“Thanks.”
“One other thing. I’m adding a new security system to your house and I’m having Julie tagged. We have to be prepared. At least until this is over.”
“I knew you would. Appreciate it. We’ll be in touch.”
Nick made eye contact with his partner and Matt hustled over to him.
“What’s up?” Matt said.
“What do you make of all this?” Nick asked.
“It’s a setup,” Matt said, like he was answering a simple third grade math equation.
Nick nodded. “If you were Kharrazi, would you set up a decoy on the other side of town, as far away as possible? Or would you want to keep the law within viewing distance?”
Matt thought about the question. “This wasn’t done on a whim. I’d say he’s on the opposite end of town, as far away as possible.”
“You’re probably right,” Nick said. He looked over Matt’s shoulder at a neighbor approaching the van. An older man wearing blue jeans and a robe. “We could have every law enforcement officer in the state canvass the city and come up empty. What would we look for? They’re not going to have a neon sign out front saying, ‘terrorists inside.’”
The neighbor was nodding as Jim Evans explained the nature of the impromptu command post. The neighbor seemed satisfied with the answers he was getting.
The man passed Nick and Matt as he headed back to his front door.
“Excuse me, sir,” Nick said. “You’re wondering what’s going on?”
“Yeah, the guy over there explained everything,” the man said. “You’re searching for some kind of kidnapper. You think he might be in our neighborhood.”
“That’s right,” Matt said. “Have you noticed anything suspicious lately, even mildly peculiar?”
“I can’t say that I have,” the man said.
Nick was about to let him go when he thought of something. “There hasn’t been many houses sold in the area, has there?
“Not really.”
“What about visitors? Are there any homeowners in the neighborhood who leave during the summer and rent the place out?”
The man’s eyes perked up. He began to point at a house directly across the street and Nick slapped his arm down before he could get it halfway up. The man looked perplexed.
“Please don’t point,” Nick said. “Just tell me.”
“The Johnsons have a son who lives in Montana,” the man was straining not to look at the house. “They go up there every summer and don’t usually get home until after Thanksgiving. This is the first year I remember them ever renting the place out. I understand they got paid handsomely. Ol’ Norm couldn’t keep from grinning when he told me about how they were approached to rent it. And how the guy told him he’d pay him cash up front, because he was so excited about moving to Las Vegas and needed a place to stay until his home was built. Nice guy, too. I don’t see him very often, but he always smiles and waves to everyone. They seem like a nice family.”
“Family?” Nick asked.
“Yeah, well, I guess I haven’t actually met his wife, but he’s shown me pictures. She’s back in Jersey with the kids.”
“Does he have dark hair, dark complexion?”
“Sure. I can’t remember his name, though.”
“He ever have any company? Other men visiting?”
The man shook his head. “Not that I’ve ever noticed.”
Nick patted the man on his upper arm, dismissing him. “You’ve been a great help. Thanks.”
“You think that guy renting the Johnson’s place is a criminal?” the man asked.
“No,” Matt said. “He doesn’t fit the description. The guy we’re looking for is fair-skinned and blond.”
“Oh,” the man said. Then he smiled and wagged his finger at the agents, “You guys are good. Asking me if he was dark-haired, when all along your man is blond. You guys know all the angles.”
The man shook his head and mumbled with short bursts of laughter all the way back to his house.
Instinctively, the two agents turned their backs to the Johnson house. Nick pointed down the block toward the limo house for effect.
“We can’t tell Evans and the crew about the rental,” Nick said. “We keep everyone focused down the street, the way it’s supposed to look.”
Matt agreed. They returned to the van where the female agent was screwing her face into a knot trying to decipher the phone calls she’d been tapping.
Matt tugged on Jake’s arm. “You have a parabolic with you?” he asked.
“Sure,” Jake said, “but they’ve got one aimed at the place already. You need another one?”
“Yeah,” Matt said, “Nick and I are going to take a stroll around the neighborhood and see what we can pick up.”
Jake shrugged, entered the second van and returned with the small, funnel-shaped parabolic microphone. “Here you go.”
Nick told Evans not to move until he and Matt returned, no matter what they heard in the house. Nick and Matt walked toward the limo house, then after they were out of range, they turned right and away from the house, down a side street. They doubled back toward the Johnson rental using a parallel street behind the house. Under the bright moon of the desert sky, they were careful to work within the shadows of shrubs and palm trees. When Matt peeked past a property line wall, he pulled his head back like a frightened turtle.
“It’s right there,” he said. “Give me the mike.”
Without exposing anything but his left hand, Nick crouched, pointed the cone toward the house and placed the miniature headset over his ears. At first he heard loud static, the rustling of trees, the sound of a car’s engine in the distance. He twisted a knob on top of the cone, adjusting its focus, narrowing its beam to the Johnsons’ house. He heard a man’s voice speaking a foreign language. Nick was fluent in Kurdish, Russian, and Spanish, and got along all right with several other Latin-based languages. His eyes widened when he heard an authoritative voice speaking Kurdish say, “Where is Bracco? I lost him.”
“Forget him,” another voice said. “He went to the other house.”
Nick went rigid when he heard, “Kill the brother and get out of here.”
Chapter 8
Hasan Bozlak peeled away the rug and yanked up on the trap door. He peered down into the dark tunnel. A simple string of lights illuminated the passageway. Working behind drawn curtains, Hasan was assigned four workers, mechanical drilling devices, and instructions on how to build the escape route. Twice a week the dirt was hauled from the backyard by a truck with a pool logo on its doors. A gate in the tall fence slid open and closed abruptly with each departure.
The American government had its law officers surrounding the decoy house while Hasan prepared to lead his team of Kurdish workers through the tunnel to a house on a street directly behind them. It was only sixty feet to the garage where a car was waiting to take them to Kharrazi.
He directed two of the men into the tunnel and was waiting for the final member of the team to execute the prisoner when he heard the strangest sound. The doorbell rang.
The two men in the tunnel also heard the doorbell. The three of them swung their automatic weapons from the strap on their shoulders and assumed an attack position. Hasan held an index finger to his lips and motioned for the men to spread out. He peeked out from the side of a curtain. Standing at the front door as casual as if he were delivering flowers, was Nick Bracco. Bracco didn’t appear to be expecting trouble. His hands were empty and loose at his side. Maybe the FBI was canvassing the area?
Hasan’s first instinct was to shoot. Kill the FBI agent and his brother. But too many years of following orders prevented him. The shooting would attract attention and cause the house to be invaded by FBI agents. There was a plan for the situation, which was just as deadly and allowed them more time to escape. In fact, Hasan had secretly hoped for an opportunity to use the alternate escape plan. It would send a necessary message to the Americans. The end of their cozy little lives was near. No one was safe in his homeland, why should America be immune from the danger?