It was completely dark by six o'clock, and agents were coming in for dinner. They were taking turns cooking or bringing in pizzas from the local parlor in Washington Depot. Peter preferred the pizzas.
Stone ate one slice, then clutched his gut. "Jesus," he said. "Please excuse me for a few minutes."
He left them sitting around the table and went to a bathroom in the hallway, closing the door, then he got his overcoat from his room, put it on and crept down the hall toward the rear bedroom. There was a roar of laughter from the people at the dining table.
Stone walked quickly across the bedroom, opened the door and stepped out onto the rear porch, closing it quickly behind him. He didn't want anyone feeling a cold draft in the house. There was a fire ladder at one end of the porch, and he climbed down it, then stood at the bottom, his back to the wall, and listened. Somebody coughed.
He peeked around the corner of the house and saw a cigarette glow in the darkness. One of McGonigle's team. His house was only fifty or sixty feet away, separated from the mother property by a high hedge. Stone ran along the hedge and around a corner. He was in full view of the Rocks's driveway, and if anybody drove in, he would be caught in the headlights.
He ran toward the road, looking for a gap in the hedge that had once been a passage between the main house and the gatehouse. It was mostly grown over, but it allowed him to push through the hedge without going to the main road, which might be watched.
He crept across the lawn to the kitchen door of his house and let himself in with his key. From there he ran upstairs in the dark to his bedroom and went to his dressing room. He had to feel for the keypad on the safe, but after a couple of tries, he got it open.
He stuck his small.45 in his pocket and a couple of extra magazines, then he took the box containing the little Keltec.380 that Lance had given him and went back downstairs. He let himself out the kitchen door and walked as quietly around the house as he could, looking for guards. He saw none.
His car was standing where he had left it, and there was no way to keep the interior light from coming on when he opened the door, so he did it and got in as quickly as he could. He put his key into the ignition and turned it to the first position, to disable the ignition lock, then he reached up and turned off the interior light, so it wouldn't come on when he opened the door.
He got out of the car and, with the door open and his hand near the steering wheel, put his shoulder against the central pillar and began pushing the car backward. There was a slight incline to the street, and he picked up speed, turning the wheel when he had to. Once in the street, he continued pushing the car backward until he was nearly to the church. Then he got into the car, started it and, with the lights off, turned past the church and drove down to the main road. He drove past a number of the Gunnery school buildings and took his first right, before he switched on the headlights. He felt exhilarated, as if he had broken out of prison, but he had only a few minutes before they began knocking on the bathroom door, looking for him.
He couldn't call Dino yet, because he wouldn't get cell-phone reception until Bridgewater, if then. He concentrated on driving fast on the curvy country road, much faster than usual. He wanted to get as far away from Washington as he could, as quickly as he could.
Fifteen minutes later he was in Bridgewater, and he switched on his cell phone. The signal was weak, but he finally found a part of the road where it was stronger, where he pulled over and called Dino's cell phone.
"Bacchetti."
"It's Stone."
"Okay, I finally got hold of the parole officer, at home. Rocco Bocca is living at his sister's house in Queens, and I've got two guys watching it. There are two cars in the driveway, so he might be home."
"Do this," Stone said. "Have the detectives knock on the door and ask to see him. Tell him, or whoever's there, that they're checking his alibi for a burglary that fits his MO. At least we'll know whether he's home."
"Okay. You on your cell?"
"Yes, I got away from the group."
"What about Peter?"
"He'll be fine with them; he likes the female agent."
"Are you coming back to the city?"
"Yes, but I don't want to go home; somebody might be watching."
"My place?"
"No. Are you at home?"
"On the way."
"Don't go there. Go to the Carlyle and get a room, under the name of Bocca. I'll come there."
"Okay; I'll go there now."
Stone hung up the phone, which rang immediately. That would be Lance. They would have missed him by now. He didn't answer.
He headed toward the city, staying off the interstate. It would take him longer, but he would be harder to spot. He felt better now, though there was not much reason to. At least he was doing something.
43
STONE'S CELL PHONE continued to ring, and finally, he switched it off. He entered the city from the East Side and drove to the Carlyle, parking in their garage. From the lobby, he asked for Mr. Bocca's room, and called Dino for the room number.
Dino let him into a very nice suite. "The manager is doing me a favor," he said. "You had dinner?"
"Half a slice of pizza, two hours ago. What's happening?"
"Bocca is at his sister's house, and the two detectives are sitting on him. They did the number about his alibi, told him he was clear and left. He's none the wiser. You may as well order some dinner."
Stone got the room service menu and ordered a steak and half a bottle of wine, while Dino poured him a bourbon from the wet bar. Then Stone called his home number and checked for messages.
"Hey, Stone," Billy Bob's voice said. "I'm ready to meet you now. What we're going to do is set up an exchange of Arrington for you. She's a pain in the ass, you know? Yeah, you know. I want to get rid of her, so I'm going to set up something for tomorrow afternoon around three. I'll call your cell phone number, and you'd better answer it, if you want to see her again. I'll give you instructions then. You get one shot at getting her back, and one shot only, so you'd better make it work. If you get the cops involved, or your CIA buddies, then people will die, among them Arrington and you. You dream about that tonight, and I'll call you midafternoon tomorrow." He erased the message and hung up.
"That was Billy Bob," he said, and he repeated the message to Dino.
"When we get the instructions, we'll set something up," Dino said.
"It's going to be tough. Lance has probably heard the message, too, and he'll be all over us, if he finds out where we are."
"Some of his people were following me; I told him to hold them off, that my guys could take care of it, and I think he did. I made sure I wasn't followed here."
Stone's steak came, and he ate it hungrily, not having had much food for twenty-four hours. Then he stretched out on one of the beds and took a nap.
DINO SHOOK HIM AWAKE. "Bocca's on the move," he said.
"What time is it?"
"A little after one a.m. I'm on the cell phone with my guys. He's headed toward the Fifty-ninth Street Bridge."
"So Billy Bob is in Manhattan?"
"He may be on his way to New Jersey, for all we know," Dino said. "Let's just sit tight until we know more."
"Let's sit tight in your car," Stone said. "We might have to move fast when we learn more."
Dino spoke into his cell phone. "I'm going to my car. Call me in five minutes and let me know where you are."
Stone and Dino went downstairs to where Dino's car was waiting at the Seventy-sixth Street entrance to the hotel. They got into the backseat, and Dino told his driver to start the car. A moment later, Dino's cell phone rang.
"Yeah?" Dino listened.
"We'll pick you up at Seventy-sixth and Third," Dino said, "then we'll play switch with the two cars." He hung up and spoke to his driver. "Get us over to Third fast; use the lights to get across Park and Lex, but no siren, and turn off the lights after Lex."