At once the room appeared to sway, although actually it was his legs that caused the effect. They were wobbly. Exhausted, he sat in the tilt-back chair and rubbed his throbbing temples. The last time he'd slept through the night had been forty-eight hours ago, but that had been in the hospital, and even then, his sleep had not been continuous, the nurses waking him intermittently to check his vital signs. Since then, he'd slept for a few hours at the motel in Beaumont, Texas, and had a few naps at freeway rest stops en route to San Antonio. The knife wound in his side ached, its stitches making him itchy. The almost-healed bullet wound in his shoulder ached as well. His eyes were gritty from lack of sleep.
The files, he thought. Whoever was concerned enough to want to find Juana and kill her would have searched her home in hopes of discovering a clue about where she was hiding. If they wanted to kill her because she knew too much about them, they would have searched for and removed any evidence that linked her with them.
A name that begins with D. Another that begins with T. Those had been the two files that were obviously missing. Of course, the files might not be missing at all. Juana might have caused the gap in the sequence of the files when she replaced two files, scrunching a group of other files together in order to make room, leaving a space where her fingers had been.
But I've got to start somewhere, Buchanan thought. I have to assume that two files are missing and that they're important. He leaned back in the chair, hearing it creak, thinking that the pages in the files looked like computer printouts, wondering if the files might be in the computer.
And realized that the creak he had heard had not been from the chair but from the hallway.
15
Slowly Buchanan turned his head.
A man stood in the doorway. Mid-thirties. Five-foot-ten. A hundred and fifty pounds. His hair was sandy and extremely short. His face, like his build, was thin, but not unhealthily so; something about him suggested he was a jogger. He wore cowboy boots, jeans, a saddle-shaped belt buckle, a faded denim shirt, and a jeans jacket. The latter was slightly too large for him and emphasized his thinness.
'Find what you're looking for?' The man's flat, mid-Atlantic accent contrasted with his cowboy clothes.
'Not yet.' Buchanan lowered his hands from where he'd been massaging his temples. 'I've still got a few places to check.'
I locked the door after I came in, he thought. I didn't hear anybody follow me. How did-?
This son of a bitch hasn't been watching from outside. He's been hiding somewhere in the house.
'Such as?' The man's hands stayed by his side. 'What places haven't you checked?'
'The computer records.'
'Well, don't let me hold you up.' The man's cheeks were dark with beard stubble.
'Right.' Buchanan pressed the computer's ON button.
As the computer's fan began to whir, the man said, 'You look like hell, buddy.'
'I've had a couple of hard days. Mostly I need sleep.'
'I'm not having any picnic, hanging around here, either. Nothing to do but wait. Where I bunked.' The man pointed toward the next room down the hall. 'Weird. No wonder the woman had it locked. Probably didn't want her parents to see what she had in there. At first, I thought it was body parts.'
'Body parts?' Buchanan frowned.
'The stuff in that room. Belongs in a horror movie. Fucking bizarre. You mean you weren't told?'
What in God's name is he talking about? Buchanan wondered. 'I guess they didn't figure I needed to know.'
'Seems strange.'
'The stuff in that room?'
'No. That you weren't told,' the man said. 'If they sent you out here to take another look for something to tell us where the target is, the first thing they'd have done was prepare you for weird shit.'
'All they mentioned were the files.'
'The computer's waiting.'
'Right.' Buchanan didn't want to take his gaze away from the assassin, but he wasn't being given a choice. If Buchanan didn't seem to care about business, the man would become more suspicious than he already seemed.
Or maybe the man's suspicion was only something that Buchanan imagined.
On the computer screen, the cursor flashed where a symbol asked the user what program was to be activated.
'What's your name?' the killer asked.
'Brian MacDonald.' Buchanan immediately reverted to that identity, the one he'd assumed prior to becoming ex-DEA operative Ed Potter and going to Cancun, where all his recent troubles had started.
Brian MacDonald was supposed to have been a computer programmer, and in support of that identity, Buchanan had received instruction in that subject.
'Having trouble getting into the computer?' the killer asked. 'It didn't give me any trouble when they ordered me to erase a couple of files. You know about that, right? They told you I erased a couple of files?'
'Yes, but those files aren't what interest me.'
The cursor kept flashing next to the program-prompt sign. Juana's printed-out files had not been in a spreadsheet format but rather in standard prose paragraphs.
A word-processing program. But which one?
Buchanan-MacDonald typed DIR. At once the disc drive made clicking sounds, and a list of the symbols for the computer's programs appeared on the screen.
One of those symbols was WS, the abbreviation for a word-processing program known as WordStar.
Buchanan-MacDonald exited the list of the computer's programs and typed WS after the symbol that asked him what program he wanted. The computer's hard-disc drive made more clicking sounds. A list of other files appeared on the screen.
DIRECTORY OF DRIVE C:
A 't B't C't D't E't F't G't H't I't J'tK'tL'tM'tN't0'tP'tQ'tR't S't T't U't V 't W't X't Y't Z't AUTOEXEC.BAK.Ik AUTOEXEC.BAT.lk
Buchanan-MacDonald knew that AUTOEXEC.BAK was a precautionary backup for AUTOEXEC.BAT, a program that allowed the computer's user to switch from one file to another. The designation '.Ik' merely indicated the small amount of memory space that this program used. As for the alphabetical series, Juana had evidently subdivided her clients' files into subdirectories governed by the first letter of each client's last name.
Or so Buchanan guessed. At the moment, he was intensely preoccupied by the presence of the man in the doorway. The killer's breathing seemed to have become loud, strident, as if he were disturbed by something.
'Having problems?' the killer asked. 'Don't you know what to do next? Do I have to show you?'