Attorney's Run (A Nick Teffinger Thriller / Read in Any Order) (5 page)

BOOK: Attorney's Run (A Nick Teffinger Thriller / Read in Any Order)
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Bird droppings ruined paint.

Then he headed to the backyard to view the body.

A white female in her early twenties lay on the ground with her head twisted radically to the side, indicating a severely broken neck. Teffinger kneeled down for a closer look.

The woman had an energetic face, even in death.

She struck him as someone who sang hip-hop with the window open as she drove, someone far too young to die.

He said, “I promise.”

Then he stood up, surprised at his words, words he hadn’t muttered in over a year.

“About time,” he said to himself.

 

HE WALKED UP TO THE TUNDRA, not wanting to mess up the scene until it had been fully photographed and processed, only to discover the magpie back on his roof. “Go on, get out of here.” When the bird flew off, Teffinger opened the door and stood on the floorboard to be sure the paint was okay.

Damn it.

A large liquid splat sat smack dab where it shouldn’t.

He grabbed a Kleenex out of his pocket and wiped it off, trying to not get any on his hands, just as Sydney pulled up and walked over.

“My universe is back to working the way it’s supposed to,” he said.

“Huh?”

“Never mind,” he said. “It’s an inside joke.”

“What are you going to do with that Kleenex?”

Good question.

He threw it into the bed of the truck.

“It’s going to blow out of there,” Sydney said. “That’s littering.”

He knew that.

“Well, what do you propose I do with it?”

“Set it inside, on the floor mat,” she said. “Then throw it away when you get home.” Teffinger knew she wouldn’t give him any peace until he complied, so he did.

“Happy?”

She nodded.

“Where’s the body?”

 

OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS THEY DISCOVERED a truckload of useful information. First, the victim, a 21-year-old named Samantha Rickenbacker, was a stocker for the Home Depot in Golden, and didn’t work for Molly Maids like they first thought.

But her roommate—Tessa Blake—did, and in fact was assigned to the car in the driveway. Blake’s purse was found under the driver’s seat. The house didn’t belong to a Molly Maid client, so if Tessa Blake had been at the scene and came to clean—which seemed obvious given the vacuum cleaner and bag of products in the backyard—she was moonlighting.

The two women rented an apartment together in Arvada.

No one answered the door when Teffinger knocked—not the first time, at ten, or the second, at eleven, or the third, at noon, when they arrived with a search warrant.

“So where’s Tessa Blake?” Sydney asked.

“That’s the question,” Teffinger said. “She’s either involved in this up to her ass or she’s another victim. My money’s on the latter.”

“Why the latter?”

“Because if she was involved, she wouldn’t have left the car behind, much less her purse,” he said.

Sydney nodded.

“So she’s another victim,” she said.

“That’s my guess,” Teffinger said. “The bigger question is whether she’s a live victim or a dead one.” He paused and added, “I made a promise to the dead woman.”

Sydney was shocked.

“I didn’t know you did that anymore,” she said.

“Neither did I,” he said.

“So how does this other woman, Tessa Blake, fit into the promise?” Sydney asked.

“It extends to her, by default.”

She cocked her head.

“That means you’re going to work my ass to the bone.”

“Both of our asses,” he said. “I have one too, remember.”

She laughed.

“You call that an ass?” she said. “That’s not an ass. That’s just a place where an ass is supposed to be.”

13

Day Three—June 13

Wednesday Morning

 

JEKKER SLEPT WITH THE DOORS of the boxcar open last night so he’d be able to hear an approaching car in the unlikely event that someone had tracked him, but no sounds cut through the black Rocky Mountain air other than the occasional howling of coyotes. He woke early morning to a rummaging noise in the corner. A black squirrel saw Jekker throw the covers off, froze for a heartbeat, and scampered out the door. Jekker stepped outside, took a long heaven-sent piss on a lodge pole pine and then pounded on Tessa Blake’s boxcar.

“Everything okay in there?” he shouted.

Silence.

“Answer me!”

More silence, then, “I have to use the bathroom.”

“In a minute,” he said.

Unfortunately for Tessa Blake, she managed to pull the hood off and run a good distance last night while Jekker found himself busy snapping the other woman’s neck. He didn’t catch her until she made it around the corner of the house to the street, under a streetlight to be precise.

