Shock Wave

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Shock Wave Page 17

by James O. Born


  Wells had listened to the man brag about how it had taken four cops to stop him, then bitch about how they hadn’t let up once they had him cowed. He ended by saying, “Fuckin’ cops. Always around when you don’t need ’em.”

  Wells had listened to this as he tried to concentrate on the course. He stopped the big truck and turned to his mountain of an instructor.

  “That sucked,” said the man. “If we’d turned you loose with one of these over in Vietnam, we woulda won the damn war.”

  “That’s why I’m here. Wanna learn.”

  “Learn? Son, they’s some things you can learn and they’s some you can’t. You can’t learn to drive one of these babies.”

  “But I need to.”

  “No, son, you don’t. Ain’t that much money in driving, and there ain’t enough money to cover what you might do in one of these things.”

  Daniel held back a smile, thinking, If you only knew.

  The big man continued. “You seem like a smart fella. You could probably do anything. Get a big-ass lawn mower and start a landscaping business. You don’t need a big rig, and we don’t need people thinkin’ you learned to drive at our school.”

  “But I paid.”

  “And you done got your money’s worth, too. Now, unless you want to try an take it outta my hide, it’s time for you to skedaddle.”

  Wells looked at the man’s earnest expression and opened the door to the big training vehicle with BIG RIG ACADEMY painted on the side. He slid out of the cab and walked away silently. He let a small smile escape as he pocketed the truck’s extra key he’d taken off the ring. There were three more keys, so no one would notice, and he had one more piece of his plan in place.

  Tasker and Sutter walked up the driveway to Wallace Training Academy. The school’s main curriculum revolved around teaching people how to handle large trucks. From step vans to eighteen-wheelers.

  On the walk up the long concrete driveway, Sutter said, “I think Camy is about to switch back to the coed team.”

  “What makes you think that?” Tasker could hardly hold back his smile.

  “I just know these kinds of things.”

  “You know all about women, huh?”

  “Enough that I know she’s got a thing for me.”

  “What if someone else was already aware of her interest in men?”

  Sutter looked at his partner. “You dog. Did you beat me to her?”

  Tasker held up his hands. “No, my brother. That fem is out of my division.”

  “What? Why’re you talking like Lail?” He froze and put a hand out on Tasker’s arm. “I know you’re not saying that the FBI version of Shaft is hitting Camy?”

  “You know everything. You’d know if she was never a lesbian and just never corrected the rumors that circulated about her. You’d also know that she and Lail have been together for five months. You’d also know that she thinks you’re a conceited ass.”

  “That’s a little harsh. You’re my partner.”

  “I’m just filling you in on what she thinks.”

  “The only thing that worries me about her is her judgment. Unless that boy Lail is rich or hung like Wilt Chamberlain, she has no business even talking to that idiot.”

  “No argument from me.”

  Sutter nodded to himself as they started walking again. “Just a different challenge, that’s all.”

  Camy walked to her car from the office of a construction business in Homestead. When they’d split up jobs, she’d taken the one she thought might produce a valuable lead; she was talking to any regular customers of Naranja Engineering. Tasker and Sutter were going around to truck-driving schools, and Jimmy Lail was searching all possible intelligence databases to see if Wells was listed anywhere. He kept saying that the FBI wasn’t allowed to keep that kind of information, but everyone knew they had some indices. Otherwise they wouldn’t have been able to claim that Wells was associated with a terror group in the first place. Jimmy could also check the county, and they had some big reports on the various crazies. Since they only had to concentrate on Dade County, they put some real effort into creating a broad database on members of extremist groups, and they didn’t have to worry about the Department of Justice looking over their shoulders. This was Dade County; there wasn’t time to worry about outsiders.

  This construction company was straight up. They had hired Wells to repair some of the small Bobcat tractors and specially configured trucks. The manager liked Wells because he did good work at half the price of the companies that were certified to repair the Bobcats. Camy just moved down her list to a pressure-cleaning company in Florida City. On the short drive down US 1, she found herself thinking about Billy Tasker. He was a sweet, good-looking guy, but she’d checked around and found out he had two kids. That was a lot of baggage. He did have a good body and those blue eyes. But he had kids.

  After a few minutes, her mind wandered to the arrogant, but definitely attractive Derrick Sutter. He was a legend among some of the Miami PD female employees. A gentleman who never had any complaints. And unlike Jimmy Lail, he really was black. Camy smiled, thinking about him as she headed south.

  …

  FDLE criminal-intelligence analyst Jerry Ristin had eliminated almost all of the phone numbers Daniel Wells had written in his address books. He had found several relatives in Florida and had agents from Gainesville to Fort Pierce on their way to check the addresses. He had a whole bunch of commercial numbers probably associated with the engineering business, and then there were half a dozen numbers he couldn’t identify. These were probably nonpublished. No one had used them on credit applications or mailing lists. A subpoena to Bell South hadn’t come back yet on all of them.

  Ristin ran them through the computer again, using general public Web-search sites like Google and Yahoo! Still nothing. Ristin hated being beaten by information. That was his job. While the agents liked to reminisce about shootouts or chases, he always relished a good challenge to find information on the computer.

