12
Eve rushed up to EDD, tagging Berenski as she pushed her way on the
glides.
“Marian Jacoby. Where is she?”
“Hey, I’m putting in extra hours on your deal. How the hell do—” “Is
she in the lab?”
“Repeat, how the hell do—” “Find out. Now.”
“Jesus, she’s
on swing this month, so she oughta be here. If she’s in the field—”
“No, right the fuck now.”
His face,
one large scowl, filled her screen as he ran his counter length on his rolling
stool. “Yeah, yeah, she’s around. What the fuck?”
“Get off your
ass, go get her, take her to a secured location. I’ve got cops coming in for
her.”
“You think you’re going to come in here and arrest one of my—” “She
may be a target, Berenski. She knows Mackie, and she may
be one of his targets. Get her safe and secured until my cops get
there.”
“Done.” The
scowl turned to a snarl, and his face blurred as he shoved to his feet. “Nobody
screws with one of my people.”
He cut her
off, and with her ’link still in hand, Eve bypassed the noise and color of EDD
central and shot toward its glass-walled lab.
“Marian
Jacoby—potential target. Being secured now. That leaves one. Apartments,
condos, townhouses, East Side, likely in the Twenties or below—the post-Urban
toss-ups. Probably Third, possibly Lex.”
She caught her
breath as Feeney immediately started a search and scan. “Finances,” she said to
Roarke. “They were saving to buy.”
“I can tell
you he all but emptied his account September eighteenth, and took the lump sum
on his pension only last week. He had
a two- hundred-fifty-thousand-dollar life insurance policy on his wife, doubled
with accidental death, and prior savings of two hundred thousand and change.
With the lump sum, he has more than enough for a downpayment, but wouldn’t that
be foolish?”
“He may not be
thinking straight, but I agree and lean toward rental. Even if he’s not
thinking straight, it’s becoming clear the daughter is, in her own twisted way.
Other accounts, he must have put the money somewhere.”
“Working on that.”
“We’ve already eliminated some buildings
and locations.” As he worked, Feeney gestured to a screen where Eve saw
numerous buildings blacked out. “We zero in on the post-Urban prefabs, we
eliminate more.”
Nodding, she answered her ’link, looked at Dickhead. “I’ve got her,
in my office. She’s scared shitless.”
“Put her on. Jacoby.” “Lieu—Lieu—Lieutenant, I—”
“Pull it
together. You’re safe, you’re going to stay safe. You know Reginald Mackie.”
“Lieutenant, please, my son. My boy’s
home alone, just the house droid. My boy.”
“We’ll take
care of it. MacNab, dispatch protection detail to Jacoby’s residence. Jacoby,
the minute we’re done, contact your kid, tell him to expect officers. Tell him
to ask to see identification before admitting them.”
“He knows that, he knows that already. He wouldn’t—” “Good. You know
Reginald Mackie.”
“Yes, my son
and his daughter have some classes together. I knew his wife, Susann. I—”
“Did he come to you, ask you to investigate her accident?” “He was
desperate, grieving. He—”
Before Eve
could shut down the excuses, she heard Berenski’s voice. “Yes or no, Jacoby.
Nobody’s going to burn you over it. Truth
and
brief. Now.”
“Yes, he came
to me, asked me. I did the reconstruction on my own time, and I ran the
evidence, analyzed the reports, everything. I had to tell him it just wasn’t
anyone’s fault. I didn’t tell him it was Susann’s, but that’s the truth. He was
angry, accused me of covering up. Then he apologized. He didn’t mean it, but he
apologized. I haven’t seen or spoken to him since.”
“Okay. You’re safe, your boy’s safe. McNab, officers’ names?” “Task
and Newman dispatched. ETA two minutes.”
“Task and
Newman—make sure he verifies those officers. They’ll be at your door in two
minutes.”
“Thank you. Thank you.”
“Use your own
’link,” Berenski said, snatching back his own. “So your kid recognizes it. Bag
this crazy son of a bitch, Dallas, before he targets somebody else in my house.
Shit, before he targets me.”
“We’re closing in.”
She clicked off, dragged a hand through her hair.
