now, as fast as possible. You’re one of them.”

  CHAPTER FOUR

  10:20 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time

  Fairfax County, Virginia

  Suburbs of Washington, DC

  “What do you think, baby?”

  Luke Stone whispered the words. Probably no one could hear them but him.

  He sat on the long white sofa in his new living room, holding his four-month-old baby boy, Gunner, in his lap. Gunner was a big, heavy baby. He wore a diaper and a blue T-shirt that said World’s Best Baby.

  He had drifted off to sleep in Luke’s arms some time ago. His little tummy rose up and down, and he snored softly as he slept. Were babies supposed to snore? Luke didn’t know, but somehow the sound was comforting. More, it was beautiful.

  Now Luke just held Gunner in the semi-darkness and gazed around the room, trying to make sense of the house.

  The place was a gift from Becca’s parents, Audrey and Lance. That, all by itself, was hard to swallow. He could never afford this place on his government salary, which was a big upgrade from what he’d been making in the Army. Becca wasn’t working at all. The two of them together, even if Becca had been working, couldn’t afford this house. And that finally brought home to Luke just how much money Becca’s family really had.

  He had known they were rich. But Luke had grown up without money. He didn’t know what rich was. He and Becca had been living at her family’s cabin, which fronted Chesapeake Bay on the Eastern Shore. To Luke, that one-hundred-year-old cabin, even though it was an hour-and-a-half commute from his job, had been a spectacular living arrangement. Luke was accustomed to sleeping on the hard ground, or not sleeping at all.

  But this place?

  He glanced around the house. It was a modern home, with floor to ceiling windows, like something out of an architectural magazine. It was like a glass box. When winter came, when it snowed, he could picture how it might be like one of those old snow globes people used to have when he was a kid. He pictured this coming Christmastime—just sitting in this stunning sunken living room, the tree in the corner, the fireplace lit, the snow coming down all around.

  And that was just the living room. Never mind the oversized country kitchen with the island in the middle and the giant double-door refrigerator, freezer on the bottom. Never mind the master bed and master bath. Never mind the rest of the place. And never mind that this house was about a twelve-minute drive from the office.

  From Luke’s spot on the sofa, he could see out the big south- and west-facing windows. The house sat up on a little rolling hillock of grass. The height extended his vantage point. The house was in a quiet neighborhood of other large houses, set back from the street. There was no parking on the street. In this neighborhood, people parked in their own driveways or garages.

  They hadn’t met many of their neighbors yet, but Luke imagined they were lawyers, maybe doctors, maybe people with high-level jobs at corporations. He had mixed feelings about it. Not the people, but the place.

  For one, he didn’t trust Audrey and Lance.

  Becca’s parents had never liked him. They had always made this clear. Even after Gunner was born, they were grudging at best about letting him and Becca use the cabin. Audrey especially was a master at the snide comment and the undermining maneuver.

  He pictured her in his mind—there was something about her that reminded him of a crow. She had deep-set eyes with irises so dark, they seemed almost black. She had a sharp nose, like a beak. She had tiny bones and a thin frame. And she tended to hover nearby, like a harbinger of bad t
idings.

  But then the Special Response Team had taken on a couple of high-profile operations, and Audrey and Lance had met the legendary Don Morris, pioneer of special operations and the director of the SRT.

  Suddenly, they felt that he and Becca needed a better house, and one closer to his work. And just like that, here they were.

  He shook his head at the speed of it. He had been known in his career for his sudden reflexes and his fast response time, but this house purchase had happened so fast it nearly made his head spin off his neck.

  Two people who had disliked him intensely for years had now just presented him with the greatest gift anyone had ever given him.

  He stopped and listened to the quiet. He took a deep breath, almost in tandem with his young son. No. That was wrong. This little boy was the greatest gift he had ever been given. The house was nothing compared to this.

  On the table in front of him, his telephone lit up. He stared at it, the blue light throwing crazy shadows in the semi-darkness. The phone was silent because the ringer was off. He hadn’t wanted to disturb the baby, or the baby’s mama, who was getting some well-deserved and much needed sleep in the bedroom.

  He glanced at the time—after ten o’clock. That could only mean a small handful of things. Either an old military buddy was drunk dialing, it was a wrong number, or… He let the phone go until it stopped and went dark.

  A moment later, it started up again.

  He sighed and glanced at the number. Of course it was work.

  He picked up the phone.

  “H’lo?”

  He said it in the quietest, I’m asleep why are you bothering me voice he could muster.

  A female voice spoke. Trudy Wellington. He pictured her—young, beautiful, smart, with brown hair cascading over her shoulders.

  “Luke?”

  “Yes.”

  She was all business. The thing that had almost happened between them, and which they never talked about, seemed to be dwindling in her rearview mirror. That was probably for the best.

  “Luke, we have a crisis. Don is rounding up the usual suspects. I’m already here. Swann, Murphy, and Ed Newsam are on their way.”

 

‹ Prev