And then, when the car took off down Mount Vernon Street, he swore.
Kurt returned to his pacing. A mission he'd assumed would be easy was proving not to be and was now threatening to get out of hand. Where could these women be going at almost ten o'clock at night? He suggested to himself that they could be going out to dinner, but then dismissed the idea, thinking dinner had probably been part of what had kept them away for so long. And how long would they be away? And would they come back alone? The last question was a particular concern.
Kurt had no answers, and the minutes ticked by. He went back to the window. The only people in sight were a few dog walkers with their pets. The Chevy Malibu was nowhere to be seen.
Kurt pulled out his cell phone. Although he was embarrassed not to be able to report success, he felt it best to apprise the commander of the current situation. Paul Saunders answered on the second ring.
"Can you speak freely?" Kurt questioned.
"As much as can be expected on a cell phone."
"Roger!" Kurt said. "I'm in my clients' home. They returned briefly moments ago but drove away without coming in, destination unknown."
Paul was quiet for a moment. "How difficult was it to get into the clients' home?"
"Easy," Kurt reported.
"Then I want you back here," Paul said. "You can go back for the women later. Spencer is the problem at the moment. I need your help."
"I'll be there straightaway," Kurt said, not without disappointment. It meant that dealing with Georgina would have to wait.
Kurt then thought he'd spend a little time looking for a spare set of keys. When he returned he wanted to be able to get in faster than he had earlier.
"l STILL DON'T KNOW WHY YOU WON'T LET ME GO UP IN the apartment and change,' Deborah complained. "It would only take me five minutes." She and Joanna were standing in one of the aisles of the twenty-four-hour CVS, which was more like a mini-mart than a drugstore. Drugs were only a small part of the merchandise available, which ran from car products to industrial cleaning agents.
"Oh, sure, five minutes!" Joanna said sarcastically. "When was the last time you changed clothes in under a half hour? And it's already after ten. If we're going back to the Wingate, I want to get it over with."
"But I don't relish stumbling around in these high heels while we do our detective work."
"Then put on your sneakers," Joanna said. "You admitted your workout gear is in the trunk of your car."
"I'm suppose to wear sneakers with a minidress?"
"We're not going to a fashion show! Come on, Deborah! Have you gotten what you wanted here? If so, let's get on the road."
"I suppose," Deborah said. She was holding several flashlights, batteries, and a disposable camera. "Help me! Is there anything else we should take? I can't think."
"If they sold some common sense, perhaps we should take whatever they have."
"Very funny," Deborah said. "You're being a brat, you know. All right, let's go."
At the checkout register, Deborah grabbed a pack of gum and a few candy bars when she paid for her items. Soon they were back in the car and on their way out of town.
Having spent themselves arguing for the previous half hour, they drove mostly in silence. With no traffic, they made the trip in slightly less than half the time that it had taken previously. Book-ford appeared deserted as they drove up Main Street. The only people they saw were two couples outside the pizza place. The only other sign of activity was the floodlights over the Little League field behind the municipal building.
"I'm kinda hoping our cards will no longer work," Joanna said as they neared the turnoff.
"Such a pessimist," Deborah responded.
They drove up to the gatehouse which looked as dark and unwelcoming as it had the night before.
"Which card should we use?" Joanna asked. "One of ours or Spencer's?"
"I'll try mine," Deborah said. She eased the car up to the card swipe and ran her card through. The gate opened immediately. "Just as I suspected: no problem with the access cards. The ironic thing is that I never thought I'd be appreciative of bureaucratic inefficiency."
Joanna was not appreciative in the slightest. After they'd driven onto the Wingate grounds and started up the driveway, she turned around and forlornly caught a glimpse of the gate closing. Now they were locked in, and she couldn't shake the feeling they were making a big mistake.
WHEN HIS CELL PHONE RANG, KURT HAD BEEN ENGROSSED in his thoughts, and the sound startled him. He'd involuntarily jerked the van's steering wheel and for a brief moment had to struggle to get the vehicle straightened out. He was traveling close to eighty miles an hour, heading northwest on Route 2 and closing in on the turnoff to Bookford.
With the van under control, he fumbled unsuccessfully for his phone in his jacket pocket while its insistent ring continued. Hastily he undid his seat belt. At that point he was able to get the phone out and establish a connection.
"We have a contact," a voice said.
Kurt recognized the voice. It was Bruno Debianco, Kurt's number-two man who served as the evening-shift security supervisor. He'd been in the Special Forces at the same time as Kurt and, like Kurt, had been discharged under less-than-honorable circumstances.
"I'm listening," Kurt responded.
"The Chevy Malibu with the two women just came through the gate."
A shiver of excitement passed down Kurt's spine. The mild despondency he was feeling at having been ordered back to the compound to deal with Spencer Wingate vanished in a split second. Having the women on the grounds would make apprehending them as easy as a turkey shoot.
"Do you copy?" Bruno questioned when Kurt hadn't immediately responded.
"I copy," Kurt said matter-of-factly to cover his excitement. "Follow them, but do not make contact. I want the pleasure. Do I make myself clear?"
"Ten-four," Bruno answered.
"There's one proviso," Kurt said as an afterthought. "If they try to meet up with Wingate, detain them and keep it from happening. Is that understood?"
"Perfectly," Bruno said.
"I should be there in another twenty minutes," Kurt added.
"Ten-four," Bruno said.
Kurt disconnected. A smile spread across his face. The evening that had started out so promising but had turned bleak had become rosy again. Now it was a given that within the hour both women would be locked in the holding cell he'd had constructed in the basement of his living quarters, and they would be tantalizingly at his disposal.
Keeping one hand on the steering wheel, Kurt used his speed dial to call Paul.
"Good news,' Kurt said when Paul came on the line. "The women have returned to base on their own accord." "Excellent!" Paul said. "Good work!"
"Thank you, sir," Kurt said. He was willing to take credit if Paul was willing to offer it.
"Handle the women, then we'll face the Wingate problem,' Paul said. "Call me when you are free!"
"Yes, sir,' Kurt said. Like a conditioned Pavlov dog Kurt felt the almost irresistible urge to salute.
THIS IS NOT WHAT I SUSPECTED, DEBORAH SAID.
"I didn't know what to suspect," Joanna said.
The women were sitting in the car in the Wingate Clinic's parking area. The vehicle was pointing toward the butt end of the building's south wing with its engine still running. The parking spot was slightly east, affording a view along the building's rear. All the second-story windows of the rear of the wing were ablaze with light.
"The whole lab is lit up," Deborah said. "I thought the place would be like a graveyard after hours. I wonder if they are working around the clock."
"In a way it makes sense," Joanna said. "If things are going on out here they don't want people to know about, it would be best for them to be happening when the crowds of clinic patients aren't here."