Three Jack McClure Missions Box Set (30 page)

BOOK: Three Jack McClure Missions Box Set
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“That’s right.”

Nina produced her Homeland Security ID. Jack made the introductions, gave their condolences for his loss.

Joachim Tolkan held out his hand.

Jack hadn’t expected this. He didn’t want to shake Joachim Tolkan’s hand, the son of a murderer, but he saw no way out. The moment he took Joachim’s hand, he felt an electric shock travel up his arm. It was as if he’d made contact with Cyril Tolkan from beyond the grave.

“Are you all right, Mr. McClure? You went white there for a moment.”

“I’m fine,” Jack lied.

“We just need a couple of moments of your time, Mr. Tolkan,” Nina said in her best neutral voice.

“No problem.” Joachim Tolkan lifted an arm. “Why don’t we continue this discussion in my office? That way we can all sit down and relax.” He turned to Oscar. “How about some coffee for our guests?”

As Nina passed Oscar, he handed her a chocolate-chip cookie, along with a wink.

Tolkan led them back through the oven room, hotter than Hades despite the exhaust fans and air-conditioning. To the right was a door through which he took them.

Jack found himself in a surprisingly large, pleasantly furnished office, complete with an upholstered sofa, coffee table, a pair of lamps. A full bathroom was to the right and beside it a short hallway that led to what appeared to be a bedroom.

“I stay here to all hours,” Joachim Tolkan said, noticing Jack’s scrutiny. He shrugged. “Anyway, no point in going back to the house these days. It’s become the soon-to-be ex’s territory.”

As Tolkan settled himself behind his desk, Oscar arrived with a tray filled with mugs and a carafe of coffee. Oscar slid it onto the low table in front of the sofa and left, closing the door behind him.

“Help yourselves.” When neither Jack nor Nina made a move to the tray, Tolkan said, “I’m curious. What does the Department of Homeland Security want with me?”

“Were you a member of FASR?” Jack said.

“So far as I know that’s not a crime.”

“You dropped out three and a half months ago,” Nina said.

“Again, not a crime.” Tolkan laced his fingers together. “Where, may I ask, is this going?”

Jack walked slowly around the room, studying everything. “E-Two.”

Tolkan blinked. “I beg your pardon?”

“You can,” Jack said, turning to him, “but it won’t do any good.”

Tolkan spread his hands. “What’s an E-Two?”

“Doesn’t read the paper, apparently.” Nina, perched on the arm of the sofa, took a tiny bite of her chocolate-chip cookie. “My, this
is
good.”

“Listen.” Jack advanced toward the desk. “We’re not in the mood for lies.”

Tolkan shook his head. “Lies about what?”

Was it Jack’s imagination, or was Joachim Tolkan becoming more and more like his late father, Cyril? He found the thought intolerable. He was just about to lunge at Tolkan when, entirely without warning, Nina skimmed her cookie right at Tolkan’s head. The edge struck him just over the left eye, the impromptu missile shattering on impact.

Tolkan’s hand flew to his face. “What the hell—!” Jack reached over, grabbed Tolkan by his lapels, dragged him up off his comfortable chair so that he was half-hanging over his desk. Cookie crumbs and bits of chocolate were strewn across his Hermès tie.

“You haven’t been listening to us, Joachim.” Jack’s face was flushed; there was a murderous look in his eye. “We don’t have time for your
fun and games.” Jack hurled him back into the chair. “Tell us about your involvement in E-Two.”

Now it was Tolkan’s face that was white. He looked visibly shaken. “I was sworn to secrecy.”

“Your allegiance is admirable,” Nina said with a chill Jack could feel, “but misplaced.”

“Spill it, Joachim!” Jack thundered.

Tolkan expelled a little squeak. “All right, but there really isn’t much to tell.” With a trembling hand, he pushed his hair off his forehead. “I heard about E-Two through someone I worked with at FASR. I quit when he did because he said FASR was too slow and poky, too conservative to get anywhere. He said if I was really serious about change, there was another group we could join, one that would get things done. Sounded good to me, so I said okay. Then I come to find out that E-Two’s methods are violent.”

“That didn’t attract you?” Jack said.

“What? No.”

“But your father was a violent man.”

Joachim regarded Jack with the proper amount of fear. “What does my father have to do with it?”

Jack said, “The rotten apple doesn’t fall far from the poisoned tree.”

