Another deep breath, and she grew calmer. She willed herself calm. She paced, unable to stay still, constantly checking each possible approach.
Twenty-two minutes had passed since Charlie called her. Where was he?
Movement on the field caught her sight, and she watched as a man in a blue shirt and cap crossed the field writing on a clipboard. It took her a couple seconds, but then she realized the man was Dean. She squinted and saw there were words in white printed on the back of the shirt. Resourceful. She had to admit to herself it relaxed her to have Dean in close proximity.
She sensed movement and turned, facing the far side of the long, narrow space. Charlie leaned against the wall, on the outside of the dugout, partly hidden in the shadows. When she saw him, he stepped inside and walked toward her.
“It’s good to see you,” he said.
Complex emotions battled. She did not like Charlie, but she couldn’t forget that her training under him had been stellar. He was a lying, gloryhound bastard, but he also knew what he was doing and had freely shared his skills with her. It was ironic that the self-defense moves he’d taught her had saved her life when he put it in danger.
“You should have given me that journal two days ago. Three of those women are dead.”
His expression hardened. Whether out of guilt or her refusal to pretend they were still friends and colleagues, she didn’t know. “You wanted me to look at a picture.”
She handed him the photo without comment.
He looked at it and she knew he saw something. “Where did you get this?”
“Through my investigation. It’s seven to ten years old. You recognize Xavier Jones, of course. And Thomas Daniels—he was killed four years ago during a police investigation.”
“The FBI. I remember hearing about it. It wasn’t related to trafficking.”
“Not directly, but he was a competitor of Jones,” she said. “As I’m sure you knew.”
“This looks like Mexico or Central America.”
“Analysts believe it was taken outside of Acapulco.”
He said, “Ashley was last seen near Acapulco.”
“And you said there was a link between her and Jones. I need to know who the other men are. We don’t have I.D.s on these three.” She pointed to her father, the man next to him, and a man in the back on the far right. “Or the woman.”
“I want this picture.”
“No.”
He stared at her.
“Why?” she prompted.
He didn’t answer.
“Damn you, Charlie!”
“I can I.D. two of those men for you. If you want their names, and additional information, then you’ll give me that picture.”
Though it wasn’t Dean’s original photo, only a copy, Sonia didn’t want to give it to Charlie. She didn’t want to help him in any of his vendettas. But he was stubborn. He wouldn’t talk without getting something in return.
She handed it to him. “Name them.”
“I don’t know the man on the far right. But these two in the middle—Jaime Huerrera on the left. He’s a drug dealer. Trafficking is a sideline, only when it furthers his goals. More money in drugs. But he provides routes. He was nobody ten years ago, a mid-level hack whose only claim to fame was he kept under the radar of law enforcement. He’s also a great master of disguise. You probably have photos of him and don’t know it. He’s from Colombia and never crosses into the United States. I suspect that your friend from the FBI, the one watching us while pretending to be a choir boy, might be able to prove Jones was laundering drug money for Huerrera, once you decipher the journal.”
“And the other man?” Sonia’s heart raced and she was dizzy, whether from the confines of the dugout or what she expected to hear.
“I don’t know his name. But I have seen him.”
“Where? With who?”
“He’s the man who killed Xavier Jones.”
Charlie pocketed the photo. “I hope you catch him.”
“Do you know who the woman is?” Sonia asked, her voice surprisingly calm. “She looks vaguely familiar, but I can’t place her.”
“You know who she is,” Charlie said.
“No, I don’t—” Dammit, she did. She’d only met Victoria Christopoulis once, over a year ago. And she looked much different now—older, with darker red hair. “Christopoulis.”
“Bingo.”
“I thought it was her son, not her—”
“He’s involved, but she’s in charge.” Charlie took a step toward her. “Sonia, this is too big, too deadly. That’s why you need people like me. I can go in and take care of—”
She put up her hand. Her voice was firm, though her insides burned. “Don’t say it. I don’t want to know what you’ve been up to, I don’t want to know who you’ve killed. I’m not a vigilante, Charlie. I’m a cop. And I can’t condone what you’ve done. This was your freebie. Now go. Before I arrest you.”
Dean walked along the base of the bleachers in the red clay gravel that separated the stands from the playing field. He’d seen Cammarata slip into the dugout, so Dean moved in closer. He heard voices but couldn’t make out the exact words. Then he heard Sonia distinctly say, “Go.”
He tensed, every instinct on alert. His phone didn’t vibrate, she wasn’t in trouble. Still … he didn’t like her tone. Practically hugging the wall, he ran to the edge of the dugout, then stood flush against the low wall.
Cammarata stepped from the dugout.
“Sonia—”
A flash of light in his periphery sent Dean back twenty years to his days in the Marines.
“Before I arrest you,” Sonia said.
Dean didn’t think; he acted solely on adrenaline and instinct.
“Down!” He rushed Cammarata who was in the line of fire and tackled him, pushing him down the short flight of stairs into the dugout.
Sonia hit the ground before they did, reacting on Dean’s command to get down while he was still moving.
