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Authors: John Sandford

BOOK: Stolen Prey
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“There are a couple bankers who care that much,” Lucas said.

“Is that what this is about? Bankers getting their money back? Did somebody make a phone call?”

“Hey, fuck you, George. We’re not paying anybody off.” Lucas was pissed, and let it show.

Shaffer held up his hands and said, “George, I’ll talk to you in my office in just a bit. But that was bullshit. I agree with Lucas. I mean, what the hell are you planning to do, drive around town until you see them?”

“There’s gotta be something.”

“Well, I’m waiting,” Shaffer said. “Tell me what it is. I’m more interested in the killers than the money, but I got nothing. So what do you have that we don’t? That we could personally do? Come on. Tell me.”

George had nothing, and, cornered, he admitted it. O’Brien said, “I’ll tell you what, if we can get that gold, that’s not going to wreck the Criminales, but it’s going to give them a couple of flat
tires. We’re starting to see some places that they’re taking their investments in Europe.”

“What about the thieves?” Lucas asked. “You see where their money is going?”

“Yeah, but we’re not getting to the end of the line. We’ve got them in Europe, but it’s coming out of there to somewhere else. We’re talking to Interpol now, but that always takes time.”

“We don’t have time.”

“Tell that to some time-wasting asshole in Lyon,” O’Brien said. “They gotta cross every T twice.”

“So we’re doing a full-court press on Martha White,” Shaffer said. “We keep our mouths
shut
on this. If anything leaks, somebody’s gonna be learning the private detective trade, because his ass is gonna be outa here. We all clear?”

Everybody nodded, and the meeting broke up, with Shaffer saying, “We’ll get back here in two hours. Everybody take a leak, get something to eat. We could be on her for a while.”

O
UT IN THE HALL
, Martínez touched Lucas’s arm and said, “If I get the ashes, and they say I will, I will not be here tomorrow morning. My flight leaves at nine o’clock. So, I thank you for your help.”

“What can I say?” Lucas said. “It’s a tragedy, but honestly … he brought it on himself. If he’d only called us…”

“I tried to get him to do it,” she said. “But he was a very stubborn man, with very big…” She hesitated, looking for the right word.

“Cojones,”
Lucas said.

She smiled then and said, “Ah, your Hemingway. But yes, exactly. So…” She put out her hand, which was small and soft, and Lucas took it and said, “If I don’t see you again, I thank you for coming and trying to help.”

T
HAT CONVERSATION
, Lucas thought as they parted, should just about cover the state of Minnesota’s daily minimum requirements for hypocrisy.

From his office, he watched her walk across the parking lot to her car, and when she was rolling, he called Shaffer and said, “She’s gone.”

“You think she bit?”

“She was so straight that I’m beginning to worry that I could be wrong,” Lucas said.

“She’s been spying on the guy she’s been working next to for, what, four, five years, and then she killed him? If she couldn’t look you in the eye and sell you a lie, she would have been dead a long time ago,” Shaffer said.

“Yeah, you’re right. I know goddamn well she’s the one,” Lucas said.

“I’m calling my crew back. Get Del, Jenkins, and Shrake over here, and let’s put it together. She might be moving fast.”

“Wish we’d had time to box her,” Lucas said.

“Just no time,” Shaffer said. “Besides, she’ll be coming back.”

M
ARTÍNEZ
was
moving fast. After leaving the BCA headquarters on Maryland Avenue, she took Maryland west to a CVS pharmacy
and got out in the parking lot with her sat phone. A few minutes later, she was speaking to the Big Voice, telling him what had happened at the meeting, reading off the address for Martha White. The Big Voice got it on his computer screen, asked her where she was, and said, “You are perhaps two kilometers away. A few minutes.”

“I will find it on my iPad.”

“I will alert Uno and Tres. Meet with them, go in there, see if the gold is there, and get out. Do you have your alternate ID?”

“Yes.”

“I will have a car rental for you in … Bloomington, Minnesota,” the Big Voice said. “This one is near the airport, on the same freeway, but farther west than the airport. I will send a map for your iPad.”

“Thank you.”

“I will have another car and a new ID for you in Kansas City, Missouri. If you drink enough coffee, you can be on the border tomorrow afternoon.”

“Yes.”

