Cut and Run

Home > Other > Cut and Run > Page 27
Cut and Run Page 27

by Ridley Pearson

CHAPTER SIXTY-THREE

  The Odessa Room had once been a library and still retained the floor-to-ceiling shelves of leather-bound books, broken only by mahogany slabs bearing oil paintings under the warm glow of brass tube lights mounted above their frames. For years it had doubled as a more intimate dining room, for parties of less than thirty. Some time in the early 1930s, its recessed ceiling had been installed, an elaborately engineered panel with curving sections that met in the very center, surrounding an oval-shaped, hand-painted depiction of a fox hunt. On its north wall was a marble mantel and its matching hearth, a working fireplace. The mantel was shored up by twin stone columns, carved into which were two nude angels bearing baskets of wheat above their heads of flowing locks. Atop the mantel, two silver candelabra, their new candles unlit, protected a dried arrangement of deep-red roses, wheat straw, and burgundy fruit blossoms.

  Around the polished rectangular cherry-topped table sat ten men ranging from thirty to eighty and in every shade of skin: African, Native American, Far Eastern, Caucasian, Hispanic. They represented Reno, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Oakland, Portland, and points in between. They were not unfamiliar to one another.

  Philippe, at the head of the table, brought the meeting to order. He thanked them for coming, reached into his black Armani sport coat, and withdrew a plastic jewel case containing a gold CD-ROM, a computer disk capable of storing ten thousand documents. “The highest bidder takes home the entire list. Subsequent sales of the names of individual witnesses, or groups of witnesses, are at the discretion of the buyer.”

  A Mexican, who wore a collarless shirt open to a gold chain bearing a St. Christopher, said, “My people tell me a general alarm was put out, that most of the people on that list have fled by now.”

  “And that may or may not be true,” Philippe said. “But even so, do you run every time you hear an alarm? Do you uproot your entire family? This list includes everything there is to know about these people. Not just new identities, but employment, banking, known associates. It would take months, years, to regenerate all new data for these people. Whether they run or not, they’re out there, and they’re leaving trails to follow.” He paused, swallowed once, and said, “The bidding will start at ten million dollars.”

  A knock on the door-no cell phones, no weapons, were allowed in this room-and Ricardo, who sat to Philippe’s left, was summoned by one of the guards.

  Philippe considered Ricardo’s departure carefully, wondering what trick he might be playing. He didn’t want him outside this room where he couldn’t see him.

  As the door shut behind Ricardo, Philippe heard whispers that included the words “… your wife…” Fast-moving footsteps followed. It was everything Philippe could do to remain focused as he turned to face the group of raised hands.

  “Do I hear fifteen?” he asked.

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FOUR

  The Skyjacks operated as motorized trolleys, a battery pack powering a high-torque motor with an oversize pulley-wheel that ran atop the steel aviation cable supporting the four black high-voltage lines. Each of the two ERT operatives hung suspended from one of the devices in a harness that featured quick-release carabiners that allowed them to bail out one-handed and rappel via a weight-balanced recoil, falling toward the ground, if need be, like frightened spiders.

  As they entered the estate’s airspace, each carrying a semiautomatic rifle slung around their shoulders, they surveyed the property with high-power night-vision headsets with wireless technology that transmitted the digital images back to the command van. The hands-free radios and earbuds allowed continuous communication between all parties.

  “You getting this, Flyswatter?”

  “A picture’s worth a thousand words,” LaMoia’s voice came back to the dangling operative.

  In the night-vision’s eerie green-and-black, viewed alternately between the Vs of trees, they saw a small parking lot crowded with luxury SUVs, Town Cars, and two stretch limousines. A cluster of darkly clad drivers and chauffeurs, some of whom were smoking, loitered by a door to the building.

  “We need more than a couple cars and chauffeurs,” LaMoia told his two men. “Keep looking.”

  At each pole, the operatives were required to suspend themselves from the cross-ties and move the Skyjack past the pole to the next length of cable. Such transfers consumed three to five minutes, conducted with the utmost care, to avoid being electrocuted.