The sniper’s bullet hit the wall where Sonia had been standing. It had been aimed at her chest, a perfect military sniper aim from more than three hundred yards. Which meant that the sniper was on the fence surrounding the stadium—the only buildings tall enough were across the river or not at the right angle to see into the dugout.
Dean crawled over to Sonia. “Are you hit?”
“No.”
“Stay down, in this corner. He can’t see you here. Flush against the wall. Do not move.”
“What the fuck?” Cammarata exclaimed.
Dean crawled over to him and grabbed him by the collar as they lay on the hard-packed dirt floor. “Did you set Sonia up?”
“I didn’t do anything.”
“No one knew we were meeting you here. Someone followed you or you led them here.”
“No one followed me.”
“I don’t believe you.”
Charlie pulled away from Dean and Dean barely resisted the urge to hit him. What that bastard had done to Sonia, he didn’t deserve to be walking free. But the movement would get them shot.
“Stay down!” Dean shouted, pushing himself up against the short wall and hoping the sniper wasn’t at a high enough angle to see fully into the dugout.
The ground in front of them suddenly jumped as bullets hit on the edge of the ground.
They were sitting ducks.
“I called nine-one-one,” Sonia said, “and emailed Richardson and Trace.”
“Quick thinking.”
The bullets stopped and they heard shouts and screams from the bleachers. The choir.
Charlie started to sit up.
“Down!” Dean pulled him down, though he deserved to get his head blown off.
“Don’t touch me!” Charlie scooted away. “I wasn’t being stupid.”
“There’s a first.” Dean glared.
“What’s your fucking problem, Fibbie?”
“You.”
There were sirens in the distance.
“Are we clear?” Sonia asked, her voice quivering.
“No,” Dean said. The sniper had aimed right at Sonia. Sonia was the primary target. Not Cammarata, not him, Sonia. What did she know that was dangerous to the traffickers? Who wanted her dead? Dean was ninety-nine percent certain no one had followed them, and had they, there’d been at least a dozen easier shots to take—getting in and out of the car, for example—than a sniper’s rifle from more than three hundred yards.
Charlie Cammarata had to have led the shooter here.
Dean pulled himself over to Sonia. She was shaking and her hands were ice cold. “Are you hit?” he asked again.
“N-no.”
“Stay low.”
Suddenly, rapid fire hit the wall behind them. Sonia’s fingers dug into his biceps.
Then it stopped. The sirens were closer. Dean waited. Waited. Minutes passed. Sonia was still shaking.
Someone called into the dugout. “Police! Is anyone there?”
Dean crawled to the dugout stairs and peered over. Police were all over the field, a large number by the fence halfway between center and right outfield.
“Special Agent Dean Hooper, FBI,” he shouted.
“You’re clear.”
Dean rose and offered his hand to Charlie Cammarata, who ignored it and stood on his own. Two West Sacramento police officers came over to them. Dean showed his I.D. and badge.
“Take this man into custody, please,” Dean said.
Cammarata fumed. “Fucking prick, that wasn’t the arrangement—” he pulled his arm back to hit Dean. Before the cops could run interference, Dean decked Cammarata square in the face with the palm of his hand. Blood spurted from his nose, and the two cops took him into custody. They read him his rights.
A third cop, this one a black man with rank, approached. “Chief of Police Rob Morrison.”
“Dean Hooper, FBI. Did you get him?”
“No. Had a driver waiting for him. We’re searching, but word is when they hit Cap City Freeway heading east, they lost the vehicle. We have a partial plate and description of the SUV, plus a possible witness. We’re on it.”
“Sounds like it. Though you have the lead, please work with my office on this. It’s part of an active investigation.”
Morrison jerked his head toward Cammarata. “Is this guy a suspect?”
“In the shooting?” Dean glared at Cammarata. “I don’t know.”
“Fuck you, Hooper.”
“What charges?”
“We’ll start with obstruction of justice.” Dean’s blood was still pumping.
“Sonia!” Cammarata shouted. “Dammit, Sonia! Tell him to let me go.” He fought against the cuffs and one of the cops tightened them.
Sonia.
Dean ran back into the dugout.
Sonia was sitting up, her back against the wall, her arms wrapped around her knees. She was shaking, ghostly pale, and he heard her mumbling something to herself.
She was whispering, “Get up, Sonia. Don’t be a wimp. On your feet.”
“Sonia?” He squatted in front of her, touched her face.
She looked at him and he saw she was scared, as if suddenly the reality of the attack had hit her. “It’s over. He’s gone.”
She shook her head. “I—I.” She swallowed. “Dammit.” She took a deep breath. “I’m claustrophobic. Just give me. A minute. One minute.” Sonia sounded angry with herself, over and above the fear.
He picked her up and carried her from the dugout. As soon as the sun hit her face, he felt her sigh deeply.
Cammarata called out, “Sonia, are you hurt?”
Dean glared at him and said, “Take him to jail. I don’t want to look at him. I’ll be in contact with you later.”
“Bastard,” Cammarata said.
He didn’t respond, but walked Sonia to the middle of the field and sat her on the pitcher’s mound. The color returned to her face and she let out a deep breath.
