67

1056 Words
“Yes, he is. Every time I talk with Alex I’m reminded both how lucky I am to have friends like him and also how unworthy I am to have friends like him.” “Well, they probably feel the same way about you.” “You think so? I don’t.” “So what do we do about Mr. Sykes? Direct approach or something more subtle?” “Subtle. And direct at the same time.” “How do we manage that?” “I’m thinking of a way right now. And something else just occurred to me. You know the Latinos that were killed?” “Yeah?” “Lloyd Wilder wasn’t involved. The Latinos all were.” “What?” “The man who told Mirabel he saw the men taking down the hoop was lying.” “But you thought Lloyd Wilder was involved too. What changed your mind?” “I suspected he was involved. I wasn’t convinced. But after thinking about it, I’m convinced my suspicions were wrong.” “Why?” “Mirabel and Reuben were strangers in a bar looking for the tree farm. And these men just happened to volunteer that one of them had seen someone, not John Kravitz, take down that hoop?” “Well?” “It was all staged. The man said he was hiding behind a building. As we saw when we were there the building with the hoop was over fifty feet from the next closest structure. And on a ladder and in the dark it’s nearly impossible to ID or even tell someone’s size and age. So how did he know he wasn’t John Kravitz?” “That’s right. And the guy did say he left before the man even came down the ladder.” “And right after they get this ‘critical’ piece of info Mirabel and Reuben are attacked?” “So you think it was a setup?” “I think they knew who Mirabel and Reuben were before they walked in that bar.” “And they tried to kill them?” “Operative word, tried. I know Reuben got shot twice, but they were both nonfatal wounds. Deliberately nonfatal, I believe. He’s as brave as they come, but there’s no way you’re overrunning a position fortified with machine guns by charging at them with a pistol. And they would not have retreated. By all combat logic Reuben should be dead.” “So they let him live, you mean? Why?” “So Mirabel and Reuben could come back and tell us what they heard. Another red herring, another dead end to run down, wasting time. And then the Latinos end up shot soon thereafter. More smoke and mirrors. More clues to hunt down that will take us farther from the truth.” “And someone is also cleaning house,” said Anthony. “By killing them.” “That too.” “If you’re right, your country is really letting Turkekul have a lot of rope. He might kill everyone before he hangs himself.” “Maybe.” “So now Sykes?” said Anthony. “Yes. Now Sykes.” ONLY THEY COULDN’T FIND SYKES. He had not returned from the break and none of his crew knew where he was. They searched the park and the adjacent areas. Herbert got on his cell phone and reported this to Ashburn, along with what they had found out from Judy Donohue. Ashburn said, “I’ll get a BOLO out on him ASAP. He couldn’t have gotten far.” Herbert put his phone away and looked at Anthony. “I don’t like how this is shaking out.” “Meaning they always seem to be one step ahead?” “Meaning I’m feeling manipulated again.” “He might have seen Donohue slip away to come and talk to us and panicked. Why don’t we get in the car and start doing a grid search? Maybe he’s somewhere hoofing it on foot.” They drove out and turned onto Pennsylvania Avenue on the east side of the White House. They had gone two blocks when it happened. The sound of the shot wasn’t muffled. It could be heard clearly above the ordinary sounds of the city. People in the streets started running for cover and screaming. The traffic stopped and horns started blaring. Herbert and Anthony jumped from the car and raced forward. They heard a siren drawing near. They ran from car to car, peering inside. The siren grew louder. Then another one joined it. Anthony looked behind her. Two cop cars were cutting through the traffic heading their way. Herbert saw this too and picked up his pace. He reached in his jacket for his g*n. Anthony accelerated on the other side of the line of stalled traffic and mimicked his movements. They finally reached the obstacle in the road—two cars in a fender bender that Herbert sensed was much more. An older man was leaning against the car in front looking very shaken and scared. As Herbert looked down he could see the man had vomited on the street. As he approached, Herbert held up his badge and called out, “Sir, what’s wrong?” The older man pointed at the car behind his, where the two bumpers were locked together. Herbert checked the license plate of this car. Government issue. His spirits sank. He peered inside the car. “Damn.” Anthony was looking in from the passenger window. “Good God.” The two cop cars screeched to a stop and men in blue jumped out. They saw Herbert and Anthony holding their weapons and pulled their own. “Police!” they cried out, their guns aimed at the pair. Herbert and Anthony held up their badges high so the cops could see them. Herbert barked, “Federal agents. Got a homicide here. FBI just put a BOLO out on this guy. But somebody got to him first.” The cops crept forward, checked Herbert’s creds and looked in the car. Sykes was lying back against the driver’s seat. The windshield was cracked. There was a hole burned into his forehead from the shot. Blood and brain matter were splattered around the car’s interior from the exit wound.
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD