Authors: John Sandford
Once she had them to her car, she separated the boxes with the fingerprints from the boxes without, and put the boxes with prints in the front seat. She also bought a bottle of Windex and some kitchen gloves.
An hour after she left the last of the stores, she was back at the farm. She made sure she was alone, then she drove through the gate, closed it behind her, and bounced across the field to the spot where she’d buried the gold. She parked thirty feet away from it, not wanting to make new car tracks through the weeds that might lead somebody to the burial spot.
Digging up the gold was a bit less hot and sweaty than putting it in the ground, but not much. Then, when the gold was uncovered, she had to pull it out of the hole and run it back to the car, eight hundred–plus pounds of heavy metal. She was frightened that she might be seen, and so did it as fast as she could, laboring
like a ditchdigger with a short deadline. When she was done, she was more angry than scared, and breathing hard: all of this work, and all of this blood, and they were taking it away from her.
She
deserved
this gold. Now the cops would get it.
Well: most of it.
Some of it, she carefully rewrapped and left at the bottom of the hole. She filled the hole again, replaced the chunks of sod and weed, and spent a half hour cleaning up the area around it. When she was done, it looked better than it had the first time. She got in the car, bounced back across the field, out through the gate, which she carefully closed, and down the dusty road toward the Cities. She still had work to do at the office.
L
UCAS CALLED
F
LOWERS
: “Anything yet?”
“Won’t be today. But Richie says they’re doing drugs, one way or another. So probably tomorrow afternoon. Next day at the latest. Your two guys, the guys who robbed you, are probably named Duane Bird and Bernice Waters. Both have a long trail, but all minor stuff, not counting these robberies. Bernice stole sixteen thousand dollars from the Full Bible Church of Darby five years ago, and spent some time out at the women’s prison…. That’s about as big as they’ve gotten.”
“All right. Keep talking to me,” Lucas said.
Lucas went home, and Weather, who always got home earlier, said, “Cast is coming off.”
“Which is good,” Lucas said. “Which is about time.”
“For such a big lug, you’re such a baby,” she said. “You got anything else tomorrow?”
He told her about the press conference, and about Virgil’s investigation, and she said, “So you’re going to have to get up early.”
“Eight o’clock.”
“Maybe we ought to go to bed early. We could get this week’s sex out of the way.”
“I’ll have to look at my calendar again, and maybe have an extra glass of milk,” he said, “but it’s a possibility.”
He barely thought about Martínez, except to wonder where she might be. Still in the Cities? In Missouri or Oklahoma? Back in Mexico already?
Whatever. He no longer much cared—she was Shaffer’s Easter egg.
L
UCAS’S EYES
popped open at six o’clock, when he felt Weather stirring around. She said, quietly, “The alarm is set for eight.”
“See you tonight,” he said. He tried to go back to sleep, dozed for a while, but at seven he got up; there was too much going on for sleep. He cleaned up, dressed for the press conference in a blue suit and a white shirt with a thin blue stripe, saw the Martínez photo again on the morning news, and a promo for the ten-o’clock news conference. Letty was kicking around in the kitchen getting some cereal when he got downstairs, and he chatted with her about Channel Three and asked her about a kid named Tom who’d been hanging around the driveway, and was told that he was just a friend.
Further efforts to elicit information were fruitless, but he decided that Tom would bear watching.
He was out of the house at eight-thirty, at Hennepin Medical Center at nine, where he checked with Weather’s secretary and was told that she was already doing a scar revision. He went down to the clinic, stated his business, and was told to take a seat.
He was reading a home furnishings magazine when his name was called. He took a seat in an examination room, and five minutes later a small fussy middle-aged man showed up, said he was a doctor, and showed Lucas what he, the doctor, called “a specialized kind of saw.” The saw looked a little like a Dremel tool with a sanding disk. “It will cut the cast with a vibration. It will not cut your arm,” the doctor said.
“Sounds good to me,” Lucas said.
The doctor peered at the tool, as though he was unsure exactly how to turn it on, then said, “I don’t usually do this—a nurse practitioner usually does it, but she’s not here right now.”
“Just glad to get it off,” Lucas said.