“I’m sorry,” she said.
“No apologies.”
“Time hasn’t changed anything. Twenty-one years hasn’t fixed me.”
“You’re so wrong.” He turned her face to his, made her look into his eyes, and said, “You didn’t panic when you had to act. You did what had to be done first and foremost. That’s what’s important.”
She closed her eyes and leaned her forehead against his for a moment, then said, “I’m okay now.”
“We can sit here as long as you want.”
“It’s my father.”
“Excuse me? The photo—You knew that.”
She looked so sad and lost, but she was getting her fire back. He saw it with each breath she took. Dean was relieved; he didn’t like seeing her weak. It reminded him that she wasn’t invincible, that people wanted her dead. He couldn’t let it happen. He wouldn’t let it happen. They’d have to kill him first, and Dean was hard to hit. His former Marine buddies nicknamed him Syl vester because he had nine lives. He’d seen a lot of combat, but had never gotten so much as a scratch.
“Charlie didn’t know his name, but positively identified my father as the man who killed Xavier Jones.”
“You think he was telling the truth?”
“Yes. He didn’t know it was my father, and I didn’t tell him. The man standing next to him, one of the others you didn’t have an I.D. for, is Jaime Huerrera, a drug smuggler from Colombia and Charlie thinks Jones might have been laundering money for him, and proof will be in the journal.”
“I’ll pass the name and photo on to the DEA.”
“I gave Charlie the picture. That was his requirement.”
“Why?”
“Probably for his own vendetta. I don’t know, but I needed the information. I’m sorry. You can get it back now. Did you really arrest him?”
“Yes.”
“I promised—”
“That was before he led a sniper to you.”
“There’s no reason—”
“Maybe not on purpose, but there’s no other explanation. No one knew we were coming here, except my boss and your boss. And I didn’t tell Bob we were going to be in the dugout. I told him the stadium.”
“I didn’t tell Toni anything other than I was meeting him.”
“I don’t think I’m the best person to interrogate him. I can’t be impartial.” Dean ran his hand up and down Sonia’s arm. “Not after what he did to you. But I thought Callahan and your partner, Trace Anderson, could take it on. Cammarata has information about tomorrow night, I feel it in my gut.”
“I agree.”
Dean was relieved they were on the same page.
“There is one other possible explanation.”
“What’s that?”
“Craig Gleason. I got the call from Charlie when we were in his office. What if he eavesdropped on us?”
“Gleason was never in the military. He has no fire arms training in his background and, frankly, I don’t see him having the balls to kill.”
“He could have called someone.”
Dean agreed. “I can see him giving out information. The time line is so close, though. To put all this together in less than thirty minutes—from the time you got the call to execution? They had to know exactly where you would be. Cammarata called you, he decided on the venue, right down to the dugout. It has to be him.”
“There’s no reason he would want me dead.”
“Maybe he planned on saving your life and getting into your good graces again.”
She didn’t say anything for a long moment. “That’s stretching it.”
“But it’s in his personality. To play the hero, the great savior.” He couldn’t see Charlie Cammarata caring about anyone but himself.
“It’s not Charlie,” Sonia said, but in her tone Dean heard doubt. “I’m putting my money on Gleason.”
“Then let’s get over there and push hard,” Dean said. He stood and held out his hand to Sonia.
She took it.
“You’re filthy,” he said.
<
br /> “So are you,” she said as he pulled her to her feet. “Nothing that sun and the clear blue sky can’t fix.”
CHAPTER
TWENTY-EIGHT
When Dean and Sonia arrived downtown to visit Gleason at XCJ Consulting in the Senator Hotel, less than two miles from Raley Field, they couldn’t get anywhere near the entrance.
Sonia glanced at Dean. He looked disheveled, his normally neat hair hanging loose across his forehead, and they were both covered in dirt and grass stains. Her elbows were scraped from where she’d cowered in the corner against the cement in the dugout. The panic was so far behind her now that she almost didn’t believe it had happened, except for residual embarrassment.
Dean walked to the tape and flashed his badge, then went under. He was stopped.
“Sir, can I see that identification again?” the female cop asked.
“We don’t look like federal cops,” Sonia told Dean. She recognized the cop from Sac P.D. “Sheila, right? I’m Sonia Knight, Riley’s sister. With ICE.”
“Sonia. Right. You look like you’ve been through the wringer.”
“We both have,” Sonia said. “This is Agent Hooper with the FBI. What happened?”
“Guy killed on the fourth floor.”
“When?”
“About an hour ago. Call came in at two fifty-three P.M.”
She looked at Dean. “That’s right after we left,” she said. “Not ten minutes.”
“Excuse me?” Sheila said.
“Who’s the victim?”
“I don’t have a name, I’m just holding the masses back.”
“We need to get in. We were interviewing a potential suspect in a multijurisdictional murder investigation on the fourth floor this afternoon.”
“Go right ahead. But tell the detective in charge you’re here.”
“Who is it?”
“Detective John Black. And I heard Riley is out of the hospital. That’s great news.”
“It is,” Sonia agreed, and she and Dean went to the fourth floor.
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