Safe and Sound

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Safe and Sound Page 2

by J. D. Rhoades


  “Sorry,” Keller said. “If you don’t want to…”

  “No, no,” she said. “That’s not what I meant.” She looked down at her hands. “You mind if I take these off?” she said. “I’m roasting.”

  “You know you don’t have to ask me,” Keller said softly.

  She looked up and smiled. “Yeah,” she said. “Well, I’m still working out exactly where we stand, now that…”

  “Now that you’re with someone else,” he said. “Well, we’re still friends,” Keller said. “I hope.”

  “Yeah,” she said. “We still are.” She began pulling the gloves off as she spoke, exposing the web of burn scars that covered the backs of her hands. “Anyway. He’s been talking about it off and on. He misses his boys and he worries about them. But a couple of weeks ago there was a news story on that Spanish-language station he listens to. A young boy got kidnapped in Bogotá.”

  “It’s not like that’s anything new in Colombia,” Keller observed.

  “Yeah, but this one really got to him. See, he’d always sort of assumed that it was just the kids of rich people who got snatched and held for ransom. But these kidnappers made a mistake. They got the wrong target. Instead of the rich kid they thought they were getting they got the maid’s son.” She shuddered. “When they discovered their mistake, they slit the boy’s throat.”

  Keller’s face darkened. “So it hit him. Anyone’s vulnerable.”

  She nodded. “It’s making him crazy. So…” She fell silent.

  “So you can’t say anything about the way you feel,”

  Keller said. “If you put up any resistance at all…”

  She finished the sentence for him. “If I put up any resistance at all, I feel like a complete selfish bitch.”

  “Well, you’re not,” Keller said.

  “Aren’t I?” she said, her voice bitter. “They’re his sons, Jack. He’s got every right to want to see them grow up. To see them grow up safe. And I’m supposed to stand in the way of that because I’m worried that I won’t be able to hack it? That I’ll be a lousy stepmother to them? Or that I just won’t be able to stand having teenage boys around my apartment?” There was another silence before she spoke again. “You know the last thing my husband said to me before he shot himself?” She paused, took a deep breath. “I was lying there on the rug, both legs broken, the house beginning to burn down around me. He dropped that fucking baseball bat he’d just beaten me bloody with and pulled out his gun. I thought he was going to shoot me. I was praying he’d shoot me so I wouldn’t have to burn to death. Instead, he looked at me and said, ‘None of this would have happened if you’d just agreed to have kids.’ ” She slammed her hand down on the counter. It made a sound like a gunshot in the silence. “Like I was going to bring a child into a house with that psychopath. I couldn’t protect myself. How was I going to protect—” She stopped, drew a deep shuddering breath as she got herself under control.

  Keller got out of his chair. He knelt by hers and took her scarred hand in his. “You need to tell him this, Angela,” he said softly. “He needs to know how you feel. Because it’ll come out. Somehow. No one knows that better than me.”

  She smiled down at him, ran her free hand through Keller’s hair before putting it on top of his hand. “Ahhh, Keller,” she said. “Why did I let you get away?” She let go and waved off the response. “Don’t answer that. I know why.” She smiled sadly. “And now it’s too late. We’ve got other people in our lives.” She glanced up at the clock on the wall. “And speaking of late,” she said, “you’d better get a move on if you’re going to make it to Fayetteville in time to see Marie.”

  He stood up slowly. “Yeah,” he said. “But remember what I said.”

  “I will,” she said. “I’ll talk to him.” She stood up. “Things easier between you two now?”

  “A little,” Keller said. He didn’t elaborate.

  “How’s her new business going?” she said.

  “Picking up,” Keller replied. “She said she needed my help on something. I’ll call if I’m going to be gone long.”

  “No worries,” Angela said. “Most of our clients have been pretty well behaved lately. Maybe it’s your reputation, since you’ve been on TV and all.”

  He made a face. “Great. Thanks to TV, I have a reputation as a total wacko.”

  She laughed. “Yeah, but damn few people want a total wacko like you coming after them. Hey, you use what you’ve got.” She gave Keller a kiss on the cheek. “Say hey to Marie for me.”

