Get Back Jack (13 page)

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Authors: Diane Capri

Tags: #mystery, #Jack Reacher, #thriller

BOOK: Get Back Jack
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Gaspar shook his head. “Some guys are just trouble magnets,” he insisted. He remained stubborn on this point, which Kim felt was so obvious even Stevie Wonder could see it.

She didn’t have time to argue about this again, so said nothing.

When she didn’t relent, Gaspar said, “Suppose he is a mercenary of some sort. Let’s say he gets paid for the work, too, because otherwise, why bother? Where does the money go? And what does he use it for?”

Kim shrugged. “Drugs. Women. Gambling. The list is endless.”

“Back to his bank records. Slim, almost non-existent. For fifteen years, very few deposits other than his monthly pension. So he gets paid for these mercenary activities in cash?”

The best answer was another bank account. Given Reacher’s friends in high and low places and the lack of information available about him, the likelihood of finding a second bank account, if it did exist, seemed remote and at the moment, she didn’t have the time to spare.

She shrugged again, this time to convey something totally different. “You’ll figure it out. Sleep on it.” Kim gathered her equipment. “Collect your bags. We’ve got to go,” she said, and left the room.

The Boss’s cell phone began vibrating in her pocket again as she walked down the hall. Coincidence? Surely not. How much had he heard of their conversation? She ignored his summons for the third time today. Liberating, really, not to be tethered to his whims.

She worked through her plans for the next twelve hours, focused on the private investigator who had been watching Dixon.

The surveillance file Neagley gave to them yesterday was incomplete at best and probably had been scrubbed. After almost a month of watching Dixon, the investigator had to have accumulated more than Neagley had revealed. Maybe Neagley had scrubbed the file, but more likely someone else had done it. Could have been the investigator. Or his employer. Or someone else.

Regardless, there was more to know than what Neagley had shared. If Dixon could be located, Kim might be able to move on in her assignment and stop dealing with Neagley and O’Donnell and the rest. Let Reacher and his crew kill each other off if that’s what they wanted to do. Kim didn’t really care anymore.

She reached the elevator, turned, and saw Gaspar pulling his bag, limping toward her, and pushed the call button.

Inside the elevator, she said, “I want to see the surveillance video Colonel Silver used to grab the still-frame photos of Dixon’s visitors.”

Silver had already failed to mention Neagley’s visit to Dixon last week. Old soldiers stick together, Kim knew, and this case overflowed with career Army veterans, most of them officers. Like any huge organization, the higher up the pyramid one climbed, the smaller the pool of pals. Officers of a certain vintage were likely to have at least a passing relationship with one another. At this point it would be foolish to assume Silver and Neagley didn’t have a long history with each other. She needed to find out for sure.

As Gaspar said, it was long past time for Kim to think like
them.

Kim glanced at her Seiko. She could feel her stomach already churning. Fifteen minutes until takeoff. “Someday, Chico, let’s try getting on board our flight on time like normal passengers. What do you say?”

“You’re my captain, Dragon Lady Boss. But you’d better hustle,” he said. “Don’t hold me back, okay?”

She hadn’t planned to ask, but she did. “What did the Boss have to say when he called just now?”

“You think I talked to the bastard?” Gaspar laughed like a man watching a slapstick comedy gag over and over and over. Kim didn’t understand slapstick comedy or why men found it funny. She only knew that they did. And when some dumb jackass comedy routine struck their fancy, they laughed as if God himself had tickled them into near hysteria. That was Gaspar’s reaction.

When the elevator stopped at the gate level, he dashed out and she had to hustle to keep up.

 

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

 

Saturday, November 13

12:54 p.m.

New York City

 

The flight had been blessedly uneventful, on time, as perfect as Kim could expect while being strapped to an explosive missile. She hoped it was an omen. Perhaps her luck had changed.

She spent the flight time reviewing and updating her files, as was her routine. She’d identified more open questions about Reacher than answers, but she could almost believe she’d been deployed on a cut-and-dry background check for the SPTF. Almost. If she ignored the six-hour gap in her memory and the soreness in her neck. And the end of her career, which for her would be the end of life as she’d planned it.