Swing shift, she thought. Dickhead was putting in overtime, too. She
made a mental note to cut him at least a sliver of a break the next time he
exhibited Dickheaded behavior.
“Working on possibles on Second,” Feeney announced. “Still eliminating on Lex,”
McNab bounced back.
“Feed me the
data.” Roarke worked a keyboard with one hand, a swipe screen with another.
“I’ll fold it into financials and ID.”
When her
’link signaled again, Eve stepped back from their chatter.
“Jacoby’s
secured, and being transported to a safe house. Officers are with her son now,”
Peabody announced. “Nobody’s hit on the nest, as yet.”
“Get me a consult with Mira.”
“If you mean now, Dallas, it’s nearly
twenty-hundred hours. She’s not in her office. Do you want me to contact her at
home?”
“It can wait.”
She already had a good picture of the Mackie dynamics. “Anybody who hasn’t had
a dinner break takes one—thirty minutes. We pull the search for the nest at
twenty-two-hundred. All officers and detectives report for full briefing at
oh-seven-thirty. Until that time, everyone’s on standby.”
“I’ll make the contacts. You’re in EDD? Can you use me up there?” “I
can always use the She-Body,” McNab said.
“Awww.”
“Knock it off.” Eve paced the lab. “We have a target outstanding.”
“I’m running the initials—actually eliminated some lawyers with
them. There are so damn many lawyers,” Peabody added. “And
paralegals, and ambulance chasers, and disbarred lawyers, and just passed the
bar—”
“Keep at it. Take a damn dinner break, but keep at it.” She paced
some more.
“Five strong possibles. Three ranging
Twenty-First and Fifteenth, between Second and Third. Two on Third at
Eighteenth.”
She turned to Feeney, began to scan the data.
“Two on Lex, between Nineteeth and
Fourteenth,” McNab added. “Another two between Lex and Third, one on Twentieth,
one on Sixteenth.”
“Two apartments, two townhouses, one loft above retail space.” “I’ve
got two apartments, two townhouses,” McNab said.
Eve scanned
the data. “Let’s see the houses first. More privacy, and you’re in control of
security. ID on tenants.”
“On screen.”
Eve frowned at the first ID shot when Feeney put it up, then at McNab’s. “Not
Mackie. Let’s see the others.”
“Zip.” McNab grabbed his fizzy, slurped
some. “We’ll move farther south, and east to Second.”
“Wait a minute. The
townhouse on Third. Pull that back up, Feeney.
Gabe Willowby,” Eve murmured.
“Willow, Willowby. Younger said he and the second wife picked
Gabriel as a boy’s name.”
Feeney’s droopy eyes lit. “Too fucking tidy.”
“Way too. It’s not Mackie in the ID shot,
but look at the data. His height. His age bracket, his eye color.”
“Easy enough
to create a dupe ID, one that pops on a search,” Roarke began. “And have
another using the same name, that matches your face.” He smiled. “Or so I’ve
heard.”
“Yeah, I bet. McNab, full level-three run
on Willowby.” She pulled out her ’link again. “Cancel dinner breaks. Everyone
report back to Central for full briefing. We just caught a break. Send me
everything
you
get,” she said as she turned toward the door. “Conference Room A, as soon as
you can.”
Wishing she had Whitney’s elevator bypass, Eve took the glides.
And as the wish
made her think of Whitney, she tagged her commander—at home—then Lowenbaum,
still in Central.
Peabody ran to catch up when Eve hopped
off the glide and arrowed toward the conference room.
“What break?”
“McNab’s running a level three on a Gabe
Willowby, Third Avenue address. Not Mackie’s face, but same general
description.”
“Willowby. That name—I
think that name popped on one of my travel runs.” Peabody pulled out her PPC to
check as they entered the conference room. “I just need to— Yeah, yeah, Willowby, Gabriel, and minor son, Colt, on the manifest for a
shuttle flight to New Mexico in November.”
“Colt? That’s the name of a gun
manufacturer. She’s passing as a boy. Get Colt Willowby on screen.”
“That’s not her,” Peabody said when the task was done, “but—” “Hair
and eye color, an easy change. But this kid could be her
cousin. Her cousin of the same age, the same height and weight. Run
a level three on that ID, use your PPC. I need the comp.”
