Tommy knew he was on the dime. He’d overplayed his hand with Kaufman, and if word got back to the Russians, they’d be paying Tommy a visit. Tommy didn’t welcome the attention. Last time around he’d managed to stay out of sight, but last time around he’d had a counterweight.
What could he use this time?
Don’t be half-assed, the cops had told him, meaning don’t be a wise guy who wasn’t wised up, like his brother Roy, but Guzenko was sucking all the air out of the room, and Tommy was fighting for breath. There had to be an angle he could play, or a stalking horse, somebody he could throw under the bus.
He caught the train into midtown and went to talk to Nico Constantine. Nico was his wholesaler, the guy he’d gone to Maryland to buy guns for. Nico was down with the Westies, the Irish mob that operated out of Hell’s Kitchen and along the West Side waterfront, but he was equal opportunity. You could be a Mick or an Italian, a Latin gangbanger, a Vietnamese punk, or a Rasta. The only color that mattered to Nico was green.
Tommy knew this was going to be delicate. Word had gotten around about the Kennedy heist, and there was heat from the feds, so he couldn’t come right out and ask. He had to churn the waters. Nico, like a shark, would sniff the bait.
They met at a bar on Eleventh. Tommy stood the drinks, Stoli on the rocks for Nico, Jameson’s and a bump back for himself.
Tommy eased into it. “I’ve got a buyer,” he said. He took a sip of his whiskey and chased it with a swallow of beer.
“Provenance?” Nico asked. He meant, how did they happen on you?
“Couple of guys I met upriver,” Tommy said. “Dirty white boys. Took a fall on a state beef, resisting arrest, assaulting an officer.”
“Retards, in other words,” Nico said.
“Smart guys don’t do hard time.”
“Smart guys don’t get caught. Who are these morons to me?”
“It’s a militia group in the Adirondacks.”
“Oh, real morons. We talking Timothy McVeigh?”
“I don’t think they’re looking to blow up buildings with fertilizer bombs. They want to stockpile guns and ammo, waiting on the end times, civil disorder.”
Nico snorted. “End times,” he said. “Maybe it’ll clean up the gene pool, weed out some of those skinheads.”
“Cash money, all the same,” Tommy said.
“What do they want?” Nico asked him.
“M4s, modified for full auto, 5.56 hardball, mil spec.”
Nico shook his head. “The guns, not that easy, but ammo, I might have a source.”
Tommy veered away. “Why are the guns so hard?”
“Gimme a break,” Nico said. “Selective fire? Weapons like that don’t fall off a turnip truck.”
“What’s your price point?”
“What kind of quantity are we talking?”
“Twenty thousand rounds.”
“Let me do the math,” Nico said.
“Turnaround time?” Tommy asked.
Nico shrugged. “I need to call some people,” he said.
“I need to get back to my guys with a ballpark.”
“You need to give it a rest. We’re not selling Mary Kay.”
Lydie had piggybacked an Internet server that hosted a regional company called Southwest Air Cargo, out of Albuquerque. They were a subsidiary of a larger international freight carrier headquartered in Toronto. Once she’d signed on and created a dummy account, it took her the better part of the day to walk it back to an outfit called CyberResources.com, but their website was firewalled. She e-mailed Felix Soto at NSA. He flagged her back inside the hour with surveillance logs on the target, its physical location, direct contact information for ATF’s New York office, and authorization for a FISA warrant.
“Ten out of ten,” he added in a postscript. “How do I get you back?”
I couldn’t afford the pay cut, she almost answered, but it wouldn’t have been the exact truth. What she’d surrender, if she went back to Fort Meade, was her independence. Lydie enjoyed having her autonomy. She relished the occasional compliment, but she didn’t miss being under NSA authority. Felix Soto was a better than decent boss. What got in the way was politics.
She called ATF. They patched her through to a cell.
“Kreuz.” The voice was a woman’s.
Lydie hesitated.
Agent Kreuz let her hang in the dead air.
“I’ve got the Guzenko computer penetration,” Lydie said.
“Your place or mine?”
“Whichever works.”
“Meet you at Brooklyn South,” the ATF agent said. She rang off.
Not a lot of bedside manner, Lydie thought. She picked up her paperwork and downloaded the rest onto a flash drive. Push comes to shove, do a core dump. The habits of NSA culture.
Bay Ridge, just off the expressway at Sixty-fifth. A neighborhood shopping plaza, shoe repair, manicures, a tanning salon, Chinese takeout, dry cleaning, a liquor store. Mom-and-pop, generic and modest. CyberResources was an end unit. Fax and copy services, computer repair, photo and graphics, web access. The ATF agent, Phoebe Kreuz, had the lead, with Babs and her team in support. They took it down at noon.
There were three people working in the shop, one at the counter up front, for customer service, a tech at the back, trying to recover files from a damaged hard drive, and the boss, in her office. The first order of business was to deny them immediate telephone access, and the cops smothered them like a blanket, no cuffs, all courtesy, but patting them down and confiscating their cells. The woman who owned the business went through the usual boilerplate. Kreuz and DiMello ignored her.
“This isn’t Russia,” the woman protested angrily.
Lydie Temple was fascinated. She knew this to be her Little Ivan, not the avatar she’d imagined, a college dropout obsessed with video games, but a tough, middle-aged pro. Her dossier with Homeland Security identified her as Ludmilla Shevardnadze, a legal immigrant from Tbilisi, with an MBA and a second master’s in computer science. She was on the pad with Guzenko for five large a month. After her initial bluster, she folded almost immediately. She had experience of the security services in her home country, after all. They were the same the world over. You played ball or they dropped you down a well.
“Who’s this guy Bagratyön?” Phoebe Kreuz asked DiMello.
“Joe Bags, he’s Guzenko’s consigliere.”
“I want witness protection,” Ludmilla said to them.
“We’ll negotiate,” Kreuz told her. “You keep talking. The deal comes later.”
“I’ll stop talking.”
“No, you won’t. I can render you back to Georgia inside of seventy-two hours, without a hearing. You’re on a felony beef, toots. You think Guzenko can get to you here? You don’t figure he can get to you while you’re sunbathing by the Black Sea?”
“Suka,” Ludmilla muttered. Bitch.
“You got that right,” Phoebe said to her.
Lydie was exploring the computer array.
“What have we got?” Babs asked.
“She left a big footprint,” Lydie said.
“Can you break it down?”
“Probably, given some time.”
“We don’t have a window,” Kreuz said. “Where’s the cargo?”
Nico thumped the canister on the table. Olive drab. It weighed sixty pounds. One thousand rounds of 5.56, full metal jacket.
“Three hundred dollars,” he said. “Round numbers, if we’re talking twenty boxes, six thousand.”
Tommy looked at Beeks.
Beeks had gone white sidewall. He didn’t have jailhouse tats, but he looked like a high school hockey coach from Saranac Lake, which fit the profile.
“Earnest money,” Tommy said.
Beeks counted it out, uncomfortably, which fit the profile, too. He was supposed to be a rube in the big town.
“When do we do this?” Tommy asked.
“Tonight,” Nico said.