‘Let’s review. Novem Soles blackmails us into finding and killing Ming. But suddenly, we’re getting hirelings interfering. The sisters tried to tell me we’re on the same side. But that makes no sense for Novem Soles to interfere with us.’
‘Maybe they thought we couldn’t do the job.’
‘I don’t think that’s it. There’s a third party here. And that party is inside the CIA, serving Novem Soles, or with his own agenda. I think it’s this Ray Brewster. Tell me about him.’
Leonie massaged her temple. ‘He… he found people who could be useful – let’s say people who had a natural talent for killing, or for theft – and instead of them being bound for jail, he got them to work for him.’
‘Was he in government?’
‘I don’t think so. Why would he need me to give them new identities? The government would be better at that than me.’
‘Did he find you?’
‘Yes. I’d gotten involved with a forgery ring. They were about to get busted. He made a deal with me to shield me if I worked for him.’
I stood, I paced. Ray Brewster might not be CIA but he had a resource in Special Projects. Or he could be part of Special Projects. The question was, why would August believe anything I told him now?
‘Do you think Ray Brewster is part of Novem Soles?’
‘If he is, then he’s operating without Anna’s approval. Maybe he’s named in the notebook. Maybe Jack Ming has really damaging goods on him. Maybe the goods that he doesn’t want anyone, CIA or Novem Soles, to know.’
‘So do you know his secrets, Leonie?’
‘No.’
‘What was he to you?’
She didn’t look at me now. ‘We were together for a while, then we weren’t.’
‘And he didn’t like that. Since you created a new life for yourself in Vegas.’
‘I thought it better to start fresh.’
‘Is he Taylor’s father?’
‘No. He’s not. Don’t ever suggest that he is.’
I watched her. I needed to know her secrets while keeping my own. No way I could let her know the sisters had an interest in Mila. If she knew there was a bounty on Mila, and that Ray Brewster wanted it, then Leonie had a bargaining chip. One I could not allow her to use.
‘You knew that CIA contact. August. He’s your friend,’ she said.
‘We used to work together. We… we used to be friends.’ Were we any more? I didn’t know. It might be a friendship too expensive for either of us.
‘What exactly did you do in the CIA?’
I took another sip of the martini. ‘I worked for a small, secret branch called Special Projects. August and I worked on transnational criminal rings. They often have ties to intelligence groups or to terrorism. Very much a black ops group. I think we’re actually hidden in the budget under “vending machine contracts”.’ I was in a confessional mode. Thank you, martini, and blinding pain radiating up my arm. ‘That was a joke, Leonie.’
‘August saw me.’
‘You?’
‘Yes. I stole Ming’s knapsack. At gunpoint. Before your friend could get it.’
‘So he knows both our faces now.’
Leonie put her face in her hands, and maybe she freaked out or she mourned or worried but she only did it for twenty seconds. Then she stood up. ‘Okay. Regroup. We have to figure out where Jack will go next. Is there a place where I can work on his computer without interruption?’
‘Yes. In there, there’s a bedroom.’
‘Then why didn’t we just stay here?’
‘Because I didn’t want you to know my business. That I own this bar.’
‘Don’t you trust me?’ she said. ‘Well, I guess I answered my own question.’
‘It was need-to-know. The situation has worsened. I have resources here.’
‘Resources.’
‘Yes.’
‘Okay, another secret. Fine.’ She stood.
‘Hey. Do we tell Anna we have Jack’s computer? You know she’s going to want all the data in it.’
‘Yes,’ Leonie said without hesitation. ‘Maybe it’s enough. Maybe they’ll trade us the kids for the laptop. They could know what he knows then.’
‘Or the laptop could give us weapons to use against them. Information on who and where they are.’
‘No. We give it to them.’ Fear creased her voice.
‘No. We don’t,’ I said. ‘We use it against them. We have no guarantees they’ll give us our kids back, Leonie. We need every ounce of leverage we can get.’
‘If they know we have it, and we withheld it, they’ll kill the kids. We have to do what they say. Exactly. I won’t risk any other action.’
‘Then they don’t ever know we have it. This is our guarantee, Leonie. That we can get the kids back.’
‘They want his notebook.’
‘Yes. Maybe the laptop has the same info on it.’
‘I don’t get why a hacker would keep a paper record of the most important information. It doesn’t exactly fit his psychology.’
‘I don’t care. That’s what they want. We can use Jack Ming’s laptop to find where he might go next, to see who he could turn to. Go work. Delve. Figure out where he’ll go.’
‘If my child dies because you failed… ’
‘What, Leonie? You’ll kill me?’
‘No. I’ll just never forgive… ’ But she knew what I would lose as well, and she choked on her words. ‘Okay. What’s done is done. We have to find him.’ She paused at the door. ‘This Special Projects group at the CIA will be hunting us now?’
‘Oh, definitely.’ I thought it best not to mention that August and I had had a drink here at The Last Minute a few days ago, and he knew I owned the bar.
‘Well, at least you’re not dead.’
‘There is that,’ I said. The phone I’d been given by the lovely snake Anna rang. Leonie sucked in breath.
‘Is he dead?’ Anna said by way of hello.
‘No.’
‘I am very disappointed.’
‘He’s hurt. He was meeting the CIA. I screwed up the meeting for him. Hopefully he will not trust them enough to make another approach.’
‘And where is he?’
‘He’s running.’
‘You failed me.’
‘Technically. But I also kept him from surrendering to the CIA and pretty much ruined their relationship.’
‘That’s not enough.’
‘I probably would have killed him by now if you didn’t have people interfering.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Ray Brewster has sent three people on us.’
‘Who the hell is Ray Brewster?’
‘One of your people inside the CIA.’
‘Sam. I know you are not inclined to believe me on any point, but I do not know a Ray Brewster.’
‘You have an ally inside the CIA. Reel him in. Or you don’t get Jack Ming dead, or his notebook of goodies.’
‘Who… who are these people?’
I told her what I knew.
‘And you dispatched them?’
‘They won’t be troubling us any more.’
Anna was silent. ‘This isn’t our doing. At all. It’s your problem. Put Leonie on the line.’
I gave the phone to Leonie. ‘Anna. Is Taylor all right? Can I listen… Listen to… ’ Her voice broke. I don’t know if she listened to her child or to Anna but she said all right and she handed me back the phone.
‘Yes?’
‘The next time we talk and you tell me that Jack Ming isn’t dead, your child will suffer.’
The phone clicked off.
56
Leonie helped me shower in the apartment’s small bathroom. The blood and sand rinsed from me. I sported cuts and bruises and a nice slice across my chest, blood caked on my belly. She washed my hair for me in silence, soaping out the grains of sand. She helped me dry off and I found boxers to put on for the doctor’s arrival.
I didn’t tell her Anna’s threat against Daniel. The idea would unnerve her, and we had to keep our focus. I was horrified enough for the both of us.
She closed the door behind her. My arm was a dull ache. My whole body was a dull ache. But if I was hurt, then so was Ming and he couldn’t run as far, or as fast. We might have clipped each other’s wings.
I drank the rest of Leonie’s Guinness. It felt good to be alive. I wanted to keep the kids alive. The past two days made me very tired of death. I could hear the hustle of Manhattan traffic outside the windows. I closed my eyes and I only opened them again when the door opened.