Authors: Jeff Abbott
To have a life again, I could take this secret life, for a while, to find my son. I felt the old tickle of adrenaline begin again, along my spine, curling into my brain.
I stood, turned to face the small scattering of customers in the Bluecut. I jumped, without a wobble, onto the fine leather bar stool and cleared my throat. The elegant piano player stopped. The sparse but cool midday crowd looked up at me, startled.
I put on my host’s smile and held my whisky glass up in a toast. “Ladies and gentlemen, I just acquired this bar. The drinks are on the house.”
Many thanks to the amazing people who helped me, in different ways, with this book:
Mitch Hoffman, Jamie Raab, David Shelley, Ursula Mackenzie, Thalia Proctor, Daniel Mallory, Kim Hoffman, Nathalie Morse, Kati Nicholl, Richard Collins, Sean Garrehy, Sarah Jones, Shirley Stewart, Peter Ginsberg, Nathan Bransford, Dave Barbor, Holly Frederick, Sarah LaPolla, Carolyn Nordstrom, Steve Basile, Kevin Casey, Dan Edwardes, James Whitaker, Georgina Tripp, Tracy Edmonson, Wesley Skow, Jurgen Snoeren, Marc van Biezen, Judith van Doorn, Johnny Zhao, Janice Gable Bashman, Sam Bashman, JT Ellison, and, as always, William, Charles, and Leslie.
Jeff Abbott is the
New York Times
-bestselling, award-winning author of thirteen novels. His books include the Sam Capra thrillers
Adrenaline
and
The Last Minute
, as well as the standalone novels
Panic
,
Fear
, and
Collision
.
The Last Minute
won an International Thriller Writers award, and Jeff is also a three-time nominee for the Edgaraward. He lives in Austin with his family. You can visit his website at
www.jeffabbott.com
.
Ex–CIA agent Sam Capra must commit an impossible assassination—or he will lose the only person in the world who matters to him…
Turn this page for a sneak peek of
Manhattan, Upper West Side
I
KNOCKED ON THE GREEN DOOR
and knew that in the next five minutes I’d either be dead or I’d have the truth I needed.
The man opened the apartment door just as I raised my fist for the second, impatient knock. He did not look like a man who traded in human lives. He looked like an accountant. He wore a dark suit, a loosened tie with bands of silver and pink and a slight air of exhaustion and impatience. His glasses were steel-framed and rectangular. His lips were greasy with takeout Thai, and the remains of a meal—maybe his last—scented the air.
He looked at me, he looked at the pixie of a woman standing next to me, then he looked at his watch.
“You and your wife are late, Mr. Derwatt,” he said. “One minute late.”
There were several misconceptions in his statement. First, my name was not Derwatt. Second, the woman standing next to me, Mila, was not my wife. Third, we were exactly on time; I’d even waited for the second hand to sweep past the twelve before I knocked. But I shrugged,
full of graciousness, and he opened the door and Mila and I stepped inside. He looked her over. He did it all in a second but I saw it. She was glancing at the two thick-necked thugs who stood by the apartment’s dinner table. Then she cast her gaze down, as if intimidated.
Nice bit of acting, that. Mila could stare down a great white shark.
I offered the accountant a handshake. “Frank Derwatt. This is my wife, Lilia.”
“Mr. Bell.” He didn’t shake my hand and I let it drop down to my side. I threw in an awkward laugh for effect. I was wearing jeans and a navy blazer with a pink polo underneath. Mila had found a horrible floral skirt that I suppose approximated her bizarre idea of what an American suburban housewife would wear. She clutched her pink purse. We looked like we were more interested in country club membership than an illegal adoption.
“I thought we were meeting alone,” I said. Mila stepped close to me, like she was afraid.
The accountant dabbed a napkin at the Thai sauce smearing his mouth. I wanted to seize him by the throat, throw him against the wall and force him to tell me where my son was. But that would only get my son killed, so I stood there like I was the nervous suburban wannabe dad that I was playing.
“Face the wall,” one of the big men said. He was a redhead, with his hair sliced into a burr and freckles the size of pebbles on his face. “Both of you.”
We both did. I set down the small canvas briefcase I was carrying.
I didn’t argue. I was supposed to be a nervous, law-abiding citizen and, although I have been those things in the distant past, I wasn’t right now. No wire, no weapons.
Just me and my shining personality and a rage I kept caged up in my chest. The redhead searched me thoroughly. Then he did the same to Mila.
“Frank,” she said, about halfway through, a tinge of fear in her voice. She was selling it.
“Just be patient, honey, it’ll be over in a minute,” I said. “And then we can get our baby.”
Mila made this soft hiss of assent, the patient sigh of a woman who wanted this deal to be her gateway to happiness.
“Mr. and Mrs. Derwatt are clean, Mr. Bell,” the redhead said. He stepped back from us. I took Mila’s hand for just a moment.
“Sit down, Mr. Derwatt,” the accountant said. “Excuse the mess. We decided on an early dinner. I don’t usually meet with clients at night.”
I knew that normally the accountant would now be on a commuter train back to New Jersey. I had checked into every nook of his life: a wife, two sons, a mortgage on a cozy little place to live, a life full of promise.
All the sweet elements I’d once had, and had lost.
The accountant and his toughs studied me. Let them, I thought. I’d been careful.
One opened the briefcase. He dumped the bricks of cash out onto the table and began to sort them.
Mr. Bell glanced at me.
“My wife and I,” I lied, “we’ve failed to conceive after three years of trying. It has nearly destroyed our marriage. I’m eager to give my wife a healthy, happy baby.”
