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Big Jack

Page 22

by J. D. Robb


  “I try not to watch that sort of thing. Depressing, and it has nothing to do with me. Want another?”

  Dix glanced at his empty glass. He shouldn’t, really. But . . . “Why the hell not? You’re behind.”

  Trevor signaled for another drink for Dix, smiled as he lifted his barely touched martini. “I’ll catch up. What does Samantha have to say about all this?”

  “I haven’t been able to talk to her. Can you beat that? She’s gone incommunicado. Nobody knows where the hell she is.”

  “Somebody must,” he countered.

  “Not a damn soul. Smart money says the cops got her stashed somewhere.” Scowling, he nudged his empty glass aside. “Probably get another damn book out of it.”

  “Well, she’ll surface soon enough. Meanwhile, I wanted to talk to you about a piece I sold you a few months ago. The scale-model bulldozer, circa 2000.”

  “Beautiful piece, prime condition. I don’t know how you parted with it.” He grinned as he counted down the time to the second drink with a few cocktail nuts. “Even for the price you scalped me for.”

  “That’s just the thing. I had no idea when I sold it that it was given to my father by his father. When I saw him the other night, the old man brought it up. Sentimental blah, blah, blah. He wants to come over and see it, among some of the others. I didn’t have the heart to tell him I’d sold it.”

  “Well . . . ” Dix picked up his fresh drink. “You did.”

  “I know, I know. I’ll buy it back for the full price, and add a kicker. I don’t want a big, ugly family crisis over it so it’s worth it to me.”

  “I’d like to help you out, Trev, but I really don’t want to sell it.”

  “Look, I’ll double what you paid me for it.”

  “Double.” Dix’s eyes gleamed over the rim of his glass. “You must really want to avoid a family crisis.”

  “It pays to keep the old man happy. You know about his collection.”

  “And envy it,” Dix admitted.

  “I can probably talk him out of a couple of pieces.”

  Considering, Dix bit an olive off his swizzle stick. “I’m looking for a well driller. Circa 1985. The article they did on him in Scale-Model Mag said he had one, primo.”

  “I’ll get it for you.”

  Dix made a sound somewhere between interest and denial. Trevor curled his hand into a fist, imagined ramming it over and over into that smug face until the blood poured.

  He’d wasted enough time.

  “Okay, then do me a favor. Let me borrow it for a week. I’ll pay you a thousand for the use of it, and I’ll get the well driller, make you a good deal on it.” When Dix said nothing, just continued to sip gin, Trevor felt his control fray. “For fuck’s sake, you make a grand for nothing.”

  “Don’t get twisted. I didn’t say no. I’m just trying to figure your angle. You don’t even like your father.”

  “I can’t stand the stupid son of a bitch, but he’s not well. He may only have a few months left.”

  “No shit?”

  Going with the idea, Trevor shifted on his seat, leaned in. “He finds out I sold that piece, he’s going to blow. As it stands, I inherit the collection. He finds out about this, he’ll probably leave it to some museum. That happens, I won’t be able to sell you any of the prime pieces, will I? I lose, you lose, friend.”

  “When you put it that way . . . One week, Trev, and we’re going to write this up. Business is business, especially when it’s between friends.”

  “No problem. Finish your drink and we’ll go get it now.”

  Dix checked his wrist unit. “I’m really late getting back to the office.”

  “So you’ll be later and a thousand richer.”

  Dix lifted his glass in a toast. “Good point.”

  Eve’s communicator signaled as she hunted for a parking spot on Thirty-third. “Dallas.”

  “Baxter. We got a hitch here.”

  “Doesn’t anybody use public transportation or just stay the hell home!” Annoyed with the traffic, the jammed curb, she whipped over, flipped up her ON DUTY light and ignored the blasts of horns. Double-parked, she jerked a thumb at Peabody to get out. “What hitch?”

  “Just got a call from the care facility where Whittier’s mother’s living. She fell or passed out. Took a header into a flower bed.”