  He looked at one number for a few moments and thought it sounded familiar. He went to one of the undercover phones and dialed the number, knowing the phone he was using would come back as an insurance agency. An answering machine with an electronic voice merely told him to leave a message. He looked at the number again. It appeared to be in a sequence. The last four were 8005. He dialed 8000, and after two rings a female answered: “FBI, may I help you?”

  Ristin hung up, thinking, What the hell was that?

  Tasker and Sutter pulled up to the last of the five schools listed for teaching the skills needed to drive an eighteen-wheeler. The other four had had no idea who Daniel Wells was and didn’t recognize his photo. They parked Tasker’s replacement car, a gold Jeep Cherokee, next to a sign that read BIG RIG ACADEMY. Tasker didn’t think they would ever get all the CS residue out of his car since Wells had booby-trapped it. Now he had a state car and personal car that were Cherokees. He had been able to slip the Monte Carlo to the dealer and have a buddy there keep his mouth shut. They were washing the interior and if necessary replacing the carpet. Tasker told him he’d pay for it out of his own pocket. It was worth it to keep the events of that day secret from his coworkers.

  They walked up to the front desk, which was manned by a tired-looking woman with graying, greasy hair held back with bobbie pins.

  “Help you?” she asked as the two cops walked into the small building surrounded by acres of asphalt. Through the glass, Tasker could see two trucks without trailers parked in the corner of the lot.

  “Yes, ma’am,” said Tasker, flipping open his identification. “We’re looking for a man who may have come here for lessons.”

  She took his credentials in one hand as she read them, then looked at his face to ensure he was the right man in the photo. She cut her eyes to Sutter, who didn’t bother to show her any identification. “What’s his name?”

  Tasker said, “Wells, Daniel Wells.”

  “Name don’t ring a bell. Hold on while
I look it up.” She turned to an ancient Tandy SL1000 computer. The old monochrome screen flickered and then displayed a list of names. She scrolled down to the end and studied it for a few seconds. “Nope, no Wells.”

  “Can I show you his picture in case he used a different name?”

  The woman just looked at him, apparently waiting for the photo. When Tasker handed it to her, she looked at it carefully, then looked at her computer again and said, “Westerly was the name he gave us.”

  “When was the last time he was here?”

  “You’d have to ask Baby about that.” She looked at Tasker as he waited for her to tell him where he’d find this Baby. “Out back near the trucks. Think he’s eatin’.”

  Tasker nodded and followed Sutter out the door, across the lot to the parked big rigs. A monster of a man in a tight T-shirt that said “I Am Not a Fucking People Person” stood next to one of the trucks, eating a bologna sandwich.

  “Help you?” he said, eyeing them carefully.

  Tasker smiled, saying, “The woman inside said this guy took lessons from you.” He held up the photo of Wells. “If you’re Baby, she said to talk to you.”

  “I’m Baby. Why you want to know about him?”

  “Just need to ask him some questions.”

  “Who’re you?”

  Tasker flipped out his identification.

  Baby leaned over to look at the official credentials. He nodded and said, “You know I had a little trouble with the cops the other night over at the Last Chance Saloon.”

  “That’s rough,” said Tasker, then held up the photograph again. “Did this man, Wells or Westerly, ever talk to you?”

  “I coulda stayed if ya’ll didn’t have them batons and pepper spray.”

  “I’m sure. Now about this man.”

  “You two wouldn’t even get my attention other than to make sure one of you didn’t get stuck under my shoe.”

  Tasker smiled and said, “You’re probably right. When is his next lesson?”

  Baby seemed frustrated in his failure to provoke a fight. As Tasker looked at his partner, so did Sutter. His hand had subtly reached around to the ASP he kept in his back pocket. Tasker shook his head slightly. He already had his hand on his own ASP.

  Baby pointed at Wells’ photo and said, “What’d he do, anyway?”

  Tasker didn’t miss a beat. “He may have molested a child. That’s why we need to talk to him.”

  Baby’s eyes widened. “A girl or boy?”

  “Does it matter? It was a child.”

  “You’re right, you’re right, it don’t matter. He just left a couple of hours ago, and I don’t think he’ll be coming back. He had no aptitude for this at all.”

  “He say why he wanted to learn?”

  “Naw, just that it was his dream. If ya’ll wait a minute, I’ll get his file. See what we can find out.” Baby started to hustle toward the office. He looked over his shoulder down toward Tasker and Sutter trying to keep pace. “A child molester, that’s low. I hope you catch that nasty sumbitch. That just makes me sick.”

  Tasker felt a little guilty leading the man on like this, but he’d never said Wells did molest a child, only that he may have. Tasker didn’t want to have to fight this guy either, so he figured it all came out in the wash. Now Baby would answer any question they asked.

  twenty-one

  Nothing was adding up on this case. No matter what Tasker did, Daniel Wells seemed to stay one step ahead of him. This wasn’t some kind of master criminal, either. He had no record. Or maybe that was the mark of a master criminal: no tracks. Either way, with the effort and manpower Tasker was putting into looking for this guy, he’d have thought someone might at least run into him at the grocery store. The southern section of Dade County just wasn’t that big. He had people covering every angle but had yet to put his hands on Wells. The Big Rig Academy proved he was still in the area. Tasker and company couldn’t even find his stripper-wife.

