Authors: Iris Johansen
Tags: #Mystery, #Missing Children, #Mystery & Detective, #Women sculptors, #Duncan, #General, #Suspense, #Women Sleuths, #Facial reconstruction (Anthropology), #Thrillers, #Mystery Fiction, #Fiction, #Eve (Fictitious character)
“Catherine to the rescue? I didn’t say that I’m meeting him. He didn’t even set up a place yet.”
“I know you. I’m tempted to call Joe and tell him to—”
“No!” No threat to Joe. The hint that John Gallo was unbalanced had made the danger even more clear. If Eve was going to take a chance, it would not be with Joe’s life. “Joe can’t be involved, Catherine. I’d keep you out of it, too, but there’s a chance that you’ll be able to find out more from Nate Queen. We need all the help we can get. I’m having trouble getting anything but double talk from Gallo.”
“Then it’s a waste. Stay away from him.”
She wanted to stay away from him. It wasn’t possible. “I’ll try to keep in contact with you.”
“I’m on my way.” Catherine hung up.
Definitely Catherine to the rescue, Eve thought. Well, she would deal with her friend when she arrived. Catherine was at her rental house in Louisville, Kentucky. That meant that it would take her at least four or five hours to reach the cottage. Unless she took a helicopter. Eve wouldn’t rule out that possibility.
At any rate, she’d better marshal her arguments and start making plans to avoid Catherine’s machinations.
The FedEx truck was coming down the lake road to the cottage.
First things, first. She’d set up the skull that the Austin PD had sent her and start the initial measurements. There was no reason to neglect her job because her personal life was suddenly in such chaos.
“You have my package?” She came down the steps as the truck stopped. “I’ll take it. I have to sign for it, as usual?”
“Yep.” The uniformed driver bent down and grabbed the box. The next minute he’d jumped down and was holding the clipboard out to her.
She took the pen and scrawled her name. “Thank you.” Her finger was tingling, and she absently rubbed it against her pants as she handed him back the clipboard and pen. “Always right on time.”
“Not this time. Long overdue.” He raised his head and looked her straight in the face.
She froze with shock.
John Gallo. Different, so different. Yet unmistakable.
“It’s okay,” he said quietly. “Don’t be scared. It’s nothing, really.”
Darkness.
* * *
EVE WASN’T ANSWERING HER
phone. It was going straight to voice mail.
Not good.
Catherine frowned as she pressed the disconnect. There was a possibility that Eve might be ignoring her call to avoid an argument. But that wasn’t like Eve. She had no problem with confrontation.
She tried to call again. Same result.
Okay, bite the bullet. Eve might not be pleased with her, but Catherine wasn’t going to go against instinct. It had saved her neck too many times to ignore it. She dialed Joe Quinn.
“Catherine,” she said when he answered. “Are you at the precinct?”
“Yes.”
“Do me a favor. Call Eve. See if she answers. I need to know if she’s just not answering my calls.”
“And why would she do that?”
“Because I’m pushy, and she doesn’t want to be pushed. Just do it. Okay?”
Joe hung up.
He called back two minutes later. “What the hell is happening?”
“She didn’t answer?”
“I called three times.” His voice was harsh. “Voice mail. Why were you pushing her?”
“I’m in my car on the way to the lake cottage. But it will be several hours before I get there. Go home and check to make sure everything is okay.”
“Why shouldn’t it be?” he asked. “Dammit, answer me, Catherine.”
“John Gallo called Eve. He wanted to arrange a meeting.”
Joe muttered an oath. “And, of course, she was going to do it.”
“You know Eve. The chances are good. She thinks she should handle this herself.”
“I know. And she wouldn’t listen to you. She won’t listen to me, either. What else did Gallo tell her?”
“That Nate Queen won’t tell her anything. He said they have an arrangement. No, he said he owned Queen.”
“Yes, and that would be the only excuse she’d need. I’m getting in my car now. I should be home in thirty minutes. I’ll call you from there.” He hung up.
The deed was done. If nothing was wrong, then Eve was going to be very upset with her. Catherine sighed as she hung up the phone. At least she hadn’t told Joe the most frightening thing about Gallo’s call. No use worrying him unless necessary. Now all she could do was wait for Joe’s call.
The call came forty minutes later.
“She’s not here,” he said curtly. “The Jeep was still in the driveway. The house was left unlocked. A half-full coffee cup was on the front porch railing.”
“No note?”
“Nothing.”
“Shit.”
“My sentiments. If she went somewhere to meet Gallo, she would have used her own transportation. And she wouldn’t have left the house unlocked. We always use the alarm.”
“You think that Gallo decided he didn’t want to wait to set up a meeting?”
“Don’t you?”
“Yes.” She hesitated. “There’s something else you should know. Gallo admitted to Eve that he was unbalanced.”
There was a silence, then an eruption of oaths. “My God, and she was going to meet him anyway? No wonder you were on your way back down here. You should have called me right away.” He added roughly, “Oh, I know why you didn’t. You two have this bond, and everyone else is on the outside. But if anything has happened to her, I’ll break your neck, Catherine.”
“And I won’t blame you. But you’d do better to think of breaking Gallo’s neck as soon as we find him.”
“And that will be damn soon. Are you somewhere near a city?”
“Knoxville, Tennessee, is about thirty miles from here.”
“Go to the airport. I’m renting a plane, and I’ll pick you up.”
“And where are we going?”
“You tell me. Can you locate Nate Queen?”
“He should be back in his office at INSCOM Fort Belvoir, Virginia, by now. But he also has a condo in Alexandria. Should I call him?”
