Hunt Her Down (28 page)

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Authors: Roxanne St. Claire

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“Did you hide it before she came in?”

He shrugged. “I don’t waste my time trying to keep things from Lucy. She figures

everything out, usually twenty minutes before every one else does.” He lowered his head to

kiss her just as the sheer curtain on the inside of the French door fluttered.

They backed away from each other instinctively, looking at it.

“If we’re not careful, everyone else will figure this out in twenty minutes,” Maggie said.

“I don’t care.”

She did. “I’ll be back in a few minutes. I’m going to shower and change.” When she

opened the door and stepped in the hallway, Quinn’s bedroom door slammed shut.

Maybe it wouldn’t even take twenty minutes.

It took all he had not to interrogate Lola James, but Dan managed to keep his tone casual as

they gathered in the guesthouse a little while later. Lucy stayed, quietly taking it in from a seat

at the kitchen bar. Max sat next to her, a laptop open.

Maggie tucked her bare feet under her on a club chair with a view of the wall-size screen,

and Lola, sporting scabs from her cuts, slumped miserably in the corner of the sofa, staring at

the map of Venezuela on the screen.

She was in pain, though definitely out of her shocked condition. That was the only reason

he didn’t rattle her cage for answers.

“Exactly when did you learn that the fortune you had was connected to missing money?” he

asked her.

“The day my brother got out of prison, and was free for the first time in fourteen years to

tell me.”

“Or you would have tried to find them all sooner, I suppose.”

That earned him a sharp look. “I suppose,” she said dryly.

“How did you get those fortunes?” he asked.

“Ramon gave me the cookies, and I shared with my”— she shot a contemptuous glance at

Maggie—”babysitter.”

“Why didn’t he just give them to Maggie and tell her to hang on to them?”

She narrowed bloodshot eyes. “Probably because he knew she’d just hand them over to you

the next time you two fucked like bunnies.”

Fury whipped through him, but he didn’t blink. “How many are there, Lola?”

“Four.”

“Did Ramon tell you that?” That’s what he told Dan, but he may have been lying.

“He told me everything.”

“Why?” Dan asked. “Why wouldn’t he just take the fortune you have, and get the money

for himself?”

She shook her head, looking as if he was so stupid, it annoyed her to have to respond.

“Because he thinks if he finds the money and gives it to our father, he’ll be forgiven for his

sins—real or imagined.”

“Then why don’t you help him do that?”

She shrugged. “Personal reasons.”

“You hate your father.”

“Of course I do. So do you. So does she.” She angled her head toward Maggie. “Viejo

knew someone was feeding information to the FBI and he made the assumption it was

Ramon. That’s how it came out at the trial, since you were conveniently dead and she was

conveniently gone.” She leaned forward. “Wasn’t this meeting supposed to be about finding

the guy who did this to me?”

“Constantine Xenakis?”


He
didn’t touch me. But he obviously beat the guy who did cut me up to my office, and

stole the fortune.”

Con was smart enough to steal the fortune from her; he was also smart enough to work with

her to try and derail Dan and Maggie’s efforts. Earlier, he and Lucy had pieced together how

Con found Dan at Max’s house—he knew plenty about the Bullet Catchers, and no doubt

knew they were close friends. He must have found out where Max’s wife lived and took a

chance.

The Con Man was smart, no doubt. But whose side was he on—other than his own?

If he hadn’t cut Lola, and she was telling the truth about the guy she’d described when they

started this meeting—auburn haired, dark eyed, muscular, with a mole under his jaw—this

player wasn’t anyone they’d come across yet.

“How many fortunes do you have?” Lola asked suddenly. “You have mine and you have

Maggie’s and you said you have Ramon’s. This other guy must have the fourth, or he

wouldn’t be so hot on the trail of the other ones. And he must know what it’s worth or he

wouldn’t want it so much.”

“Or maybe he works for Viejo,” Dan suggested, “and his job is to get them all so no one

finds them. Viejo might already know exactly where the money is hidden.”

