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Remy leaned forward and knocked more loudly.

Maggie felt slightly irritated at him, but she knew he was just doing what he did because he cared about Shel. All of them did.

“I got a 12-gauge shotgun aimed at the center of this door that says you’re gonna step off now,” a man’s voice said. “Otherwise five-o’s gonna be scraping pieces of you off that other hallway wall.”

“We’re with the police,” Maggie said.

“‘With the police’ ain’t the same as being the police,” the man said.

“Is this Richard McGovern?”

“Don’t know nobody by that name.”

“That’s fine. But when I walk away from this door, I’m going to call the Army payroll offices and stop that monthly check that’s been coming to this address.”

“That’s my girl,” Remy whispered. “I like that.”

“You can’t do that,” the man said.

“If Richard McGovern doesn’t live at this address, I can,” Maggie said.

“He lives here,” the man grumbled.

“Then I want to talk to him.”

“He ain’t here.”

“Then I’m going to suspend that check until I can verify he lives here.”

The man cursed. “Guess you got me up on the wrong side of the bed this morning. Lemme see some ID.”

Maggie opened her identification and held it in front of the lower peephole.

“Says NCIS. Richard McGovern was in the Army. You can’t go cutting off his check.”

“Open up, McGovern,” Remy said. “We’ve come a long way and we’re going to talk to you.”

“I ain’t said I was McGovern.”

“Unless you’re a midget or a second grader with a deep voice, you’re McGovern.” Remy tapped the bottom peephole. “Now open the door. Otherwise we’re going to get a caseworker out here to review your life with a microscope to make a new decision about your benefits.”

“Man, that ain’t right. I done give up my legs in the service to my country, and you come here and get all up in my grill-for reasons I do not know.”

“Let us in,” Maggie said. “We’re here to talk about Victor Gant.”

McGovern was quiet for a moment. “Now that there’s a bad man. Got a lot of bad juju all knotted up in that man’s name.”

Remy pounded on the door. “Open the door, McGovern.”

Down the hall a child cried louder.

Maggie felt bad about that.

“Dude,” McGovern said, “chill. People live here.”

The locks slid back. Maggie counted five of them. She stood in the doorway and waited.

Richard McGovern, now sixty-three years old, was scrawny, and his ebony skin looked gray. Dressed in a sweater and sweatpants that hung on his too-thin legs, he sat in a wheelchair and looked up at them through John Lennon glasses that made his eyes look too big. His hair touched his shoulders, and a scraggly beard adorned his cheeks. An unfiltered cigarette hung from his leathery lips.

A cutdown double-barrel shotgun lay across his lap. He started to lift it.

Maggie had her Beretta out from under her jacket and pointed at the man in a heartbeat.

At the same time, Remy leaned in and grabbed the shotgun. McGovern refused to let go.

“You’re going to release the weapon,” Remy said, “or I’m going to break your fingers when I take it away from you. Your call.”

Cursing, McGovern let go of the shotgun. “I want that back. It ain’t safe living here. I got a right to defend myself. I gave my legs to this country.”

“Let’s go inside,” Maggie said as she put the Beretta away.

“Lady, this is my house. You can’t just barge into my house. I got rights.”

Maggie took a deep breath, then looked at Remy. The apartment reeked of marijuana. “Do you detect the presence of a controlled substance?”

A smile almost flickered to life on Remy’s lips before he caught himself. “I do.”

“Hey, it ain’t me,” McGovern protested. “It’s those college kids living in the apartment below me. They smoke reefer, smoke rises, and I’m trapped up here with it.”

“Getting by on a contact high?” Remy asked. He kept moving forward and forced McGovern to keep backing.

“I’m not happy about it,” McGovern said. “I’ve been talking to the super about it.”

“Anybody else in the apartment with you?” Remy glanced into the small kitchen to one side.

Maggie flanked Remy, staying behind far enough to give herself a clear field of fire if she needed it. According to the files Estrella had gotten about the man, he lived alone.

“No, man,” McGovern said. “It’s just me.”

In the living room, McGovern spun the wheelchair around and rolled into an empty space in front of the television. The blinds were pulled and the room was dark. Some kind of cheap horror movie was playing on the television set. A knife-wielding character chased a young couple through a forest. They were both screaming, but the set had been muted.

Maggie stood in the living room and kept watch over McGovern while Remy quickly went through the rest of the apartment.

“Hey,” McGovern squawked. “Hey! You can’t just go barging through my house!” He started to roll forward.

Maggie stuck her left foot out and braced it against the wheelchair wheel. McGovern came to a stop rather than push himself around in a circle.

“Let’s just stay here,” Maggie suggested.

A few minutes later, Remy reappeared carrying a Baggie filled with grass and some pills. “Does this belong to you?” he asked McGovern.

McGovern frowned and looked increasingly nervous. “I haven’t ever seen that before. You planted that on me.”

“Funny thing about Baggies,” Remy said, holding the bag up for a better look. “They retain fingerprints pretty easily. The dust from the marijuana is going to make any prints on today’s blunt, or anywhere else in the Baggie, easy to find.”

A worried look tightened McGovern’s face.

“Want to know what a judge is going to say when he finds out your fingerprints are on the inside of the bag?” Remy raised a speculative eyebrow. “Unless you have a really good excuse.”

“Look,” McGovern said, “I got an okay thing going here. I know that. I don’t want anything to screw it up.”

“We’re not here to try to screw it up,” Maggie said. “We’re here to get some answers about Victor Gant.”

McGovern took a hit off the cigarette dangling from the corner of his mouth. He took it out and looked at it a moment, then dug out his lighter and expertly relit it.

“Victor isn’t a man whose trust you betray,” McGovern said quietly.

“Do you think you’re going to have to betray that trust?” Maggie asked.

“When you’re talking about Victor Gant, you’re not going to have anything good to say. And no cops-not even NCIS agents-would ever come snooping around to give Victor some kind of good citizenship award.”

Maggie knew that was true. She sat in a sagging easy chair across from McGovern. “Do you remember Dennis Hinton?” she asked.

51

›› Intensive Care Unit

›› Las Palmas Medical Center

›› El Paso, Texas

›› 0721 Hours (Central Time Zone)

In the wake of his daddy’s confirmation that he’d killed Dennis Hinton, Shel took a moment to gather his thoughts. Then he asked the question that he most feared to get an answer to.

“Why?”

Tyrel lay back and stared at the ceiling. He licked his lips. “You really want to get into this, Shelton?”

“I don’t have a choice, Daddy.” Shel knew his voice sounded cold and distant. It was the only way he could speak at the moment.

“Might be easier if you had someone else asking these questions.”

“Yes, sir. It might. But I don’t think, after all these years, that you should be looking for the easy way out of this.”

Tyrel snorted. “There ain’t no way out of this. If there was, don’t you think I’d have found it by now?”

Shel didn’t answer, but he had to wonder if he was going to be strong enough to deal with everything he was about to learn.