The End Game (5 page)

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Authors: Catherine Coulter

BOOK: The End Game
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9

BISHOP TO F4

Bayway Refinery

B
oth Mike and Nicholas leaned in so Zachery could hear. “What did you say, sir? Reeves is dead? He was killed?”

Zachery said, “No, but he's missing. His wife said he didn't come home from the Dominion Bar to change before his shift. His friend's name is Chuck Metter; we're looking for him now. No luck yet. Jersey police are canvassing the neighborhoods, the few who could be spared from this mess.

“We're running Reeves's financials now, trying to see if there's a money trail. Either he decided to bolt or he's been kidnapped or killed.”

Nicholas said, “Ten pounds says he came back to the refinery to do whatever he was supposed to do to let in the bombers. He obviously needed some liquid courage to pull it off. He may be among the dead or injured. He may be in hospital. I'll leave word with the EMTs, see if anyone fitting his description was taken away.” Nicholas paused. “Or COE is eliminating witnesses and took him out. They didn't count on him shooting his mouth off in a bar.”

Mike kicked the tire of her car. “He was our only lead. I hope security has been increased on Mr. Hodges as well. Given what these people have done tonight, their sheer disregard for human life, we don't want to take any chances with his safety.”

Zachery said, “Nor do I. With any luck, COE doesn't even know about Mr. Hodges, but just in case, I now have three agents with him. He'll be fine.”

“You're thinking revenge?”

Zachery shrugged. “I don't know, Nicholas, that or an overall cleanup. I plan to have him moved to a safe house later tonight. Now, have they found the initial blast site yet?”

Nicholas said, “They have to get the fire put out first, then it will still be too hot for a few hours. We'll go in the moment they clear us.”

“New Jersey bomb squads are here; New York is close. They'll find the ignition point.” Zachery touched both his agents on the shoulder. “I've been told what you two did tonight, how you didn't stop. I met a firefighter named Jimbo who said you were both maniacs and saved his life. I realize you're both frustrated, exhausted, and angry, but know this—you saved lives otherwise lost if you hadn't been here, if you hadn't been who you are.” He paused. “Thank you both. I'm thinking there might be commendations coming to you for this night.” He paused again. “That is, if you catch these scum.”

Nicholas looked down at his hands, covered in soot, the flesh pink and raw, blistered in places, and at Mike, who was staring back into the flames again, also covered in black ash, her blond ponytail gone brunette with small silver streaks. “We're going to catch them, sir.”

Mike asked, “Has COE claimed responsibility yet?”

“Not yet. But I'm sure they'll follow the path of the last few bombings—give the media maybe an hour to speculate before their
signature letter is splashed all over the Internet and blaring out from newsrooms.” He paused for a moment. “What really concerns me is, unlike the other bombings, people died tonight. At least fifteen, last count, and COE has never killed before. And the bomb itself was more powerful, much more powerful, plus there was a second bomb, lying in the open, almost as if it had been dropped.”

Mike nodded. “Tonight they changed, and I keep wondering why. Why murder people when they never had before? It's not like they weren't getting lots of attention. People were getting alarmed, there were politicians beginning to talk about reducing oil imports from the Middle East, the refinery bombings on everyone's mind.”

Nicholas said, “Maybe there's something else going on, maybe they now have another, grander plan—”

Zachery nodded. “Yes, or another person is now on board. Another player, perhaps, one with no qualms about killing. Or maybe a separate group entirely, using COE's MO?”

Nicholas said, “The last bit of chatter in the darknet warned specifically of a California hit, near San Francisco. But now this happens here at Bayway. No, I still think it's COE. Another player now involved, someone far more violent who's now calling the shots? That sounds possible.”

Mike shook her head, sprinkling ash down onto her shoulders. “We're going to have to—”

Zachery interrupted her, his hand on her arm. “Stop. Listen, Agent Caine, both you and Agent Drummond go home, take a shower, get some rest. Nothing will happen until the fire is out, which could take hours. Since you two are our leads on these bombings, JTTF will want to be briefed in the morning. You know they'll be expecting a full report, so you need to power down and get some sleep.”