She pulled his ski mask off in the fight.

That gave her a good look at his face, meaning that release was no longer an option.

She would have to die at the end. Too bad, but she’d brought it on herself. He got the coffee pot going, showered, grabbed the .357 SIG, and then opened the heavy door of his captive’s boxcar. She cowered in the corner, wearing the same look on her face as the black squirrel.

Jekker grinned at the similarity.

“Get out here,” he said.

She obeyed.

Now, by the light of day and up close, Jekker realized how small and frail the woman was. She couldn’t be taller than five-one, and probably weighed in at ninety or ninety-five. What she lacked in size she more than made up for with her eyes, big brown eyes that took up half her face, peeking out timidly from behind pitch-black hair.

Her lower lip quivered.

She wouldn’t try to escape, he could already tell.

He turned his back while she used the facilities, then chained her left ankle to an eyebolt in the middle boxcar and fed her cereal and coffee.

She said nothing, watching his every move.

Suddenly his cell phone rang.

He swallowed, dreading what was about to come, and stepped outside to talk in private.

 

IT TURNED OUT HE WAS RIGHT.

The voice on the other end said, “You had some collateral damage last night, a woman by the name of Samantha Rickenbacker.”

Jekker kicked the dirt.

“This isn’t an exact science,” he said. “Sometimes things happen.”

“We hire you to have things not happen,” the voice said. “If we wanted things to happen, there are a hundred different people we could call.”

“I have Tessa Blake,” Jekker said. “That’s what you wanted and that’s what you got.”

“We can’t afford slop,” the voice said. “That causes huge problems on our end.”

Jekker already knew that.

He decided not to mention the other complication, namely that Tessa Blake saw his face.

 

HE CLOSED THE PHONE AND STOOD THERE, not knowing if the call was meant as a slap on the wrist or something a lot more serious. On the one hand, he had already established himself with years of loyal service and perfectly executed operations. On the other hand, he had broken Rule No. 1, set in stone on day one and emphasized many times thereafter.

No collateral damage.

Ever.

Understood?

Yes.

We hope so.

Also, Jekker had let the woman see his face, which meant that she had to die. He didn’t know if this was the beginning of the end, but one thing he did know—his job wasn’t one that you got fired from and then retired to some warm place with white sand and women in bikinis bringing you little drinks with umbrellas. The end of the relationship most likely meant the end of his life.

At least they’d try.

Who would they send?

It would probably be one of Jekker’s counterparts. Unfortunately, he had no idea who they were. He knew there was at least one more like him, and maybe two, operating in Europe, and probably at least one more right here in the States.

He had no idea if they were male or female, tall or short, or young or old.

He needed to keep his guard up as if he was being hunted by the best in the world, starting immediately.

He also needed insurance.

He needed something he could hold up and say, “Take a good look. If you kill me, this will come back to bite you in the ass.”

 

HE WALKED BACK TO THE BOXCAR and found Tessa Blake sitting at the table exactly as he left her. Seeing her gave him an idea.

“Who wants you dead?” he asked.

Her lower lip trembled.

“What do you mean?”

“You pose a threat to somebody. Who is it?”

She looked genuinely puzzled.

“I don’t know.”

“Think!”

He must have had a fury in his voice because she cowered as if expecting him to strike her.

“Nobody,” she said. “I’m just a maid.”

“Do you sniff around when people aren’t home?”

“No.”

“Do you take things?”

“No.”

“No?”

“No.”

“Then why are you here?”

Her face trembled and then she broke into tears.

He could care less.

They meant nothing.

He grabbed her by the hair, pulled her head back and stuck the barrel of the SIG in her mouth.

“I said, why are you here?”

When she tried to mumble something, he pulled the steel out.

“I don’t know,” she said. “I didn’t do anything wrong. All I want to do is go home. Please don’t hurt me. I’m pregnant.”

14

Day Three—June 13

Wednesday Morning

 

AT THREE IN THE MORNING, London crawled out of bed, fired up her computer and typed a draft letter, addressed to the Managing Partner of Vesper & Bennett:

The undersigned represents Venta Devenelle. Ms. Devenelle was retained by Vesper & Bennett (V&B) to perform services in connection with the surveillance of Robert Copeland. V&B agreed to pay Ms. Devenelle $20,000 plus expenses, whether her surveillance was successful or not. In reliance upon this agreement, Ms. Devenelle traveled to Bangkok, Thailand, and incurred expenses of $7,238. The total owed to Ms. Devenelle is $27,238, less $10,000 (paid to date), leaving a balance due and owing of $17,238. Ms. Devenelle requests payment of this outstanding balance forthwith.