“You could adopt through legit channels.”
“Yes. But, um, some of my business practices, I don’t care to have them scrutinized by well-meaning social workers. We simply wish to acquire a child.”
Mila moved close to me. “You have done our background checks, yes? We wish to make our selection and get a child.”
“It’s not that easy, Mrs. Derwatt.”
“I’ve brought the down payment. We select our child and then we go get him or her.”
He blinked at me.
“That was what was agreed,” I said.
“The money’s all here, Mr. Bell,” the redhead had counted with the precise quickness of a man used to handling banded stacks of cash. “Twenty thousand dollars.”
“There were some anomalies in your background checks,” Mr. Bell said.
“Anomalies. I do not know this word,” Mila said. She’d thickened up her Eastern European accent.
“Um, questions, Mrs. Derwatt.”
I held my breath. We had been very, very careful in setting up these identities. Mila had worked on them while we tried our best to find any link to the one clue we had to my son’s whereabouts: a photo of a woman leaving a private clinic in Strasbourg, France, soon after my son’s birth. I had been told she’d sold my son. We still did not know who the woman was, but using Mila’s considerable resources we’d found a surveillance photo of her arriving in New York, a week after my son’s birth, walking out of the terminal with this man. Mr. Bell, whose face was in a criminal database maintained by the state of New York for having been convicted of embezzlement six years ago and had gotten parole. We matched him to the airport photo. Found out where he lived, where he worked and who his associates were. Slow, plodding detective work but it had paid off. We had sent out feelers as potential adopters of a child, provided background, gotten this meeting to pick out a son or daughter.
But now.
“We could not find a complete enough history for Mrs. Derwatt before she came over from Romania.”
Mila was from Moldova, but the languages are identical. She turned to me and said in Moldovan, “We will have to kill them.”
I forced a smile. “She doesn’t understand what you mean,” I said to Mr. Bell in English.
“You said you met Mrs. Derwatt through an online dating service that matches Western men with eastern European brides.”
“Yes. What does this matter? We’ve brought the money. We want a child.”
“She’s Romanian, why not adopt there?” Mr. Bell said. “You could just go to eastern Europe and buy yourself a kid like you bought yourself a wife.” Nice sneer at the end.
Somewhere, we’d left a hole in our story. Or, conversely, this was a test. I put on my outraged face. “We don’t care where the child comes from. I told you, I cannot use normal channels.”
“As many of our clients can’t, Mr. Derwatt. So you understand why we must be so cautious. Our potential parents are… dangerous people.”
“My business is my business. I’ve provided you with what you need to know about me. Anything more could be compromising.”
“For me or for you?” Mr. Bell asked.
“Darling, let’s gather up our money,” I said to Mila. “We’re leaving.” I continued to play the outrage card.
“Don’t touch the money, Mrs. Derwatt,” Bell said.
“We had a deal.” I pointed at the laptop on the table.
“Pay a deposit, pick a baby from the list, pick him up and pay the rest.”
“We can decline to do business with anyone who makes us uncomfortable.”
“What is problem?” Mila said. “Maybe you make misunderstanding, and this is easy to fix.” She tried a bright smile with him.
“You claim to be Lilia Rozan, from Bucharest, immigrated here three years ago.”
“No claim. Am.”
“That particular Lilia Rozan is currently in a cancer ward in New Jersey.”
Misstep. We’d used a bad identity. Mr. Bell stood a little straighter. He was nervous but he had the muscle here. “So, Mr. Derwatt, we want to know who you and the lovely missus are.”
“We’re wanted by the police,” I said. “We had to lie.”
Mr. Bell smiled. “Details, please.” The two men were on each side of him. They didn’t have their guns out but they thought they didn’t need to; we were unarmed.
I looked at Mila. “Look, our money’s good as anyone else’s. Please.”
The bald man moved behind Mila. She clasped a hand over her wristwatch.
“We want to know who you are. Right now. Or he starts in on your wife.”
Mila turned, hands clasped together as if in prayer. “Oh no, please, don’t hurt me. We just want a baby. Please. That’s all we want.”
He shoved her into the wall. She kept her footing but tears sprang to her eyes. “Oh, please.”
I stayed very still. The bald man glanced back at me,
frowning with disgust that I would let him manhandle my woman, and in that second Mila pulled the watch from its band. Connecting them was a thin steel wire. She leapt onto his back and looped the garrote over his neck, the watch and the band serving as handles so that she didn’t slice her fingers off. His yell became a gurgle in an instant.
I hammered a fist into Mr. Bell’s chest and he went heaving into the air and landed on my money. The redhead started to draw but he couldn’t decide, for one crucial second, whether to shoot me or save his buddy, now purpling under Mila’s wire. As he swung the silencer-capped Beretta 92FS back toward me—hello, self-preservation—I launched into him. I levered the gun down as he fired and he hit his own foot. He howled and I slammed a fist into his solar plexus and then into his throat. He staggered back and we fought for control of the gun. He was bigger than me. I wrenched the gun, pushing it back toward his chest. His eyes widened as he realized the barrel was going to slip under his chin. It did and I squeezed his hand and his own finger pulled the trigger. A spray of blood and flesh fountained as it carved a path into his face. He looked surprised before the bullet distorted his flesh.
I freed the gun from his fingers and whirled, aiming at Mila’s opponent. But that guy was already gone. She’s not big but still, a hundred pounds hanging onto a wire; a throat can’t survive the trauma. The bald man lay in a sprawl at her feet; she hovered over Mr. Bell, panting.