“You’re not worried about entering the house?”

“Not if we do it fast enough,” Martínez said. “They are deploying at the airport in two hours…. We have to be out in two hours, or sooner.”

“Then go.”

B
UT SHE
was
worried. Her conscious mind had bought the charade at the BCA, but her unconscious, her intuition, nagged at her. She paid attention to that, the nagging feeling. Rational analysis
argued that she had not given herself away, but there was something about the situation….

And she still hadn’t made up her mind about the gold. Keep it, or turn it over to the boss? If she kept it, she’d have to do something about Uno and Tres. She decided that she’d worry about that when the gold was in her car.

The phone rang a minute later, and it was Uno.

“Where do we meet?”

“There is a school here. In the parking lot. I will tell you the directions….”

They were fifteen minutes away.

She resented all fifteen of them.

17

M
artínez’s problem, which she’d recognized before she ever set foot in the U.S., was that none of her subordinates, Uno, Dos, and Tres, were particularly bright; they were the Mexican equivalent of the hapless American shitkicker who discovers the power of the gun. Which was fine when somebody needed to be killed right now, or chopped to pieces. Not so fine when subtlety was needed.

She waited for Uno and Tres in a Metro State University parking lot; when they arrived, they got out wearing jeans and black sport coats, and not-so-subtly armed with Mac-10s over their shoulders, nine-millimeter pistols tucked in their belts.

“How will you carry them if we have to go on the street?” she asked of the Mac-10s.

“Under a jacket,” Uno said.

“It’s warm. It’s hot.”

“So … if anybody asks, we shoot them.” Uno laughed to show that he was joking. Maybe.

T
HEY WERE
in a hurry, but Martínez took five minutes to examine the target house, and the surrounding area, on a Google aerial
photo that she pulled up on her iPad. When she was satisfied that she had the general lay of the land, they left, taking her car. If they were ahead of the BCA, then the car wouldn’t matter. If it was a trap, and they had to run, the BCA agents knew Martínez’s rental, but not the Toyota.

As she waited for traffic at the edge of the parking lot, she remembered her shock when Davenport had suddenly appeared at Sanderson’s apartment, running up the apartment steps with the gun in his hand.

She began to sweat. Something about the feel of the thing.

The direct route to Margaret Street would be a left turn and straight ahead. She considered, checked her iPad again, and took a right. She turned right again on East Seventh, then left on Greenbrier, drove a block, and found herself looking out the driver’s-side window, down a long, steep bluff, into a vast weedy hole in the ground. She’d seen it on the iPad, but hadn’t been quite sure what she was looking at.

Another block and they came to Margaret Street, but five blocks from the target house, and across the four-lane East Seventh Street. Margaret dead-ended at the hole, which a sign said was Swede Hollow Park.

She looked at it for a moment, then turned around and drove back the way she came, again overshooting the direct route to Margaret.

Uno, who was now looking at the iPad, said, “No, you turned the wrong way.”

“We’re going another way,” she said.

Uno turned the iPad in his hands, and the map image turned with him, frustrating him—he wanted to look at it sideways, and
it wouldn’t allow him to do that. “Shit,” he said. “This machine is shit.”

Martínez took the tablet away from him, propped it against her steering wheel, and followed the map along Mounds Boulevard to Third Street, took Third to Cypress, turned left on Cypress to Fremont, turned the corner on Fremont and pulled over.

“So now, one of you has a mission.” She didn’t care about which one—one was as dumb as the other.

Uno was querulous:
“¿Qué?”

She explained: there was some small chance that the cops were watching this house. A small chance, but a chance. They nodded.

“There may be twenty-two million dollars inside,” she told them. “Big Voice says that if we get the gold, I will get ten percent for taking the chance to get it, and each of you will get five percent. That’s one million dollars in gold for each of you, if we take this chance. A million in gold will buy a very nice life for you and your mother and your wife, if you have one. A Toyota Tundra with a cap, running boards, brush guard, bush lights. Whatever you want. Ten of them, if you like, and you still won’t have spent even half of the gold.”

They nodded, listening closely now.

If the police were waiting up ahead, it would be better if only one of them was caught. The others could then try to rescue that one, or get away, and send money for lawyers and so on.

“So which one goes?” Uno asked.

