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Shadow of Betrayal Page 7
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But he also couldn’t hide the fact that Nate’s situation wasn’t the only thing that had added to his stress. It had been two weeks since he’d received the call from Liz, but he could still remember every word. It was the first time he had talked to his sister in nearly five years. She was younger than he was by eight years, so they had always traveled in different circles, and weren’t close.
“First, everything is fine, okay?” she’d told him.
Instantly he was on alert. “What is it?”
“Dad went in for some tests.”
“Tests? For what?”
He could hear her take a deep breath. “The doctor thought he might have had a small stroke.”
“A stroke?”
“Take it easy, Jake. I said a small stroke.” Jake. The nickname his father had given him. And like the name Jonathan Quinn, Jake had no relation to Quinn’s real name. “Turns out it wasn’t a stroke at all.”
“What was it, then?”
“They’re not sure. Maybe a virus. He’s fine now. Well, his blood pressure is high, so he’s taking some medication for that. But otherwise he’s fine.”
Quinn wasn’t sure how to feel. His relationship with his father was an odd one. They had never been close, even when Quinn was a child. It wasn’t from lack of trying on either of their parts. They just didn’t have anything in common. Quinn knew the real answer why, but he never spoke it out loud. His dad was the only father he had ever known, but genetically they weren’t related. So their core points of references for life were different, and neither could really understand the other. Still, he cared about his father, because he knew his father loved his mother deeply.
“How’s Mom?”
His sister—technically his half-sister—sighed. “How do you think she is? She’s glad he’s better, but she’s still concerned. She keeps checking on him to make sure he’s all right.”
“I was just asking, Liz.”
There was silence for a moment. “She tells me you haven’t visited them for a long time. You need to come out here.”
At the time, he was just getting ready to leave for Ireland. “I can’t come right now.”
“Of course not.”
“But I will come soon. In a few weeks.”
“Whatever. Do what you need to do, Jake. I just thought you’d want to know.”
Before he could say anything else, she’d hung up. He’d called his mother next, but she was evasive, doing her best, as always, not to burden Quinn with anything she felt he didn’t need to worry about.
Now that the jobs in both Ireland and Boston were complete, he knew he had to go see his parents. They’d be in Minnesota now, summering in the home Quinn had grown up in. He’d stop by on the way back to L.A.
“What are you thinking about?” Orlando asked.
“Nothing,” he said as they stepped out of Strega, an Italian restaurant in Boston’s North End. He hadn’t told her about the call from his sister.
There was a slight chill in the air. Quinn could feel Orlando shiver under his arm, so he pulled her small frame closer to help warm her up.
“Thanks,” she said.
She tilted her head up, and he leaned down and kissed her.
“Well, I was thinking about something,” he said as they walked down the street with no specific destination in mind.
“Thought so,” she said, an eyebrow raised. “I assume it hurt. Maybe you should leave the thinking to me.”
It was a playful argument they’d had often, each claiming to be the more intelligent one.
“I’ve been thinking,” he said again, “about our location problem.”
“What location problem?”
“The fact that you’re not geographically available to me when I need you.”
“Wait,” Orlando said, the hint of a wicked smile on her face. “You need me?”
“Shut up,” he said. “You know what I mean.”
“We’re a hell of a lot closer than we used to be,” she said.
“True enough,” he said. “But I was just—”
“Hold on.” She pulled away a little. “We’re not moving in together. Not yet. We’ve already talked about that.”
“I know that.”
He eased her back against him. But as he was about to explain what he meant, his phone began to vibrate in his pocket. Annoyed, he pulled it out and looked at the display, then glanced at Orlando.
“It’s Peter,” he said.
Her eyes narrowed. “Maybe you should just let him go to voice-mail.”
It was a good idea. Quinn tapped the Reject prompt on the phone’s touch screen, then put the device back in his pocket.
“I didn’t mean move in together,” Quinn said. “But I thought maybe I could get a place up there. I don’t have to be there all the time. I mean I’d definitely not be there when you’re in Vietnam, but when you’re in town … you know, I could, I could be up there, too. Close by. It’ll make things easier for us.”
He looked down at her, expecting some resistance. What he’d learned since they’d become involved was that she had a fierce independent streak, and was very protective of her own space. A product, perhaps, of her previous relationship experience with Quinn’s late mentor, Durrie.
But both her lips and her eyes were smiling. “I like that idea.”
“You do?”
“Yeah. What? You thought I wouldn’t?”
“I … eh … I don’t know what I thought.”
Quinn’s phone began vibrating again.
“Dammit,” he said. He pulled it back out. “Peter again.”
“Let him leave a message.”
“That won’t work,” Quinn said. “He’ll just keep calling until I finally answer. He’s done that before.”
“Then whatever he wants, just tell him no.”
“Like that’s an option.”
Quinn touched Accept on the screen.
“What?” Quinn said.
“I need you in New York,” Peter said. “I have something for you tonight.”
