The Discarded

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The Discarded Page 16

by Brett Battles


  “Two summers ago,” Abraham said. “Every few years he’d come to San Diego for Comic-Con and we’d get together for lunch one of the days.”

  “So…nerdy, kept to himself for the most part, borderline paranoid,” Orlando summed up. “The perfect CIA analyst.”

  “Yeah, I guess.”

  “Okay, given those factors, even after he’d snuck out of DC, he would have still considered himself in potential danger, right?”

  “Sure. That makes sense.”

  “Then he would have taken precautions, left a backup somewhere you could find it if something happened to him.”

  “But I searched the hotel room. If he left anything there, the others got it.”

  “You’re looking at this wrong. I mean, yes, if you were just a normal guy, never worked in the business, you might hide the information in the room. But Eli wasn’t a normal guy. He may not have been in the field, but he lived on the edge of our world.”

  “So…what? He dropped a copy in the mail to me? He knew I’d be there in a few hours so that seems unlikely, don’t you think?”

  “Exactly. And you’re not a normal guy. You were an operative and he knew that. Now, think. What would he have done? What would he have done that you specifically would have been able to figure out?”

  Abraham fell silent, his gaze resting unfocused on the tabletop. “I really don’t know. He wouldn’t have even been there long enough to do much by the time the ambulance came for him.”

  “That’s true. There was a very finite window.”

  She grabbed her laptop and jerked it forward. Within seconds she was in the system for the Azure Waves Hotel. The security department monitored over a hundred cameras spread throughout the facility. From the amount of storage they had, she knew they wouldn’t keep old footage for long. As she dove into the archive, she hoped she wasn’t too late.

  Her immediate impression was that the majority of old footage was dumped within twenty-four hours, but this tended to be true only for cameras in less traveled areas of the facility. The footage from those in and around the elevators, the lobby, the pool area, and the main entrances were held on to longer.

  Since nothing remained from the seventh floor in the building where Eli had been staying, Orlando concentrated on the lobby, starting early evening. Running the playback at high speed, she scanned the comings and goings of the guests and employees, not spotting Eli until the timer on the image read 09:43:21 PM. She slowed the footage to double speed and observed as he checked into the hotel.

  “He’s nervous,” Abraham said.

  That was an understatement. Every fifteen seconds or so, Eli would shoot a look over his shoulder as if expecting someone to jump him.

  When he received his key, he headed immediately to the elevators.

  “He’s carrying a bag,” Orlando said. It was a small suitcase. “It wasn’t in the room, right?”

  “The room was empty.”

  As soon as Eli disappeared, she increased the speed again. She thought the next time they see him, he’d be on a gurney, but—

  “Stop!” Abraham shouted.

  Orlando paused the image.

  “Go back,” he told her. “He just walked through.”

  She scrolled back until Eli was clearly in frame. He had exited the elevators at 10:46:09 PM, walked straight across the lobby, and out the front door. She stopped the image and switched to a camera outside. Matching the time code, she found the point where he came out. He paused on the sidewalk for several moments, looking both ways. Three cabs were at the curb to the left. The driver of the first stuck his head out his window and said something to Eli. Eli shook his head and then turned right and walked off.

  “So he was on foot,” Abraham said.

  “Or caught a cab somewhere else,” she said.

  She sped up the image. Eli returned twenty-four minutes later. Not really enough time to drive anywhere far away and get back, so she thought it unlikely he’d grabbed a taxi. She followed him through the lobby to the elevators. When he got on, a drunk-looking woman stumbled on with him, but not just any woman. The same one who had been in Eli’s apartment and met with Boyer.

  Gloria Clark.

  Once more Orlando sped up the footage, this time slowing when the two men dressed as paramedics wheeled a gurney holding an unconscious Eli toward the front door. Right behind him was Clark.

  “It’s her,” Abraham said, seeing it now, too.

  Orlando nodded as she opened a new window on her browser and brought up a map of the area surrounding the Azure Waves Hotel. “All right. Eli could have gone, what? Maybe a mile and a half out and back, if he kept walking the whole time. But we’ve got to figure he would have stopped for a bit and—”

  “Orlando, that was the woman,” he said.

  “I realize that. Not a big shock she was there, though, is it? Now, come on, I need you to concentrate.” She created a circle with a mile radius around the hotel. “Wherever Eli went, I’m pretty sure it’s in this circle. Think. What kind of place would he have gone to?”

  “I don’t know. Maybe he was getting something to eat.”

  “All right. Restaurants. We’ll start there.” She put in the parameters and the program highlighted all the known eating establishments in the area. There were dozens. “Does he have a favorite type of food?”

  “When we met up, we sometimes went for Italian or Chinese or for steaks. Nothing in particular.”

  “If we’re working off the premise that he did leave something behind, and it would be somewhere you could figure out, then I guess restaurants are out.”

  Abraham reluctantly nodded.

  “What, then? Bars?” she asked, then remembered the stack of posters at his townhouse. “How about a movie theater? He liked movies.”

  “That could be it.”

  She searched for movie theaters, but the only two were right at the edge of the mile—unlikely candidates.

  “Bookstores,” she said, thinking back to his place again.