The moment she had Internet access again, she’d sent the materials to secure storage. They’d stashed their equipment in a locker and joined a short cab line. The cab was clean, the driver pleasant, and weekend traffic light. Elapsed time from their O’Hare hotel to the curb in front of Dixon’s Manhattan apartment was under four hours. Not bad.

She waited on the sidewalk while Gaspar paid the cab driver. Unlike their prior visit only two days ago, the weather was crisp but fine and the city teemed with Saturday crowds. A Salvation Army volunteer stood on the sidewalk outside Dixon’s building, vigorously ringing his bell beside the familiar red kettle. New Yorkers hustled along, loaded down with heavy shopping bags or lost in whatever coursed through their earbuds, but several stopped to slide coins and folded bills through the slot on the collection kettle’s lid.

Kim’s father served as a volunteer bell ringer after Thanksgiving every year. He and her mother would be expecting Kim home in Detroit for the long holiday weekend. Would she make it? She dropped a folded twenty into the kettle and made a wish like she always did. Kim wasn’t superstitious. But her mother was and the wishing habit was ingrained from childhood. Today she wished to finish her assignment before Thanksgiving.

Kim could see through the revolving door that Dixon’s building was busier today, too. Residents passed through the lobby, some coming, some going; most called out to Colonel Silver on their way. Kim saw no one she recognized. When Gaspar joined her at the entrance, she said, “You take the lead with Silver. He seems to relate better to you. Tell him we want to talk to him privately. Find out when his break is and how long it lasts.”

“Ten-four.” Gaspar waved his arm forward, palm up, and said, “After you.”

She pushed through the door and waited for Gaspar on the inside before following him across the lobby. Seeing them before they reached him, a big grin lifted the corners of Silver’s mouth. “Hey! Good thing you two came back.”

Gaspar asked, “Why is that, Colonel?”

“Ms. Dixon came home last night. You still want to talk to her, right?”

“You’ve seen her?” Kim asked.

He wagged his head. “Not personally, no. But the night guy, he told me she’d arrived during the wee hours. She’s probably still catching up on things. Jet lag and all, you know? You can go on up if you want.”

Gaspar said, “Okay, thanks.”

Kim followed, completely flummoxed, and reconsidering everything she thought she’d learned in the past three days. Finding the investigator, identifying the scar-faced woman and the dead man might be unnecessary now. Maybe Dixon would actually be helpful. A cooperative witness who knew Reacher and might have something worthwhile to add? Now that was a refreshing concept.

Unlike the elevator in Neagley’s building, Kim remembered how this one zipped up the floors at light speed. They arrived on Dixon’s floor in a hot New York minute and Gaspar led the way to her apartment.

He pressed the doorbell. They waited. He pressed again. No answer, just like their prior visit. Kim began to feel uneasy. Gaspar pressed one last time. Same result.

He turned to Kim, gestured toward the keypad, and said, “Your turn.”

She spent a couple of moments in indecision before she stepped up and pressed the numeric keypad as if it were a cell phone, testing her hunch. 7-3-2-2-4-3-7.

Just as it had when Gaspar pressed the same entry code on their last visit, the door clicked open. “Good to have you back, Susie Wong,” he teased, grinning. “How did you know Dixon’s code?”

“I didn’t. But I know you, Chico. And I know everything you know about Dixon. I just used the code you would have guessed first when you were trying to impress me.”

“Which was?”

“The common denominator.”

He laughed and she pushed through the door and they stood a moment to admire the breathtaking view of New York again before he called out, “Ms. Dixon? Karla Dixon? Are you here?”

Crickets.

Kim said, “I’ll check the bedroom. You check the kitchen. Meet you back here.”

Gaspar nodded and moved toward the kitchen, continuing to call out to Dixon. Kim did the same while moving in the opposite direction.

“Karla?” Kim called ahead to avoid the possibility of interrupting the woman in her own bedroom. She needn’t have bothered.

Dixon’s bed had not been slept in. Kim had left one pillow slightly askew on her last inspection, as a test, which remained as she had positioned it. The master bathroom’s sinks and shower were dry. She lifted the toilet lid. The bowl had a full complement of water. After almost a month’s disuse, some of the water should have evaporated. Maybe the toilet had been flushed since Dixon left, but when? No footprints on the carpets except her own size 5s and Gaspar’s size 12s, made during their Thursday inspections. She looked inside the closets and found them unchanged. She stopped in Dixon’s office again. Nothing out of place.