Very truly yours,

London Vaughn, Esq.

Attorney-At-Law.

Then she went back to sleep.

 

AT TEN IN THE MORNING—WEARING KHAKI PANTS, a white blouse and black leather pumps—London pushed through the glass doors of Vesper & Bennett and walked to the receptionist with her client Venta Devenelle at her side.

“Who’s the managing partner of the firm?” she asked.

The receptionist studied her, wondering whether to answer, and apparently saw no downside because she said, “Thomas Fog.”

London set an envelope on the fancy glass station.

“We have a letter for Mr. Fog,” she said.

The receptionist looked at it, explained that she would be sure Mr. Fog received it, and asked if there was anything else.

“We’d like it delivered now if we could,” London said. “We’re going to wait for a reply.”

“You’re going to wait?”

“Right.”

She and Venta took seats on a couch at the far end of the reception area.

London swallowed and looked at Venta.

“First blood,” she said.

Venta nodded.

Earlier this morning, over coffee at Starbucks, London had explained her strategy. The first thing they needed to do was to get V&B to admit that it had hired Venta. Asking for money due and owing was the best way to get that admission.

An hour later the receptionist walked over.

“Mr. Fog has been in meetings all morning,” she said. “He asked me to tell you that he’ll look at the letter this afternoon and call you tomorrow.”

London shook her head.

“Tomorrow’s too late,” she said. “Tomorrow we file a lawsuit as soon as the court opens. If that’s what Mr. Fog wants, we’re happy to leave now.”

The receptionist frowned.

“Hold on a minute,” she said. “Let me see how he wants to handle this.”

Twenty minutes later, London and Venta were escorted into a small conference room.

They waited there for over an hour.

Then a 40-ish pleasant-looking man wearing an expensive suit walked in and closed the door behind him. He had deep blue eyes, the kind that look at someone and understand them immediately, he kind that can tell if someone is lying or not—trial lawyer eyes.

 

HE HAD THE HARRIED AIR OF SOMEONE trying to squeeze twenty hours of work into eight. He shook both their hands and said, “I’m Thomas Fog and I’m very sorry to have kept you waiting. Please accept my apologies. I’ve read your letter, Ms. Vaughn, and have had my assistant try to verify that the firm hired Ms. Devenelle.” He frowned. “So far, we’re not having any luck.” Then to Venta, “Who was it exactly that you spoke to?”

Venta looked at London, not wanting to answer without permission, and London nodded.

“The person wouldn’t say,” Venta said.

“You have no name?”

“No.”

“Did this person say they were from Vesper & Bennett?”

London nodded permission to answer.

“No,” Venta said. “He said the matter was confidential. So confidential that he didn’t even want the name of the law firm in my files.”

Fog cocked his head.

“So what makes you think this man was with V&B?”

“I was able to get my phone records,” she said. “The calls came from a phone registered in the lobby of this building. For some reason he always gave me the impression he was with a big firm. Plus this firm is in the process of opening a Bangkok office. It’s the only firm in the building that has a tie to Bangkok.”

Fog looked at her hard, then at London.

“Ms. Vaughn,” he said, “your letter states that $10,000 has already been paid.”

“That’s correct,” London said.

“Do you have a copy of a check or wire transfer or anything else to show that the payment came from V&B?”

Venta jumped in.

“The payment was made in cash,” she said. “It was made in that manner as part of the firm’s plan to keep its involvement confidential.”

Fog stood up.

Hooked out the window and then back at them with a puzzled look on his face.

“You’re not giving me much to go on,” he said. “If the firm owes you money, Ms. Devenelle, we’ll definitely pay you every penny. I trust that you can see my dilemma though.” He smiled. “I’ll tell you what, let me get the word out to the other attorneys regarding this matter and see if anyone knows anything about it. How’s that? Fair enough? If someone steps up and says they hired you, case closed. We’ll get a check to you in full right away, with our apologies.” He looked at London. “Plus any associated attorney fees.”

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