Tolkan shook his head. “You’ve got it wrong.”

Nina crossed her arms. “So enlighten us.”

Tolkan nodded. “The truth is once I was old enough to understand how my father could afford all the luxuries I enjoyed as a kid, I stayed as far away from him as I could. It sickened me the way he’d take us all to church on Sunday, how he’d kneel, say his prayers to Jesus, quote from the Bible, and then go out and do … the things he did. I wanted no part of him, his contacts, his blood money. I worked my way through college, got an MBA from Georgetown.”

Nina came down off the sofa arm. “So how come you wound up here?”

“I worked for Goldman Sachs for a year and hated every minute of it. When I quit, I decided I wanted to be my own boss. The bakery was still going, more or less. I saw an opportunity. I stepped in, invested in advertising, in a community-outreach program. Gradually I built up the business to the point where I needed to expand.”

“And look at you now,” Nina said.

Jack put his fists on the desk. “So you expect us to believe that you never joined E-Two.”

“I didn’t,” Tolkan said, shying away. “I swear it.”

“What happened?” Nina asked.

“I felt ashamed of myself. I went back to FASR, but they wouldn’t have me. Chris said I could no longer be trusted.”

Jack said, “This friend of yours—”

“He isn’t a friend.”

“Colleague, whatever.” Jack pulled himself up. “Does he have a name?”

“Ron Kray.”

Nina checked the printout Armitage had given them. “He’s here,” she said, and read off his home address.

“That’s a phony. Kray told me. He’s very private.”

Jack wondered why the name seemed familiar to him. He racked his brain, but the answer remained frustratingly out of reach. “So where does Mr. Kray live?” he said.

“He never told me and I never asked,” Tolkan answered. “But he said he works at Sibley Memorial Hospital.”

“I’ve heard of it,” Jack said. “It’s a rehab place for the elderly. Physical and psychiatric.”

Tolkan nodded. “Ron’s a nurse there. A psychiatric nurse.”

The modern layer cake of Sibley Memorial occupied a wide swath of real estate on Sleepy Hollow Road outside of Falls Church. Nina suggested they call to see if Kray was on duty, but Jack disagreed.

“First off, I don’t want to take any chance of him being tipped off we’re coming. Secondly, even if he’s not there, the HR department is bound to have a current photo of him.”

As it turned out, Kray wasn’t on duty. In fact, the head of the psychiatric department told them he hadn’t worked there for over two years.

They were directed to the HR department, where they obtained Kray’s last known address, which matched the one on the list Chris Armitage had given them. Kray’s photo ID, however, had been destroyed.

Kray lived on Tyler Avenue, not more than six minutes away. Nina was silent during most of the drive. At length, she turned to Jack.

“You must think I’m quite the neurotic.”

Jack concentrated on his driving. This was somewhat of a new area for him, and he wanted to make sure he read every road sign.

Nina took his silence for assent. “Yeah, you do.”

“What do you care what I think?”

“For one thing, we’re working together. For another, I like you. Your mind doesn’t work like anyone else’s I’ve ever met.”

“I’ll take that as a compliment.”

She offered a nod of assent. “In a very short time, I’ve come to trust what you call your hunches.”

“Would you call them something else?”

She nodded. “I would, yes, if I had a word to describe them. Whatever they are, they’re far more than hunches, though.” She put her head back. “You know, if I spend any more time with you, I’ll start to doubt everything I thought was true.”

She put a hand over his. “We had a moment there under the old oaks where Emma escaped from school at night.” Her forefinger curled, the nail scratched lightly, erotically along his palm. “Why don’t we take it from there?”

He braked until he could decipher a street sign. Also, to clear the air between them.

“Listen, Nina, I’m flattered. But just so there’s no misunderstanding, I’m not into on-the-job screwing.”

“Too many complications?”

The image of Sharon was beside him, with her long tanned legs, hair swept across her face, that mysterious look in her eyes he loved because he never quite knew what it meant or foretold. “Among other things.”

“What if we weren’t partners? I could arrange—”

“It wouldn’t matter.”

“Well, that’s candor for you.” Nina removed her hand. “Your ex still under your skin?”

He swung onto Tyler, slowed to a crawl.

“Okay, forget it. Privacy’s something I respect. There is, in any case, a kind of privilege in loneliness. It makes you feel alive, introduces you to yourself.”

