Authors: Brett Battles
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Crime
“Good sleep?” Nate asked.
“Fine,” she said. She looked at Quinn. “What did you want to talk about?”
“I’ve arranged for a place where you can stay,” Quinn said. Orlando had used one of her local contacts to find an out-of-the-way location for Tasha to lie low. It was in the mountains on the way to Lake Tahoe to the east, someplace no one would ever think to look.
“What?” Tasha asked, surprised.
“They won’t be able to find you. It’ll be safe.” Quinn walked over to the closet. From the inside pocket of the suit he’d been wearing earlier, he removed a map, a house key, and a valet ticket.
“I thought I was staying... with you. Help you find Jenny.”
He walked over to her. “There’s a car downstairs,” he said, handing her the ticket, then the map and key. “The route is traced out on here. You won’t have any problems. It’s a safe house. Stocked with food. You won’t have to leave. It’ll only be you.”
She looked at him for several seconds, her brow furrowed like she didn’t completely understand. “Why can’t I stay?”
“It’s out of the question.”
She looked at Quinn, then Nate, then at the front door, then back again. She seemed almost panicked. “I’m staying,” she said. “You need me.”
“You’ll get in the way and get one of us killed.”
“I won’t!”
“This is not a negotiation,” he said. “You’re leaving. We’ll drive you there ourselves if we have to.” She stared at him, her eyes pleading with him to reconsider. But
when he said nothing, the desperation on her face began to wane. “How...how long?” Quinn sighed inwardly, relieved. “A couple weeks would be best. It
should be okay by then.”
“A couple of
weeks
?” She had a pained look on her face again, only this time it seemed more for show than anything else. She knew she’d already lost the battle. Quinn could see that, too.
“You know what these people can do. So, yeah. Two weeks.”
Her gaze moved from his face to a point on the floor near his feet. He let her absorb the new reality for a moment, then said, “It’s time to go.”
“What about Jenny?” she asked, obviously stalling. “I’ll find her.” He paused, then added, “I’m already in contact with
her.” Her eyes grew wide. “You’ve talked to her? You know where she is?” “You don’t have to worry about her anymore. Go lay low. This will
all be over soon.” “But...I—” “This isn’t a choice,” Quinn said. “Get your purse and let’s go.” She hesitated, looking like she wanted to push back one more
time, but after a few seconds, she turned and walked back into the bedroom.
Nate had sat unmoving through the entire conversation, his eyes glued to a rerun of
Three’s Company
. As soon as Tasha left the room, he held up the remote and changed the channel.
“Don’t get comfortable,” Quinn said. “Oh, I’m not comfortable,” Nate told him. “You could have given me a heads-up you were going to do that.” “I’m going to take her down to the car. Wait ten minutes, then
meet me in the lobby.” As soon as he finished speaking, Tasha came back into the room. “How will I get ahold of you if there’s a problem?”
“There’s not going to be a problem,” Quinn said. “How do you know that?” Quinn hesitated, then walked over to the desk and tore a corner
off one of the remaining pieces of stationery. On it he wrote one of his many dummy phone numbers. Calls to any of the numbers would be rerouted to his cell phone.
“Here,” he said, handing the paper to her. “But only if you have no
choice.” She put the scrap into her purse. “Wait,” she said. “I’ll give you mine, too.” She walked over to the desk and ripped off another strip of paper.
She wrote something on it and handed it to Quinn. “Promise me you’ll call me every few days to let me know what’s
going on,” she said. “I can’t do that,” he said. Her lips pressed together for a moment, and her eyes narrowed.
“All right. Then here’s the deal. If I don’t hear from you every...seventy-two hours, I’ll start looking for her again,” she said. “That
I
promise you.”
Quinn tensed, but he sensed this was not an argument she would give up on. “Fine,” he said as he jammed the paper into his pocket. “Let’s go.”
He headed for the front door. “Hold on,” she said. “I want to hear you promise me.” He looked back at her, annoyed. “Well?” “I promise,” he said.