“What are you doing?”
“Running a
face recognition on the kid’s ID—let’s see if anything pops.” As it worked, Eve
studied the board, paced in front of it. “He’ll have multiple IDs for both of
them. Cashed in his pension, and got an insurance payout for the wife’s
accidental death. He could afford them—or a twenty-year vet? He might know how
to generate them.”
“More likely
the kid could.” Peabody shrugged. “Kids are just quicker with tech, evolving
tech, and a teenager’s always interested in fake IDs, ones that’ll pass a level
one anyway. Like this one did.”
“Either way, he’d have more than one.
Rent the place, do some travel using this one. Other travel using another. If
he has an account for his finances, that’s in another. Credit cards, ’link
account. Mix it up.”
She spun back
when the comp signaled. “There’s the face, and Colt Willowby is actually Silas
Jackson, age sixteen, from Louisville, Kentucky. Forget that search, we’ve got
them. No, let it run—the
more
evidence the better—but use the comp now to get me everything you can on the
Third Avenue property.”
“I have that for you,” Roarke said as he walked in. “Already sent.”
“Handy. Peabody, put it up.”
“I also ran a
facial recognition on Willowby—who is actually Dwayne Mathias, fifty-three,
from Bangor, Maine.”
“That’s cop thinking.”
“And you insult
me,” he said, flicking a finger down the dent in her chin, “when I have a dozen
pizzas on the way.”
“Pizza!”
Eve gave Peabody and her happy dance a sidelong look. “Nobody got
that dinner break,” Peabody pointed out. “I grabbed a
yogurt bar, but
that’s it.”
“And hungry
cops may be more likely to make mistakes,” Roarke concluded.
“I thought
hungry kept you lean and mean. I’m feeling mean.” Eve stared at the blueprints
on screen. “But pizza sounds okay.”
Cop thinking,
she mused, and he’d done the work faster than she had. Plus pizza. Hard to
complain.
“Tri-level
duplex,” she observed. “Johns on the first and second only, so I’d say: Keep
first level clean—they’re going to get deliveries, don’t want weapons or plans
in view—sleep second, use third for strategy sessions, storage. Fire escapes,
rear, and potential roof access. Third bedroom on the second floor could be
used for work, too. Subway’s an easy walk, or run if you need to run. Bus
stop’s convenient. It’s a good location, a good HQ.”
“One that’s
showing its age,” Roarke added, “and the effects of poor construction. Willowby
rented with an option, and as the asking price is easily fifty thousand dollars
over what it’s worth, I’d conclude he
didn’t bother to negotiate.”
“He doesn’t plan to buy it.”
“I agree with that. The rent’s low in any case.”
Lowenbaum stepped in, looked at the screens. “You got him.” “We
will.”
“Then let’s get to work.”
Cops came in
from the field minutes before pizza. Eve allowed the wolf attack—Roarke was
right, cops had to eat—and brought them
up
to date while they ate.
“McNab, your level-three results.”
He swallowed a
hefty bite of pizza, loaded. “The ID cruised through a standard level one, and
would have passed a sloppy, even a
down-and-dirty level two, but it cracked like an egg on three.
Totally bogus ID,
Dallas, but a decent one. Nobody but law enforcement runs a three—and then
generally only when there’s a major crime involved.”
“Same on the
second suspect,” Peabody put in. “Just like the one the suspect used for
check-in at the hotel.”
“That keeps
it clean, establishes pattern. Peabody, push the warrant through now. We go
with the same op as before.
Lowenbaum’s got his team in their ready room. EDD will roll out,
using sensors to let us know if the suspects are inside. There’s an art studio
on the west side of Third. McNab and Callendar will set up there.
“Lowenbaum.”
He rose, used
a laser pointer to highlight the projected positions of his men. “Patroni will
access the studio with McNab and Callendar.
He requested the
assignment,” Lowenbaum told Dallas. “He’s one of my best. He’ll stick.”
“All right then, saddle it up. Peabody, we roll with EDD.”
T
—
|
T |
his time they rolled in the dark, after a long day of hunting. As
they drove across town, Eve went over every step, tried to
calculate every
possibility.