She shrugged. “He might. And if he hasn’t laundered it yet, it could still be there.”

Dan turned to the screen and pointed to the southwest corner of the lake, not zooming in

enough for her to know they had a fourth coordinate from the FBI files, giving them a precise

quadrant. “This area of Lake Maracaibo mean anything to you?”

“Yes. My uncle had a house down there in the lake.”


In
the lake?” Maggie asked.

“A stilt house. They’re all over Lake Maracaibo, especially in the south, where there are no

oil derricks and plenty of fishing. That’s all they are—fishing huts up on stilts, and I was

down there with my uncle when I was seven or eight.” She squinted at the screen. “I’m pretty

sure it was right there. About thirty miles off shore from a town called . . .” She tapped her

chin, thinking. “Puerto Concha. A village on a river that leads to the lake.” She shifted her

gaze to Dan, then Maggie. “Is that it? The location of the money?”

When he didn’t answer, her eyes widened with interest. “I should have thought of that. It

would be a perfect place for my uncle to hide it. There’s nothing around it for miles—at least

there wasn’t all those years ago. But it’s not very secure. The place only has three walls and a

thatched roof, a dock, and a toilet. I suppose that he . . .”

At her hesitation, Dan forced himself not to prod her. But Maggie was already leaning

forward.

“He what?” she urged.

“He could be dropping it in the water in some kind of protective covering.”

Maggie looked at Dan. “Is that possible?”

He doubted it. He doubted a lot of what Lola said, but they had little else to go on at this

point. “Anything’s possible.”

Lola crossed her arms and studied the screen. “It would make sense that Viejo would put it

there, far away from the plantation where he lives. But how would that sick old bastard get

down there?”

“He’s sick?” Dan asked.

She closed her eyes, disgusted. “Black hearted, corrupt, depraved, and mean. That’s my

dear father.” She pushed herself up. “Are we done here? I want to go home.”

“You’re not going home,” Lucy said, standing up. “That wouldn’t be safe.”

Lola turned and scanned her from head to toe with a mildly interested look. “I’ll be okay.

This time I won’t open my door for anyone.”

“We’ll arrange round-the-clock protection for you, Ms. James. There will be someone

waiting for you as soon as you get back.”

Lola eyed her again. “Back from where?”

“The FBI offices. I’m taking you now.”

“What?” She jerked forward. “I’m not going to the FBI.”

“Of course you are,” Lucy said smoothly. “This is an open federal investigation, and you’ve

been face-to-face with someone who might be involved. I understand you often work with the

authorities to maintain the integrity of your business.”

Lola just stared at her, clearly recognizing she didn’t have a chance against the other

woman.

Dan smiled at Maggie. “Looks like I might need a skilled boat driver again.”

“Let me get my stuff and go say good-bye to Quinn.” She started to leave, but Lola reached

out and grabbed her hand.

“So it’s just one big happy family now?” Lola looked from Maggie to Dan. “How nice that

you found each other after all these years.”

Maggie pulled free. “I wish I could say the same about you.”

Fighter jets and a familiar theme song blared from the media room, telling Maggie exactly

where to find her son, and, more importantly, what his mood was.

Top Gun
was his comfort movie of choice; he’d watched it about seventy-five times in a

row the year that Smitty died.

She pushed the heavy door open and instantly covered her ears at the deafening surround

sound.

“Quinn!” she shouted over it.

He sat in the middle of eight theater-style recliners, leaning all the way back, his gaze

unwavering on the huge flat screen. He’d never hear her. She walked deeper into the room,

but he didn’t move.

“Quinn,” she said again when the sound dipped for a second.

Still he didn’t turn.

She marched to the bottom of the slightly elevated floor and stood right in front of the

screen. “Turn it off or you will seriously regret this.”

Barely moving a finger, he touched some kind of remote panel and the room went silent.

Asking him what was wrong was a waste of time. He wouldn’t tell her anyway. “I’m

leaving for a few days.”

His gaze was on the screen behind her, as if he were just waiting for her to leave so he

could hit Play. Irritation and frustration zipped through her as she kneeled on the seat right in

front of him.

