"My wife!" Pendegrass answered quickly. He ordered, "The tape, Boldt. Now! No more of this! I want that tape."
"It's in the car," Boldt said.
"No fucking way," Pendegrass barked.
"Search me. Ask him," he said motioning to the porch. "He was here waiting for me. He saw me get out of the car." He turned slightly. "Did I have a videotape on me?"
For a moment there was only the drone of an airplane far off, and the low constant hum of traffic.
"I didn't see it on him," Smythe confirmed.
"Untuck your shirt," Pendegrass ordered.
Boldt did as he was told. No tape fell out. "I'm telling you, it's in the car." He added, "But then again, I wouldn't shoot me just yet, if I were you. What if I dropped it off at a friend's on the way over?"
From Boldt's right, a third voice. "Then I'd have seen you," Riorden said. Also wearing a balaclava, he stepped around the corner of the house, there to block any attempt at an exit to the street. To Pendegrass he said, "He didn't stop anywhere."
The third part of the puzzle. No more surprises.
"No one's going to shoot you, Boldt," Pendegrass stated. "All we want is that videotape."
"We were going to trade," Boldt reminded.
"Change of plans. You ever get any idea to breathe a word of any of this, and Matthews ends up like Sanchez or worse. That's my leverage on you. That, and the tape. That's my promise."
Boldt felt another chill race down his spine. Pendegrass had made the wrong threat. He had also just made an admission of guilt by mentioning Sanchez. Boldt had much of what he wanted. "Front seat of the car," Boldt said. "Take the tape and get out of here before I lose my temper."
Pendegrass chuckled, amused. "I'm quaking all over." He moved toward the Crown Vic, though never taking his eyes off Boldt. He tried the passenger door, but found it locked. "Keys," he called out to Boldt.
Boldt let the keys dangle from his right hand, thinking that if Pendegrass or the others had half a brain they would wonder why he'd opted to have his keys out and ready in his right hand. Smythe might think he'd intended to open the back door of the house, but then why not switch hands with the gun when Pendegrass had walked out of the shrubs? But they weren't thinking: That was just the point. They hadn't been thinking when they'd stolen the guns off Krishevski's tip about the strike; they hadn't been thinking when they'd broken Sanchez's neck in an attempt to rough her up and get her off the I.I. investigation; they hadn't been thinking when they'd tried to cover it up by making it look like Flek. Guys like this didn't think—they reacted. It was all they were capable of. "Thing's got a remote," Boldt informed him, letting the keys hang from his hand. "I'll do it for you."
He lifted his right hand, pointing the small remote device toward the car the way people aim clickers at their televisions. Straight-armed and determined. Again that eerie silence, punctuated only by the keys ringing together like tiny bells. Boldt pushed the button. The doors to the car clicked open. Pendegrass pulled on the door handle and opened the passenger door. He leaned inside.
Boldt pushed the remote's other button. As the car's trunk popped open, Boldt shut his eyes, collapsed to the steps and rolled down them.
LaMoia came up out of the car's trunk lobbing a phosphorus grenade, a police issue semi-automatic clutched tightly and ready to fire. Boldt heard one shot; he wasn't sure from where. He caught hold of his fallen handgun on the roll, and opened his eyes to the devastating pure white glare of Pendegrass coming out the passenger door, burning brightly in that light like an angel. He had let go of the videotape, and it floated through the air in an eerie slow-motion arc. One hand shielding his eyes, casting a triangle of black across his brow, he raised the tip of that silencer toward Boldt, who saw no choice but to fire. He aimed low, tracking his shots as two holes appeared in the side of the Crown Vic, and a third found the man's knee, bludgeoning it into a bloody pulp.
The force of a ton of bricks hit Boldt's chest, knocking the wind out of him. He'd been shot.
"Drop the weapons!" he heard LaMoia order through his wired teeth. A siren cried in the distance. "On the ground! Now! No one gets hurt!" his sergeant shouted. They had two witnesses to Pendegrass's mention of Sanchez: Boldt and LaMoia. Even if other charges failed, they had all three on assaulting police officers, attempted murder and deadly force.
Boldt felt down and determined he'd been hit in the vest, not flesh. It didn't feel that way. His breathing was labored, he couldn't speak.
The phosphorus died down, hissing like a winded runner, and Boldt could see again.
Smythe was down, fatally wounded—Riorden's doing, not LaMoia's. In testimony it would come out from Riorden that he and Pendegrass had in fact intended to kill both Boldt and Smythe, just as Boldt had guessed. Boldt for obvious reasons; Smythe for his stupidity and greed.
Pendegrass lay bleeding, passed out against the car, the fallen videotape just out of his reach, his fingers still stretching for it.
LaMoia, soaked through with sweat, kept his weapon aimed at Riorden's back. The man was leaning spread out flat against the wall of the house, bleeding from his left arm. "You got him?" LaMoia inquired, indicating Pendegrass.
"I've got him."
"It's a mess."
"Yes, it is," Boldt agreed.
LaMoia hopped out of the trunk, walked over to Riorden and placed the barrel of the weapon against the base of the man's skull. "The location of the Denver video," he said ominously.
"John," Boldt complained, "that's not how to do it."
"We did this your way, Sarge. We do this other thing my way." He jabbed the gun. "You give up the video and your shooting of Smythe goes down as a stray bullet. With all this other shit, you'll still get life, but you won't get lethal injection." He added, "You've got three seconds to decide. One . . . two . . ."
"Chuck has it!" the man spit out onto the wall. "Locked up, I think. I don't know."
LaMoia backed off, pulled his cell phone from his pocket and hit a button. "You there?" he asked, when a voice answered. "It's Pendegrass. And you've got all the probable cause you need."
C H A P T E R
67
Boldt stepped out of interrogation room A, "the box," at 4 A.M., an empty mug that had held tea in his hand. LaMoia was still in the next room over, getting interviewed by his fellow Homicide officers just as Boldt had. Any officer-involved shooting required the surrender of one's weapon, a half dozen interviews and a mile of paperwork. It wouldn't all sort itself out for another week.
She sat in one of the gray office chairs, the kind with four spread feet on black rollers. Her left ankle, encased in a removable cast, looked more like a ski boot. Only Daphne Matthews could look so beautiful at four in the morning.
"Hey," he said.
"Went a little differently than you thought," she told him, barely able to conceal her anger. She didn't like him taking chances like that.