CHAPTER
QUINN AND NATE TOOK A CAB TO AN ITALIAN RESTAU-
rant a few miles away, in Richmond. There was better Italian food in North Beach, but the quality of the meal wasn’t as important as the privacy of the location. And there was no place better for a meeting than a restaurant that served mediocre food.
Richmond was a mix of the new and the old. Family businesses that had been in the neighborhood for years, next to boarded-up buildings awaiting renewal. On some blocks, the gentrification had already begun. But that wasn’t true for the block Angie’s Fine Italian Restaurante was located on. It was part of a 1970s-era strip mall. Its neighbors were an insurance broker to the left and a defunct tanning salon to the right. The sign for Easy Tan was still mounted above the front window, but the space itself was empty.
The front window of Angie’s was unadorned except for a layer of grunge that had gathered on the inside over years of disinterest, blurring the view. The only thing that could be made out was the neon “Open” sign, but even that had a hazy, ethereal cast to it.
As Quinn opened the front door, they were assaulted by the odor of garlic and tomato sauce—but cheap, like out of a can.
“I think I lost my appetite,” Nate said.
The promise of a less than stellar experience conveyed by the exterior continued inside. Almost all expense had been spared on the décor. A row of high-backed booths lined the walls on both sides, with an additional set running down the center of the room. The seats and backrests appeared to be covered in brown vinyl that was no doubt some amateur designer’s idea of faux leather.
The main dining room was empty. No customers. No employees.
Quinn pointed to a booth halfway down the left side. They walked over and sat, Quinn taking the side with the view of the front door.
Almost a full minute passed before they heard footsteps approaching from the back of the restaurant. Soon a woman wearing a flower pattern dress and a red apron was standing at the end of their table. She was at least in her mid-sixties, Quinn guessed. And the smile she wore looked like it came more from habit than from pleasure.
“Thought I heard someone come in,” she said. “Did you get menus?”
“No,” Nate said.
“Two seconds,” the woman said.
She walked over to a small counter next to the front door and picked up two menus off a large stack.
Once she had handed them out, she asked, “Can I get you something to drink first?”
“You have Moretti?” Quinn asked.
“Should have a few bottles left.”
“Same for me,” Nate said.
“I’ll be right back.” She left the way she had come.
Quinn moved his menu to the side without even looking at it.
“I guess I could get the spaghetti Bolognese,” Nate said, studying his menu. “They can’t mess that up too much, can they?”
The sound of the traffic outside increased briefly as the front door opened. Quinn shot a glance over, then stood a moment later when Orlando reached the table. Nate jumped up as soon as he realized who it was and gave her a hug.
“I’m sorry about your aunt,” he said.
“Thank you,” she said.
“I wish I could have been there this afternoon, but I was put on babysitting duty.”
“It’s okay. Don’t worry about it.” She looked at Quinn. “You send her off?”
“All done.”
“Any problems?”
“No.”
Quinn moved out of the way so she could sit on his side of the booth.
“You’re going to make me sit on the inside?” she asked.
“Yes, I am,” Quinn said.
She rolled her eyes, then slipped in.
Before anyone could say anything else, the waitress returned. She was holding a tray with the beers. Only one was a bottle of Moretti. The other was a Red Stripe.
“Three of you now, huh?” the waitress said. “Only had the one Moretti.”
Quinn reached up, grabbed the Red Stripe, then handed it to Nate.
“So I guess this is yours,” she said, setting the Moretti in front of Quinn. She turned to Orlando. “Something for you, hon?”
“Pellegrino?” Orlando said.
“The only water I got comes with or without ice,” the woman said.
“I’ll take tea,” Orlando said. “Hot.”
The waitress lost a little bit of her fake smile as she sighed. “It’ll be a minute.”
“Take your time,” Orlando said.
When they were alone again, Quinn said, “I got a response.”