  “She bad?” Eve asked as she climbed over to get out curbside rather than risk life and limb getting out the driver’s-side door.

  “Banged up her head, from what I’m getting, maybe fractured her elbow. They got her stabilized and sedated, but Whittier and his wife both want to go see for themselves.”

  “Let them go, have a couple of uniforms you pick take them and stick with them.”

  “There’s more. Here’s the kicker. She wasn’t outside strolling down the garden path alone. Her grandson paid her a visit.”

  “Son of a bitch. Is he with her now?”

  “Bastard walked off, left her lying there. Didn’t tell anybody. He signed in, Dallas. Signed in, brought her flowers, talked to a couple of the attendants. He knew there was a record of him being there, but he took off. The uniforms you sent out missed him by a good half hour.”

  “I want the place locked down, searched.”

  “Already in progress.”

  “Left himself open.” She swung into the restaurant. “He knows what he’s looking for now and where to find it. He doesn’t care about leaving tracks. You’ll need to take the Whittiers, handle the scene there. I’ve got a line on something here. I’ll get back to you.”

  “He left her lying there,” Peabody repeated.

  “She’s lucky he didn’t take the time or trouble to finish her. He’s got the prize in his sights. He’ll move fast now. Chad Dix,” she said to the restaurant hostess. “Where’s his table?”

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “Don’t bother, I’m in a hurry.” Eve slapped her badge on the podium. “Chad Dix.”

  “Could you be any more indiscreet?” the hostess demanded, and pushed the badge back at Eve.

  “Oh yeah. Want to see?”

  The hostess touched a section on her reservation screen. “He was at table fourteen. It’s been turned over.”

  “Get me his server. Damn it.” Stepping to the side, Eve yanked out her ’link and called Dix’s office. “Did he come back?”

  “No, Lieutenant, he’s running a little late. He hasn’t returned my call as yet.”

  “When and if, I want to hear immediately.” Eve broke the connection and turned to the young, brutally clean-cut waiter. “Did you see Dix, table fourteen, leave?”

  “Table for three, two of them left together about a half hour ago. One guy—guy who paid—took a call right as the meal was winding up. Excused himself. He walked over toward the restrooms. I heard him say he’d meet somebody in the bar in ten. Sounded happy about it.”

  “This bar?”

  “Yeah. I saw him go over, get a table.”

  “Thanks.”

  Eve worked her way through the tables into the bar section, scanned the area. She snagged a waitress’s elbow. “There was a guy in here. Around thirty. About six feet, one-eighty, dark hair, medium complexion, poster-boy looks.”

  “Sure. Gin martini, extra dry, three olives. You just missed him.”

  “Was he with anyone?”

  “Long, lean dream machine. Dark blond hair, great suit. Nursed half a martini to the other guy’s two. Left together maybe five, ten minutes ago.”

  Eve turned on her heel and charged for the door. “Get Dix’s home address.”

  “Already on it,” Peabody told her. “Do you want to pull Baxter and Trueheart back?”

  “No, take too long to get them back, dump the Whittiers.” Eve dove into the car, swung her long legs over. “This could turn into a hostage situation in a finger snap.”

  “We can’t be sure they’re heading for Dix’s home address.”

  “It’s best guess. Tag Feeney and McNab
. We’ll call for more backup if it turns ugly.” Since she was hemmed in by traffic, she jammed the vehicle into a straight vertical, smacked sirens and peeled out into a one-eighty six feet off the ground. “Upper East, isn’t it?”

  “Yeah, I got it here. Goddamn sucky navi system.” Peabody cursed, rapped her fist on the dash and had the map shuddering into place across the windshield.

  “You’re making progress, Detective.”

  “Learned from the best. Sixth is your best bet. Jeez, watch the glide cart.”

  She missed it by a good two inches, and used the in-dash ’link to contact Roarke. “Suspect is believed to be heading to Chad Dix’s residence, with Dix,” she began without preamble. “We believe he’s learned the location of the diamonds. Baxter and Trueheart are halfway to Long Island with the Whittiers. Feeney and McNab are being tagged. Depending on how this shakes, I might be able to use a security expert, even a civilian. You’re closer than Feeney.”