“Why are you doing this?”

“Why am
I
doing this?” The fury in his voice surprised her. This wasn’t just ‘I caught Mom

kissing a guy.’ “Why are
you
doing this?”

“I told you, I’m trying to keep you alive.”

“All night long?” he said. At her look, he nodded. “Yeah, I came to find you last night. I

had a stomachache.”

A pang of guilt hit. Then she remembered that he hadn’t come looking for her with an upset

stomach for years. “You’re lying.”

“Am I? Then I guess I come by it naturally.”

She sucked in an audible gasp. Did he know about Dan?

“You’re doing an awful lot of sneaking around and changing the truth these days, aren’t

you, Mom?” He gave her a smart-ass look. “Where are you going?”

“Venezuela.”

His eyebrows raised. “What for?”

“To get what we need to make sure you’re safe.” She leaned forward. “Honey, I don’t like

this any more than you do.”

“I think you like it just fine. And you like that guy, too.”

“Yes, I do,” she said. “Very much.” Way, way too much. He didn’t say anything.

“You’re not jealous, are you?” she asked, adding a teasing smile to soften the blow.

“Of some hotshot bodyguard with expensive cars?” He puffed out some air. “As if.”

Her heart melted, as it always did when he acted tougher than he was. “You stay safe while

I’m gone, okay? Do everything Mr. Roper says to do.”

A tap at the door got her attention. “You in here, Maggie?” Dan came in, carrying his small

duffel bag. “You should put your stuff in here, so we only have one light bag to carry.”

Quinn didn’t turn to see Dan, or smile at him as he usually did.

“Gimme a kiss, Quinn.” She leaned forward and he met her halfway, giving her more cheek

than kiss. “I’ll call you,” she added.

Dan dropped into the recliner at the end of that row. “Here,” he said, giving her the bag.

“I’ll catch a few minutes of my favorite movie while I wait.”

Still Quinn didn’t look over or react.

“This is the ‘hit the brakes and they fly right by’ scene, right?”

Quinn nodded, his gaze on the frozen image behind Maggie. She gave a little shrug to Dan,

and walked out. The sound came blaring back on, and all she heard was Tom Cruise’s voice.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

IN AN OPEN-AIR vehicle that resembled a rickety Jeep, Dan navigated a treacherous

combination of dirt, potholes, and huge puddles at the foothills of the mountains. Maggie held

on to the roll bar with one hand, the rusted door with the other, and never complained. She

hadn’t even bitched about riding a bus with chickens from the San Carlos airport to the city to

rent a Jeep. He took his hand off the gearshift to give her bare leg a squeeze.

She let go of the roll bar and held his hand for a minute, saying nothing but making him

feel something. Close. Connected. Crazy about her again. They shared a look and he knew she

was feeling the same thing.

“Not at all what I expected El Viejo’s homeland to be like,” she said as they slowed down

at a group of five or six shacks and a ramshackle store, which constituted a village here.

“There are two Venezuelas,” Dan replied. “Over-thetop wealthy, and this.”

At one hut, children played in hammocks while a weary mother pounded laundry on a rock.

The kids waved and a flock of herons took off into the hills.

“You think we’ll make it tonight?”

He glanced at the sun, which was much closer to the western mountains than when they

started. “I don’t know. Puerto Concha should be the next town, and that’s where we have to

find a boat. We need to get down the river, which could take an hour, then out to the lake, to

our location, look around, and go all the way back to San Carlos. We’re so close to the

equator, it’ll be light a lot longer, but we’ll be tight on time to make it all by nightfall.”

The pilots were waiting at the airport with the Bullet Catcher plane, because if they’d left it,

it would have been stolen or scrapped by the time they got back. Not too many Lear jets

landed in the San Carlos airport.

In less than half an hour, they reached Puerto Concha. The next job was to find the home of

a man named Jose Navarro, who was a friend of a friend of Lucy’s and who would take them

down the river to the lake. The connection was tenuous, and as of Dan’s last call to Lucy, she

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