“From the message board?” Orlando asked.
“Yes.”
“Wait a minute,” Nate said. “I—”
“Genuine?” Orlando said, ignoring Nate.
“Seems to be. The code word was Los Angeles. When I worked it out, this is what I got.” Quinn pulled the piece of paper he’d written the message on and handed it to Orlando—the series of numbers followed by “4:00 p.m. GMT Saturday.”
“Excuse me,” Nate said. “What the hell are you talking about?”
“What are these numbers at the top?” Orlando asked. “A phone number?”
Quinn nodded. “That would be my guess.”
She set the paper on the table and pointed at the first few numbers. “Brazil?”
Quinn shook his head. He had tried the number on the ride over just to check it. “I thought so at first, but the number doesn’t work.”
“Maybe you screwed up one of the digits.”
“Thanks for the confidence.” Quinn turned the paper around. “Anyone have a pen?”
Orlando didn’t, but Nate pulled one out of his pocket and held it out. “I’ll let you use this if you tell me what’s going on.”
Quinn snatched the pen from him, then set to work on the numbers. He applied the Los Angeles code—eleven digits, including the space—to the number Jenny had sent him one more time. This time, instead of skipping words, he increased each digit by eleven, starting again at zero once he reached the number nine.
“She double-encoded it,” Orlando said.
As soon as he finished, he turned the paper around so Orlando could see it.
“Six-six-eight,” she said. “Bangkok cell phone.”
“Yes,” Quinn said.
“Hold on,” Nate said. “Can one of you please—”
This time Nate cut himself off as the waitress reappeared. When she reached their table, she set an empty cup on the table in front of Orlando and placed a small teapot next to it.
She looked around the table. “You all going to order now?”
“Not yet,” Quinn said.
“You are going to eat, aren’t you?” she asked.
“Maybe,” Quinn told her. “We’re not sure yet.”
This time the woman’s smile vanished completely. She turned without another word and headed back to the kitchen.
Nate leaned forward. “What message are you talking about?”
Quinn finally looked at his apprentice. “Jenny contacted me.”
“What?” Nate said, surprised.
Quinn gave him a quick description of how he’d used the message board to contact her, and of how he had just received her response.
“So she wants you to call tomorrow afternoon?” Nate said.
“GMT,” Orlando said.
“Right,” Nate said. He paused a moment. “So, nine in the morning for us.”
“Yes,” Quinn said.
“That’s great,” Nate said, a smile on his face. “Make sure she’s all right, tell her about Markoff, then you’re all done.”
“Do you really think she’s going to be all right?” Orlando asked. “Someone is obviously after her. Are you saying we should just let her hang out there on her own?”
The smile slipped from Nate’s face. “No,” he said. “Not really. I was just... just being a little hopeful.”
Quinn looked over at Orlando. “I want to record the call and see if we can trace it. You have what you need to do that?”
“Yes,” she said. “I have something that will work.”
“Then come over to the hotel around seven-thirty,” he said. “That should give you enough time to set up, right?”
As Orlando was about to answer, the front door to the restaurant opened again. Moving only his eyes, Quinn glanced at the new arrival. A man, six feet tall, in shape, no more than thirty-five years old, with hair trimmed short and neat. He wore a dark suit that looked just a little too nice for this part of town.
“Keep your eyes open. I’m going to check him out,” Quinn whispered. Maybe this guy was a customer, but there was no sense in taking a chance.
As he started to rise, Orlando put a hand on his thigh. “I’m the unknown,” she said. “I’ll do it.”
It was the right move. If the man was looking for anyone, it would be Quinn. He wouldn’t recognize Orlando. The solution didn’t make Quinn happy, but he nodded.
“I’m going out for a smoke,” Orlando said just loud enough to be heard across the room. “Any of you want to join me?”
Reluctantly Quinn slid out of the booth so she could get up.
“Careful,” he whispered to her as she passed him.
Her quick smile told him to shut up.