  CHAPTER TWO

  Keller pulled the Crown Victoria into one of the angled parking spaces along Hay Street. The broad sidewalks near the Cumberland County Courthouse were lined with older buildings. The Hay Street area had been populated with strip clubs and streetwalkers catering to horny soldiers far from home for the first time until a city cleanup program in the 1980s closed the venerable fleshpots like Rick’s Lounge and the Seven Dwarfs. But that didn’t eradicate vice in Fayetteville so much as relocate it. The strip joints had moved out to Bragg Boulevard and turned into upscale “gentleman’s clubs.” The hookers had moved indoors and into the Yellow Pages, where they euphemistically called themselves escorts. Now Hay Street was more friendly to “legitimate” business, but those businesses seemed slow to get the word. Some of the storefronts were deserted, but various civic organizations had brightened them up with brightly colored designs painted on the empty windows. Other storefronts held small law offices, clothing stores offering “urban wear,” and a pair of hair and nail salons.

  Keller got out of the car. He stopped in front of another storefront. The lettering on this front window read JONES INVESTIGATONS. A bell attached to the door rang as Keller entered.

  There was a pressed-wood reception desk with a phone and a computer in the front office. Keller had helped assemble the desk when Marie opened the office. It was empty; so far, there was no money to pay anyone to man it. He and Marie had also spent a weekend constructing the thin wall that separated the single office from the reception area. Behind the desk, the door was open. Keller could hear voices coming from inside.

  Marie was seated behind another cheap desk. The wall behind her was sparsely decorated: her newly framed PI license, a couple of pictures of her in her police uniform, and a picture of her with her father that Keller remembered last seeing at her house. A picture of Marie’s son, Ben, smiled at her from a frame on the desk.

  The woman seated across from Marie stood up and extended a hand to Keller. She was tall and broad-shouldered. She looked to be in her early forties, but there was a single broad streak of pure white in her wavy dark brown hair. “Tamara Healy,” she said. Her voice was a contralto roughened by tobacco and whiskey. “I’m with Black, Diamond, and Healy.”

  Keller took the hand. Her handshake was firm, like a man’s: straight up and down, one pump, two pumps, release. She sat back down. Keller took the other chair.

  “You’re a lawyer,” he said.

  She gave a short laugh. “I thought Miss Jones was the detective,” she said.

  Keller began to feel a vague sense of unease. He looked at Marie and cocked an eyebrow.

  “Ms. Healy…” Marie began.

  “Tammy,” the woman broke in.

  Marie forced a smile. “Tammy has a client who’s involved in a custody dispute.”

  Keller tried not to grimace. He knew Marie hated domestic cases. He didn’t blame her. They usually involved surveillance of husbands or wives suspected of fooling around. The suspicions proved true with depressing regularity.

  “I’ll wait in the lobby,” Keller said.

  “Pull the door shut as you leave, will you?” Marie said.

  Keller did so. He took a seat at the empty reception desk. He looked around for something to read. There was nothing. Then Keller realized that he could hear the conversation on the other side of the cheap paneling almost as clearly as if he were in the same room.

  “Problem is,” Healy was saying,
“Dad’s run off with the kid.”

  Keller grimaced. He didn’t really want to hear this. He got up and went to the window. No good. He could still hear the voices.

  “Did you call the police?” Marie was saying.

  “No,” Healy said. “Dad made his move before there was a custody order. With no court order, either parent has a right to the kid. No court order, no crime.”

  “So get a court order.”

  “We got one. But we can’t get it served. We’re not really sure where Dad is, either.”

  “I can run a skip trace on him,” Marie said.

  “Well, that’s where it gets a little complicated,” Healy said. “This guy isn’t your standard anything, Ms. Jones. He’s in the military, for one thing.”

  “I can contact his unit…or is he AWOL?”

  “No,” Healy said, “he’s not AWOL. At least as far as we know. But the Army won’t tell us anything. They act like he doesn’t exist.”

  That got Keller’s attention. His pacing had brought him back to the office door. He knocked, then entered.