“I can’t make it there tonight. I’m not even close.”
There was a second of silence. “You’re in Boston, Quinn. I have a plane waiting. You can be here within an hour and a half.”
Quinn could feel his tension returning. “How do you know where I am?”
“Does it really matter? Remember our deal. No questions.”
“You’re a son of a bitch sometimes, you know that?”
“I’ll text you with the plane info as soon as I get off.”
“What if I’m busy?”
“You’re not.”
Quinn started to tighten his hand around the phone, but made himself stop. “This is number two,” he said, knowing this would mean delaying the trip to see his parents for a few more days. But getting Peter that much closer to being off his back would be worth it. “That leaves one and we’re through.”
“I can count,” Peter said. The line went dead.
“So,” Orlando said as Quinn slipped the phone back into his pocket. “We’re going somewhere?”
Quinn and Nate stood in the hallway of an abandoned apartment building in New York, a few feet away from a doorway that had been blown out by some kind of explosion. There was debris everywhere: splintered chunks of wood, a twisted metal door frame, and bits and pieces of plaster. The room beyond the gaping doorway was a pit. A nub that had once been the concrete landing stuck out no more than a foot and a half into the room, but beyond that there was nothing.
Shining his flashlight inside, Quinn was just able to make out a pile of wood and concrete approximately twenty feet down. It wasn’t an entire floor’s worth of wreckage, but it was enough for a staircase.
“It looks like the best places to attach the ropes are there and there,” Nate said, pointing up at the ceiling.
Quinn looked up at the spots his apprentice had indicated, happy that Nate was talking about something other than the Yankee game Quinn’s phone call had pul
led him away from.
Nate had found a couple of large gaps in the ceiling that exposed some of the building’s support structure. The damage looked old, perhaps caused by water, or vandals, or neglect.
“Do it,” Quinn said.
Nate picked up the end of one of the ropes. “I need a boost.”
Quinn laced his fingers together and moved up next to the hallway wall. Nate put his free hand on Quinn’s shoulder, then raised his left foot and put it into Quinn’s palms.
“One, two, three,” Nate said, then pushed himself up, straightening his left leg—his good leg—so that his head almost reached the ceiling. “Good. Hold me steady.”
Quinn tilted his head up and watched as his apprentice looped the rope through the gap and around one of the beams before tying it off. As Nate stepped down, he tried to hide a wince, but Quinn noticed.
“I’m fine,” Nate said.
“That’s not what it looked like to me,” Quinn said but immediately regretted it.
“I’m fine. A cramp.” Nate’s face was tense, serious. “We all get them.”
As if to emphasize his point, he reached down and picked up the end of the second rope.
“I’m ready, let’s go,” Nate said.
Quinn moved three feet to his left and made another cradle with his hands. Nate repeated the task with the new rope. When he stepped down this time, he stared Quinn in the face and didn’t wince. But it didn’t matter. Quinn couldn’t help remembering Nate lying unconscious on a Singapore street, his foot mangled by a car that had purposely rammed into him. It had been Quinn’s call to remove the foot. It had been the right decision, but that didn’t make Quinn feel any less responsible.
“Shall I unroll it?” Nate asked.
“Please,” Quinn said.
The end of each security line was attached to a rope ladder sitting next to the empty doorway, waiting. Nate walked over and maneuvered the ladder so that it was centered in the opening, ready to roll over the edge into the darkness.
Another hour, two tops, and they’d be done, Quinn thought. And even more important, one more job would be ticked off the Peter payback list.
So far this one had been easy, if not a little unusual. Peter had arranged for a sedan to be waiting for them at the airport, complete with a trunk full of the equipment he thought they might need: flashlights, gloves, crowbars, the rope ladder, and handguns for each of them.
Peter hadn’t been the one to greet them, though. Quinn wasn’t even sure if he was in the city. It had been one of his agents, a woman named Ida. Quinn had met her briefly once before. She gave Quinn and Orlando the brief as they drove into Manhattan. It basically boiled down to a mop-up job in an apartment building, with a little recon work thrown in. Apparently an agent had run into a little trouble. While the agent had been extracted, there was the possibility that evidence had been left that could link the agent to the building. Peter wanted Quinn to make sure any link was severed. While they were at it, they were also to keep their eyes open for anything unusual.
“The agent was interrupted before the recon was complete,” Ida had said, just before they’d dropped her off near Columbus Circle.
“Recon is not one of our normal services,” Quinn told her.
“We both know that’s not true.”
Quinn had almost argued the point, but let it go. Doing this job meant he was almost done with Peter and the Office. Once he finished the third of his promised jobs, he was going to stop taking Peter’s calls. Enough was enough. The last few years had proved that.
Nate pushed the ladder over the edge of the opening. There was a thud-thud-thud as it unrolled itself on the way down, then the support ropes they had just tied off snapped taut.
“We’re almost set here,” Quinn said, subconsciously turning his mouth toward the mic attached to the collar of his shirt.