Mike had worked for Zachery long enough to know he meant
what he said, so she nodded slowly. But she still wasn't ready to fold her tent.

“Yes, sir.” Mike ran her hands across her face. They came back still streaked black with soot. “I've got to hose myself down before I hit the sheets. Maybe get a power wash.”

“We'll find a place where they can turn a hose on both of us,” Nicholas said, and gave her a wink.

“May I also suggest you put some ice on that shiner?” Zachery said. He patted her shoulder once again, shook Nicholas's hand, then set off to talk to the firemen at the triage center.

“Get the chemical ice pack out of the first-aid kit in the boot, Mike. It's quicker than stopping off for a bag of peas.”

She quickly found the ice pack since all the pool cars had the same equipment. She broke the pack as she climbed into the front seat, pressed it against her face and leaned her head back against the headrest, and felt the blessed freezing begin.

She said, “You don't have any sleeves. Dare I ask what Nigel will have to say to you?”

He laughed, and it felt good after this nightmare of a night—well, at least for a moment.

He fired up the Crown Vic and headed back for the bridge.

Mike lifted off the ice pack and pulled down the passenger mirror. She really didn't want to look, but she had to.
Oh my, not good.
At that moment, she saw her mother staring at her, horror clear on her face. She lightly touched her fingers to her cheek. Bruises galore, and a lovely plus—her skin was lobster-red from the few minutes with the ice pack. She groaned and slapped the visor closed. She looked over at Nicholas. Sure enough, he was smiling, a brow arched. “I shouldn't have looked. The truth doesn't always set you free. Sometimes it terrifies.”

He laughed. “You do look like you went rounds with Lord Queensberry himself.”

“Isn't Queensberry one of your grandfather's swanky friends?”

“Possibly, though a few generations removed. He's a famous British boxing enthusiast. You've heard of Queensberry Rules?”

“Yeah, yeah, it figures it would be a Brit who decided the proper, most civilized way to go about killing each other.”

He reached over and lightly touched his fingers to her cheek. “Even though you look a bit rough, Agent Caine, all those men you rescued tonight would agree an angel saved them. The ice pack should help.”

She said, “When I'm done with it, you can use it. You're a bit on the edge yourself.” She paused, then, “And they'd say you're an angel, too.”

He shot her a grin with a raised eyebrow, his teeth shiny white against his soot-black skin. “Have I ever told you you're fierce?”

She gave a small laugh. “You want to tell me what you mean by that?”

“Let's say if you were my mom, I'd know to my core you'd keep me safe.”

She felt a warm glow all the way to her belly. “Thank you.”

Once over the bridge, he said, “What's the fastest way to your place?”

“You're kidding, right?”

“Well, yes, of course. Despite the three agents, we're going to make certain Mr. Hodges is safe and sound and hasn't thought of anything else useful. But if Zachery finds out, I'm telling him it was all your idea.”

10

PAWN TO D5

Richard Hodges's house

Bayonne, New Jersey

N
icholas retraced their steps to Bayonne. Mike, her face set, stared back at the burning refinery.

“We weren't in time, Mike, but we did good. Are you all right? No broken bones you're keeping from me?”

“No, nothing,” she said, still staring back.

“I ask because you're practically vibrating.”

Mike gingerly pressed the ice pack back to her cheek. “Yeah, I guess I am. I'd like to hit something. I hate what we saw tonight. So much death, so much destruction.”

He gave a humorless laugh. “I feel precisely the same way.”

She turned to face him, drawing her legs up on the seat. “I'm sorry, of course this would remind you of your past as well.”

Some things were better left unsaid, so he simply shook his head. “You've seen this kind of destruction before?”

So he didn't want to talk about the huge betrayal in Kabul. She
knew enough. She said, “My dad was in Oklahoma for work when McVeigh bombed the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. I was ten. I spent hours watching it on television, and when he came home, he showed me some of the pictures his team had taken, not of dead children, of course, even though I knew of their deaths, just as I knew he'd taken out many of the really bad photos, but it was still too much. All of it brought about by a misguided madman.

