Warlock gestured to Favreau’s pockets. “Check to see if he has any keys.”
Alex found a ring full of them and handed it over. “What are you looking for?”
He searched a moment then held up what looked like a key fob. “This. It deactivates the alarm.”
“Then we’re in,” Deuce said.
“We’re in,” Warlock told him.
They breathed a collective sigh of relief, then Cooper gestured to Deuce. “Let’s get him into Alex’s room and get his clothes off.”
“Dude,” Deuce groaned.
“Stonewell’s paying you double, remember?”
“Yeah, but still…”
“Hey,” Alex said, “at least you didn’t have him on top of you with his tongue wagging in your face. I’ll never get those few seconds back.”
Deuce grunted and grabbed hold of Favreau’s ankles. “May I reiterate, if I’m ever near a poker game again, just shoot me, okay?”
“Believe me, it’s already on the list.”
Cooper took Favreau by the armpits. “Alex, you start the search while Warlock’s rigging the suite. We’ll get over there as soon as we can. And play nice, all right?”
Warlock and Alex exchanged a look. He showed her a tight, tobacco-stained smile and wagged a finger at the wallet in her hands. “Be a dear and grab one of those key cards, luv. We may as well make this as painless as possible.”
As they approached Favreau’s suite, Warlock pressed a button on the fob he’d found and they heard a faint beeping sound from the other side of the door.
“That takes care of the perimeter alarm. He’ll never know we were here.” He gestured to Alex. “Card.”
She handed him the key card, but when he ran it through the slot, the light flashed red, refusing them entry. He tried again and got the same result.
Alex sighed. “I’m really starting to hate technology.”
“If it weren’t for technology, you’d still be cleaning your teeth with twigs, and squatting in the dirt to spend a penny.” He handed her the defective card, and pulled out his souped-up permanent marker. “And don’t forget, there’s always this.”
Uncapping the device, he poked the end into the hole at the bottom of the lock mechanism. The light flashed green and the latch unlocked.
He grinned. “And here you were ready to give it all up and go back to nature.” He gestured to the key card in her hand. “Make sure you return that to his wallet. Not that it’ll do him any good.”
“Just get inside,” she said.
Warlock picked up his case full of surveillance goodies and led her into Favreau’s foyer. Except for the size, the suite appeared to be identical to theirs. He pointed to the mirror above the table and said, “I should be able to rig a camera behind there without it being obvious. It won’t be the best angle but at least we’ll get a view of—”
“Do whatever you have to. Just get me inside the safe first.”
“With all due respect, breaching that safe is a waste of energy.”
“What makes you so sure he didn’t put the codes in there?”
“You’ve spent a bit of time with the man. Does he strike you as someone who’s careless?”
“Not particularly.”
“Then why would he leave his most valuable bargaining chip in a hotel room safe? That’s much too obvious and not even remotely secure.”
“Do me a favor and open it anyway.”
“On one condition.”
Alex willed herself to be patient. “And what would that be?”
“You buy me a new pack of snouts.”
She frowned. “I’m starting to think you should come with subtitles. Say what?”
“Fags. Ciggies. They don’t come cheap, you know.”
“They’ll also kill you,” she said. “If I don’t do it first.”
He shrugged. “My grandmother smoked two packs a day and lived to be ninety-five.”
“She obviously didn’t spend much time around you. Will you please open the safe?”
“I don’t have to,” he said. “You can do it yourself.”
“And how am I supposed to do that?”
He smiled. “Every hotel safe has a default password in case the guest forgets his, and it’s rarely changed from the original factory setting.”
“You’re kidding.”
“Go to the keypad, tap in six zeros, and open sesame.”
“Seriously?”
“Give it a try.”
“How can you be sure they didn’t change this one?”
“Because it worked on ours.”
She studied him a moment, thinking he must be pulling her chain, then turned and crossed to the alcove in the living room.
After opening the cabinet door, she looked at the small, rectangular safe built into the wall, and wondered how in God’s name a hotel could be so lax with its security. If doors and safes were so easy to breach, what was the point in staying here? People might as well pitch tents, fire up a generator, and save some money.
She tapped six zeroes into the keyboard, and as promised, the safe beeped and the latch released. She opened the door, found a single sheet of paper, and pulled it out.
It was a handwritten message:
Tell your boss the price is now double.
She stifled a laugh. The note was obviously meant for Valac’s men, in case they decided to get greedy and tried to rip him off before the deal was complete.
But Warlock had been right. No sign of the codes.
So now what?
She returned the note to the safe, and as she closed the door, it occurred to her she needed to lock it again or Favreau would know somebody had been inside. But how would she do that without overriding his password?
“Hey, Warlock,” she said.
He called out from the foyer. “Six ones. He’ll never have a clue.”
Apparently the Brit was a mind reader, too. She tapped six ones on the keypad, heard the reassuring thunk of the lock engaging, then turned and looked around the suite, wondering where Favreau could have hidden the damn codes.
“So help me out here. How do you think he’s storing the data? SD card?”
Warlock came out from the foyer carrying his case full of gear. “My guess would be a micro SDHC, which is small enough to hide just about anywhere.” He held up his left thumb and forefinger to indicate size. “But his equipment is consumer grade, the kind you get from a high street spy shop, so I’m inclined to think he’s the type who goes in for hidden compartments in fizzy drink canisters or toothpaste tubes. You might try the loo or maybe the kitchen cupboards.”
She nodded, then spotted a computer on the coffee table. “What about his laptop?”
“It’s worth a look, but I’ll clone the drive before we leave.”
As Warlock went into the bedroom, Alex crossed to the computer, crouched in front of it and opened the lid. It came to life showing a page from the website for Travel Planet Lifestyles, her own face smiling out at her above a pair of breasts and shoulders that definitely weren’t hers. The Photoshop wizards at Stonewell had put her in a bright red bikini on a beach somewhere tropical, microphone in hand.
Thanks again, guys.
The bio accompanying the photo claimed that Alexandra Barnes had been a runner-up in several regional beauty contests, had a degree in journalism, and was the newest addition to the TPL roster.
It was all very convincing.
Alex checked the computer’s SD slot, but it was empty. She closed the lid, flipped it over and checked the screws on back, but there was no sign of any wear or tampering that might indicate something was hidden inside.
She looked around the suite again, and thought she might as well have been searching for the proverbial needle in a haystack. In a movie or spy novel she would have found the codes by now, but fiction didn’t always reflect reality, a point proven by this goat rodeo of an op.