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Authors: Kyle Mills

Rising Phoenix (42 page)

BOOK: Rising Phoenix
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“FBI,” Fallon corrected. “There’s a difference.”

His friend looked like he was about to make a smartass comment, but before he could open his mouth Sara pushed him out of the way and ran her fingers through Fallon’s closely cropped hair. A sad look came over her face. “What happened to your beautiful hair?”

“Cut it off—the Bureau doesn’t take kindly to that shoulder-length look.”

“So why didn’t you call us and tell us you were coming?”

“I wasn’t sure I was. Actually, I’m on business.”

She snickered, looking at the climbing harness peeking out from the top of his backpack.

“No, seriously,” he protested. “I’m looking for somebody. He’s a climber. Name’s Lance Richardson. Five foot ten, long blond hair. You know him?”

“Did he kill somebody?” Scott asked,

“Nah. He might have seen a guy we’re looking for when he was working for a bank in Saint Louis. That’s all.”

“Well, you came to the right place,” Sara said.

Fallon looked at her with surprise. After all this time on the road, he hadn’t been prepared to actually find the guy. “You’re kidding. You’ve seen him?”

“Yeah. He’s been around for about a week. I think he’s living in his van back in the National Forest somewhere.”

“Do you know where, exactly?”

“No. But I think he’s probably working Chain Reaction.”

Chain Reaction was debatably Smith’s most renowned climb. And it was less than a quarter of a mile away.

“You mean right now?” Fallon asked, still in a daze. The realization that his paid climbing trip might be nearly over was sinking in.

“Right now.”

Scott was getting impatient with all the business talk. “So are we gonna do some climbs while the sun’s still up, man?”

Fallon reached behind him and felt the pack, confirming that his notebook was in it. “Hell, yeah—just
let me go ask this guy a few questions. I’ll be back in less than an hour.” He started back down the boulder field. Stopping about fifty feet away, he turned back to his friends. “Oh, can I stay at your place for a couple of days?”

Sara sat back on the rock behind her. “We’ve got a wedding to go to tonight. We’ll leave the front door open.”

Fallon sat down in the dirt and pulled the notebook from his backpack. He lay back and put on his sunglasses. The blond figure was about halfway up the climb, and struggling. Despite his long arms, he missed the hold he was aiming for and fell six feet or so before the rope stopped him. Fallon looked on calmly, silently critiquing his technique.

“Shit, man, I’m never going to get this—too late in the day.”

“You want down?” his partner asked.

“Yeah, might as well.”

Fallon watched as the climber slowly lowered. When his feet hit the ground, Fallon interrupted what sounded like the beginning of a long conversation about tomorrow’s climbing strategy.

“Excuse me. Are you Lance Richardson?”

The young man looked up from the knot he was untying. “Yeah. Do I know you?”

“Nope.” Fallon didn’t get up, but leaned forward and pulled a pen from his pocket. “My name’s Matt Fallon.”

Richardson wagged his finger up and down, trying to remember something. Finally it came to him. “Hey,
aren’t you that guy from Boulder who quit climbing to join the CIA or something?”

Fallon frowned. “FBI. There’s a difference.”

“So how do you know me?”

“I’ve been trying to find you for weeks, actually.”

Richardson’s climbing partner was looking at him strangely. Fallon figured he was wondering if he’d hooked up with a mass murderer or something.

“We’re looking for someone who was a customer of the bank you used to work for.” The climbing partner relaxed a bit and began slowly coiling his rope.

Richardson sat down next to Fallon. “Seems like years ago, man—bank jobs, you know?”

The agent nodded, remembering the shit jobs he had taken to finance climbing trips. “You might actually remember this guy. It was right before you left. He brought in a suitcase full of cash to buy some cashier’s checks.”

“Oh, him. Yeah, I do remember him, sort of.”

Fallon shook his head. This guy must not have looked at a TV or newspaper since he had left Saint Louis. It made him long for the good old days. “So what can you tell me about him?”

“Nothing really—don’t remember his name or anything,” Richardson began, spreading his legs wide and beginning to stretch. “He came up to the teller window where I was working—but we didn’t do cashier’s checks there, you know. So I sent him to one of the customer service reps. I don’t remember which one.”

