Read Tracers Online

Authors: J. J. Howard

Tracers (16 page)

BOOK: Tracers
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Cam didn't stop. He heard Miller come up behind the cop and say, “DEA, I'm taking your car,” like he was really proud of himself. Yeah, the guy was a pillar of the freaking community.

“No!” the cop yelled.

From the sound of squealing tires behind him, Cam guessed that Miller had taken the car in spite of the cop's protests. He ducked in closer to the buildings, trying not to let his former boss (attempted murder was definitely grounds for quitting) run him over.

He might not be able to commandeer a police car, but Cam made use of every other vehicle in his path, leaping from roof to roof, kong-vaulting faster than he ever had before. His lungs were on fire, the cut on his arm burned, but he tuned out everything except the idea of escape.

Abruptly, he ran out of vehicles to leap over, and he found himself back on the ground He looked up and saw Miller driving straight for him, determined to run him over.

But the car couldn't run up a wall. And Cam
could.
He tic-tacked up the wall of the closest building just as the car approached. Miller almost wiped out, squealing to a stop at the last second.

At that moment, a van T-boned the police car; both vehicles spun out.

It took Cam a few seconds to realize that it was the van he'd been riding in just an hour before.

Nikki.

He raced over and wrenched open the nearly fused door. “Are you okay?” he asked.

She nodded, clearly dazed. “Yeah.”

“You have to get out of here,” Cam said, breathing hard, putting a hand on her arm, almost not believing that she was real. He'd been silently calling to her across the city. But now that she was sitting there in front of him, all he wanted was for her to be out of there, to be safe. He helped her out of the van and they started to run.

“Stop!”

Cam turned at the sound of Miller's voice. The Energizer Bunny of evil had survived the crash and was back on his feet—bleeding and dazed, but still coming. Still holding a gun.

Cam moved to stand in front of Nikki.

“Give me the diamonds, Cam,” Miller called.

They heard sirens in the distance.

“Stop it, James,” Nikki yelled. “It's over.”

He actually looked hurt by her words. “Okay, then. If that's how you want it.” He raised his gun, aimed . . .

A motorcycle skidded to a stop not ten feet away from Miller. Cam took advantage of the brief distraction and grabbed Nikki's hand, leading her behind a row of parked cars.

“Stay with me,” Cam told her. “Follow my lead.”

They kept running, with Cam leading the way. His only hope, really, was that he'd led Miller on enough of a chase to prevent him from realizing where they were heading.

He spared one glance back. Miller was still right on their heels. Cam said a silent prayer as they reached their destination. He ran up to the building and pulled open the door. He exhaled in relief as the door opened. He gave Nikki a little push to send her inside, then backed in himself, with his hands up.

Miller burst in just after them, his gun raised.

“Dead end,” he said, sounding pleased with himself. “Come on, Nikki. Move away. I don't want to hurt you.”

Cam didn't normally find the sound of guns being cocked to be a happy one, but at that moment it was like the sound of angels singing.

Out of the darkness, all around them, stepped the Tong. His old friends Jerry and Hu among them.

The huge open space had once been some kind of theater. There were still huge banners—red silk decorated with gold Chinese characters—hanging haphazardly from the ceiling and walls. Behind them, Cam knew, was an empty stage. He knew this place from one memorable day, and from a thousand nightmares that came after.

A voice came out of the darkness, speaking Mandarin. Cam caught the name
Hatcher.

It was a woman's voice. Cam turned and was shocked to see the old woman from the fish store. Miller was staring at her in horror.

This, clearly, was Chen. The boss. Like an idiot, Cam had always assumed that Chen was some big, burly guy.

“Chen?” Miller's voice sounded completely different. He wasn't the alpha dog here.

No, Miller was the about-to-wet-himself runt of the litter here.

Chen kept speaking, still in Mandarin. It was obvious that Miller understood her; he answered her in the same language.

They switched to English. “There's been a mistake,” Miller said.

“There
has
been a mistake,” Chen agreed. “You have made it.”

Miller was glaring at Cam. He couldn't help but smile back.

Chen was still speaking to Miller. “I told you a long time ago to stay out of my neighborhood.”

Miller's voice came out breathless and panicked; all his bravado was gone. “I've honored your request, Chen. I kept my business away from yours. But this one's personal. Give me these two and you'll never see me again.”

Chen was smiling. “Your business here is closed. You've been making too much trouble for too many of my friends. It's time for you to go away for a while.”

“But, Chen . . .”

“You belong to me now, Agent Hatcher.”

Cam's old friend Hu walked up to Miller, smiling as he took his gun and ripped the badge from around his neck.

Chen continued to regard Miller with a steady, unblinking gaze. “There's a boat leaving for Macau in two hours,” she told him. “Mr. Hu will make sure you're on it. Some friends of mine want to talk to you. Say good-bye now, James.”

Hu started to lead his captive back toward the exit, but Miller lunged toward Nikki, his face a mask of anger. Hu held him back, but he couldn't stop him from yelling.