“You decide,” she said.

The two killers looked at each other and Uno finally lit up
and said,
“Piedra, papel o tijera.”
Rock, paper, scissors, best two out of three.

Tres laughed and nodded. Uno promptly won the first round, rock breaking scissors. Tres groaned with excitement, and they went again, and Tres won this time, paper covering rock, when Uno tried to get smart and do “rock” twice in a row. Tres pulled out a second victory with another paper over rock.

Uno giggled and said to Martínez, “I thought he would do scissors because he thought I would go to paper, but, I fail.”

Martínez nodded, contained an impulse to smack them both, and said, “Look for people in cars, or people standing around not doing much, or even people hiding. Look in windows. Walk slowly. We will keep the telephone on, you and me. If you see something, tell me.”

If he didn’t see something, she told him, he was to check the house, and perhaps go in. “If you do see something, go this way on the same street, on Margaret. If they chase you, keep going, and you will come to that big hole we saw. They can’t follow in their cars, and you are very fast, so you will lose them when you go through the hole.”

“Ah,” Uno said. He was, indeed, very fast. “Walk on to East Seventh Street, and then down the long hill to the city.”

“We will be on this street, and will watch behind you.” She tapped the iPad. “When you get here, in the city, you will call us and we will come and get you.”

Uno looked at the iPad for a long moment, then said, “So I walk to this Margaret Street and then to the right number, and then, if I find the gold, I call you. If I don’t, I call you, and then walk down the same street.”

He repeated it all, tracing the route on the aerial photo. When she was satisfied that he had it, she cut him loose.

They watched as he walked back to Fremont, looked at the street sign, and took a right. In a moment he was out of sight.

S
HRAKE HAD
gotten permission from a Margaret Street homeowner to sit behind the slats of his old-fashioned front porch, a block east of the decoy house. Jenkins was two blocks away, also on Margaret, west of the decoy, on his stomach behind a hedge. Lucas was in Del’s pickup with Del, parked a block over, north and west, toward East Seventh, where they expected she would come in. Shaffer was in a car with another agent, north and east.

The second meeting with the other agents had gone well enough, with a couple of them annoyed that they hadn’t been let in on the secret about Martínez, but most agreeing that not knowing had given the meeting, with its flashes of anger, more authenticity. “Never would’ve guessed it,” one of the agents said.

Shaffer found two members of the BCA SWAT team who weren’t on any immediate assignment, and grabbed them, and assigned them to hide inside the decoy house.

In any case, it was Shrake who saw Uno coming. There’d been a half dozen false alarms, guys walking alone or in pairs along the street, but none of them looked right. Shrake checked Uno with a pair of compact, image-stabilized Canon binoculars, then called in on a handset that all the other teams would pick up.

“Got a small guy coming in, he looks right, he looks Mexican,
he’s small. Moving slow. He’s on Cypress, coming up to Margaret. He’s checking things out.”

Lucas: “He’s alone?”

“He’s the only one I see.”

“I’m moving over a block, to Margaret,” Shaffer called. “Everybody else stay put.”

A moment later Uno came up to the intersection and stopped on the corner, and with great, ostentatious nonchalance, stretched, yawned, took a good long look around, then turned toward the target. Shrake recognized that for what it was: “This is one of them,” he said, excitement riding in his voice. “He’s checking out the block. He’s got a phone in his hand, he just said something into it, so it’s turned on, or it’s a walkie-talkie. He’s turned toward the house.”

“I see him,” Shaffer said. Shaffer was a full block behind Uno, sitting at an intersection.

“She’s sent him out here to look for us,” Lucas said. “She’s not sure we’re here, but she’s worried. And she’s close. Not more than a few blocks away. I’m going to break off with Del and start turning blocks, see if we can spot her car.”

“Go,” said Shaffer. “John, come in a block. Look for people in cars.”

“The guy’s looking at the house,” Jenkins called.

J
ENKINS
, S
HRAKE
, and Shaffer took turns recounting Uno’s progress down the block, and Lucas and Del started turning corners, looking for Martínez. They started north and west of the target house, while Martínez was south and east. As they went
first south, and then east, they turned a block too soon and passed a block north of Martínez’s position. They never saw her car, and she never saw their truck.

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