“No one back here,” she called out to Gaspar as she rounded the entry to the dining room. “Find anything out front?”

She saw Gaspar through the kitchen door, facing her with his hands behind his back, leaning against the cold granite countertop. He tilted his head to the side, as if he was pointing toward the corner, outside Kim’s visual range.

She felt every small hair stand up on the back of her neck. Alarm coursed through her venous system as she reached for her gun. But before she drew it, a woman’s voice projected from that direction. An even, dispassionate voice she recognized.

“Hello, Otto,” Neagley said.

Kim holstered her weapon and entered the kitchen. Neagley stood with her back to her, looking into the open refrigerator.

“Looking for lunch?” Kim asked.

“I was, actually,” Neagley said, without turning.

My ass,
Kim thought. “You might have answered when you heard us calling out.”

“You called Dixon, not me.” Neagley closed the refrigerator and moved to opening cupboard doors.

The woman was infuriating. “Is Dixon here?”

“You’ve been through the entire place. Did you see her?”

Kim’s patience evaporated. “Why are you here?”

“Same reason you are, I suspect. I told you I’d left a message for Dixon. She got my message and left one in return. Said she was flying in last night and she’d be home today.” Neagley returned to the refrigerator and grabbed a bottle of water. “No food in here.” She offered a bottle to Kim, and closed the door again when Kim didn’t accept.

“So you just hopped on a plane from Chicago this morning?” Kim demanded.

“Isn’t that what you did?” Now Neagley was heating up too.

Gaspar interrupted. “Are we getting anywhere with this?”

“Where is Dixon?” Kim pressed.

Neagley said, “I don’t know. It’s obvious she hasn’t been here. Do you know where she is?”

Gaspar said, “So we need to figure that out. Let’s sit, okay? I’m tired of standing.” He turned and walked into the dining room, pulled out a chair and waited.

Kim waved toward the archway and said, “After you.”

Neagley volunteered nothing, but she sat across from Gaspar and Kim took the chair at the head of the table. Silence. Gaspar assumed his usual waiting pose. He extended both legs, crossed at the ankles, slouched in the chair, folded his hands over his stomach and closed his eyes. “Let me know what you want me to do, Boss.”

Kim ignored him. Should she trust Neagley? She had no provable reason to distrust her, except that Neagley had been too close to Reacher once. Kim wasn’t comfortable with that, even if Reacher wasn’t orchestrating whatever was going on here. Which Kim still thought there was a better than decent chance he was.

“We were attacked in your office building last night,” Kim said.

Neagley’s eyes narrowed. “What do you mean?”

“We were knocked out and drugged. When we regained consciousness, we were lying in the stairwell outside your office.”

“Do you have a suspect in custody?”

“We’re working on that,” she lied. No one was investigating the assault. Nor would they be. But Neagley didn’t need to know that. Kim wanted Neagley to be worried about being arrested, but if she was, she did a damn fine job of hiding the fact. “We’d like to see the surveillance video from the corridor and the stairwell outside your office.”

“So you don’t know who attacked you? Surely you don’t have so many enemies that you can’t name them, Agent Otto.” She’d amused herself there. “You’ll need to ask the building security. I’m not responsible for those common areas.”

“Why don’t I believe you?” Kim already knew she couldn’t get what she needed from building security. She’d tried. But she didn’t argue. Neagley’s refusal to cooperate was at least some evidence that she knew more than she let on.

Neagley said nothing.

“How long have you been waiting here for Dixon, Frances?” Gaspar asked without sitting up. He did open his eyes, though.

Neagley glared at him. “Don’t call me that. About an hour. I figured she went out for food or something and she’ll be back.”

“Did you ask Silver?”

Neagley narrowed her gaze in his direction, but Kim could feel the frigid response emanating from her when she said, “No.”

“Have you tried to call Dixon?”

“Of course. No answer.” Neagley pushed her chair back and stood.

Kim wanted to shake that cold confidence. She chose a different tack. “Is Dixon with Reacher?”

It worked. Neagley pushed her chair in and glared at her. “How would I know?” Then she turned and walked toward the exit. “When Dixon shows up, you can ask her.”

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