“I was sixteen when Nine-Eleven happened.” Her voice rose, and she smacked the dashboard with her closed fist. “These sons-of-bitches and their bombs and attacks, it still makes me so mad I knew if I had them in front of me, I'd blow off their worthless heads.” She sucked in her breath, knew her blood pressure had spiked to the stratosphere. “Sorry, but it really pisses me off. Unlike you, I haven't ever been in the middle of it, but I've seen enough.”

“Is this why you became a copper?”

“Not really. You know my dad's a cop, so I knew the life, knew I wanted it. Dad was all for it. But my mom, do you know she's still known in Omaha as the Gorgeous Rebecca? Yes, Nicholas, unhoist your eyebrow. Mom was a beauty queen, Miss Nebraska, as a matter of fact. My mom the beauty queen had great plans for me, her only daughter. She wanted me to be some sort of model or maybe a movie star, although I could never act my way out of a paper bag, or maybe marry a rich guy and have beautiful kids. But even as a bratty teenager, I never gave her vision of my future serious thought.” She paused. “When I was accepted to Yale, she decided maybe a highfalutin education would be just the ticket. She saw me marrying some eastern politico, I think.

“But she's come around, likes to talk about her daughter, the FBI special agent who lives in New York City. She and Dad come to town at least once a year and see an endless round of Broadway
shows and eat at fancy restaurants where all the waiters gawk at my mom, and my dad just sits there, shaking his head, and grinning.”

“You look like your mom?”

“Ha. In my dreams, but I guess I look like her more than Dad. And she still looks like my older sister.”

“And then there's your younger brother, Timmy, who also lives here in New York. You said he's a wannabe actor, right?”

Where were all these coming from? To distract her, Mike realized. He was good, she had to admit it. “Timmy—well, he's another matter entirely.” And she shut it down, as he had before.

Nicholas saw that she was relaxing, that she was rebooting, getting back her balance. “And then you went to the FBI Academy and blew everyone away. Yes, I read your dossier. You made the New York CID office at twenty-six, one of the youngest agents to fill such a position. From personal experience I can add that you're pretty hot stuff, Agent Caine.”

Hot stuff?
She'd rather be fierce. “How in the world did you get ahold of my personnel file?” She smacked his arm, his bare arm, which was as black as his face. “You and your hacker talent. Don't whine, you deserved the punch.”

“Well, that, plus your instructors in Quantico loved to talk about you. I think you might have broken a couple of hearts. Believe me, I grilled them, since no way I wanted to be partnered with a slacker. They said you were pretty good, Agent Caine. Actually, Mr. Filbert, the shooting range supervisor, said I'd have to bust my butt to keep up with you.”

“Those instructors, Mr. Filbert especially, they're jokers, experts at spotting gullible marks, plus you're the freaking Brit who rescued the Koh-i-Noor diamond. They figured you had to be full of yourself and wanted to cut you down to size. Trust me, they were
putting you on. Now, talk about making his bones at the Academy, you walked away with an award or two yourself.”

“Only one.” That got him a smile. At last.

But the laughter died a quick death when Mike looked out the window yet again to see the orange plume of flame still reaching into the sky.

He said quietly, “We're going to stop them, Mike. They don't stand a chance against the two of us.”

He reached over and took her hand, gave it a squeeze.

He rocked with surprise when she said, in the most vicious voice he'd ever heard, “If Reeves isn't dead when we find him, I'm going to slam his ass up against the wall, maybe knee him a couple of times to show him how serious I am, and he's going to split right open and tell us everything in that pea brain of his.”

That's my girl.
“Remind me not to get on your bad side. See, like I told you—fierce.”

Five minutes later, Nicholas pulled in front of Richard Hodges's house. It was quiet. No lights were on. No draperies twitched, no shadows moved into defensive positions because of an unscheduled visitor. Even the air had stilled. The silence was eerie.

Both of them went on red alert. Mike already had her Glock in her hand, and fear in her belly.

She whispered, “Do you think maybe they already moved him to a safe house?”

He didn't answer, he was calling it in, speaking low. He hung up, shook his head. They stepped quietly to the red front door. Nicholas tried the knob. The door opened easily. Not good. He mouthed,
One, two, three,
and they went in.

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