“No, we’re going to pay him a visit. There’s too much wiggle room on the phone. He’s going to talk. I’ll know everything he knows about John Gallo within an hour after I have him. I’m going to pin him down so tight he won’t be able to breathe. As a matter of fact, that’s an even better idea.” His tone was savage. “Gallo thinks he owns Nate Queen? He just yielded possession. I’m the one who’s going to own Queen from now on.”
San Francisco International Airport
The gate area was crowded, and Paul Black was barely able to get a seat at Gate 2.
He would rather have been at Gate 1. From where he was sitting, he could see a little girl of seven or eight standing next to a flight attendant. She was a pretty, brown-haired little girl, her hair pulled back in a blue ribbon. Her face was eager, her eyes shining.
A first flight?
She was probably one of the thousands of unaccompanied minors who flew every month entrusted to the airlines flight attendants. The flight attendant seemed to be in her early twenties and was chatting with the man next to her.
While the little girl was going toward the doughnut stand in the center of the gate area.
It would not be easy, but it would be possible, he thought.
Train stations, bus stations, airports were all prime areas to make contact. Airports were a little harder, but that only made it more interesting. He usually preferred bus stations in European and Asian countries, but he couldn’t be choosy at the moment. He hadn’t had a kill in over a week.
The little girl had her doughnut and was coming back toward the flight attendant.
The woman barely glanced at the little girl when she sat down next to her.
Maybe it would be easier than he thought.
The mind-set of the people at travel centers was always different. Sometimes the travelers were nervous, excited, unhappy, but there was always a chance that their altered perception would lead them more easily to do things they wouldn’t ordinarily do.
He had read once that Andrei Chikatilo, the Soviet serial killer who had been convicted of killing at least fifty-three women and children, had made a habit of contacting his prey at train stations. It was a wonder the fool had not been caught before. Personally, Black preferred to be unpredictable. It was the only safe method and, combined with his clever acquisition of Queen as a protector, it had worked wonderfully well for him. He had stopped counting at sixty-two kills and, though he had occasionally skirted capture, he had never been really in danger.
Paul Black glanced up at the clock. He had forty minutes before he boarded the flight. Time to spend them doing something he’d enjoy. He took out his cell and dialed Nate Queen.
“I’m coming after you, Queen,” he said softly. “I just thought I’d let you anticipate a little.”
“Black?” Queen’s voice was hoarse. “What are you talking about? Why? Haven’t I protected you? Let’s talk.”
The bastard was scared shitless, Black thought. Good. Fear was power. It was as heady as straight vodka. “I don’t like to talk. That’s what’s made our relationship work so well. You give me an assignment, and I do it. I give you a bill, and you pay it.” He paused. “Benkman didn’t like to talk, either. He just wanted to kill me and walk away. You shouldn’t have sent him, Queen.”
“Why would I want to kill you? You’re valuable to me.”
“I think you’re playing both ends against the middle. You don’t care how faithful an employee I’ve been over the years.” His voice was mocking. “No gold watch. Just a bomb under the terrace. So I must have been more valuable to you dead than alive.”
“It wasn’t me.” Queen’s voice was panicky. “Maybe Gallo did it on his own. He doesn’t tell me everything.”
“It doesn’t matter. I’ll get to you both.”
“Look, we can work this out. You need me as much as I need you. They would have executed you years ago if I hadn’t protected you. You know that’s true.”
“And the reason you protected me is that you know the minute they catch me, I’ll tell everyone how you’ve constantly stolen evidence and whisked me away from the local police. In how many countries? At least a dozen.” Turn the screw. “And I’ll give details to the media. Ugly details horrify the media. You’re so comfortable in your cushy job, just waiting to retire and tap all the money you’ve stolen and go to some Caribbean island. That dream would be blasted to hell. They’ll start a witch hunt.”
“Maybe I made a mistake,” Queen said. “I admit I was getting nervous. I needed someone who would just do the kills I assigned, then go undercover until we needed him.”
“Oh, someone who didn’t like his job?”
He hesitated. “I may have thought that you were out of control.”
“I am. You’ve never been able to control me.”
The little girl at Gate 1 was wandering away from the flight attendant again. Black felt tension grip him. It was too tempting. The challenge, the possibility … the hunger.
“Give me another chance,” Queen said.
He jerked his attention away from the girl. “Why now? Why did you send Benkman now?”
“I told you that—” Queen stopped. “Gallo is becoming difficult. I’m tired of dealing with him. I needed a sacrificial lamb.”
Black burst out laughing. “And I was your lamb? What fools you are. You should have let me kill him when I wanted to do it.”
“We had our doubts whether you could do it. He’s as nasty a piece of work as you are.”
Black’s smile vanished. “I could do it.”
“Then maybe we could deal. You forget my lack of judgment. And I turn you loose on Gallo for a very substantial sum. Look on it as a challenge.”
The challenge was the little girl at Gate 1. Gallo would only be an amusement in comparison. “How much?”
“Double the last job.”
“You really are finding him difficult. Or me a threat.”
“A little of both,” Queen said. “I want information from him before he dies. I need a ledger he’s been holding.”
“How do you know I won’t take it?”
“You wouldn’t be interested. Blackmail requires a certain effort and restraint. You only want one thing from us.”
Freedom to keep doing what he loved best.
Queen knew him better than he’d thought.
“I might be interested. I’ve always hated Gallo’s guts.” He added, “As long as you understand, you won’t get another chance with me. Where is Gallo?”
“Mazkal, Utah.” He paused. “Where are you?”
“San Francisco.”
“Very close.”
“I’m close to you, too. Only a few hours away.”
“But you’d get nothing by killing me.”
“Except satisfaction.”
“Be reasonable.”
“But all the FBI profilers say that men of my persuasion are seldom reasonable.”
The flight attendant at Gate 1 was leaning on the departure gate desk and talking to the gate agent.
The little girl was standing several yards away looking out the huge window at the planes.