  “Off-line,” announced the lead operative in a hushed whisper.

  In the command van, Rotem had had his fill.

  “We’re not going to get anything out of this,” he announced to no one in particular.

  “Give it time,” LaMoia said. “Our guys know what to look for.”

  “When that meeting breaks up,” Rotem said, speculating, “we lose what we’re after.” He had yet to explain, and never would, the loss of Laena. “By then we need legitimate reasons for stopping each and every one of those vehicles. And that’s not happening in this lifetime. If this goes down as a win, we’re going to have to take them as a group, while they’re still in that meeting.”

  “It’s a catered event,” LaMoia reminded. “It’s not going to be over in a half hour. They’re probably not even set up yet,” he said, completing his argument. “Give ’em a minute.”

  “There’s baggage,” Hampton advised from his uncomfortable seat.

  “What about your guy inside?” LaMoia asked.

  “That’s unconfirmed,” Rotem said. But then hearing himself say this, he ordered Hampton to try Larson’s cell phone again, muttering, “I’ve waited long enough.” ERT officer Peter Milton, suspended by a woven nylon climbing-strap from one of two wooden booms that supported four high-voltage electric lines, was in the midst of transferring his Skyjack to the next length of cable when he spotted a small stainless-steel box screwed into the wooden pole, and recognized it immediately. He’d moonlighted weekends for Cablevision.

  Milton radioed his discovery to the command van and waited to see if LaMoia understood its implications.

  LaMoia swiveled on the small stool and faced Rotem. “You may need our help on this one, Marshal Rotem-state law versus the feds, and all-but my officer just stumbled upon the unexpected. It seems someone in that compound is pirating their cable television.”

  “Television?”

  “A black box,” LaMoia explained. “Unauthorized intercept of a coaxial cable. It could be to steal high-speed Internet or a television signal, but state law’s the same either way.”

  “Are we sure?”

  “Milton knows his stuff, believe me. If he says it’s a black box, it’s a black box. And I don’t know about Washington, D.C., but in Washington state that’s a no-brainer for a search-and-seizure: ‘to confirm and record the use of the unauthorized interception of radio or television transmission,’ ” he quoted. “More to your favor is that our guys typically make such raids evening or nighttime-like right now-when people are in their homes. It’s not going to ruffle any judge’s feathers to cut us the paper this time of night.”

  “Let’s make the call,” Rotem said with reservation.

  LaMoia could see through to his concern. “As CO, I’m free to solicit the assistance of any law-enforcement personnel that, in my judgment, will better protect my field personnel. A couple federal marshals joining up won’t raise many eyebrows. We’ve got that license plate, that link to OC, to give us good enough reason to go in hot.”

  Rotem had his phone out. He told Hampton to get word to Larson to keep his head down because they were coming in.

  “I’ve tried him, like, ten times,” Hampton said.

  “Well, try him again.”

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FIVE

  Hope spotted a tray holding ten empty water glasses and two pitchers with ice. Scooping it up, she headed into the hall and turned left toward the stairs. She climbed quickly, arriving into the dizzying smell of oiled wood, leather, and the lingering sweetness of cigar and pipe tobacco. Golf championship plaques lined the wal
ls, some dating back to 1910. Yellowed black-and-white head shots of officious-looking men in blazers and club ties filled in the gaps between the plaques.

  She forced herself to walk slowly. With all the activity in the basement and the dining room being on the first floor, she assumed Penny was being kept somewhere here. The first two doors she encountered were closed. She dared not open them. The third was open a crack. She peered into an empty secretary’s station, the anteroom of an office. The sound of male voices down the hall won her attention and drew her past two more doors. The hall opened up then into a large trophy room with pennants hanging from the crown molding. Clubby, with brown leather couches and overstuffed chairs, chess sets, and backgammon tables. An armoire concealed a television.

  Hope cut across this room and into an opposing hallway where she came across a small window in a swinging door. She peeked through and saw a narrow stairway.

