Marina nodded dumbly.
Holly led her to Grant’s spare bedroom and got her settled, then came back downstairs.
“What a beautiful girl,” Grant said.
“She’s had more than her share of heartbreak in the past week,” Holly said. “I don’t think she’s feeling very beautiful now.” She went to the phone and called the Sarasota police.
“Lieutenant Brower.”
“Lieutenant, it’s Holly Barker.”
“Hello, Chief. We’ve worked our crime scene; two dead, as you reported. Looks like executions; he used a nine-millimeter.”
“Any sightings of Rodriguez?”
“Not a thing. Where’s my witness?”
“Asleep. You can talk to her on the phone tomorrow, unless you’d like to come to Orchid Beach.”
“It’s a woman?”
“The daughter of one of your victims and the niece of the other.”
“You’re satisfied she had nothing to do with their deaths?”
“Yes. They went to Sarasota to hide from Rodriguez. Somehow he found them, but Marina was at the grocery store when the shootings took place.”
“I faxed the FBI in Miami the report, since you said they wanted Rodriguez, too.”
“That was the right thing to do. I’ll call you tomorrow morning, and you can talk to Marina Santos.”
“Thank you. Good night.”
Holly hung up and went to bed, happy to have Grant to sleep next to.
45
Holly took Marina to her office the following morning. She put her in Hurd Wallace’s empty office, called Lieutenant Brower in Sarasota, and put Marina on the phone with him. She gave instructions to check the dead Russian’s prints against the INS database, then faxed the photograph of his tattoo to Harry Crisp. Then she called in a policewoman, who was in civilian clothes, and gave her some money.
“I’ve got a witness in Hurd’s old office; her name is Marina Santos. I want you to take her out to the outlet mall and buy her enough clothes for four or five days.”
“Yes, ma’am,” the woman said.
“I want you to go armed. Someone is trying to kill her, and although he’s unlikely to look for her at the outlet mall, you should be alert.” She gave the officer Trini Rodriguez’s description. “It may not be him; he has friends.”
Holly introduced the two women and let them get on with their shopping trip.
Hurd Wallace, slightly itchy in his new uniform, drove slowly around the Blood Orchid property, taking in everything. Two houses were in the early stages of construction, and others were being renovated, with workmen going in and out. The golf courses were beautiful, he thought; he didn’t play golf, but maybe it was time to take up the game, since membership in the golf club was part of his compensation package. As he passed the ninth hole, he saw Ed Shine playing with a Hispanic man, who seemed never to have played before, and Ed waved him over.
“How’s it going, Hurd?”
“Everything’s fine, Mr. Shine.”
“Call me Ed; everyone does.”
“We seem to be in good shape, Ed.”
“You meet your new employees?”
“Yes, one’s on the gate, and the other is back at the station, manning the phones.”
“When is your first golf lesson?”
“I haven’t scheduled anything yet.”
“Start soon; the pro is bored rigid.”
“I’ll do that, Ed. See you later.” Hurd drove on past the empty tennis courts, then turned and went out to the airfield. A King Air twin turboprop, belonging to Shine, was the sole aircraft parked there. Then, as he watched, a business jet came whistling in and landed on the six-thousand-foot runway. A large van bearing the Blood Orchid logo drove up, just in time to meet the airplane as it taxied in. Hurd saw a group of four men, all accompanied by rather flashy women, disembark and be greeted by the salesman. They all piled into the van, while the airplane’s crew stowed their luggage in the rear, then they drove off, just another group arriving to hear Ed Shine’s sales pitch. They’d be put up in the guest cottages and would, no doubt, be on the golf course by mid-afternoon.
Hurd drove back to his office and parked the Range Rover. One of his two officers sat, his feet on the desk, obviously talking to a woman. Hurd pushed his feet off the desk to get his attention, and the officer put his hand over the phone.
“Yeah, what is it?” he asked irritably.
“Hang up the phone; you’re at work.”
“I’ll call you back, baby,” the man said, then hung up.
“Not from the office, you won’t,” Hurd said, “and not from a patrol car, either. Talk to her on your own time; right now, you’re at work.”
“There isn’t any work,” the man said.
“Then find a broom and sweep up,” Hurd said, going into his office. The man had a point, he thought; the golf pro wasn’t the only staffer who was bored rigid. He looked out his window at the shop across the street, where a truck of goods was being unloaded. This was the first of the shops to be reopened, and Hurd had not met the man who ran it.
He got up and went across the street, introduced himself to the man, whose name was Carter.
“What sort of shop are you opening?” Hurd asked.
“Jewelry,” the man said, setting down a carton on a showcase and lifting out a number of trays filled with diamond earrings and bracelets.
“Looks expensive.”
“You better believe it,” Carter said. “That’s the way Ed wants it.”
“You know, we’re a little underpopulated here so far; it may be a while before you have some customers.”
“Hurd, my first customers are already here,” Carter said, nodding at the group approaching the shop. The people who Hurd had seen get off the jet walked in and started shopping immediately, forcing Carter to open more cartons.
Hurd left them to get on with it and went back to his office. He had nothing else to do, so he started setting up a file system, one for each property on the place. It took him less than an hour, and when he was finished, he had nothing to do. He picked up the phone and called the golf club.
Holly found Harry Crisp on the other end of the phone.
“Afternoon, Harry,” she said.
“Hello, Holly.” His cold sounded a little worse. “Where did you get this tattoo you sent me?”
“From the guy who came to my house with pizza and tried to kill me,” she said. Somebody came into the room and handed her a report on the man’s fingerprints. “And his prints were on file with the INS.”
“What’s his name?”
“Alexei Bronsky. He emigrated to the States less than a year ago, supposedly resides in New York.”
“What else do you have on him?”
“Just his prints and the tattoo. The ME said he might have been a boxer at one time; there was evidence that he’d taken one or more beatings, although he looked like the kind of guy who’d be delivering them. What did you get on the tattoo?”
“This is really weird,” Harry said. “D.C. had only seen one other like it, also on a dead guy. They traced it back to a special branch of what used to be the KGB, a branch that was devoted to rough stuff. Your dead guy was probably not a very nice person.”
“That was my impression when he was shooting at me,” Holly replied. “You get anything yet on the background of Pio Pellegrino?”
“Nothing yet,” Harry said. “I’ll let you know.”
Harry didn’t sound very convincing.
“Harry, you’re not holding out on me, are you? Remember the two-way information highway?”
Harry ignored her. “I got the report from Sarasota about the double homicide.”
“Yeah. We’ve got to get Trini off the streets or we’ll be wading in blood.”
“I’ve got Lauderdale, Miami, and the state police all over it,” Harry said. “We’ll pick him up soon.”
“Harry, how did your tail lose Trini after I called you in?”
“They, uh, just lost him; the guy’s good.”