Fallon decided to pass on asking for a description, they had twenty already. “Nothing else?”

He continued stretching. “Actually, I saw him later that day, now that I think about it.”

Fallon perked up. “Where was that?” he asked, putting the list of climbs that he wanted do that afternoon out of his head.

“Up the street at a little shopping mall. I didn’t talk to him or anything. I was just stopped at a light and he was getting into his car.”

Fallon scribbled in the notebook. His heart was beating faster and faster. “Remember what kind of car, by any chance?”

“Sure. It’s not every day somebody walks into the bank with a suitcase full of cash—we thought he was a drug dealer, or something. Was he?”

“Not exactly”

Richardson looked disappointed. “It was a red Cherokee. Not one of those cool new Limiteds—just one of the old boxy ones. I remember thinking that a guy with that much cash ought to have a nicer ride, you know?”

“Do you remember anything else about the car? Things hanging from the rearview mirror, dents, bumper stickers—anything, really.”

“Nothing like that—it was really clean. Looked new. It did have those Save the Chesapeake plates on it, though.”

Fallon looked at him with a confused expression.

“You know—from Maryland. I went to school there. The climbing sucks.”

29
Baltimore, Maryland,
March 6


W
hat the hell’s going on?” Robert Swenson demanded in a loud voice, bursting through the front door of the apartment.

Hobart looked up from a thick computer printout, annoyed at his partner’s untimely entrance. He had a headache that no aspirin seemed to be able to cure.

“What’s the problem, Bob?” he asked calmly, already knowing the answer.

“I just watched one of our guys get blown away on the steps of some jail in New York and now I’m hearing that the guy that shot him was shot from another building when he was getting away.”

Hobart leaned back in his chair, turning the printout to face his desk. “I saw the report,” he said cheerfully. “A stroke of good luck—looks like we won’t have to close up shop as soon as we thought.”

Swenson eyed him suspiciously. “How do you know he didn’t already talk?”

“I have a well-positioned… friend. He confirmed it.”

“Is he reliable?”

Hobart nodded. He had caught his “friend” stuffing his pockets full of cash at a drug bust almost ten years ago. He could have turned him in but decided against it. Better to hold out for a favor if he ever really needed one.

After confirming Nelsons silence, this particular friend had made it clear that all debts were repaid. He had slammed the phone down before Hobart could threaten him again. There had been no answer since.

“They haven’t released the name of the shooter, but they’re broadcasting a picture. You wouldn’t be acquainted, would you?” Swenson asked.

“Karns,” Hobart said, feigning disgust. “I was wrong to have let him back on board. Loose cannon. He must have heard the report that Nelson was talking and figured he’d try to make up for the strychnine thing.”

“And who do you figure got him?”

“Oh, hell, probably the Bureau. They fucked up and now they’re covering up. Doesn’t look too good, them blowing away their star witness.” Hobart could tell from his partner’s expression that he wasn’t buying it.

“And where were you yesterday at ten o’clock?” Swenson asked, an edge of nervousness in his voice. Hobart smiled. He could tell that his partner desperately wanted to believe that he hadn’t been involved. People with that kind of bias were easily convinced.

“I was in the office working on our budget.”

He knew that Swenson had been in D.C. the entire day of the shooting and had no way of knowing whether that was true or not. He would undoubtedly check the time and date of the budget file on the computer the minute he got the opportunity. Hobart had
temporarily reset the internal time clock on the system when he had saved it. It would read 10:35
A.M.
, roughly a half hour after the incident. Not proof positive, of course, but it should ease his partner’s mind long enough to finish this thing.

“They’re gonna trace Nelson and Karns back to you sooner or later,” Swenson said. “We’ve still gotta get out of here.”

“Yeah, but I didn’t know them that well. Even with a couple a hundred agents on it, they won’t get back to me for at least four weeks. So I figure we’ve got two weeks to wrap things up and get a little more work done.”

Swenson looked doubtful.

“I’ve got some stuff I’ve really got to finish up, Bob. You mind?”

Swenson stood. “So what’s your plan for today?”

