“You’ll notice that the e-mail appears to have been sent from the director’s computer,” Holly said.
“The gall!” Lance said, with more emotion than she had ever seen him display. “He broke into our mainframe and into the director’s mailbox!”
“Looks that way,” Holly said. She leaned forward. “Lance, what is your response going to be?”
“Response? You think I’m going to respond to this?”
“It’s addressed to me. I’ll respond, if you like. He’s apparently created an internal mailbox for himself.”
“When did you last hear from Todd Bacon?” he asked.
“This morning. I’m afraid Teddy is running rings around him.”
“Should we send someone to help him?”
“Lance, read the message again.”
“I’ve read it twice.”
“Then you understand that he is going to start killing again. Do you want that?”
“Of course not.”
“Please remember,” Holly said, “that Teddy is professionally and personally very well equipped-perhaps as much as anyone in the Agency-to eliminate anybody who tries to get to him, and he’s right: If he starts to do that, then explanations are going to have to be made.”
“Are you telling me that Todd can’t handle this?”
“I have a high opinion of Todd,” Holly said. “He is certainly a rising star here and could succeed at any number of assignments. He could also get dead on this one. In fact, I’m surprised that since Teddy so obviously knows about him, he isn’t dead already.”
“Do you believe, as he implies in his message, that Teddy has moved on from Santa Fe?”
“That’s what he does when he thinks he might be discovered: He moves on. I have no reason to doubt him.”
“Todd found him once. He could find him again.”
“That could very well be the worst possible thing that could happen, both to Todd and to you and, by extension, to me.”
“So, Holly, you’re worried about your hide?”
“In dangerous situations, Lance, I always worry about my hide.”
“Not the mission?”
“This isn’t a mission, it’s a vendetta, and vendettas can always turn around and bite you on the ass.”
“I’ll give it some thought.”
“Do you want me to respond to the e-mail?” Holly asked.
“Yes. Say, ‘Message received and understood.’ ”
“Is that a threat or are you agreeing to his terms? We’d better be clear.”
“I don’t want to be clear,” Lance said. “I want him to worry.”
“Then respond to the message yourself,” Holly said, standing up and walking out.
44
Vittorio and Cupie spent their entire day touring Santa Fe ’s hotel parking lots, motel parking lots, shopping malls and the Plaza. They had spotted two tan Mercedes wagons, both driven by people who were not Barbara.
They returned, dejected, in the late afternoon, and Cupie poured them both a drink. “Maybe we can’t protect Ed Eagle,” he said as he sank into the recliner next to Vittorio’s.
“You going to fink out on me?” Vittorio asked.
“No. We both have an obligation to Eagle, because we let him nearly get killed while we were on the job.” He sat silently for a moment, then picked up the phone on the table between the two chairs and called a number.
“Detective Santiago,” a voice said.
“Dave, it’s Cupie Dalton.”
“Hey, Cupie. Twice in one week. That’s something.”
“Dave, you remember the Bart Cross killing.”
“Sure.”
“Did you find anything interesting at his residence?”
“In the way of evidence? Not much. His killer was a pro, I’d bet on that.”
“Did you take any personal stuff from his house, like a diary?”
“Nah, there was no diary. Come to think of it, there was an airplane logbook.”
“Now, that’s interesting,” Cupie said.
“Why?”
“Well, I’m trying to put together a picture of his last few days, in connection with a protection job I’m working on. I think he might be the guy who tried to kill a client of mine, put him in the hospital.”
“I see.”
“Could you copy the last, say, four pages of the logbook and fax or e-mail them to me?”
“Sure, I guess so. Which do you prefer?”
“E-mail, if you can scan them.”
“Give me a few minutes,” Santiago said. “You’re buying lunch, right?”
“Wherever you like, Dave. I’ll take you to the Brown Derby, if you like.”
“Cupie, you know very well the Brown Derby closed twenty-five years ago.”
“Okay, you can name the place.”
“Spago Beverly Hills.”
“Done.”
“What time?”
“Not today, Dave. I’m in Santa Fe on a case. As soon as I get back. I promise.”
“Okay. You’ll have the pages shortly.”
Cupie gave him his e-mail address and hung up.
“What are you looking for?” Vittorio asked.
“I’ve no idea,” Cupie replied. “Anything. I’m desperate.”
They drank their drinks, then Cupie’s laptop made the little chiming noise that signaled a new e-mail.
“Incoming,” Cupie said, getting out of his chair and setting his drink down on the desk, next to his laptop. He pulled up Dave Santiago’s e-mail and opened the attachment, then connected his laptop to Vittorio’s computer and printed it.
“So,” Vittorio said, “what have you got?”
Cupie went slowly through the pages. “Seems Bart Cross kept a very meticulous logbook,” he said, “including dates and names of his passengers.” Cupie got to the last page. “Here we go: Bart flew Jim Long to Acapulco and came back the next day with Long and-bingo!-Barbara! Cleared customs at Yuma.”
“ Yuma? Why Yuma?”
“Well,” Cupie said, “if you had just escaped from jail in Mexico, you might want to land at some out-of-the-way place, right?”
“Yeah, I guess,” Vittorio said.
“Then he went back to L.A. and landed at Burbank.”
“What about after that?” Vittorio asked.
“A few days later he flew to Albuquerque! Shortly after that we saw him at Barbara’s house. Then the day of the attempt on Eagle, he flew back to Burbank. That was the day he got killed.”
“I guess Barbara didn’t take the news of Eagle’s survival too well,” Vittorio said.
“Hey, look,” Cupie said. “In the notes section he wrote down the color and tag number of Barbara’s Mercedes wagon! Arizona plate.” Cupie wrote down the plate number in his notebook. “Now we know exactly what to look for.”
“I’m getting tired of looking for tan Mercedes wagons,” Vittorio said. “Too many of them out there. We saw three today.”
“Always good to get the correct plate number, though,” Cupie replied. “We got more than that, though.”
“What else we got?”
“We know that Jim Long busted Barbara out of the Mexican jail-or at least got her out of the country after she got out.”
“That is interesting,” Vittorio said. “It’s the sort of information that might make Long willing to talk to us.”
“Tell you what,” Cupie said. “Eagle’s going to be in the hospital for a few more days. Why don’t we go to L.A. tomorrow and pay a little visit on our famous film producer?”
“We got nothing else to do,” Vittorio said.
Cupie called Long’s office at Centurion Studios.
“Long Productions,” a woman said.
“Hi. Can you tell me if and when there’s going to be a funeral for Bart Cross?”
“Why, yes,” the woman replied. “Are you a friend of his?”