The doctor began cutting, and it went quickly enough, but an inch down the foot-long cast, Lucas felt a cutting pain, and flinched. The doctor said, “Just hold on, you may feel a few twitches, but it won’t cut.”
He started again, and another inch or two along the way, there was another slicing pain, and Lucas flinched away again.
“Don’t do that,” the doc said impatiently. He took the head of the tool and pressed it against his palm, where it buzzed away. No cut.
“You think it’s cutting, but it’s not,” he said. “Let’s not break the cutting head.”
Another inch, and Lucas said, “Ahhhh…” but didn’t flinch;
another inch, and he did flinch, and the doctor said, “Hold on, hold on.” To Lucas, it didn’t seem like his imagination…. One more searing pain, and the cast popped loose.
The doctor carefully pulled it off and said, “See, no cuts.”
Lucas could still feel something like cuts, and looked closely at his arm. There were five inch-long white lines on the fresh pink skin.
“What’re these things?” he asked. “They hurt like hell.”
D
EL SAID
, “Burns?”
Lucas: “Yeah. I’ve got five burns, each one an inch long, gonna be scars, right up my arm. What he didn’t know was, the saw doesn’t cut you, but if you go through the cast slowly enough, like he did, the blade gets red hot. He was branding me, and telling me the pain was just my imagination, the silly asshole.”
Del said, “Ah, well … you know. Accidents happen.”
“Accidents? The guy was supposed to be a medical doctor.”
“You’re getting to be a sissy, man….”
“Sissy?”
A
T THE PRESS
conference, Shaffer spent fifteen minutes describing and discussing the extent of the hunt for Martínez and the last of the Mexican shooters, and Lucas said that the BCA was expecting some kind of movement in regard to the thieves who’d started the chain reaction that led to the murders.
“Any more about the gold?” he was asked.
“I just want to say that anyone who sees Martínez should not get any ideas about this gold—that will get you killed,” Lucas said. “We believe she has it, as much as twenty-two million in untraceable gold coins, but that should not be a motive to go after her. Let the law handle this. No amount of gold is worth losing your life, and these two people are professional killers. So stay clear.”
V
IRGIL
F
LOWERS
called fifteen minutes after the press conference. “You looked good. Nice suit.”
“You know what I was doing? I was saying ‘gold,’” Lucas said. “Gold, gold, gold, gold. I want everybody thinking gold, and that Martínez has it.”
“Whatever works,” Flowers said. “Listen, Richie wants to pop these guys at the farm so bad that he walks around with his legs crossed. He can’t wait—I think we’ll be going in this afternoon. Everybody coming out of there has had a drug problem. He’s talking to his favorite judge about a warrant, and probably Channel Three. Did I mention that he’s up for reelection this fall?”
“Yeah, you did. What time you want me there?” Lucas asked.
“I don’t know. I’ll call you. Be ready. It’s about an hour out of town.”
K
LINE’S ATTORNEY
, Jay Keisler, called: “Can we get together?”
“If you make it worth our while,” Lucas said.
“I think we can, but maybe not exactly the way you want it,” Keisler said. “We’ve run into a bump in the road.”
“If I hear about bumps, we might have to go with what we’ve got,” Lucas said.
“Who’re we talking to over at the county?”
“Dave Morgan,” Lucas said.
“So let’s let Dave decide,” Keisler said. “What time’s good for you? I’ve got to be in court at eleven-thirty, but only for a motion, take five minutes.”
“One?” Lucas suggested.
“One’s good,” Keisler said.
“I’ll check with Dave and get back to you.”
Lucas checked with Morgan, who said try for twelve-forty-five, because that’s what lawyers do, and Keisler sighed as though it were the end of the world, but agreed.
Lucas, Del, Shrake, and Jenkins went out for an early lunch, much of it spent in a thoroughly despicable gossip session about another agent and an extraordinarily attractive female tech, both in their early forties, both married with children, who may or may not have been having a hot affair, that may or may not have included sex on the upstairs gun-testing range.
B
Y THE TIME
they got back to the office, Lucas had to hurry to make the appointment at the prosecutor’s office. Morgan’s office was in the Ramsey County courthouse, and Lucas parked kitty-corner in the Victory parking garage. As he hustled across the street, something felt wrong, but he wasn’t sure what it was, so he kept going.