“After everything I did for you? How long are you gonna last without me, Nikki? How long?”

Nikki blinked away tears, but didn't look away from Miller. She didn't give him an answer either.

Miller had expected an answer, Cam saw. He watched as the remaining fight went out of the man; he seemed to shrink several inches before their eyes.

Hu smiled as he slid a black bag over Miller's head. Another gangster grabbed Miller's other arm and they led him out.

Cam watched them take Miller away. Some part of him couldn't quite believe that his crazy plan had actually worked. He couldn't believe how much had changed since that morning, when Miller had been confidently planning to kill him and leave town with Nikki and the others.

Pulling Cam out of his reverie, Chen turned to him and asked, “You have something for me?”

Cam nodded and handed her the pouch of diamonds. She looked inside, carefully taking inventory and smiling.

And then something unbelievable happened. She took out one diamond and flicked it back to Cam.

“Your debt is clear. Don't ever come back to Chinatown.”

First Miller was gone. Then, moments later, his debt was gone too. Cam suddenly felt light enough to fly—the heavy weight that had been pressing on him for months had lifted. He turned to Nikki and saw that her radiant smile mirrored his own.

She took a step closer and threaded her fingers through his. Cam looked down at their intertwined hands and squeezed. For the first time in years, maybe in his life, he was filled with something he thought was probably hope.

Cam looked up to see Chen walk out of the theater, with the others falling in line behind her.

Jerry hung back. Cam walked up and found him smiling too. “You're one lucky bastard, Cam. That's the best deal I ever seen anybody cut with Chen.”

“What about
our
deal?” he asked. Extreme good fortune had made Cam bold.

Jerry stared at him for a few seconds, then his face broke out into a wider grin. “All right. Your debt
is
clear. What the hell? I could use the karma points.” He tossed Cam the keys. Not a bad guy, in spite of all the death threats.

Together, he and Nikki walked back out into the sunlight, their hands still clasped tight. The whole world looked different in that moment: the colors were brighter. He could hear birds singing, a sound he hadn't noticed in what seemed like years. The GTO was parked across the street from the warehouse. Cam felt the weight of the keys in his hand. He caught Nikki's eye. She was grinning back at him.

He had done it. He'd found their exit strategy.

Cam opened the passenger door for Nikki, let go of her hand, then vaulted over the hood and slid into the driver's seat. He turned the key and sighed with pleasure to hear it start up purring. His car was running perfectly.

He looked over at Nikki. “Where to?”

She leaned her head back against the seat and smiled back at him. “Let's just drive.”

NINETEEN

CAM GOT
in the lane for the Holland Tunnel—heading out of the city. He looked over at Nikki as she sat back in her seat, a peaceful smile on her face.

“I have one more debt to settle,” he told her. She frowned a little, but nodded. Cam pulled out his phone and dialed the number he'd saved yesterday. Angie picked up after just two rings.

“Cam? Please tell me you're calling with good news.”

He smiled so widely he thought maybe Angie could see it across the phone connection. “It's good news. All clear. You can go home.”

“Oh, Cam—how? Wait, never mind. I don't want to know. But . . . you're sure? Completely positive?”

“One hundred percent. And, Angie? I'm really sorry. Again. For everything.”

“I'm just glad it's over and you're safe. And
we're
safe! Mostly that last part,” she added, laughing.

He laughed too. “Just stay at your old address long enough for me to send you a package, yeah?”

“Cam, you don't owe . . .”

“I know what I owe, Ang,” he said, cutting her off. “And I always pay my debts.”

It was really nice to be able to say those words.

“Who was that?” Nikki asked, after Cam hung up.

As he pulled up to a red light, he looked over at her, still grinning. “What, are you jealous?”

She crossed her arms. “No.”

“Well, good. Because that was my landlady. She was a friend of my mom's. I kind of jammed her up in my trouble with the Tong. I had to let her know I was in the clear.”

“Oh. Well, that's good.”

“So there's nothing else to delay our getting the hell out of here,” Cam said, looking over at her once again. “You do still want that?” He felt the air catch in his lungs; he was holding his breath waiting for her answer.

Her eyes met his for a second. “I do,” she said. “But . . .”

Cam exhaled. “But . . .”

“I texted Dylan. I need to see him.”

They were still at the red light, and Cam turned fully to face her. “This
actual
morning, your brother came this close to shooting me. You do realize that?” He demonstrated the narrow margin of Dylan's decision by holding his thumb and index finger so close together they were almost touching.

Nikki held his stare, looking determined. “But he
didn't
shoot you.”

Cam frowned back at her. “True.”

“He's my brother, Cam.”

Cam groaned. “Are you trying to tell me he's coming with us?”

“No.” Her voice sounded sad, but resigned. “He's going home.”

“Home? What about his ‘trouble'?”

“The kid's big-shot actor dad OD'd. It was on the news just the other day. And, last I heard, a scholarship got the kid himself out of Florida—I don't think Dylan will have to worry about running into him there. Now he can go back. It's all he ever really wanted.”