  Marie looked up at him. “We should have sprung for the thicker paneling,”

  Keller said. “I can hear every word you’re saying in here.”

  Healy gave a sharp laugh. “Well, you might as well sit in, then.” A flash of annoyance crossed Marie’s face and Keller took the other client chair.

  “So you know this guy’s military,” Keller said, “but no one will tell you anything about him. That can only mean one thing. He’s Special Ops, isn’t he?”

  Healy nodded. “Delta.”

  “Well, that’s it, then,” Keller said. “You won’t find him. It’s like pulling teeth to even get the Army to acknowledge there is such a thing as Delta, let alone tell you where any of their people are.”

  “That’s where I was hoping Ms. Jones could help,”

  Healy said. “And maybe you could as well. Scott McCaskill tells me you’re pretty good at finding people.”

  Keller shook his head. “I bring in bail jumpers,” he said, “not commandos.”

  “You’ve been in the military,” Healy said. “You speak the language. You know your way around.”

  Keller snorted. “Scott obviously hasn’t told you everything,” he said. “I didn’t exactly leave the Army on the best of terms.”

  “So you don’t want to help?” Healy said.

  Keller looked at Marie. She refused to meet his eyes. The words he was about to say died in his throat. He had promised to be there for her. He had promised not to let his own demons drive them apart. He turned to Healy.

  “Okay,” he said. “I’ll see what I can do.”

  “Good.” Healy stood up and handed a file across the desk to Marie. “I’ll tell the client to call you,” she said.

  She held out her hand. Keller stood up and took it. “Nice meeting you, Mr. Keller,” she said. She closed the door as she walked out.

  Keller turned to Marie. “I can try calling—”

  “Jack,” she interrupted, “what the hell are you doing?” Her voice was low and furious.

  “Whoa,” Keller said. He held up his hands in a warding gesture. “If you don’t want my help, just say so.”

  “Why are you doing this?” she demanded. “You don’t think I can handle it on my own?”

  “I know you can,” Keller said. “It was Healy who brought it up. And she played me pretty well to get me to agree.”

  “She’s a lawyer,” Marie said absently. “It’s what they do.” She rubbed her hands over her face and sighed. “Okay,” she said. “I’m sorry. I’m just a little…I don’t know, I’m trying to figure out where we are right now.”

  “You’re not the only one,” Keller said.

  She laughed.

  “So you’re taking this one?” Keller said.

  Marie spread her hands. “What am I supposed to do?” she said. “I’m trying to get a business off the ground, Jack,” she said. “I’ve got a kid of my own to feed and an ex who’s three months behind on his child support. I can’t turn down work.”

  “Okay,” he said, “I’ll lend a hand.”

  She stood up, slowly, grimacing slightly. She had been shot in the abdomen by the last person she had tried to apprehend, and the wound still pained her. She limped slightly as she came around the desk. “Thanks, Jack,” she murmured as she came into his arms. She nestled the top of her head beneath his chin. “I don’t have any more appointments today,” she said softly, “and Ben’s at day care till five. No one’s at the house.”

  “And that means?” Keller said.

  She poked him hard in the ribs and laughed. “You know damn well what it means, Jack Keller.”

  “I’ll drive,” he said.

  She laughed and gave him a squeeze. Then her face turned serious again. “Did you think it was going to be this hard?” she said.

  “What?”

  “Being together. You and me.”

  He tucked her head back under his chin and stroked her light brown hair. “I didn’t think at all about it,” he said. “It just kind of happened.”

  Her voice against his chest was muffled, but he could still hear the tension in it. “So is it worth it?”

  He kissed the top of her head. “Yeah.”

  ***

  DeGroot was frustrated. He sat down in a wooden chair in front of his subject and took off his surgical mask and goggles. The subject was presumably HIV negative, but one never knew. He wiped a spatter of blood from the goggles with a towel.