A secretary showed him into a conference room, where Kline was waiting with a man who looked as though he’d just been
electrocuted: the Einstein hair. Lucas said, “You must be Jay,” and they shook hands, and then Morgan bustled into the office and said, to Lucas, “We’ve been talking for a couple of minutes in the hallway…. It’s not quite what I thought.”
Lucas looked at Kline: “What’s up?”
Keisler answered. “We have a small problem. My client is innocent. I try not ever to get into that question, but he told me before I could stop him. Then, you know, he convinced me. He also convinced me that even if he isn’t innocent, you could never convict him. So, we don’t have a basis for a bargain. But we do have something.”
Morgan: “What?” He was not at all perturbed; just another workday.
“There’s the possibility that my client might be able to provide you with some information about an accomplice of the real criminal in this matter, Ivan Turicek,” Keisler said.
“If your client is innocent, he has the obligation to provide us with any information he has,” Morgan said.
“But not misinformation. Let me put it this way. This is more of a feeling than hard information, and while it includes a name, it’s possible that he would be implicating a completely innocent person. He wants to cooperate, and if he cooperates, and you guys, from some misplaced sense of vengeance, go after him, we want the court to know that he cooperated.”
A
FTER A LOT
of to-ing and fro-ing, which took the best part of fifteen minutes, a name was spat out: Mohammed Ibriz.
Lucas: “This guy, Mohammed Ibriz, is an accomplice?”
“I can’t swear to it,” Kline said. “But I heard Ivan talking to the
guy several times, when we were working down there in Systems. I was over on the other side of the computers, and you know how you listen to somebody when they’re trying to be confidential and quiet? I heard him call him Mohammed several times, and you know now, how you notice Islamic names because of all the trouble?”
“Where did the Ibriz guy come from?” Lucas asked.
“From Ivan’s cell phone. It was sitting on the work table, and it rang, and I looked down at it and it said, ‘Mohammed Ibriz’ on the display,” Kline said. He thought Ibriz might be an accomplice, he said, because the calls started just about the time the money was stolen, and continued off and on through the month.
“And you just remembered the name, like that?” Morgan asked.
“Well, I heard
Mohammed
a lot, so that was already in my head, and then Ibriz … I guess it just stuck,” Kline said. “Then Officer Davenport asked me these questions about some Syrian moving gold coins…. It popped into my head.”
“You wouldn’t know where we could find this guy, would you?” Lucas asked.
“Well, I know what I did, this morning,” Kline said.
“What was that?” Lucas asked.
“I looked in the phone book. There’s an office listing for a Mohammed Ibriz over in Galtier Plaza. How many Mohammed Ibrizes can there be?”
Galtier Plaza was maybe six blocks away.
T
HERE WAS
more lawyer talk, but Morgan had agreed that no matter what happened, if there should be a prosecution, the
court would be told of Kline’s cooperation … if, in fact, it turned out to be anything.
When they were gone, Lucas asked Morgan, “What do you think?”
“Keisler’s a dealer. That’s what he does. If he doesn’t want to deal, he probably thinks he’s got a strong case. And he’s smart enough to know strong from weak. His partner, the trial guy, could sell ice cubes to penguins. So, if I were you, I’d look into Mohammed.”
Lucas patted his pocket looking for his cell phone, and realized why he’d felt uneasy walking across the street to the courthouse: he’d left the phone in the car, on the car charger. He borrowed a phone, called Del, and said, “Meet me at Galtier Plaza in fifteen minutes. Bring the Turicek file. We need to talk to a guy.”
L
UCAS TALKED
to Morgan for a few more minutes, then hurried off to Galtier, which was an office and apartment complex on the edge of an area called Lowertown. He’d once seen a woman get murdered in a park across the street, and never walked through the area without thinking about that day.
Flowers had been with him….
Flowers
, he thought. “Goddamnit.” He should have stopped and gotten the phone. He’d never owned a cell phone until three years earlier, and now he felt naked without it.
Del was waiting outside Ficocello’s barbershop on the Skyway level. The Ficocello brothers were both cutting hair, and both took the time to raise a hand as Lucas went by. Del said, “He’s on nine.”