Karim didn’t answer.
‘That’s right, Malcolm Fletcher,’ Borgia said. ‘We sent Fletcher and your son’s killer… well, no one knows what happened to him as this person was never caught.’
And never will be, Fletcher thought. Three men had killed Jason Karim — three young men whose gang-initiation rite involved the murder of a wealthy Manhattan resident. Fletcher had scattered their remains along the bottom of the Hudson River.
‘And then we have Boston,’ Borgia said. ‘Five years ago you offered your services to a wealthy businessman whose daughter was, in fact, a victim of a serial killer. We know Fletcher was involved because a Boston forensic investigator named Darby McCormick met Fletcher face to face — twice. We couldn’t prove your involvement with him then, but I can certainly prove it now, as we know Fletcher came here with you.’
Borgia straightened and resumed his position in front of Karim. ‘The penalty for harbouring a fugitive carries a maximum five-year sentence. I’d quote you the six-figure fine involved, but the amount is a drop in the ocean to a man of your financial means. What’s more disconcerting — what I suspect you’re thinking about right now, Mr Karim — is what will happen if the news gets out that you, the owner of one of the country’s most respected and highly visible security firms, are not only working with but hiding the nation’s most wanted fugitive.’
‘I want to speak to my lawyers,’ Karim said.
Borgia went on. ‘Fortunately, I’m in a position to bargain. Tell me where you hid Fletcher and not only will I guarantee no further damage to your house, I can guarantee you probation, no more than six months. More importantly, we’ll keep your name out of the papers.’
‘I want to talk to my lawyers.’
Borgia, unfazed by Karim’s defiance, turned his attention to the HRT operator and said, ‘I understand Mr Karim was armed.’
The operator nodded. ‘We confiscated a 10-mm sidearm, a BUL M-5.’
‘Any other weapons?’
‘No, sir.’
‘Does Mr Karim have a permit to carry in the state of New Jersey?’
Karim answered the question: ‘The permit’s in my pocket.’
‘Untie him,’ Borgia said.
‘Sir?’ the operator asked.
‘I think Mr Karim’s bindings are cutting off the blood supply to his head. He might as well be comfortable while we talk. You won’t be any trouble, will you, Mr Karim?’
Karim didn’t answer. The operator didn’t wait for one. He clipped the submachine gun to his vest. The video camera mounted to the weapon had been turned off.
Why? Fletcher didn’t know but wanted to warn Karim, had no way of warning him. Karim was no longer wearing the headset, had tucked it in his breast jacket pocket.
Fletcher watched as the operator removed the nine from the holster strapped to his leg. Then the man unsheathed a tactical knife, cut Karim’s bindings and stepped back with the nine raised.
Slowly Karim reached inside his back pocket. He came back with a thin leather wallet and placed it on Borgia’s waiting palm.
‘I’m going to go check your gun permit,’ Borgia said. ‘When I return, Mr Karim, if you don’t tell me where you’ve hidden Fletcher, I’ll have tear gas launched inside every room of this house. If for some reason Fletcher doesn’t appear, I’m going to have Hostage Rescue, New Jersey SWAT and every other officer I brought here take a sledgehammer to each and every wall — I’ll raze the foundations if I have to. We will find him, Mr Karim, because we know he’s here. You, sir, will go to jail and you’ll be all over the news. I already have a press release prepared.’
‘I want to speak to my lawyers,’ Karim said for the third time.
‘This is a limited, one-time offer, Mr Karim. Take a few minutes to think it over.’
Borgia left the bedroom. Karim stared after him, absently rubbing the red circulation marks left on his wrists. The operator was pulling something from underneath his watchband.
It was a folding knife.
Fletcher found himself reacting as though he was actually standing inside the room — as though he could grab the operator’s wrist and disarm the man.
On the screen the operator opened the knife and dropped it to the floor. Karim saw it, and was about to stand when an elbow smashed across his jaw.
Fletcher was already on his feet. Over his earpiece he heard a garbled scream from Karim. He punched the code into the glowing keypad, knowing that if he didn’t act quickly Karim would surely die.
56
Special Agent Alexander Borgia slipped on his sunglasses when he reached the living room. The local SWAT agent he’d put in charge of guarding the front door, a former Marine who had seen plenty of combat in his time, hand-signalled to the nearby officers to stand down. Borgia was glad to see the man bark a quick order into his chest mike. At least this one knew what the hell he was doing.
The cold wind blew sand across the driveway packed with FBI and New Jersey police officers. They wore bulletproof vests underneath their winter jackets, each man braced behind the vehicles and holding their weapons on car roofs and hoods. FBI snipers were set up on the dunes around the house. Technical Investigative Equipment teams had finished setting up auditory surveillance devices mounted to stationary platforms.
As Borgia moved down the driveway, threading his way through the bodies, he caught men glancing away from their gun sights, their high-powered binoculars and thermal-imaging devices, to take the measure of him, to see if they could read something in his body language that would hint at what had happened inside the house. Everyone here knew this wasn’t an ordinary fugitive situation.
Borgia wasn’t a natural gambler; he hadn’t felt entirely comfortable rolling the dice on this. While all the information he collected pointed to Malcolm Fletcher’s involvement with Karim (especially the description from Karim’s pilot), Borgia still had no visual or auditory confirmation that Fletcher had been inside Karim’s home that morning. The agents had tried. Their thermal-imaging devices couldn’t penetrate through Karim’s garage door or his mansion walls. The laser mikes aimed at the windows had failed to pick so much as a single noise — not entirely surprising, as Karim was in the security business and had access to the same counter-surveillance toys the federal boys played with. The man had remodelled his home to prevent every conceivable surveillance scenario.
But when Karim’s Range Rover had pulled out of the garage, agents had picked up not one but two heat signatures sitting behind the tinted windows. Karim had brought someone along for the ride, and Borgia’s gut told him that that someone was Malcolm Fletcher. Borgia imagined the positive swells he would receive for capturing the elusive fugitive and, gripped with the fever of a man enraptured, had given the go-ahead for Hostage Rescue to breach the house.
Borgia reached the main road. Tactical Operations Command had set up a post within the inner perimeter. He opened the door for the mobile trailer and entered the warm space, grateful to be out of the cold. Agents sitting at the long consoles kept a close eye on their surveillance monitors while listening over their headsets to incoming radio-intelligence information from TOC agents set up in sniper positions.
Special Operation Commander Howard Cronin stood in the room’s centre with the thumbs of his meaty hands hooked in the pockets of his Wranglers. Tall with a beer-belly neatly hidden by a generous-fitting khaki field shirt, Cronin took great delight in swinging his dick to let everyone know just who the hell was in charge. Red-faced and wearing a headset, he saw Borgia and yanked the phones away from one ear.
‘ What’s with this bullshit with the radio and camera silence?’
A few men flinched. Cronin had been in a foul mood since he’d been informed that Borgia would be speaking to Karim. Alone.