What had Bo gotten into?
The gunman’s flashlight swung up and she gripped the wood tighter, certain he was going to shoot them, but then heard a soft click as he turned on the light in the main living area.
He shoved the flashlight in his pocket, and gun in one hand, he walked toward the kitchen. She glanced down, saw her reflection in the mirrored tray right beneath her where Bo’s wallet sat, and she prayed the intruder wouldn’t notice.
“Find anything?” the other called from below.
“Nope.”
“You see any computers up there?”
The man stopped, looked around. “Not a one. The window’s open. She musta gotten out that way.”
“Let’s go. We’ve spent enough time here.”
He moved to the window, looked out, then returned the way he came, shutting off the light before heading downstairs. She didn’t dare move, barely dared to breathe, until she heard the swoosh of the warehouse door as the intruders left.
Suddenly she felt sick, the adrenaline starting to flush from her system, and she barely had the strength to hang on to the rafter. She looked at the man standing in the shadows across from her, his gun still pointed toward the stairwell.
“Who are you?” she asked softly.
He held up a finger, waited several seconds before answering, as though listening for something. “Let’s get down from here.”
She wasn’t sure if she could, her knees were starting to shake.
“Sit on the crossbeam, then turn,” he instructed her. She did, and he holstered his gun, hopped down first, his agility confirming in her mind that he was used to this. She was not, and her effort would have been comical, if not for the circumstances. Once they were on the floor, he held out his hand, saying, “Griffin. Department of Justice.”
“Why didn’t you shoot them, Griffin, Department of Justice? And how do I know you’re really who you say you are?”
“First, I’m here by myself, and I don’t know if there were only two. I didn’t like the odds. Second, you’re going to have to trust me on this, since I’m all that stands between you and probable death.”
“But they’re gone.”
“For now. What’s your name?”
“Piper.”
He motioned her to follow him to the stairs, and as they descended, he asked, “Do you know anything about this list of numbers those men were asking about?”
She stopped, crossed her arms. “Maybe trust is too big a first step. Do you have ID?”
He gave her a slightly annoyed look over his shoulder, dug a billfold out of his back pocket, then handed it to her as he continued down the stairs.
She opened it, could just make out the seal of the United States Department of Justice, and then his photo and name, Zachary Griffin. It seemed legit—and unfortunately devoid of money and credit cards. “Your wallet.”
He took it from her, and returned it to his pocket. “About those numbers?”
“He found them on a hard drive.”
“Where’d he get the computer?”
“Not a computer. A copy machine.”
“A what?”
She pointed into the depths of the darkened warehouse, where just visible in the light spilling out of the office sat the copy machines Bo was in the process of rebuilding. “He bought them at a government auction. The one with the numbers came from the San Francisco FBI office.”
He stopped suddenly, turned toward her. “You’re sure?”
“Very. There were other reports on it. But he didn’t look at those. I swear.”
He glanced toward the machines, then started toward the exit once more. But as they approached the office, he said, “Wait here.”
He walked into the open door, was gone no longer than thirty seconds before stepping out and walking back to her. “Was he a friend of yours?”
People didn’t say “was” unless the outcome was death, and she nodded. Tears clouded her vision.
He took her hand, saying, “When we walk past, try not to look in. Maybe even close your eyes. You don’t want that to be the way you remember him.”
“Okay.” It came out more of a croak, her throat having closed up, and she was grateful when he didn’t let go. As they approached the office, she caught a glimpse of black and white on the floor before she looked away. Bo’s Converse tennis shoes, she realized, then squeezed her eyes shut, not opening them again until he led her outside and the cold misty air hit her face. Only then did she say, “Shouldn’t we call the police?”
“No.”
“But—”
“The last thing you want is your name in that report. The men who killed your friend? They won’t think twice about coming back for you. They have his computer, which means if your friend communicated with you through it, you’re at risk anyway.”
“What am I supposed to do?”
He looked toward the end of the drive, saw a vehicle slowly cruising toward them. Headlights suddenly turned on, blinded them, and the vehicle sped up. “Right now?” he said, grasping her hand tight and pulling her in the opposite direction. “We run.”
2
Several days earlier, Special Agent Zachary Griffin received an alert that a partial match from a list of numbers code named the Devil’s Key—stolen by a former military agent and hidden away at a villa in Ensenada, Mexico—had popped up from an IP address in the Bay Area. It had taken his team that long to track the computer to this warehouse, and he’d prayed that the FBI connection he’d suspected wasn’t a factor. What he didn’t expect was that someone else was tracking it, too. That meant that someone other than an authorized U.S. agent—and as far as he knew, the agents on his team were the only ones authorized—had tapped into a secure database.
In other words, a simple operation to plant a few bugs and find out where the info originated had gone downhill fast. And as much as he’d hoped there was no connection to the San Francisco FBI field office, or Sydney Fitzpatrick, the FBI agent he was currently dating, tonight’s mission had confirmed his worst fears.