“Do I need to turn around?”

“Yes. He's meeting us in the cell-phone lot at JFK.”

Cam turned around and headed for the Verrazano Bridge. They rode the rest of the way to the airport in silence. Nikki spotted her brother waiting at the edge of the lot and pointed. Cam pulled the GTO up beside him.

Dylan was standing with the hood of his black sweatshirt pulled over his head, even though it was warm and sunny out. Nikki leapt out of the car as soon as Cam came to a stop. Dylan picked her up and held her in midair for a few seconds before letting go.

Cam got out of the car, putting his hands in his pockets. He felt like an intruder in this moment between them.

“You're sure Miller's gone?” Dylan asked Nikki as they broke apart.

She nodded. “Yes. It's all over. He's definitely gone.”

“But what do you mean
gone
?” Dylan asked sharply. “Define
gone.

Cam noticed then that Dylan's eyes were red rimmed, and he needed a shave. Maybe he'd been more upset about executing Miller's plan than Cam had thought.

“How about Macau?” Nikki replied. “That gone enough for you?”

Her brother shook his head. “I have no idea where that is.”

“Neither do I. But I know it's on the other side of the world.”

Dylan stepped away from Nikki and looked over at Cam. He opened his mouth, swallowed hard, then took another deep breath before speaking. “Look, Cam, I know . . . I owe you an apology, man.”

“For leading me toward certain death?” Cam shrugged. “Bygones.”

Dylan shifted his weight uncomfortably. “I didn't know what to do . . .” He seemed to be fumbling for the right words. “Miller told me what would happen to Niks if I didn't . . .”

“I get it,” Cam said, cutting him off. “I know what you were up against, man. I really do. And when it came to decision time, you didn't shoot me. Even though it might have meant something bad happening to you or Nikki. So I mean it: bygones. Seriously. We're good.” Cam extended his hand, and Dylan took it, smiling gratefully.

Nikki was smiling too, as she looked from Cam to her brother. Her face changed a few seconds later, when the sound of a low-flying plane filled the air. “You're really leaving?” she asked Dylan.

“Are
you
?” Dylan shot back, giving Cam a significant look.

Nikki didn't hesitate: “Yes.”

“I'm going home, Niks,” Dylan confirmed. “I can finally go home. I've already talked to Mom, and to Allison.”

“Allison's still single?” Nikki asked, grinning. “Did she wait all this time for you?”

Dylan's face changed. He looked younger suddenly—and very happy. “I can't believe it either. I'll give Mom your love?”

There was a momentary hesitation, but Nikki nodded again. “Yeah.”

The two siblings hugged again, Dylan wiping quickly at his eyes. Nikki wasn't bothering to hide her tears. “Take care of yourself—and Mom. Like you always took care of me, okay?”

Dylan broke away from Nikki first, giving Cam another handshake and asking him to look out for his sister.

“Is Tate okay?” Cam asked.

Dylan nodded. “Yeah. He's staying here. This is home for him. He's gonna lay low until things quiet down.”

“Hey, what about Jax's dogs? We can't just leave them . . .”

Dylan held up a hand. “Chill, Cam. Tate's keeping them.”

“He didn't really seem like a dog person.”

“Nah, it's cool, guy's all talk. Besides, I think they remind him of Jax, you know?”

Cam nodded. “Makes sense.”

Nikki gave her brother one more quick hug, then broke away from him and climbed back into the car. Dylan offered a wave and started walking toward the terminal.

“Stay outta trouble!” Nikki called to him.

Dylan waved once more, then turned around and kept walking.

Cam sat behind the wheel, steering the car back into the traffic heading out of the city.

“So where to?” he asked, more to distract Nikki than anything else.

She wiped at her eyes with the sleeve of her T-shirt. “We're going home too.”

Cam gave her a surprised smile. “I know you don't mean back to New York . . .”

Nikki shook her head.

“And you just cried all over your brother, who's headed back to
your
hometown . . .”

“No, that's not where I meant either. Come on, Cam. You'll figure it out . . .”

“I give up.”

“We're heading to this little town in SoCal. It's called Lone Pine. You know . . . where your mom is from.”

“You remembered?”

“I did more than that.” She pulled out her phone and started tapping. “At the next red light, you have to see this.”

A minute or so later, Cam hit the brakes and took Nikki's phone.

The screen showed the Chamber of Commerce website for Lone Pine. Cam smiled at her. She'd obviously done some research of her own.

He looked down to see a picture of a perfect blue sky dotted with bright white clouds. Jagged white rocks jutted up from the ground. And perched in midair hung a man wearing a black T-shirt and baggy cargoes.

There it was, right there on the Lone Pine website: parkour.

“It's our destiny!” she told him.

Cam handed the phone back. “When did you find this?”

She smiled back at him. “The day after you told me about where your mom grew up.”

“Destiny,” he repeated. “I like the sound of that.”

“Me too.”

BOOK: Tracers
5.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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