Doing Hard Time (20 page)

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Authors: Stuart Woods

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“I’m working from memory, here,” Genaro said, “because her personnel file has been deleted from the hotel computer.”

“No kidding? How’d she do that? Did she have anything to do with computers in her work here?”

“Just her schedule.”

“How about the state record of her casino worker’s application?”

“Good idea, check that.”

“Any close friends?”

“Not that I know of. Her apartment’s been cleaned out, and her car was picked up by the leasing company from the employees’ lot.”

“How about that husband of hers, the one we busted for that card-counting scam?”

“Now, there’s a thought—I forgot about him. Last I heard he was working as a parking valet at the Sands. He won’t ever work indoors at a casino again.”

“You have an address on him?”

Genaro turned to his computer and searched the out-of-date employment files. “Got one, but who knows if he’s still there?”

Harry made a note of it. “Well,” he said, “it’s a start.”

“There’s something else, Harry.”

“Shoot.”

“Charmaine has a boyfriend named Billy Burnett. He checked in here a few weeks ago, wired us a quarter-million, and played poker for three or four days. Walked away up sixty grand. I ran every sort of check on the guy and came up with the standard stuff, but nothing that would help track him down.”

“Billy Burnett,” Harry said, writing down the name.

“William J. Burnett. Harry, the man is dangerous.”

“How so?”

“He doesn’t like being tracked. One of our major stockholders has lost four—count ’em, four—men who tried to track him. Two of them are buried
in their car
in the New Mexico desert. The other two have been found in the trunks of their cars in the parking garage at Shutters, in Santa Monica.”

“Holy shit!” Harry said. “I guess that is what you’d call dangerous.” He noted the names of the four men, then took down the colors and tail number of Burnett’s airplane.

Genaro was still typing away at his computer. “Well, shit,” he said, “her casino card application is gone from the state’s records, too.”

“This Burnett sounds like a major computer geek,” Harry said.

Genaro told him everything he could remember about both Charmaine and Billy Burnett. “Go get ’em,” he said. “When you find ’em, do nothing—just call me. And, Harry, don’t turn up dead.”

“Gotcha,” Harry said, then left.

Stone and Emma, Dino and his wife, Viv, and Mike Freeman were having dinner at Patroon, a new favorite restaurant of Stone’s. When the ladies went to the restroom, Mike spoke up.

“I sort of had lunch with Billy Barnett before we left L.A.,” he said.

Stone was surprised. “Why?”

“It was accidental, really. Peter and I bumped into him at the Centurion commissary, then Peter left and Billy and I had a chat.”

“About what?”

“I offered him a job.”

“Doing what?”

“I haven’t figured that out yet, but I’m sure he’d be a useful employee.”

“Did he have any idea that we suspected him of being Teddy Fay?”

“He does now,” Mike said. “I told him so.”

“Mike, that’s crazy,” Stone said. “That makes him dangerous.”

“I told him my story as a way of warming him to me.”

“Did it work?”

“He admitted nothing—the man is icy cool. I’ll bet he could beat a good polygraph.”

“Did he take the job offer?”

“No, but he has my card. Stone, I don’t think you have anything to worry about, as far as Peter is concerned. He seems very protective of the boy.”

“Well, I’m relieved to hear that,” Stone said.

The women returned, and the subject changed.

• • •

Harry Katz ran the usual background check on Billy Burnett, just to see what turned up. Pete Genaro had been right: it was unrevealing, as far as the man’s whereabouts were concerned. He was going to have to go to L.A., he guessed. He told his secretary he was going away for a few days, and as an afterthought, he asked her to book him into Shutters, where the two dead men had been found.

But Harry had another stop to make before he left town. He found James Sayer in the valet parkers’ break room at the Sands and introduced himself.

“Yeah, I remember you from the Desert Inn,” Sayer said. “What can I do for you?”

It wasn’t a warm greeting, Harry thought. “The Desert Inn people are concerned about your ex-wife,” he said. “She quit her job and apparently left with somebody who could be dangerous.”

“I didn’t know Pete Genaro was concerned about anything but his bottom line,” Sayer said.

“It’s true he’s not concerned about people who steal from his casino,” Harry said, “but Charmaine was a valued employee, and he doesn’t want her to get into trouble.”

“Well, she called me yesterday,” Sayer said. “She said she had gotten married and left town, and she wouldn’t be seeing me again.”

“Did she say who she married?”

“No name. She said he was a former client at the Desert Inn.”

“Did she say that she got married, then left town?”

Sayer thought about that. “No, she just said she got married. I didn’t get the impression she got married in Vegas. In fact, she had a low opinion of the marriage chapel business here. I don’t think she would have gotten married at one of those.”

“Did she say anything else that might have indicated where she was?”