  Along with the case problems, Tasker felt guilty about leaving the girls alone during the morning. It was so unusual to have them on a weekday. Thanks to a Jewish holiday that the Palm Beach County school system called a “fall break,” he had been able to have them on a rare Thursday and Friday.

  Now Bill Tasker sat at his kitchen table while his girls played a PlayStation game. He’d worn them out before dinner shuttling from a Home Depot to hobby shops, letting them think he was looking for a certain type of glue, when he was really looking for signs of Daniel Wells. He figured that Wells might be looking in places like that for supplies of some kind. If Donna knew he was dragging the girls around on that kind of mission, he’d have been in for a fight. And that woman could fight. He still missed her, but she could lay a big hurt on you if you crossed her.

  He looked up at Kelly and Emily as they concentrated on the TV screen. The two sisters shared no qualities other than being sweet. Kelly, the artistic, cerebral, quiet ten-year-old. And Emily, the athletic firebrand. He didn’t deserve such beautiful, well-mannered girls. That was one of his biggest problems in a nutshell. He didn’t deserve much of anything. He’d always been focused on work and tended to exclude everything else. Even after the West Palm shooting, while he was under investigation he could only focus on that. After he’d eventually been cleared, he’d still sulked about it to the point that Donna had thrown his ass right out of his own house. Now that he did deserve.

  Every time he made a promise to himself that he’d spend time with his family, something happened to side-track him. He loved them and loved doing things with them. He just couldn’t let things at work drop. Tomorrow he had one meeting in the morning at the office with everyone-then he was coming straight back to these two. He didn’t care what happened.

  He looked down at his and the other agent’s notes and knew there was a pattern somewhere, he just couldn’t see it. Unlike the FBI profiler, he didn’t think his own analysis was beyond question. He needed something confirmed. The one thing that the profiler had said that he continued to contemplate was the bomber’s motivation. To be in control. Tasker ran that through his maze of a mind to see if he could relate to it at all. From some of the shit he’d pulled, it seemed like Wells liked to lose control, not gain it. But maybe he was misreading what the profiler had meant. That psychobabble tended to cloud issues. Tasker thought in practical terms, and he couldn’t see a practical reason for Wells to risk his family and bomb that ship. On the other hand, he was running awful hard if he was not involved. What scared Tasker the most was that he felt Wells was working on something else. That had to be the reason he hadn’t left town. That’s why he had a gas tank welded in his step van. Tasker knew he was up to something, and that’s why when he looked up at his daughters and saw they were occupied, he went back to his notes.

  Derrick Sutter followed Tasker through the front doors of the Miami Regional Operations Center of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. It was a severe culture shock after the constant bustle of activity at the Miami PD. In the city, local citizens stood in line to get accident reports, report minor crimes and complain about some unknown cop who either didn’t enforce some city ordinance or enforced it too rigorously. Here, west of the airport, in a brand-new, sparkling clean, three-story building, no one waited in the lobby. One well-dressed, nice-looking woman sat comfortably behind thick, bulletproof glass. Sutter was shocked to see her smile and wave to Tasker as he walked inside. That shit wouldn’t happen at the PD. Sutter realized that the mission of FDLE was entirely different from that of a local PD. FDLE worked on big cases which generally weren’t reported directly to them by the public. Sutter decided police work was more efficient if you didn’t include the public.

  On the third floor, they turned into an immaculate squad bay with big, clean windows and working computers on every desk. In a spacious conference room at the end of the bay, Sutter could see the delicious Camy Parks sitting with her perfect legs crossed. As he came closer, he saw she was talking to that FBI moron, Jimmy Lail.
Tasker’s analyst, Jerry something, stood at the end of the conference table, not even concealing his feelings about Camy’s legs, or the rest of her.

  Tasker said, “Sorry we’re late. Thanks for seeing them in, Jerry.”

  The older, portly man nodded, not taking his eyes off Camy.

  Sutter grabbed the seat next to Camy. “Hey, baby,” he said quietly. It still got a harsh glance from Jimmy Lail. Sutter wondered when he’d realize that a real black man was trying to move in on his territory.

  Tasker addressed the whole room. “Let’s see where we are. Who’s first?”

  Camy started right up. “No clues from any of the companies he worked for. They all said he was a great guy who worked hard.”

  Tasker asked, “None of ’em had any idea where he might be hiding out?”

  “Nope. One place, South Florida Metal Works, said he worked on some welding and even hauled away bags of metal scraps that had been lying around for a year. Just little corners and shavings from making shelves and things like that. They loved the guy. Kept turning them down for a permanent job.”

  Sutter gazed at her while she delivered her professional report. He nonchalantly let his hand drop off his lap and brush her leg. He got no response.

  Sutter said, “Bill and I covered all the truck-driving schools in Dade and found out Wells used the name Westerly at the Big Rig Academy, but didn’t graduate. In fact, they booted his ass ’cause he couldn’t get the hang of it.”

  Camy asked, “When was his last lesson?”

 

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