  “What’s the address?”

  Peabody called it out and grabbed onto the chicken stick on her door. “ETA’s five minutes, unless we end up a smear on the pavement prior to that.”

  “I’ll be there.”

  Eve punched it up Sixth, weaving around vehicles with drivers too stubborn or too stupid to make way for the sirens. She was forced to slam the brakes to avoid mowing down a mob of pedestrians who surged into an intersection at the WALK sign.

  They streamed by, ignoring the scream of sirens and the vicious blast of cursing she poured out her open window. Except for one grizzled old man who took the time to give her the finger.

  “God love New Yorkers,” Peabody commented when her heart kicked back to beating again. “They just don’t give a shit.”

  “If I had time, I’d get Traffic to haul in every last one of those jerks. Goddamn it!” She rammed for vertical again, but this time the car only shuddered, shook an inch off the ground and dropped again with a thump.

  “We’ll be clear in a minute.”

  “He’s going to get him inside. He’s going to get him inside the apartment. Once he does . . . ”

  Uptown, Trevor paid off the cab in cash. It occurred to him on the way up with Dix babbling a bit drunkenly beside him that he might not be able to get out of the city, out of the country immediately and he’d already left too much of a trail.

  The cops had already interviewed and dismissed good old Chad, so they were unlikely to bother with him again anytime soon. But there wasn’t any point in leaving a credit trail in a cab to Dix’s front door.

  This was smarter. Fifteen minutes, twenty, he’d walk out with millions. He’d stroll right by the doorman and down the block, catch a cab and pick up his car from the lot on Thirty-fifth.

  He needed time to get back to his own place, pick up his passport and a few essentials. And he wanted a few minutes, at least a few, to admire the diamonds in the privacy of his own home. After that, he’d vanish. Simple enough.

  He’d planned all of it already. He’d vanish, not unlike Samantha Gannon had done the last few days, but with a great deal more style.

  A private shuttle to Europe, where he’d rent a car with a forged ID in Paris and drive himself to Belgium and a gem dealer he’d found through the underground. He had more than enough money for that leg of the trip, and once he’d sold some of the diamonds, he’d have plenty more for the rest.

  Another transaction in Amsterdam, a trip to Moscow for a third.

  Crisscrossing his way from point to point, using various identifications, selling off the gems here and there—never too many at a time—until, in six months perhaps, they were liquified and he could live the life he’d always deserved to live.

  He’d require some face sculpting, which was a shame as he liked his face quite a bit. But sacrifices had to be made.

  He had his eye on an island in the South Seas where he could live like a king. Like a fucking god, for that matter. And there was an exciting and palatial penthouse on the sumptuous off-planet Olympus Resort that would suit him very well as a pied-à-terre.

  He would never, never have to pay lip service to the rules again. Never have to kowtow to his sniveling parents, pretend an interest in his mother’s obnoxious relatives or spend all those tedious hours every week in some box of an office.

  He’d be free, as he was meant to be free. Claiming his rightful legacy at long, long last.

  “Damn office again.”

  Trevor tuned in to see Dix frowning at his beeping pocket ’link.

  “Screw them.” Trevor laid a restraining hand on Dix’s. “Let them wait.”

  “Yeah, screw them.” With the gin sliding through his bloodstream, Dix chuckled, dropped the ’link back in his pocket. “I’m so damn indispensable, I’ll have to up my fees.”

  He strolled into the building beside Trevor. “In fact, I think I’ll take the rest of the day off. Let somebody else run on the wheel for a while. You know, I haven’t had a vacation in three months. Fricking nose to the fricking grindstone.”

  He used his passcode to access the elevator. “You know how it is.”

  “That’s right.” As Trevor stepped into the elevator with him, his heart began to trip lightly in his chest.

  “Dinner party tonight. Jan and Lucia. You going to make that?”

  It all seemed so petty to him now, so bland, so small. “Bored.”