Jack felt annoyed. “I didn’t mean that.”

“You just didn’t say it.” She took out a clove cigarette, lit up. “I have a question. D’you have any idea who Emma met underneath the oaks?”

“My daughter’s life was a closed book to me. It was as well hidden as a spy’s dead drop.”

“You never followed up on it?”

“With who?” A nerve she had nicked flared up. “My daughter’s dead.”

34

Jack went up the flagstone path, knocked on the door. Immediately, a dog began to bark. He heard a scuffling inside, then the patter of feet. The door opened, revealing a middle-aged woman in a housecoat. A cigarette was dangling from her mouth.

“Yeah?” She looked Jack square in the eye without a trace of apprehension.

Jack cleared his throat. “I’m wondering if Ron Kray is home.” The dog continued barking inside the house. The woman squinted through the smoke trailing up from her cigarette. “Who?”

“Ron Kray, ma’am.” Nina stepped up.

“Oh, him.” The woman expelled a phlegmy cough. “He used to live here. Moved out about, oh, six months ago.”

“Do you know where he went?”

“Nah.” The dog’s barking had become hysterical. The woman ducked her head back inside. “For God’s sake, Mickey, shut the fuck up!” She turned back. “Sorry about that. People make him nervous. He’s probably gonna leave a deposit on the kitchen linoleum.” She grunted. “At least the carpet’ll be spared.”

“You wouldn’t happen to still get any of Kray’s mail,” Jack said.

“Not a one.” The woman took a mighty drag on her cigarette, let out a plume of smoke like Mount Saint Helens. “Sorry I can’t be of more help.”

“You did fine,” Jack said. “Can you tell me the address of the local post office?”

“I’ll do better than that.” The woman pointed the way, giving him detailed directions.

Jack thanked her, and they picked their way back down the flagstone walk.

“The post office?” Nina said as they climbed back into the car.

Jack glanced at his watch. “We just have time to get there.” He pulled out, drove down the street. “Tolkan said that Kray was a private man. He wouldn’t have wanted anyone else getting his mail. I’m betting he filed a change-of-address form before he left.”

They headed east on Tyler, while Nina finished her cigarette, turned right onto Graham Road, right again on Arlington Boulevard, then a left onto Chain Bridge Road. The post office occupied a one-story pale brick building. It looked like every other post office Jack had been to, outside and in.

He walked up to the counter, asked to see the postmistress. Ten minutes later, a hefty woman in her mid-fifties appeared, walking none too quickly. It seemed to Jack that all postal employees were constitutionally incapable of moving at anything but a sluggish pace. Then again, maybe they learned it at some secret government academy.

Jack and Nina showed their credentials, asked for a forwarding address for Ron Kray. The postmistress, who had a face like a boxing glove, told them to wait. She disappeared into the mysterious bowels of the building. Time passed, people walked in, got on line, waited, inched forward. Forms were filled out, packages were rubber-stamped, more forms were filled out, letters and more packages were rubber-stamped. People who failed to fill out the proper forms were sent to
the corner stand to correct their mistakes. Jack was at the point of risking a federal offense by hurdling the counter to go after the postmistress, when she reappeared, inching snail-like toward them.

“No Ron Kray,” she said in her laconic manner. She spoke like a character straight out of a Raymond Chandler novel.

Jack took a pad and a pen, laboriously wrote down Kray’s last known address, the house they’d just come from. Tearing off the top sheet, he handed it to the postmistress, who looked as if her recent labors had tired her out. “How about a forwarding from this address?”

The postmistress peered down at the slip of paper as if it might possibly do her harm. “I don’t th
ink I can—”

“From six months ago, give or take a week.”

The postmistress looked at him bleakly. “Gonna take some time, this.”

Jack smiled. “We’ll be waiting.”

“I get off work in twelve minutes,” she pointed out.

“Not today, you don’t,” Nina said.

The postmistress glared at her, as if to say,
Et tu, Brute?
Then, in a huff, she shuffled off.

More time passed. The line gradually dwindled down, the last customer finally dealt with. A collective sigh of relief could be felt as the postal workers totaled up, locked their drawers, and followed their leader into the rear of the building.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if she was having a cup of tea back there,” Jack said. “She looks the vindictive type.”

“Jack, about Emma—I was just trying to help.”

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