  She pushed through and climbed to the second floor, knowingly out-of-bounds. She hoped a simple excuse of being lost might get her by. Stopping at the landing, she heard the elevator’s electronic groan. Peering out into this second-floor hallway, she saw the room doors were farther separated than on the ground floor. Bedrooms or billiards or card rooms, perhaps. The stairs continued up to her left. She knew she was in dangerous territory.

  The tray grew increasingly heavy for her.

  Out in the hallway, she heard the spit of a radio intercom. “Khakis, brown sweater.”

  She didn’t have to look down to realize she fit that description.

  She set down the tray, pushing it into the corner, and quickly climbed to the third floor.

  From below she heard a male voice. “Hey, I got a tray here. Glasses. Pitchers. Fresh ice.”

  If something was said back to this man, Hope didn’t hear it. She pushed through the door and stepped out into the third-floor hallway, struck by the immediate smell of a hospital ward. She wondered if Meriden Manor was serving as a retirement home for mobsters.

  She darted past medical equipment, convinced her pursuer was coming through that door behind her at any second.

  The smell of old people intensified, like a grandmother’s house on a winter day with the windows shut tight.

  Through a partially open door she caught sight of a luxury suite of rooms and the back of a bald head-a man wearing hospital pajamas.

  Not assisted living, but assisted dying, she thought.

  Penny might be locked up in any one of these suites, held hostage in front of a color television with room service of ice cream sundaes and grilled cheese sandwiches. How simple here to keep a young child placated and free of complaint.

  Burning with resentment, hungry for her daughter’s freedom, she retraced her steps, trying each and every door. All locked. Slots for key cards like hotels. The Meriden Marriott. She opened the first door without a lock, albeit cautiously.

  A storage room containing linens, a pair of upright vacuum cleaners, and two rolling buckets with a variety of string mops.

  Out of the corner of her eye she caught the door to the stairs swinging open. Reacting, she ducked inside and pulled the door shut. She collected herself into the corner, crouching behind the pair of vacuum cleaners. Hunkered down.

  A muffled male voice. A guard on a radio checking room to room.

  The complaint of the hallway’s parquet flooring presaged the doorknob’s twisting. Hope ducked farther down, her eyes trained to the floor, head as low as she could manage.

  The door opened, the room flooding with light. She could hear his breathing. The light lessened as the door started to close.

  The BlackBerry lit up and buzzed in her pocket. She slapped a hand over it, tried to squeeze the buttons through the fabric of her pants. The vibration of the plastic continued.

  The room lit up as the door was flung back open.

  “Come out from there,” a tentative male voice ordered.

  She heard a bucket kicked out of the way. Another crash, extremely close to her.

  “Do… not… move,” the voice demanded.

  She looked up slowly, just as the BlackBerry stopped buzzing.

  Head down, she managed to get three numbers typed into the device quickly and hit SEND.

  He was just a kid: twenty, twenty-two. Dark skin. He held a gun aimed at her head, the barrel’s small black circular hole staring at her like an unflinching eye.

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SIX

  After twenty minutes of watching the bunkhouse, Paolo saw something in the dirt by the far end of the structure. Only as he came up to him did he see it was one of his team-Todi, they called him. Out cold.

  Paolo patted himself down, looking for his phone, only to remember Philippe had stripped him of it in the study, and he’d gotten out of there without it. He patted down Todi-he had a gun but that was all. He untaped the injured man, for all the good it would do.

  Paolo entered the bunkhouse with his razor gripped tightly in his right hand, ready for a fight. With his one good eye, he saw two more men, also hurt and unconscious, tied up and stretched out on the floor. He decided to clear the building. He didn’t need anyone coming up from behind him as he untied his buddies.

  He moved like a wraith through the small corridor, room to room, his shadow bending as it followed. Finding each of the rooms empty, he proceeded to where he’d left the little girl.

  He stood above the crawl space access door in the back closet of the back room. A fabric loop protruded from the carpet. The carpet had been cut perfectly to match the pattern.

