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Redden snorted. “Well, shit, we know where this is going, don’t we? If I can help it I’m not about to spend the rest of my life in a cage.” He grunted. “You sure it’s really necessary to keep me cuffed up like this? Goddamn.”

Graver stepped over in front of him and squatted down. He looked at him. “You smoke?”

Redden frowned. “Yeah, I smoke.”

“Want a cigarette?”

“Yeah, I want a cigarette.”

Graver looked at Neuman who went over to Ledet and took his cigarettes out of his shirt pocket, along with the disposable lighter.

“Take off one cuff,” Graver said to Neuman who got the key from Murray and unlocked one cuff. As he did, Remberto loudly cocked the slide on his Sig-Sauer.

Redden flinched and then slowly turned his head toward the sound as he took the cigarette from Neuman and lit it He looked at Remberto.

“You guys sure don’t act like the law,” he said. He didn’t try to get up, but stretched his waist and shoulders, twisting this way and that.

“Okay,” Graver said, still squatting in front of Redden, “tell me what’s supposed to be happening tonight.”

Redden was not given to dramatics, but his long pause before responding to Graver’s question clearly reflected the pressure he was feeling from what he was about to do. It seemed that no one talked about Kalatis without behaving as though they were about to open the doors of hell. You just didn’t do it unless you had no other choice.

“Kalatis has been working on some kind of a big business deal,” Redden began. “I don’t know anything about what the negotiations are over-drugs or information or arms, I just don’t know-but the thing’s going to be wrapped up tonight.” He pulled on his cigarette. “Now, when something like this happens, these people he’s dealing with are brought in to see Kalatis for the deal-maker meet They bring their last cash payment with them. And usually, and this is just a peculiarity with the Greek, usually all this happens after midnight, early hours of the morning. That’s just the way he likes to do it.

“The way it works is, these people, if they’re from out of town, are put up in a hotel in Houston, and Kalatis’s people pick them up and take them to whatever airstrip we’re using.”

“Do you always use the same ones?”

“Yeah”-Redden nodded-”all of them. On a kind of rotating basis, nothing regular. He keeps it random. But we’ll use most of them sooner or later, West, Southwest, Clover Field, here, Gulf, Andrau, Hull, Ellington, Hobby, Intercontinental, Hooks, Midwest, Weiser-all of them.

“Anyway, these people and their cash are transported by Kalatis’s security people from their hotel to the airport They get in, the money’s loaded, and we take off. Now, all these people think we’re going to Mexico, somewhere down in there. But what we do is we take a two-hour diversionary. We keep them occupied in the cabin so they don’t hear transmissions or see anything, even though it’s at night, then we land at Kalatis’s place if we’re in a ‘tooner-”

“A ‘tooner?”

“Plane with pontoons-or we land at a little transfer strip, transfer to a ‘tooner, and take it in.”

“But you always go to Kalatis’s in a plane with pontoons.”

Redden gave a single nod. “Got to. He won’t let that kind of stuff come in by car. Besides, it’s part of the scam, them thinking they’re in Mexico.”

“Is there just one transfer strip or several?”

“One, just one. A place called Las Copas.”

“But tonight is different?” Graver asked.

“Yeah, tonight is different,” Redden said, nodding hugely, taking one last drag off the cigarette which he had smoked down to the filter. He mashed it out on the concrete beside him. He used the thumb of his right hand to squeegee the sweat off his forehead, the one loose handcuff making a jangling sound like Paula’s bracelets.

“When there’s several in one night like this, they all take off from the same airport That way Kalatis’s security people have to check out only one hangar. The timing is worked out so that the clients arrive one hour apart so there’s plenty of time in between connections. None of the clients even know that Kalatis has met with anyone else that night. That’s the way he does it.”

Redden rocked on his buttocks again. “This is a hell of a place to sit down,” he said. He shot a look of disgust at Remberto. “Shit. Okay.” He used his thumb on his sweating forehead again. “Tonight all three are coming in at different airstrips.”

“Which ones?”

“Wade from Andrau. Maricio from Clover. I’m leaving from Hobby.”

“And this will be after midnight?”

“Nope, not this time,” Redden corrected. “That’s another thing that’s changed. First client will be here at ten-fifteen. Second one at eleven thirty-five. Third one, twelve fifty-five.”

“That’s”-Graver paused to calculate-”an hour and twenty minutes between each client arriving here.”

“That’s right.”

“Why the change?”

Redden stared at the concrete in front of him for a moment, and then looked up at Graver.

“Well, actually, to tell you the truth,” he said, “we were just a little worried about that point ourselves.”

“We?”

“Me and Wade and Maricio… the three pilots. We’ve, uh, been watching all this, and it looks to us like Kalatis may be going to drop out of sight after tonight.”

“Why do you think that?”

“There’s a guy name of Sheck who used to fly with us,” Redden said. “He’s been with Kalatis a lot longer than the rest of us, and we kind of get together with him pretty regular and talk about Kalatis. Ol’ Sheck’s got some pretty good insights into the guy. He still works for Kalatis on some kind of secret shit they got going. Sheck seems to think he’s winding down a lot of his operations here and that he’s getting ready to do some kind of super scam and then just disappear. After these changes that have been developing today-first one thing, then another-me and the boys are getting a little skittish. I’ve been trying to get in touch with Sheck for the last four or five hours to run these last developments by him, but I can’t find him.”

“Did you read the paper this morning?”

Redden looked at Graver. “Yeah.”

“Bruce Sheck blew up in one of those boats in South Shore Marina.”

Redden blanched and his facial muscles went slack. “Blew up?”

“You know Colin Faeber?”

“Yeah.”

“He was hit this afternoon.”

“‘Hit? Killed?”

“Gilbert Hormann?”

Redden nodded, already seeing it coming.

“He was hit last night.”

Redden swallowed. His eyes looked like they would never blink again. He swallowed again.

“And three of my intelligence officers who were working on the case,” Graver added without explanation.

Redden’s stare dropped to the tarmac outside the doors of the hangar. “Sheck was goddamned right… the Greek’s cutting himself loose. He’s going to run.”

“And where do you think his pilots fall into this scheme of things, Eddie? You think he’s just going to let you go-with all you know about him?”

“Son… of… a… bitch.” Redden seemed almost catatonic.

“This might have been your last day of flying anyway,” Graver said.

Redden said nothing. He just stared at the tarmac that was dancing in the heat waves beyond his plane.

Chapter 74

“Tonight,” Graver said, bringing Redden back to the conversation at hand, “if you’re going to be picking up the clients here, taking them on a two-hour ‘diversionary’ and then going into Las Copas, they’ll be boarding pontoon planes there to hop over Chocolate Bay, right?”

Redden nodded. His rate and volume of perspiration seemed to have accelerated.

“How does that work? Does the pontoon plane pull up in the bayou there? There’s a bayou nearby, isn’t there?”

Redden nodded. “About seventy-five yards from the strip.”

Neuman had rolled a car tire over and was sitting on the edge of it behind Redden. Murray and Remberto had pulled over a sawhorse and were sharing opposite ends of it. All of them sweating, all of them riveted to the conversation as they listened to Graver methodically extract every logistical detail.