He stood and asked if there was a pay phone. The bouncer, a fat man with a pockmarked face, pointed with his thumb. Matt had a prepaid phone card. He always carried it- another holdover from what he'd learned in the pen, he guessed. The truth was, you could trace a phone card. You could find out where it came from and even who bought it. Eventually. Best example was when prosecutors traced a call made with a phone card in the Oklahoma bombing case. But it took time. It could be used to prosecute, but Matt wasn't worried about that anymore.
His cell phone was off. If you keep it on, there are ways to figure out where you are. Cell-phone tracking, even without making a call, is a reality. He pressed in the digits for the 800 number, then his code, then Midlife's private line at the office.
"Ike Kier."
"It's me."
"Don't say anything you don't want someone else to hear."
"Then you do the talking, Ike."
"Olivia is okay."
"Did they hold her?"
"No. She's, uh, gone."
That was good to hear. "And?"
"Hold on." He passed the phone.
"Hey, Matt."
It was Cingle.
"I talked to that investigator friend of yours. I hope you don't mind, but they had my ass over a barrel."
"That's okay."
"Nothing I said will hurt you anyway."
"Don't worry about it," he said.
Matt was looking off in the direction of the club's entrance. Cingle was telling him something else, something about Darrow and Talley, but there was a sudden rush in his ears.
Matt almost dropped the phone when he saw who'd just walked into the Eager Beaver.
It was Loren Muse.
Loren Muse flashed her badge at the fat guy at the door.
"I'm looking for one of your dancers. Her name is Kimmy Dale."
The fat man just stared at her.
"Did you hear me?"
"Yeah."
"So?"
"So your ID says New Jersey."
"I'm still a law enforcement officer."
The fat man shook his head. "You're out of your jurisdiction."
"What are you, a lawyer?"
The fat man pointed at her. "Good one. Bye, bye now."
"I said I'm looking for Kimmy Dale."
"And I said you have no jurisdiction here."
"You want me to bring someone more local?"
He shrugged. "If that gets you off, honey, do whatever."
"I can make trouble."
"This." The fat man smiled and pointed at his own face. "This is me scared."
Loren's cell phone rang. She took a step to the right. The music blared. She put the phone to her right ear and stuck a finger in her left. Her eyes squinted, as if that'd make the connection better.
"Hello?"
"I want to make a deal with you."
It was Matt Hunter.
"I'm listening."
"I surrender to you and only you. We go somewhere and wait until at least one in the morning."
"Why one in the morning?"
"Do you think I killed Darrow or Talley?"
"You're certainly wanted for questioning."
"I didn't ask you that. I asked you if you think I killed them."
She frowned. "No, Matt. I don't think you have anything to do with it. But I think your wife does. I know her real name. I know she's been hiding and running for a long time. I think that Max Darrow somehow figured out that she was still alive. I think they went after her and that somehow you got caught in the middle."
"Olivia is innocent."
"That," Loren said, "I'm not sure about."
"My deal still stands. I surrender to you. We go somewhere else and talk this out until one in the morning."
"Somewhere else? You don't even know where I am."
"Yeah," Matt said. "I know exactly where you are."
"How?"
She heard a click. Damn, he hung up. She was about to dial in for an immediate trace when she felt a tap on her shoulder. She turned and he was standing right there, as if he'd just materialized out of thin air.
"So," Matt said. "Was I smart to trust you?"
Chapter 54
WHEN THE PLANE LANDED, Cal Dollinger took over. Yates was used to that. Most mistook Dollinger as the muscle and Yates as the brains. In truth theirs had always been closer to a more political partnership. Adam Yates was the candidate who stayed clean. Cal Dollinger was behind-the-scenes and willing to get nasty.
"Go ahead," Dollinger said. "Make the call."
Yates called Ted Stevens, the agent they had assigned to follow Olivia Hunter.
"Hey, Ted, you still on her?" Yates asked.
"I am at that."
"Where is she?"
"You're not going to believe this. Ms. Hunter got off the plane and headed straight to a strip joint called the Eager Beaver."
"She still there?"
"No, she left with a black stripper. I followed them back to some dump on the west side of town." Stevens gave him the address. Yates repeated it for Dollinger.
"So Olivia Hunter is still at the stripper's trailer," Yates asked.
"Yes."
"Anyone else with them?"
"Nope, just the two of them alone."
Yates looked at Dollinger. They had discussed how to handle this, how to get Stevens off the case and set it up for what was about to occur. "Okay, thanks, Ted, you can leave them now. Meet me at the Reno office in ten minutes."
"Someone else picking them up?" Stevens asked.
"Not necessary," Yates said.
"What's going on?"
"Olivia Hunter used to work the clubs for Comb-Over. We flipped her yesterday."
"She knows a lot?"
"She knows enough," Yates said.
"So what's she doing with the black chick?"
"Well, she promised us that she would try to convince a woman named Kimmy Dale, a black dancer who works at the Eager Beaver, to flip too. Hunter told us that Dale knows a ton. So we gave her rope, see if she was keeping her word."
"Which it looks like she is."
"Yeah."
"So we're in good shape."
Yates looked over at Dollinger. "As long as Comb-Over doesn't find out, yeah, I think we're in real good shape. I'll meet you at the office in ten minutes, Ted. We'll talk more."
Yates pressed the end button. They were in the concourse now, heading for the exit. He and Dollinger walked shoulder to shoulder, as they'd done since elementary school. They lived on the same block in Henderson, outside of Las Vegas. Their wives had been college roommates and were still inseparable. Dollinger's oldest son was best friends with Yates's daughter Anne. He drove her to school every morning.
"There has to be another way," Yates said.
"There isn't."
"We're crossing a line here, Cal."
"We've crossed lines before."
"Not like this."
"No, not like this," Cal agreed. "We have families."
"I know."
"You have to do the math. On one side, you have one person. Candace Potter, an ex-stripper, probably an old coked-out whore, who was involved with lowlifes like Clyde Rangor and Emma Lemay. That's on one side of the equation, right?"
Yates nodded, knowing how this would go.
"On the other side are two families. Two husbands, two wives, three kids of yours, two of mine. You and me, we may not be that innocent. But the rest of them are. So we end one ex-hooker's life, maybe two if I can't get her away from this Kimmy Dale- or we let seven other lives, worthy lives, get destroyed."
Yates kept his head down.
"Us or them," Dollinger said. "In this case, it's not even a close call."
"I should go with you."
"No. We need you to be at the office with Ted. You're creating our murder scenario. When Hunter's body is found, it will naturally look like a mob hit to keep an informant quiet."
They headed outside. Night had begun to settle in now.
"I'm sorry," Yates said.
"You've pulled my butt out of plenty of fires, Adam."
"There has to be another way," Yates said again. "Tell me there's another way."
"Go to the office," Dollinger said. "I'll call you when it's done."
Chapter 55
THE SMELL OF POTPOURRI filled Kimmy's trailer.
Whenever Olivia had smelled potpourri over the past decade it brought her back to that trailer outside Vegas. Kimmy's new place still had that same smell. Olivia could feel herself start slipping back in time.