“Nope, not a thing.”

Harry thanked him, got into his car, and headed for L.A.

His first stop was at the West Los Angeles police station, and it took him only a minute or two to find out which detectives were assigned to the homicides in the Shutters garage. Turned out, he had been a mentor to one of them, Sanders, when they had both been assigned to the Ramparts division. Sanders seemed glad to see him.

“I hear you guys are working the homicides at Shutters,” Harry said.

“‘Working’ isn’t the right word,” Sanders said. “We’re mostly sitting on our asses, trying to figure out what to do next. These are the cleanest killings I’ve ever seen.”

“Tell me about the ballistics,” Harry said.

“Same gun, a .380 semiautomatic. There was a shell casing in each trunk, too.”

“No prints on the shell casings?”

“Clean as a whistle. This guy is a pro, no doubt about it. Both victims worked for the same company in Phoenix, an international conglomerate. The second victim came in here and talked to us, told us nothing, then claimed the first victim’s body and had it cremated. We think he must have been hunting for the killer on his own and found him.”

“You think there was a crime other than homicide connected to these two killings?”

“Maybe, but we can’t prove it.”

“Do you have a list of the other guests in the hotel at the time?”

Sanders fished a document out of the case file. “Here’s a list of people who checked out the morning Smolensky was shot. That’s all we got from the hotel.”

Harry glanced at the list and immediately saw a W. J. Burnett, but he said nothing. This was his case for the moment, and he didn’t want the two cops in his way.

“What’s your interest in these homicides, Harry?” Sanders asked.

“I may be looking for the same guy your two victims were looking for.”

“What’s his name?”

“Doesn’t matter—it changes often,” Harry said.

“What does your casino want with the guy? He steal from them?”

“Nope. It’s a confidential matter.”

“If it’s connected to our two homicides, it’s not confidential.”

“If I find out anything along those lines, I’ll let you know,” Harry said. He thanked them and left.

• • •

Teddy checked his computer for messages and found flags he had placed on various websites, indicating to him that somebody was doing a background check on William J. Burnett. It had to be the casino again, since he had never given that name to anybody else.

So, there was somebody else on his tail again.

Teddy had begun to think that the only way to put a stop to this relentless hunt for him would be to take Majorov out of the picture entirely. Apparently, nothing less would discourage him.

He logged on to the CIA mainframe, routing his path through half a dozen other computers around the country. Anyone who stumbled onto his presence there would find that the computer being used was in a real estate office in Boise, Idaho.

He did a search for Majorov, and the man not only had a file, but a large one. He was the son of a colonel in the KGB who had been in charge of a Spetsnaz, or special forces, unit that had been tied to a misbegotten plan to invade Sweden back in the 1980s. The father had begun his rise in the KGB when he was chosen as the English instructor to the former Soviet premier, Andropov.

Yuri Majorov, the son, had been trained as a KBG officer right out of Moscow University, but his career had been rocked by the Glasnost movement, which changed nearly everything in the former Soviet Union, even to some extent the KGB. After that, he had made large sums of money by putting together syndicates of investors to buy former state enterprises that were being privatized. His investors were largely criminal organizations.

Majorov was believed to have combined and reorganized these Russian Mafia groups into a kind of criminal conglomerate, which had many investments in legitimate businesses. They were very big in hotels.

Then came the interesting part: Majorov had been involved in an attempt to take over The Arrington, a new hotel built in Bel-Air, Los Angeles, by a group formed by Stone Barrington, who had inherited a large piece of land in that community from his murdered wife, Arrington, who had been the widow of the movie star Vance Calder, who had assembled the land over decades.

Majorov was believed to have been in New York when a friend of Barrington’s had been kidnapped by a Russian Mafia group, and to have been in a helicopter shot down in the ensuing battle between the Russians and a combination of NYPD and CIA units. He was thought to have perished in the crash.

Teddy thought of adding an addendum to the file, pointing out that Majorov was alive and well in Las Vegas and still trying to get The Arrington, but he thought better of it. Such a note would simply start a search for whoever had put it there, and he didn’t need the attention. Instead, he closed the file and did a search for Michael Freeman. In reading the file he confirmed the story that Freeman had told him at their meeting. He logged off the mainframe and considered his options.

It was clear that Teddy would be doing a favor to just about everybody—Barrington, the CIA, the NYPD, and the group that owned The Arrington—by simply eliminating Majorov. This, though, was not as easy as he would have liked it to be. First of all, his face was now known at the New Desert Inn, as was the Burnett alias, and Majorov would surely have heavy personal security.

Teddy had come to a point where he had been offered a way out of his fugitive existence and into an interesting and safe environment, and to risk that over a revenge killing, however satisfying, would be foolish.

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