  She tried that. There were seven hits. Five were used bookstores, one of which was only a couple blocks from the hotel. Another was part of one of the big chains.

  “That’s it,” Abraham said, pointing at the last store on the list. “If he did leave something, that’s where it would be.”

  She couldn’t argue with him.

  The seventh bookshop was a place called DeeDee’s Comics, and was located somewhere between a five- and ten-minute walk from the hotel.

  She brought up the store’s website. “They’re open to eleven. You want to give them a call?”

  “Why not?”

  The call connected after the fifth ring.

  At first only loud rock music came out of the speaker on Abraham’s phone—a classic Arctic Monkeys tune, if Orlando was correct—then a man said, “DeeDee’s.”

  “Good evening,” Abraham said. “I, um, have a bit of an unusual question to ask.”

  “You wouldn’t be the first. What is it?”

  “I’m wondering if a friend of mine left something there for me.”

  “This isn’t a mailbox store,” the guy said, sounding like he was about to hang up.

  “I realize that,” Abraham said quickly. “He would have come in three nights ago just before you closed.”

  “I wasn’t on three nights ago.”

  “Well, is there someone there who was?”

  An exasperated “Hold on.”

  The Arctic Monkeys filled the absence until a woman came on and said in a much friendlier voice than her colleague’s, “This is Vanessa. Can I help you?”

  “Yes, my name is…Abraham Delger. I think a friend of mine may have left something there for me the other night.”

  In an unexpectedly cautious tone, she said, “It’s possible. Who was your friend?”

  “Eli Becker,” he said. “Oh, or he may have been going by Charles Young.”

  “May have been going by?” the woman asked.

  “His name is El
i. It’s…well, it’s a long story. Did he leave something for me?”

  If it weren’t for the fact they could still hear music, Orlando would have wondered if they’d been disconnected. Finally Vanessa asked, “What was the girl’s favorite game?”

  Orlando could see that Abraham was shocked by the question.

  “Hey, you still there?” the woman asked.

  “Checkers,” he blurted out. “She loved checkers.”

  “Then yeah. I do have something for you. When do you want to pick it up?”

  CHAPTER 21

  IF THERE WAS one thing you didn’t do, it was mess with the people important to Quinn.

  Those who had tried to harm his mother and sister had found that out, as had those who’d caused Nate to lose half of his leg, and the ones responsible for nearly killing Orlando. Unfortunately, not everyone seemed to have been clued in to that particular nugget of information, so it fell back on Quinn to hammer home the lesson again.

  The section of the Maryland countryside he and Nate were driving through was a haven for those who made their living trying to suck the US government dry—lawyers and businessmen and lobbyists and those who were a bit of all three. Five-bedroom, six-bedroom, seven-bedroom homes on an acre or more of land. Some with columns, some with guesthouses, and almost all with more cars than could fit into oversized garages.

  Ethan Boyer’s home was in a gated community called The Hilltop, on a street named River View Lane. The Hilltop’s security staff appeared to be competent, with two vehicles constantly roaming the development and pairs of guards stationed at the three separate entrances. Competent, yes, but little problem for Quinn and Nate.

  The two cleaners entered over the wall into the backyard of a darkened house whose owners were either not home or early sleepers. Sticking as much as possible to the shadows, they moved silently through the community to River View Lane. Behind some bushes across the road from Boyer’s property, they found a spot that would serve as the perfect observation point.

  Nate pulled the pack off his back and removed the two sets of night vision goggles they’d procured from Peter’s stash. In addition to allowing them to see their surroundings as if during daytime, the goggles were equipped with two magnification settings, turning them into adequate if a bit underpowered binoculars.

  Each man donned his pair and scanned the area. Boyer’s home was a Federal-style clapboard house, three stories high with a four-car garage off to the side. Though they couldn’t see it from their position, they knew from the layout Orlando had obtained that a two-story annex stretched behind the house, with a room on the second floor designated on the plans as OFFICE.

  “See anything?” Quinn whispered.

  “Nothing,” Nate replied.

  While The Hilltop did have its own security force, Quinn was positive someone in Boyer’s line of work would employ his own people to ensure his safety.

  Motioning toward a copse of trees fifty yards to the left, he said, “Let’s reposition.”

  Quietly, they moved straight back from the bushes, away from the road, before skirting the front of a neighboring home and entering the small grove. Staying low, they shuffled forward again until they were only a few feet from where the trees ended. Once more, they scanned Boyer’s property.

  “Got one,” Nate said.

  “Show me.”

  Nate touched the side of his goggles, pushing the button that would put a digital tag on the sentry he’d seen. A second later, a yellow dot appeared in Quinn’s view, showing him where the man was. By the time they were through with their visual search, they had tagged three total.

  “Probably two more on the other side,” Quinn said. “Maybe three.”

  “D-guns?” Nate asked.

  Quinn nodded. “They’re all in range.”

  In addition to the goggles, they had procured two SIG SAUER P226 pistols with matching sound suppressors, four flash-bang stun grenades, and a pair of high-tech dart guns—D-guns—complete with scope and set of twelve tranquilizer-filled darts. Since they were operating in a highly populated civilian area, the less noise they made, the better.