“He’ll want
to protect his daughter,” Roarke said, but she shook her head.
“He’s not running this show, he only
thinks he is. She may play the student, the apprentice, but she’s driving the
ball now. Maybe she’s been driving it for a while.”
“Do you see them as willing to die for this?”
“She doesn’t
want to die, she wants to kill. He has a mission, fucked-up as it is, and would
probably die for it. But she wouldn’t have stopped there. She wants to kill.
We’ve taken all but one of the targets off the board. We take them down here,
or she’ll find that last
target.
Then? She can wait. She’s young, she has resources, she has IDs, and likely she
can get more. How long can we keep everyone she’s after protected? She’s got
time on her side of this. We take them down here and now.”
When they reached the drop-off point,
McNab gave Peabody a finger wiggle and slipped out with Callendar.
Didn’t look like cops, Eve thought, in
the bright coats, patterned airboots. They walked briskly, as anyone would on a
windy night in January.
Eve ran through
check-ins from her men, from Lowenbaum and his as Roarke and Feeney got to
work.
“He’s got it barricaded,” Feeney told her. “What do you mean,
barricaded?”
“Shields on the doors, on the windows.
Stun deflectors. He’s put some work in here, and some serious moola.”
“Can you get through them?”
“Not with a stun or a laser on anything
under five. He’s got some jammers set up, too, but give us a minute here.”
“Last stand,”
she murmured. “He figured he had more time, time enough to finish the mission,
hoped to get out with his daughter. But if and when it came down to it, he’d
take his last stand here. Are they in there?”
“Working on it,” Roarke muttered while
Feeney coordinated with McNab and Callendar. “The place may be a pile of shite,
but he invested well in his bloody moat. There now, nearly there now.
Feeney?”
“Yeah, I got you. McNab, you following?”
“Right behind
you, Captain. It’s wobbling, it’s sputtering, and . . . we got it. Several heat
sources popping, but . . .”
“I don’t think so,” Roarke said quietly. “Another minute here.”
“He’s set them up. Counterfeits—it’s false imaging,” Feeney
explained. “We
can survey and eliminate.”
“First floor’s generated. No warm bodies there,” Roarke said.
“Surveying second level.” Feeney nodded at the small screen.
“And it’s clear.”
“We’re on
three,” McNab announced. “Knocking down the bullshit.”
“And that’s
one.” Callendar’s satisfied voice came through. “Single heat source third
floor, north corner facing west, behind shielded window.”
“That’s not
the girl.” Eve hunkered down for a better look. “Too tall.”
“She could
have gone out for food,” Peabody suggested, “supplies.”
“I don’t think
so. He’s on duty. He’s waiting for us. We’ll give it thirty, in case. If she
went out for food, that’s enough time. Baxter, Trueheart, split off, take a
walk, check takeout joints, 24/7s, delis, any market still open within a
three-block radius. If you spot her, don’t let her make you.”
“Peeling off now.”
“If she’s outside, bringing home some egg rolls, we take her down
—fast, hard,
done. We may be able to bargain Mackie into surrendering if we have her as
weight.”
“But you
don’t think so.” Feeney turned to her. “He sent her out, stay covered, stay
safe so you can finish the mission. He’s the distraction.”
“Yeah. Yeah,
that’s my gut on it, but we have to see it through. She could be anywhere.
Lowenbaum, we need him alive. He can be hurting, but we need him breathing.
Have you got a shot?”
“He knows how
to keep covered, Dallas, and that’s what he’s doing. We can punch some holes in
the barricades, but right now, we can’t take him out.”
“Battering
ram would take down the door,” she considered, “but give him time for whatever
he has in mind by the time we get to the third floor. Taking out as many of us
as he can, taking himself out. Worse, targeting civilians.”
She closed
her eyes a moment, held up a hand so nobody spoke and interrupted her thoughts.
“Lowenbaum, does Tactical have anything handy that’ll cut through those crappy
walls—the common wall?”
After a beat
of silence he answered. “Yeah. Yeah, we’ve got something.”
“Stay where
you are. I’m coming to you. Can you spare Roarke?” she asked Feeney.