“I’m heading out in about an hour or so. Be back tonight.”

“Maybe we can get together and talk about how we’re gonna wrap this thing up,” Swenson said hopefully. On his way out, he paused and looked down at the chess board sitting next to the television. Two white pawns, representing Nelson and Karns, were lying on their sides. Two blue pawns representing the dead cartel enforcers were in a similar position.

Alone again, Hobart flipped the printout on his desk over and continued running down the endless columns of numbers with the aid of a ruler.

The list had been provided by an old acquaintance who worked for C&P Telephone. Phil Nelson’s capture had jolted him like a bolt of lightning. He’d spent
hours running through the operation in his mind, trying to find where he might have screwed up.

In the end, he had decided that Nelson had blown it somewhere. That was a risk you ran in this type of operation—it was impossible to do everything yourself.

He had gone to bed that night chalking up Nelson’s capture to the fortunes of war—confident that in the next two weeks he could continue to turn public opinion, and then slip silently out of the country.

It had been almost three in the morning when he had bolted upright in his bed. He had mentioned the DiPrizzio operation to Blake at the hotel. Could the Reverend have called the Bureau? Hobart dismissed the idea at first, but had been unable to get back to sleep. In the end, it had nagged at him enough to spend an entire day on a tour of the pay phones of the greater Baltimore metro area. He had pulled off every freeway exit ramp between Blake’s office and home, and between the hotel where they had met and Blake’s home, copying down the numbers of the first pay phones that he saw.

His acquaintance at the phone company had almost choked on the list of numbers, but Hobart had explained that the Reverend was getting death threats and that this was an integral part of the investigation. A devout follower of Blake, his acquaintance had called in some favors and retrieved a list of the long-distance numbers called from those phones on the dates that Hobart had supplied him.

He rubbed his eyes, painfully aware that the phone company could have had their computer search specifically
for the FBI hotline number and saved him hours of tedium and a migraine headache. Everyone in the country knew that number, though. It had been running along the bottom of every TV screen in America for the past two months.

He was on the second-to-the-last page when he found it. Leaning back in his chair, he tossed the thick stack of paper in the garbage. He had underestimated his former employer. Blake was a consummate actor. He had left the hotel with just the right mix of nervousness, sadness, and growing calm. Not overacted, not underacted.

So now he knew. The question was, what could he do with the information?

Mark Beamon paused in the open door to the SIOC. The normally fast pace of the agents inside had been accelerated to a fevered pitch. People talked loudly on phones, typed furiously on laptop computers, televisions blared CNN. The increased activity further tightened the hand that gripped the back of his head every time he walk into the JEH Building.

Laura was leaning over a man’s shoulder, reading off his computer screen. Beamon threaded his way toward her, nodding to the hustling agents who bid him a good morning.

“Jesus, Laura—do you live here?” It was seven-thirty
A.M.
He had hoped to beat her to the office for once, but as usual he felt like he was strolling in at ten.

“Just like to put in a full day at the office,” she said, walking around the table.

Beamon grunted and made his way to the coffeemaker. “Want one?” he asked her.

She shook her head. “Had two already this morning. I’m wired.”

“Well then, why don’t you step into my parlor,” Beamon said, heading toward an empty conference room. “Tell me what’s going on.”

Holding a manila folder under her arm, Laura closed the door behind her and began in as excited a voice as he’d ever heard from her. “We’ve got guys waiting at the front door of the MVA—Maryland Motor Vehicles Administration. They’ll start running down Cherokee registrations this morning.”

“What’s our time frame on getting a list cross-referenced with the driver’s licenses of people who fit our guy’s description.”

She shrugged. “I have no idea. State motor vehicle departments have different database capabilities. I should be able to give you a pretty good idea later today.”

She took a seat at the small table across from Beamon. “Our dead shooter’s name is William Karns.” She slid the manila folder across the conference table. Beamon picked it up and began reading.

“His prints were on file ’cause he was an ex-cop.”

“Seems to be a pattern emerging.”

“It gets better. We have three witnesses who place Karns living in an abandoned house only a few blocks from the site of that strychnine poisoning.”

BOOK: Rising Phoenix
11.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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