  Nate removed them from his pack, attached the clip that contained an extra three darts beyond the one already chambered, and handed one of the weapons to Quinn.

  “Left to right, one, two, and three,” Quinn said. “You take one, I’ll take two, and whoever gets there first gets three.”

  Nate grinned. “We both know who that’ll be.”

  Quinn placed his dart gun’s barrel against a tree to steady it, and then aimed through the scope at target number two.

  “Set,” Nate said.

  “Set,” Quinn echoed. “Ready. Now.”

  Together they pulled their triggers, each man keeping an eye on their target to make sure their shot hit home. Quinn’s man staggered backward, his hand grasping at the dart, but before he could pull it out, he collapsed on the ground.

  Quinn immediately moved his scope to target number three, but as he was lining up his shot, he heard the pfft of Nate’s gun again, and a second later number three was on the ground.

  “Told you,” Nate said.

  “Keep up the cocky attitude and you’ll have firsthand knowledge of what these darts do to you.”

  After Nate reshouldered his backpack, they sprinted across the street and dropped into a shallow ditch that lined the other side of the road. They made a quick study of the grounds but saw no one, so they headed toward the side of the house.

  Partway there, they came across the first of the sleeping sentries. Together, they moved him to the other side of a leafless hedge so he wouldn’t be noticed by any community patrols driving by. The other two they didn’t need to worry about. They’d been farther in on the property and were lost in the darkness.

  When the cleaners reached the house, Quinn pointed at Nate and then at the rear corner. With a nod, Nate headed there while Quinn moved to the front of the house. Very carefully, he leaned around the edge and searched the yard. Once he was sure the area was clear, he headed back to Nate’s position.

  His former apprentice held up two fingers, and then pointed at an angle through the wall at two different spots to show Quinn where the guards were located. After silently deciding who was responsible for whom, they dropped all the way to the ground and eased around the corner.

  “Set,” Nate whispered.

  “Ready. Now.”

  At the exact second Quinn pulled the trigger, his target moved. Not a problem if the dart traveled as fast as a bullet, but at its subsonic speed, it sailed harmlessly behind the man’s back. It did not, however, do so in complete silence.

  As the sentry whirled around to see what had made the sound, Quinn pulled the trigger again. This time the man did not get out of the way.

  Five down.

  Nate took the lead as they followed the property line to a group of hibernating shrubs that delineated the back end. There, they got their first good look at the rear of the house.

  Just like the plans showed, a two-story wing stuck straight out along the southern edge of the house. The only window on the property emitting any light was the one corresponding to the second-floor office.

  Quinn carefully swept his goggles from one side of the property to the other. The only heat signatures he was picking up were those of the unconscious guards. There was still one side of the house they hadn’t checked yet, though—the south. They crept along the bushes until the wing was no longer blocking their view.

  A sixth sentry was about midway along the side.

  “I got this,” Nate said.

  Quinn didn’t argue. Nate’s marksmanship had won him the opportunity, so Quinn stayed by the bushes and watched. Nate retraced their path until he was out of the man’s potential sightline before cutting across the lawn toward the back of the wing section.

  That’s when Quinn saw the guard move. Nothing fast, not a reaction to having heard Nate, but the man did start walking toward the back of the house. That wo
uld have been something Nate could easily handle, but then the guy plucked something off his belt. When he held it up to his mouth, Quinn realized it was a radio, and knew their stealth arrival was on the verge of being exposed.

  Since it was impossible for Nate to get into position for a shot in time, Quinn didn’t even bother clicking on his mic. Instead he rushed forward and closed the distance between him and the sentry.

  The man still had his walkie-talkie at his mouth when he spotted Quinn. The radio dropped as he went for the gun on his belt.

  Quinn pulled the trigger of his D-gun, sending a dart zipping through the air. The man tried to duck but the tip caught his shoulder, only an inch from his neck. His hand flew up and yanked it free.

  Quinn shot again, hitting the sentry in the chest this time.

  The man staggered to his left, bumping into the side of the house as he tried to rip out the second dart. Though he was able to extract it, he was too late. Enough of the tranquilizer had already entered his system, causing him to crumble to the ground before he could even drop the dart.

  Nate rushed around the wing and reached the man at almost the same time Quinn arrived.

  “What happened?” Nate whispered.

  Quinn picked up the man’s radio and showed it to his partner. He was about to put it back on the ground when it crackled to life.

  “Mr. Richards, what’s going on out there? Sounded like something just hit the house.” When there was no immediate answer, the voice said, “Mr. Richards, come in, please. I want to know what’s going on out there.”

  Boyer, Quinn thought.

  Having no choice, he snatched up the radio and said in a hushed voice, “Sorry, sir. One of the men slipped.” It was as good an excuse as any. Several patches of snow had turned to ice, some very close to the house.

  “Jesus,” Boyer said. “Tell your people to watch their fucking step! I’m trying to work here.”

  “Yes, sir. Sorry, sir.”

  Quinn waited for Boyer to say more, but apparently the man was done. The cleaner turned the volume way down, put the walkie-talkie into his pocket, and motioned for Nate to follow.

 

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