  “I hear that. Gets so it’s the same thing, day after day. Same people, same talk. But you’ve got to do something. Could use a little excitement though, something different. Something unexpected.”

  Trevor smiled as they stepped off the elevator. “Careful what you wish for,” he said, and laughed and laughed as Dix unlocked his door.

  Eve screeched to a stop outside Dix’s building. She was out of the car with her badge held up before the doorman could sputter an objection.

  “Chad Dix.”

  “He just came in. About ten minutes ago, with a companion. I’m afraid you can’t park—”

  “I’m going to need a blueprint of the building and of the apartment.”

  “I can’t help you with—”

  She cut him off simply by holding up a hand, and looked over as Roarke pulled up. “I need the blueprints, and I need your security to shut down the elevators, block the stairwells on every floor. Roarke.” She jerked her head, knowing he’d get results quicker. “Talk the talk. Peabody, let’s get that backup.”

  She yanked out her communicator to contact her commander and apprise him of the situation.

  By the time she was finished, she was ready to confer with McNab and Feeney in the security office. The diagram of the building was up on screen.

  “We send a uniform up to the other units on this floor. We determine what other tenants are in residence and move them out quick and quiet. Then we lock down the floor again. Make that happen,” she said to Peabody.

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Emergency evac in Dix’s unit, here.” She tapped a finger on the screen. “Can that be sealed from this location?”

  “Sure.” Feeney jerked a thumb toward McNab to put him on that detail.

  “He won’t be going anywhere,” Eve stated. “Got him locked, got him boxed. But that doesn’t help Dix. We wait and Whittier remains unaware of our presence, maybe he just walks out, but odds are he kills Dix, takes his prize, then tries to walk. That’s his style, that’s his pattern. We move in, we’ve got a civilian in the crosshairs. We let Whittier know we’re here and he’s sealed in, he’s got a hostage.”

  “Has to be alive to be a hostage.”

  She met Feeney’s gaze. “Yeah, but he doesn’t have to stay that way. Big place,” she continued, studying the diagram of the apartment. “Chad’s got himself a big-ass place. No telling where they are in it.”

  “They came in chummy,” Feeney reminded her. “Maybe he takes the toy, leaves Dix alive.”

  She shook her head. “Self-preservation comes first. Dix is too big a risk, so he has to eliminate him. Easier to do it
now. He’s killed twice before and gotten away clean.”

  To better absorb the whole of it, she stepped back from the screen. “We seal it up, we seal it up tight. Isolate him. Let’s go with decoy first. Delivery. See if we can get Dix to open the door. He opens it, we get him out, move in. He doesn’t, we assume he’s dead or incapacitated and we take the door.”

  She pushed at her hair. “We work on getting eyes and ears in there, but we try the decoy now. This turns into a hostage situation, you take the negotiations?” she asked Feeney.

  “I’ll get it set up.”

  “Okay, somebody get me a package. McNab, you’re playing messenger. I want three of the tactical team up, positioned here, here, here.” She tapped the screen again. “Feeney, security and the coms are on you. McNab, let’s move.”

  She looked at Roarke. “Can you ditch the locks on the door without letting anyone inside know?”

  “Shouldn’t be a problem.”

  “Okay.” She rolled her shoulders. “Let’s rock.”

  Chapter 15

  Inside the apartment, Dix suggested another drink. “Since I’m blowing off the day, I might as well make it worthwhile.”

  Calculating, Trevor watched him get out a martini shaker. The doorman had seen him come inside. Security disks would show him entering. If he needed a little extra time, it might be wise to set the stage for an accident. Alcohol in the bloodstream, a slip in the bathroom? He could and would be gone before they found the body. Gain a little more of a buffer while they investigated what would appear, on the surface, to be a drunken fall.

  My God, he was clever. Wouldn’t his grandfather be proud?

  “Wouldn’t say no to a drink. I’d really like to see the piece.”

  “Sure, sure.” Dix waved him off while he mixed drinks.

 

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