There was no response.
“Orlando? Did you hear me?”
There was a second of nothing, then Orlando’s voice in his ear. “Yeah, just a minute.”
“What’s up?”
Earlier, while Nate and Quinn had lugged the ladder inside and set it up, Orlando had volunteered to begin the recon of the first couple floors.
“I think I found something,” she said.
“What? Where?”
Instead of a reply, Quinn heard footsteps coming from his left down an intersecting corridor. Turning toward the sound, he could see the beam of Orlando’s flashlight cut through the darkness, then angle in his direction.
“It might be nothing,” she said, her voice still coming through the receiver in his ear. “We can check it out later if we need to. I’ll be right there.”
While they waited for her to arrive, Nate checked the ladder and the ropes to make sure everything was secure.
“Who wants to go first?” Nate asked, the moment Orlando rejoined them.
“You do,” Quinn told him.
“Check this out,” Nate said.
Quinn and Orlando walked over as Nate worked a wooden riser loose from one of the piles of junk. Nails stuck out in a line along both short ends, and one corner had splintered off, but otherwise it was intact.
“See?” he said after he flipped the piece of wood over.
Quinn had to look closely to see what his apprentice meant. There was a circular patch in the center of the tread that was just a shade or two darker than the surrounding wood. Nate pressed against it, and it pushed in half an inch, then sprang back when he let go.
“Pressure trigger,” Orlando said. “Good catch.”
“Peter’s agent must have stepped on this,” Nate said. “That probably sent a signal to the explosives.”
Orlando smiled. “You’ve been studying.”
Nate shrugged. “Had a lot of time on my hands.” He glanced up at the doorway high on the wall above them. “Jesus … do you think he fell all this way?”
Quinn’s eyes were drawn to something several feet away. It flashed white as his light passed over it. He walked over, picked it up off the ground.
“I’d say there is a very good chance the agent fell the whole way,” Quinn said. He held up the item he’d found. “I also think there is a pretty good chance that he is a she.”
In his hand was a pair of decidedly feminine glasses, complete with camera attached to the side.
“She was apparently here for a reason,” Orlando said. “But has anyone found out what that might have been?”
Neither Quinn nor Nate had an answer for that. So they began looking in the only place they had yet to check, under the wrecked stairs. They moved things around so they could be sure there was nothing hidden underneath—trapdoors, hidden storage spaces. But there was nothing.
“Red herring,” Nate said.
“Looks that way,” Quinn said.
“Then we’re out of here?” Nate asked.
Quinn shook his head. “Not yet. I want you to photograph everything in here. Normal and infrared. Just in case.” Quinn looked over at Orlando. “While he’s doing that, why don’t you show me what you found earlier?”
Orlando led Quinn to a hallway that ran along the back of the building. About a third of the way down, she stopped in front of a door on the right-hand side. The other doors along the hallway were all wooden and rotting. And, for the most part, all were also open. This door was different. It was metal, though it had been painted to look older than it really was.
“Look familiar?” Orlando asked.
Quinn nodded. It looked nearly identical in both texture and color to the metal remains of the door that had been torn and twisted by the explosion.
“I haven’t seen any others like it,” Orlando said. “Peter’s instructions were to look for anything unusual. Thought this might qualify.”
“Definitely.”
Quinn touched the knob, then attempted to turn it. It moved a fraction of an inch before stopping.
“So?” she said. “Do we try to get in?”
Though Quinn t
hought it might be better to just walk away, that would be neglecting the assignment. And as much as he was annoyed to be here in the first place, that was just not something he would do.
“Not through here,” he said.
He took a few steps down the hall away from the door. As he did, he let his fingers brush against the wall, tapping the surface every few inches. After ten feet he stopped, returned to the door, then did the same thing along the other side.
“Think this is rigged like the staircase?” Orlando asked when he finished.
Quinn looked back at the door, then frowned. “What’s your gut?”
“I think we’d be stupid to think it wasn’t.”
Quinn smiled in agreement.
He took a few paces forward, then stopped at a spot four feet to the right of the door. He touched the wall again. Like elsewhere, it was plaster, probably supported by ancient wooden slats underneath. Only the wall had given in a little at this spot as he pressed against it.
He moved his light through the hallway. Like elsewhere in the building, random junk was scattered along the floor: an old shoe, dozens of empty food containers, newspapers, cardboard boxes, and several pieces of wood in varying shapes and conditions. He wished he’d brought along one of the crowbars Peter had gotten for them, but that would mean a trip back to the car. He almost decided he didn’t have much of a choice, when the beam of his light caught something that looked promising.
It was a two-by-four, about three feet long. Quinn picked it up with one hand, then tapped it against the ground, testing its strength. It was solid, no sign of rot.
Should work, he thought.
“Let me hold your flashlight,” Orlando said.
He handed it over, not even registering the fact that she’d figured out what he was going to do. That was just the way they operated, more often than not having the same ideas at the same time.