  He realized now that he had made a mistake. He had tried to rush things, instead of going by the book. He should have known better. Through a dozen wars, across Africa and Asia, he had perfected the craft of extracting information. Physical interrogation should start with small indignities: a cuff, a slap, denial of food or sleep. Then the pressure should be ratcheted up in small increments, between periods where the subject is left alone to consider the next level, his imagination becoming the interrogator’s ally as he worries and wonders how bad it could get. The extreme methods should be saved for the last resort. But DeGroot had let the time pressure get to him. He wondered briefly if his earlier speech to the subject had been a bit of denial on his part, wondered if he was becoming one of those people who enjoyed inflicting pain.

  “Maybe I’m gettin’ bossies in my old age,” he said out loud to the subject in the chair. The word was slang for bosbevok—“bush crazy.” “Maybe it’s time to retire, eh, boet?” The man didn’t answer. His head still hung forward slackly so that DeGroot couldn’t see his face. A drop of blood fell from his face to join the pool on the chair between his legs.

  DeGroot picked up the galvanized steel bucket beside his own chair. It was empty. He sighed. Besides the dodgy electrical wiring, the running water in the safe house was a meager trickle of rust-stained water from the faucets.

  He would have to revive the subject with water from the ancient pump outside. As he stood up, his cell phone rang. He muttered under his breath and answered it. “Go,” was all he said.

  The voice on the other end was agitated. “We still haven’t found Dave,” he said.

  The Afrikaner looked at the man in the chair. “Keep looking,” he said. He turned away. “Do you have his key?”

  The brief pause was all the answer he needed. DeGroot cursed under his breath. “No,” the voice said. “We figured he had it with him.”

  “BOBBYYYYY!” the man in the chair bellowed. “MIIIIIIKE! HELP MEEEEEE!”

  DeGroot looked up in shock. The subject was awake, struggling against his bonds and yelling at the top of his lungs.

  DeGroot heard a confused “Dave? Was that Dave?” before he swore and snapped the phone shut. He advanced on the man in the chair, his arm poised for a backhand blow. He stopped short. Lundgren was smiling at him through his mouthful of broken teeth. His one remaining eye glittered with triumph. “Psych,” he whispered. “Psyched you out, you fucker.”

  “Clever boet,” the Afrik
aner said. He knew the school-boy taunt was designed to make him lose his temper. It worked. He drew his gun and shot Lundgren in the head.

  CHAPTER THREE

  Carly Fedder was not taking the disappearance of her daughter well. Her eyes were red from crying, and her hands shook as she lit a cigarette. It was the third one Marie had seen her light since she and Keller had arrived.

  They were seated in the living room of her two-bedroom apartment. Carly Fedder lived in one of the cookie-cutter apartment complexes that were expanding outward into the rural areas surrounding the growing city of Fayetteville.

  “The son of a bitch,” she said. She took a deep, angry drag on the cigarette. She was slim, blond, and blue-eyed. She looked like a high school cheerleader who had managed to keep her figure, but fatigue had worn furrows in the corners of her mouth and eyes.

  “Mrs. Fedder—” Marie began.

  “It’s Ms.,” the woman interrupted. “We were never married.” She took another drag.

  Marie tried to ignore the anger that hung in the air like the smoke from the cigarette. “How do you know David Lundgren took your daughter?”

  She looked at Marie as if the question was idiotic. “Because he told me he was going to take her. He said he wasn’t going to wait for the courts.”

  “What did he mean by that?” Marie asked.

  Carly didn’t answer. Instead she looked at Keller and said, “What’s he doing here?”

  Keller stared back. He kept all expression from his face. He decided to let Marie answer.

  “Mr. Keller is a friend of mine,” Marie said. “He’s helping me. He has some…military experience.”

  “Great,” Carly snapped. “One of them.” She turned to Marie as if Keller had ceased to exist. “What if I don’t want him along?”

  “Suits the shit out of me,” Keller said as he stood up. “I only came along as a favor to Ms. Jones.”

  Carly’s laugh was nasty. She addressed Marie again. “Oh, now I get it,” she said. “I’ll bet you’ve got him jumping through hoops right now, honey. But when you run out of tricks, he’ll leave. They all do.”

  Keller gritted his teeth. “I’ll be in the car.” He was almost to the door before he heard a small voice behind him. “I’m sorry.”

 

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