Now he had one civilian dead and was left babysitting another one who looked like she’d just stepped out of some mosh pit from an underground concert, with her black and pink spiky hair and facial piercings.
So much for getting in and out without a body count, he thought, hitting the button on his Bluetooth to call his partner, James “Tex” Dalton, who was supposed to be checking the other source of the numbers, a friend of this Bo Brewer’s at an apartment about two miles away. The two had used computers to send the numbers back and forth. He and Tex had decided a divide-and-conquer approach would be faster. Now Griffin wished they’d stuck together.
“Where are you?” Griffin asked, when Tex answered.
“Just hitting the freeway. The source on this end? Bo Brewer’s friend? Dead. And they took his computer.”
Two deaths. “They’re here now. Same result. Except they’re looking for us.”
“Us?”
“Picked up someone. We could use a ride.”
“On my way.”
Griffin heard the beep as Tex disconnected, then looked over at the girl. At least she wasn’t prone to hysterics. And she was dressed in black. He led her to the rear of the building, just as the car pulled to a stop out front. A chain-link gate blocked the vehicle from following them, and he heard the engine shut off and two car doors closing. Only two. He could deal with those odds if necessary, but he’d rather avoid any shooting. In this area, if anyone heard the earlier shot, it might be dismissed as a backfire. Multiple shots were likely to be called in, and if he could, he’d like to get out before the police arrived.
Looking around, he saw the yard belonged to an auto repair shop, and he noticed a stack of old tire rims near the wall that separated the area from the freeway. Counting on the road noise to help mask any sounds, h
e leaned close so she could hear. “Do you have a cell phone?”
“Of course.”
“Turn the ringer off. Don’t use it. Unless I’m dead, dying, or bleeding. Your number will come up on the police switchboard, which means a trail directly to you. Very bad,” he said, then directed her behind the rims, not having time to explain why that would be less than desirable. He drew his gun, then watched as the two men came down the side of the building.
He looked over, saw a hole in the fence between the auto repair yard and the warehouse yard next door. “If I can create a distraction, we’re going to move to that fence, then go under.”
“Distraction?” She dug into her pocket. Pulled out a set of keys with a remote, then pointed it up the drive toward the two men who were heading their way. The pair walked past a dark SUV parked alongside the building. “That’s Bo’s car,” she said, then pressed the button. The car alarm beeped. The suspects stopped, swung around toward the vehicle, pointing their guns.
“Get ready,” Piper whispered, then pressed another button.
The SUV’s engine started and the headlights turned on, silhouetting both men, who started firing at the vehicle as they advanced.
Impressed, Griffin pulled Piper toward the fence. Piper scrambled under and Griffin followed suit. They raced around the building toward the front.
“That’s their car,” she said, pointing to a mid-sized Chevy.
There were several cars parked in the lot, and since he’d come around from the other side when he’d made entry, he had no idea if that one had been there earlier. “How do you know?”
“License plate’s the same.”
Not a lot of people went around memorizing license plates. An oddity for sure, but he wasn’t about to stop and ask her why. He nodded toward the corner. “End of the street, turn right. My partner, Tex, should be arriving any minute in a dark blue Ford Fusion. I’ll be right behind you.”
She hesitated the barest of instances, and he pushed her in that direction. “Go!”
She ran.
Griffin kept close to the building, making his way to where the gunmen’s car was parked. He peered around the corner, saw them looking into Bo’s SUV. One of them started swearing, as the other yelled, “Idiot! It’s a remote start. They’re still back there.” Both men lumbered down the drive toward the rear of the auto repair shop.
Perfect, he thought, then pulled a knife from the sheath in his belt, aimed, and threw it at the car’s left front tire. The moment he heard the hiss of air as it hit, he raced toward the end of the street. As he rounded the corner, he saw Tex waiting in the car, but Piper was nowhere in sight. He didn’t have time to hunt for her and try to convince her that, for a while, her life was no longer her own. But she popped up from behind a hedge, and when he pulled open the back door, she slipped in without him asking.
“Buckle up,” he said, then got into the front seat. And just as Tex hit the gas, then sped forward, he caught a glimpse of one of the gunmen in the side mirror running around the corner. “Get down,” he told Piper.
Tex kept it floored until the first right that led over the freeway. He didn’t slow until he was certain they weren’t being followed, then worked his way around until he found the freeway onramp.
“Where are we going?” Piper asked Griffin.
“As far from here as we can get.”
Piper was quiet a moment, then asked, “What do the numbers belong to?”
Tex glanced at Griffin, then back at the road. Griffin wasn’t about to divulge anything to her, but he still needed to know what she knew. “What’d your friend tell you?”
“He thought they were some sort of computer code.”
“Any idea what sort?”
She shook her head. “He said they might be out of order. He changed them around because it made more sense.”
