"An hour," Herman said. "My daughter's picking up Wirta's picture now."

"In an hour you'll have the scoop of a lifetime. And, Leon? If you can get it on the Times' wire and leak it to the AP for the next news cycle, I'll owe you my firstborn. If I'm lyin', I'm dyin'." A moment more of eyebrow calisthenics, then Swifty nodded. "You're a mensch. Be back atcha." He closed the phone, sighed theatrically, then looked at Herman. "He's down. Now let's see if I can write this up the way you want and still not come off like a complete asshole when Leon reads it."

At 8 p.m. Susan stood in the corridor outside of Jack Wirta's office in Boy's Town and waited. The office door had been replaced and was bolted. She didn't have a key, but she had called Jack's ex-partner, Shane Scully, whose son's estate owned the building. After she'd filled him in on the phone, Shane said he'd stop by the realtor's for a key and come right over.

Ten minutes after she arrived, a good-looking, dark-haired man came up the stairs and into the hall. He was dressed in blue jeans, an LAPD windbreaker, and tennis shoes. He smiled as he approached.

"Ms. Strockmire?"

"Shane Scully?"

"Yep." After they shook hands Shane put a key into the lock. "You said on the phone you think Jack's been kidnapped by the feds. You real sure about that? Jack would be a hard guy to snatch. Maybe he's just working your case and hasn't had a chance to phone in yet."

"He was arrested by federal police at the airport, then disappeared. There's been no sign of him since. Besides that, we've been under surveillance by some kind of urban commando unit since the day before yesterday."

"That sounds ugly." He pulled the key out of the lock, looked at it, then tried again. "This isn't working."

When Scully looked directly at her she saw that he had beautiful aqua-blue eyes and was attractive in a rough-and-tumble kind of way. His vibe was all male.

"It's a new door, maybe the lock was changed when they replaced it," she said.

Shane smiled, then reached into his pocket, withdrew a little leather case full of long-handled picks, and started to feed them one at a time into the lock. First he pushed in a slender, flat one, then slipped in several tiny picks with hooked ends behind it.

"You pick locks, too?"

"We're a full-service police department," he quipped, carefully turning the four picks in his hand. In a second she heard the lock spring. He opened the door, checked inside to make sure it was safe, then stepped back and said, "Your party."

Susan walked into the office. The place had been thoroughly tossed and whoever had done it had made no effort to hide the search. The file cabinets were open, the dividers strewn all over the floor. The desk had also been ransacked. The closet door was ajar and the boxes Jack had stacked in there had been ripped open, their contents-mostly law enforcement reference books and manuals-strewn everywhere.

"Not very neat, were they?" Shane commented. "Dad and I were hiding next door when it happened. That was yesterday."

She moved to the east wall and looked at the pictures hanging there, finally taking down one of Jack and Shane. "This is you?"

"Yeah. Police barbecue, the first year we partnered in Southwest. My third year on the job. Jack and I rode together in a Plain-Jane for almost eighteen months."

"Was he a good cop?"

That brought Scully around fast. "He was a great cop, okay?" he growled at her. "He took chances out there, for all the good it did him. He probably didn't tell you this, but during that bank shoot-out in North Hollywood, even after he stopped the Parabellum and couldn't walk, he was crawling around under cars, exposing himself to fire, cranking off rounds while those two assholes emptied armor-piercing ordnance at him. Guy is a hero, but all he got for it was a buncha shit and a disability check that he had to sue the department to collect."

"Don't snap my head off," she said. "Pisses me off, is all."

"If I need your help down the road on this, can you give it?"

"If you need me to help pull Jack Wirta out of a hole, I'm here. I can also line up some guys to join us if you want. Jack still has a lot of friends on the job."

"Thanks." She looked down at the picture again. They appeared young in the shot… young and eager. Untouched by the cop cynicism that she sensed had finally scarred them both. In the picture they looked boyish and heroic, full of idealism, comfortable inside their skins.

"I need a picture of Jack, so I'm going to cut you out of this," she said, holding up the picture.

"Why should you be any different?" he quipped, confirming her suspicions about his now-dark view of law enforcement.

Then Susan noticed something on the floor under the desk. She leaned down… it looked like dried blood.

Shane crossed to where she was standing.

"That wasn't there when I was here the first time," she said. "I hope Miro didn't try to…"

"Who's Miro?" Shane interrupted.

"The guy who runs the escort service next door."

Shane followed as she hurried out of Jack's little office and down the hall. The door to Reflections was locked. "That's strange, it's a dating service. They should be open. They operate at night."

"Dating service, as in young men for rent?"

"I try not to be judgmental."

"And you're to be heartily congratulated for that," he said sarcastically, but she let it slide.

While they were standing there a man wearing a ripped T-shirt came up the stairs at the end of the hall. "They're closed," he called out.

"Why?" she asked.

"The guy who owns it got the shit kicked out of him. He's in Cedars. They took him outta here in an ambulance about four hours ago."

FORTY-TWO

He was in a private room in the trauma ward, conscious but hooked to a drip trolley, his face swollen and already turning purple. Two of his front teeth were missing.

"I didn't tell anything," Miro slurred proudly, looking up at Susan through puffy eye sockets. She was holding his hand trying not to wince as she took in the damage. The doctors would only allow one visitor, so Shane was waiting downstairs in the coffee shop.

"Miro, Jack told you not to go to his office," she scolded.

"But I had to get the door fixed. We couldn't leave Jack's office open." His voice small, "I was just locking up when they came."

"But why would they beat you?"

"They wanted to find all of you. I told 'em to stop threatening, that it was against the law. But that just made them angry. They said if I'd tell them, they'd let me go. But I didn't tell."

"Jesus, Miro…"

"Make sure Jack knows I didn't say anything… not about the DNA or the Octopus thing, or Dr. Adjemenian. Nothing."

"Even after they beat you?"

"When they thought I was unconscious they left me on the floor under the desk. But I wasn't unconscious. I just kept my eyes closed." Proud of himself now. "They called a man named Mr. Valdez from Jack's phone. Told him what happened. Promised Valdez they would find all of you and take you to some place called Black Star in Cleveland."

"Miro, I'm so sorry. Nobody meant for anything to happen to you."

"Tell Jack I didn't say anything. Tell him Miro's one gay man who knows how to keep secrets."

"I'll tell him." But she seemed hesitant, and Casimiro Roca, expert on human dishonesty, picked up on it immediately.

"Is Jack okay?" he asked, frowning.

"He's missing. They got him, Miro. But maybe with what you just told me we can figure out where he is in Cleveland," she said, wondering how they would ever find Jack in a city of several million.

"Black Star," Miro said. "Don't forget, Black Star."


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: