With most jobs, he only knew his target by name. It was easier if he didn’t know the person. This time he had no personal connection, but almost too much information.

He remembered when the rich had welcomed him into their group as a promising, clean-cut athlete bound for glory. Now he was just an outsider looking in. Just another thug.

The upscale building was located in downtown Las Vegas, the city’s central business district. It was originally the town site and gambling district located in the center of Las Vegas Valley, but it had taken a backseat to the Strip, which was located just south.

When he arrived at the expensive office complex, he ignored the valet parking and parked on the street. He put on the hat and sunglasses, stepped from the car and donned the coat.

Surveying the crowded sidewalk, he zigzagged through pedestrians hurrying to work. He strode through the rotating door into a bustling lobby, where men and women in tailored suits hustled to meetings.

It was 9:12 a.m. He was a bit early.

Oh well. Better to be early than late.

He entered the building and approached the counter, where a short, stocky security guard held a clipboard.

“Winston Coburn III to see Douglas Grant.” Calvin handed his business card to the guard.

The guard scanned the clipboard. “Yes, Mr. Coburn. I have you down for a nine-thirty appointment. I’ll notify Mr. Grant that you’re here and see if it’s okay to send you up.”

“No problem.”

The guard called Grant’s office. He listened for a minute, then hung up. “Mr. Grant isn’t in his office. He probably stepped out for a few minutes. You are a bit early. Would you mind waiting until I’m able to reach him?”

Calvin’s smile disappeared. He remembered his boss’s words.

“Listen, uh…” he read the man’s name tag, “Gus. Yes, I mind waiting. Grant knows that I’m flying back to Atlantic City this afternoon, which is why we made an early appointment. I don’t care if he’s there now or not. I’ll wait for him in his office, but absolutely not in this miserable lobby.”

“But Mr. Coburn,” the man stuttered, looking at his partner. “Do you think Mr. Grant would mind?”

The partner shook his head. “Nah, he’s okayed it before, plus he made the appointment so he is expecting him.”

Gus still looked uncertain when Calvin jumped in. “If you don’t get me to an elevator in the next thirty seconds, I’m leaving. And when Grant calls to ask why I missed such an important meeting, I’ll tell him that Gus wouldn’t let me go up.”

“Fred,” Gus called to another guard who’d just joined him. He explained the issue to the man.

“Right this way, Mr. Coburn.”

They took Calvin through the metal detector and used the manual detector to scan his body as fast as they could, without a word. He was probably the only collector in Vegas who had never carried a weapon.

They escorted him to the nearest open elevator.

“Please don’t say anything about the delay to Mr. Grant,” Fred mumbled. “We could lose our jobs.”

“I’ll think about it.” Calvin stepped into the elevator. “Penthouse,” he said to the elevator operator. “Doug Grant’s office.”

He was pleased with how he’d gotten in. He might be only a bill collector, but he knew how to act with the arrogance of the very wealthy.

Ace was parked in a modest rental car. He’d been waiting for half an hour in a distant corner of the parking lot where no one would recognize him, but where he could see everyone leaving or entering the building.

He’d called Pitt twenty minutes before and had confirmed that Watters was on his way and that he’d agreed to wear the hat, sunglasses and coat before he went into the lobby.

Ace had spotted Watters as soon as he walked down the sidewalk to the front entrance and entered the building. He was impossible to miss and would not be forgotten.

Killing Grant in his office or transporting him there after his death would have been too risky and probably impossible with the state of the art security system in the complex. Watters was the perfect fall guy, but Ace had to link Watters and Grant somehow and that was the challenge. A guy like Grant wouldn’t be caught a hundred yards from Watters. This was the only way Ace could see connecting Watters and Grant and it could also potentially implicate Pitt. There was no other way to associate Watters with Grant and still lead the cops to connect the dots.

Earlier, Ace had an informant get him all the information he needed on the LVMPD, because once the Grant homicide investigation began, he’d be following it with interest. He could have dialed the Homicide Division directly, but he wanted to play the concerned, frightened, innocent citizen, one who only knew to call 911 in case of an emergency.

He waited ten minutes after Watters had entered the building before picking up his untraceable cell phone and dialing the three digits.

“Hello, 911 emergency.”

“I need to speak to someone right away,” he said. “A murder is about to occur and the police need to stop it.”

Ace could tell by the sound of the police officer’s voice that the man was concerned, but the officer remained composed. “Would you repeat that, please?”

He did.

“I’m going to transfer you to Homicide. Please hold.”

The call was picked up in ten seconds. “Detective Hartford, Homicide. You’re claiming someone’s about to be murdered. Who? And where?”

Ace grinned. “I have reason to believe that Doug Grant is going to be murdered.”

“Doug Grant, the casino owner? When and by whom?”

Hartford sounded shocked. That was the reaction Ace wanted. It would make the detective more likely to act than stop to think about the credibility of the call.

“Just listen,” he said, forcing his voice to sound scared. “I’m risking my life by making this call. If people involved find out I’ve reported this information to the police, I’ll be the next dead man.” He didn’t wait for a response. “I have solid information that a man named Calvin Watters is going to murder Doug Grant in his private office in the next few minutes. You need to get patrol cars over there right away.”

He gave Hartford the address even though he knew he didn’t need to.

“Watters entered the building three minutes ago. He made an appointment with Grant for nine thirty this morning under false pretenses. He’s using the alias Winston Coburn III and he’ll have a phony business card to show the guards at the front desk. He’s wearing a Panama hat, black sunglasses and a long tan coat. By now, he may already be on the elevator. If you don’t get officers there in time to stop Grant’s murder, I’ll let it be known anonymously that you received this call and because of your delay, you’re to blame for Grant’s death.”

“Okay. But you have to tell me your—”

Ace hung up. Then he drove away, smiling.

Grant’s suite was the only one on the penthouse floor. When Calvin strode out of the elevator, he approached the double front doors and knocked.

No one answered.

He tried the doorknob and found the door unlocked.

Hmmm…I guess Grant really did step out.

He pushed the doors open and walked in. “Hello? Grant?”

Silence.

Since Grant had left the doors unlocked, Calvin could only surmise the man had planned to return soon. Besides, Pitt always had good information as to where the target would be.

Maybe Grant left the money for me to pick up, to avoid meeting me.

He passed through a secretary’s room, which connected to a larger carpeted office with a bathroom off to one side. Grant’s office. The aroma of expensive leather and the scent of pipe tobacco filled the air.

This was the first time that Calvin’s boss had ever been wrong about where a prospect would be. Also, from what he had seen, Grant hadn’t left the money in a package to be picked up. He would have put it near the front

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