  Paolo pulled on this, lifting the trapdoor. He stepped back, anticipating a gunshot. A cool wind wafted up through the crack. Nerves tingling, he stepped forward, prepared to jump.

  He’d practiced such tunnel raids in his training, though he’d never used the skills. He counted down from three, jumped into the dark space, and rolled upon impact. He crashed into a pony wall of lumber that braced the trailer’s central support beam. With a vertical clearance of less than four feet, he squatted on his haunches, his razor held out in front of him. He struggled to see clearly.

  Two low cots with sleeping bags. The girl was awake, sitting up, eyes wide, looking right at him.

  The crawl space was as large as the bunkhouse itself, framed in with plywood and blue foam insulation. The floor consisted of dirt and rock. Several electrical boxes, strung together with Romex wiring, ran from one porcelain light fixture to the next, dividing the structure in half. Light from the hole seeped down, just enough to see dimly corner to corner.

  They were alone here, the three of them.

  How that was possible, he wasn’t sure. Had whoever had tied up the guards missed the trapdoor?

  Clunk. A sound from above. The trailer’s front door came softly shut, though not softly enough.

  Paolo replaced the carpeted trapdoor from below, sitting it into its frame. He duckwalked over some plastic pipe and took up a position to afford him the greatest surprise. He trained his one good eye toward a spot in the blackness.

  The razor pressed tight between his fingers.

  Come and get it.

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SEVEN

  Bloodstained from his rescue of the woman, Larson had reached the far end of a darkened fairway with a partial view of the double-wide below. The more he thought about it, the numerous guards, the isolation, the more it made sense. Somehow he’d missed where they held Markowitz’s grandson, and if he’d missed him, then maybe he’d missed Penny, too.

  He reentered the bunkhouse, his gun at the ready. He had no time. A woman being badly wounded on the property would sound the alarm, no matter what she might tell others. Within minutes this bunkhouse would be swarming with guards.

  As he passed the bound guards, one looked conscious, but he made no appeal. Why so complacent? Larson raised his weapon. Someone was here with him.

  He moved stealthily and cleared two small bedrooms and a bath in a matter of a half minute or less. Arriving at the closed door to a room he recalled as a bunk room, h
e tensed. He counted down in his head and kicked the door open. It rebounded off the thin, hollow wall and he blocked it with his wet shoe. He sighted down the gun, finding every pattern in the room that worked against his expectation, nearly squeezing off a round into what turned out to be a pillow angled awkwardly.

  Clear.

  He moved toward the closet. Looked down, and there it was: a loop of fabric. A crawl space.

  A single guard sleeping in the bunk room could easily defend such a crawl space. Simple. Efficient. Practical.

  Larson bent and reached down for the fabric loop. He could not only feel guards hurrying toward this bunkhouse, but he also sensed at least one down this hole, a man charged with defending the space until help arrived.

  Larson would be a target from the moment he entered.

  Ten, fifteen seconds of precious time ticked off, Larson longing for a stun grenade. He retreated and switched off the hallway light behind him, evening the playing field by ushering the bunk room to pitch black. He let his eyes adjust, then he slipped his key-chain penlight from his pocket, hoping to use it as a diversion or decoy. He held the penlight in his right hand, along with his gun, the Glock.

  He knew he’d be fired upon the moment he jumped down in there. He had no doubt of this, and the stupidity of such an act briefly froze him. But with no time, and no options, Penny’s survival on the line-Larson dropped into darkness.

  He landed awkwardly, his gun smacking a metal pipe. He tossed the penlight to his left as a distraction while rolling right.

  No shots fired.

  As he rolled, his gun released its magazine into the gravel floor. His thumb touched the gun’s metal: the contact with the pipe had sprung and bent the magazine’s release switch. He fumbled to locate the magazine-wondering if the gun would accept it with the broken lever. He had one round in the chamber-one round he could count on.

  The weak light showed a pair of collapsible cots, and on them, the blond head of… a little girl.

 

‹ Prev