Выбрать главу

Over the six months before we’d left the States, Dad had aged twice as fast. He’d literally wilted right before my eyes. I assumed that the stress from hiding the kids caused this damage. Cancer studies have proven that stress is a serious causation factor. I couldn’t have deterred him from getting involved with bringing the children to Central America. He’d always been a protector of the neighborhood.

But this wasn’t necessarily cancer. I had to keep telling myself this wasn’t cancer, this was something minor, like an intestinal virus.

Marie, slightly ahead, passed through our ornate wrought-iron gate. “Look at this.”

Her words pulled me out of my conflicted thoughts. On the sidewalk, large painted white letters reflected the limo lights. “I KNOW WHERE YOU LIVE, YOU BLACK RAT BASTARD.”

What else could go wrong? I muttered, “Shit.”

She squatted, touched two fingers to the paint. “It’s still tacky. Who did this?”

“I know who it is.”

“Who?”

“You know how I’ve been trying to get the guys at the bar to tell me why they’re here?”

“You mean outing your friends? I told you that was a bad idea. Wait, there was only one left. Don’t tell me this is that crusty old man, Jake Donaldson?”

“Yeah, ol’ Jake Donaldson. And you were right, I probably shouldn’t have been trying to find out their dirty little secrets. Turns out, he’s a murderer on the lam. He’s no one to mess with. He saw me with Barbara. He thinks I ratted him out and Barbara is here to take him back. Now he wants to get even.”

“Don’t worry,” she said. “He comes around here again, I’ll take a ball bat to him, make him wish he was back in the States on death row.” She wasn’t just saying this to make me feel better; she really would take a bat to him.

I remembered the story about him, how he’d shot and killed a black kid out on the sidewalk, and now he’d tagged me on my sidewalk. I wasn’t going to feel right leaving with this hanging. Although, he wanted me, not Marie or the children. He wouldn’t necessarily go after them, not when I was the target. In fact, not being around might even be better. I preferred deluding myself. Crazies were unpredictable.

Marie read my thoughts. “Trust me, I can handle this.”

Her tone changed back to the familiar Marie and made it easier for me to get in the limo. I stepped up to the back door. The driver got out, came around, and opened it for me.

“What’s with the limo? Wait, I don’t want to know. Save it for when you get back, and then you can tell me the whole story.” She went up on tiptoes to peck me on the cheek. Not good enough. I took hold of her and kissed her hot and wet and deep until we both gasped for breath when we broke. I hugged her and whispered, “I love you more than you know.”

“Ditto. You just come back safe, you hear me, Bruno Johnson?”

My throat closed up. I could only nod. I let go and shot into the limo before I changed my mind. The door closed with the finality of a jail door clanging shut.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

I had expected the driver, an embassy employee, to look like Oddjob from the 007 movies, close-shaved hair, shoulders humped with muscle, without a visible neck. Instead, Mr. Kim sent a young, slightly built Korean man dressed in an expensive suit. He watched the mirror as we pulled away from the curb.

“Can we please make a detour?” I asked.

“Of course, I have been told to help in any way possible.” His English came with a hint of East Coast accent, my guess, somewhere close to Boston.

“Calle Buena Vista. The salmon-colored hacienda. You can’t miss it.”

“Yes, sir.”

I mulled over the options. Within ten minutes, the driver pulled up to the intercom recessed into a cairn of flagstone rocks. I rolled down the window and pushed the button. Nothing. I pushed the button again and held it down.

“Jesus, Bruno, is that you?”

I stuck my head out the window so the hidden camera got a better angle.

The large heavy gate slowly swung open. The driver continued up the drive and pulled through the porte cochere and stopped by the open front door. Ansel stood in the doorway in a kelly-green silk robe. I didn’t get out. I wanted him to come to me. He hesitated, and then came down the steps.

“What the hell, Bruno, a limo?” He ventured closer, holding his robe together in a feminine way with both hands. His normally curly red hair was combed off to one side and mussed. His freckled face creased by a pillow.

I said, “I need a favor.”

He looked up and down the limo. “Sure, pal, anything you need.”

“I…ah… got called back to the States on business and…”

He leaned in closer, lowered his voice. “You can’t go back. You’re like the rest of us. They’ll nail your black ass to the wall for mortgage fraud.”

I hadn’t told the guys about the children, the real reason I came to “The Rica.” Instead, I had told them that I had fled the US just ahead of a major indictment for identity theft. I told them that I had created a gallery of fake persons with their own histories, and refinanced lots of homes at the peak of the market. According to the cover story, I had fled with twenty million.

“Trust me,” I said, “I know what I’m doing and I have no choice. I have to go.”

“Sure, sure pal, what do you need me to do?”

“You know that thing with Jake Donaldson?”

Ansel slapped the sill of the door. “Sure, that was really something, wasn’t it? Who would have thought, huh?”

“You saw how he pointed his finger at me when he walked away?”

“You know, Jake, he was just mad. He’ll be back at the bar like nothing happened. Trust me on this, I know people.”

“He painted a threat on the sidewalk out in front of my house.”

“You’re kidding me, right? No shit?”

“Yeah, and I don’t think anything will happen, and I don’t expect to be gone that long, but, could you-”

“You got it, pal, anything you need.”

“Let me finish. I want you to hire some local help. I want my place watched twenty-four seven.”

“Oooh, that’s going to be expensive.”

“You’re really going to strong arm me like this when my back’s to the wall?”

He shrugged.

I couldn’t expect him to foot the bill. “You cover it and I’ll catch you when I get back.”

“Ah, Bruno, not to be a wet blanket-but, what if you don’t come back?”

He was right. I could get arrested and never see daylight ever again. I reached into the valise and peeled off one of the four bundles. “Here’s five grand.”

He took it, thumbed the bills. “With the prices down here, this will probably last you three or four weeks. But what about my, ah, handling fee?”

I glared at him for a long second hoping his conscience would kick in. He’d taken a movie star’s entire savings and fled the country without so much as a rotten night’s sleep.

I took out another bundle and tossed it to him. “I hope I’ll be able to do you a favor someday.”

His eyes turned greedy as he thumbed the cash. “I told you, I’m here to help.”

I rolled up the window. The driver had heard the entire conversation, knew the meeting had ended, and drove off. I didn’t know why Ansel’s slimy behavior bothered me. You lie down with thieves, what do you expect? I guess I had just considered him a friend, and it hurt to find out otherwise.

***

The sleek white jet set down at a seldom-used General Aviation Center in San Bernardino, Southern California. Every detail of the trip had been prearranged by Mr. Kim. Customs came on board through the front door as I went out the back with the catering elevator truck. Just that easy. Crossed my mind that if a South Korean diplomat could orchestrate a human smuggling operation in a few short hours and pull it off, why couldn’t North Korea smuggle in a tactical nuke and ruin everyone in the world’s life with one press of a button?