“I think the kids and I can handle things.” “You’re with me. You
don’t look like a cop.” “Why, thank you.”
“Peabody, give me that stupid coat.” “My coat!”
“Pink coat,
snowflake hat.” She pulled it out of her pocket. “I don’t look like a cop.”
“Beg to differ,” Roarke murmured.
“I know how to not look like a cop. I need like a . . .” She
gestured. “Purse?”
“Yeah, yeah,
a bag thing. Tool or tools can go in that. What’ve we got in here?”
Feeney pulled open a drawer. “McNab’s old satchel.”
The old
satchel was a wild green just short of fluorescent, with a jagged lightning
bolt pattern done in Peabody pink.
“Christ, it’s nearly as bad as one of Jenkinson’s ties.” “I heard
that,” Jenkinson said in her ear.
“It’s not a secret. Okay, give me your
coat.” Eve took off her much- loved coat, put on Peabody’s girlie pink coat,
and dragged her own cap onto her head. “The scarf, too.”
Eve wound
Peabody’s bold, brightly colored scarf around her neck.
“It actually looks really good with the bag.”
“Don’t ever
say that again.” She hitched the bag on cross-body like a sensible New Yorker,
and slipped out of the van.
“We need to
circle the block, come around from the south, hook up with Lowenbaum. Then
we’re going to walk fast, hold hands, laugh and talk, straight to the
connecting duplex.”
“So I
assumed.” And, though there was no need to do so at this point, he took her
hand as they walked west. “There are heat sources in the attached house—three
of them. One would be a small dog,
possibly a large cat.”
“We’ll deal with that.” “I don’t doubt it.”
As they
walked they passed Baxter, who kept going as he spoke in her earbud. “No sign
of her yet. Trueheart?”
“I’ve hit two places with previous sightings—pizza joint, deli.
Nobody’s seen her
today or tonight.”
“Finish the
sweep, then retake your positions. Without her as a bargaining chip, odds are
slim to nada on talking him out.”
As they
rounded the next corner, Lowenbaum hopped out of the big armored van. “Got
battering rams, sledgehammers, torches, but I figured you didn’t want to make
that much noise.”
“Not if you’ve got something else.
“Laser cutter. She’ll go
through those interior walls like shit through a goose. Not as noisy as the
other options, but she hums. If he hears it,
he’ll know what it is.”
“We’ll make sure he doesn’t hear it.” “I can go in, create an entry.”
“I need you out here, Lowenbaum. The chances of me taking out a
trained sniper most likely in body armor with my sidearm? Low.
We’re the
distraction, and believe me, we’re going to duck and cover when necessary. I
need you to take him down—that’s on you. We’ll get him to move—you tell me when
and where—and we’ll make it happen so you can take him down.”
“You can count on that. Do either of you
know how to work a laser cutter?”
“I do, yes.”
Roarke took it, studied it. “And a fine one it is,” he added as he put inside
the satchel.
“I’m going to call Trueheart and Baxter in. Make sure everyone’s
aware there are civilians in the attached house. We’ll get them to a secured area, but stay aware.”
She started to walk again. “Baxter, Trueheart, back to
post.
Roarke and I are heading for the corner of Third and
Eighteenth, about to move into suspect’s eyeline.”
“In that
case.” Roarke wrapped an arm around her, glued her to his side. “Could we look
less concerned about murderers?”
When they
stopped at the corner, she tugged
him down to her for a kiss, studied the target location, and murmured against
his mouth, “He’s scanning the street, so he’s seen us. But he hasn’t moved to
cover the back. Might have some sort of early warning system set up for that.”
She snuggled in
against him as they crossed at the light. “We’re going straight to the
neighbors, like we’re expected.”
“Jan Maguire,
Philippe Constant. I looked them up while you were changing coats.”
“Jan and
Phil, got it. Do you want to tell me how come you know how to work a laser
cutter?”
He grinned down at her. “Not at this time.”
She grinned
back, let out a laugh she hoped carried. “Thank God we’re here. I’m freezing!
We’re springing for a cab on the way home.”
“Let’s see how it goes.”
They walked
up the steps and, with their backs to the target, pressed the buzzer.
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