Griffin noticed Tex’s grip tightening on the steering wheel, undoubtedly wondering what exactly her friend had just delivered to the enemy before he was killed . . . “In what way?” Griffin asked, trying to keep his voice neutral, as though none of this was of any importance.
Piper shrugged. “Trust me. I had no idea what he was talking about. Besides, he erased them. They got nothing.”
“Any chance he made a copy they don’t know about?”
“He didn’t need to. He had me.”
Tex checked his rearview mirror, then signaled and moved to the slow lane. “Maybe we should find a place to stop,” he said, taking the next exit. Eventually he drove into a grocery store lot, parking so that he had a view of the cars coming in and out.
Griffin shifted in his seat so that he could see Piper. “He had you? What exactly are you talking about?”
“Numbers. Lists,” she said. “If I see it, I remember it. It’s sort of a curse. I can’t shut it off.”
“You remember numbers?” From the corner of his eye, he saw Tex’s eyebrows go up. “As in the list your friend changed?”
“As in I can re-create it to a T.”
“The new list.”
“The new list. The old list. Any list.”
Assuming she was telling the truth, not exaggerating, this was big. This code she’d allegedly seen had been stolen twenty years ago, and the government had been searching for it ever since. They’d thought it lost until just a few months ago, when an FBI agent, Sydney Fitzpatrick—the woman he was currently dating—had recovered it while investigating the murder of her father, who had been involved in the theft of the code.
The implications hit Griffin and he took a breath, telling himself that they needed to take this slow. Sydney was supposed to have turned over the only known copy of this code to her superiors at the FBI, who had then turned it over to his agency, ATLAS. The obvious explanation for it suddenly appearing here on a copy machine hard drive was that Sydney had made a copy.
And now, because of that, someone was dead—and this girl’s life endangered.
Then again, maybe he’d misunderstood what this punk rock kid was saying. “Can you explain it a little more?” he asked.
“About this list or my memory?”
“Both. Start with the memory.”
“When I was twelve, my foster dad took me to spring training for the Giants. I was hit in the head with a baseball. A line drive. It knocked me out, and I ended up in a coma for two days. When I woke up, this, well, thing happens. I have a precise memory of whatever I read. I can show you if you like.”
“How?”
“Maybe the license plates in this lot? You have pen and paper?” Tex pulled a pen and small notebook from the center console. When he tried to hand them back to her, she said, “Drive through the lot first.”
“How fast?”
“Normal speed. I just need to be able to read the plates.”
Tex shrugged, then pulled out, cruising the lot. There were about twenty cars in all. When he finished, he parked in the same spot, then handed her the pen and paper.
She immediately started jotting down the plate numbers. Without hesitation, Griffin noted. When she finished, she handed Griffin the list, then instructed Tex to drive past the cars to check it.
Tex drove through again, while Griffin compared the list to the plates.
She wasn’t even looking at it when she said, “Ignore the fourth one down. The white Lexus left.”
And it had. “She didn’t miss one,” Griffin said.
Tex returned to their original parking spot, then looked back at her. “How much can you read at one time and still retain what you see?”
“I don’t know. Whole books’ worth. The thing is, I’m not like a math genius or anything. I didn’t understand this computer code stuff that Bo was working on. I can’t do formulas or computations. I just memorize what I read.”
“But you remember the code Bo was looking at?” Tex asked.
<
br /> “Because he made me read it. I think he was afraid of getting in trouble, because the machine belonged to the FBI. He was curious, that’s all. He just wanted to make sure there was a copy to look at again after he erased the stuff . . .”
Griffin asked, “How many people know about this talent of yours?”
“I don’t know. Most of my friends just think it’s, well, like a game.”
A deadly game should the wrong person discover what she was keeping in her head.
“Where do you live?” Tex asked.
“A couple miles from Bo’s place. I took the bus.”
“Anything you can’t live without?”
She shook her head, looking scared, as though it was finally hitting her. And Griffin saw tears welling in her eyes.
“We need to call McNiel,” Tex said, referring to their boss. He pulled out his phone.
Griffin stopped him from calling, then told Piper, “Can you excuse us for a moment?”
He got out.
Tex followed, and both men moved a few feet away. Griffin wasn’t even sure how to break it to Tex.
“What,” Tex asked, “aren’t you telling me?”
“Where the numbers came from.”
“Which would be . . . ?”
“A hard drive from a copy machine that used to sit in the San Francisco FBI field office.”
“As in Sydney Fitzpatrick’s former office? The same Sydney you’re currently dating?”
“As in someone in that office made a copy. We don’t know for sure it was her.”
“Does it really matter? It means there’s still a copy floating around out there. And we need to find it. Before someone else does.”
Griffin’s stomach knotted. Tex had warned him—on more than one occasion—that he needed to have a frank talk with Sydney about this list she’d recovered. “Do not say I told you so.”
“Wasn’t even thinking it.”
“Like hell.”
“Okay, maybe I was. So what’re you going to do?”
The Kill Order Page 2