“Okay,” Quinn said. “Then we’re set on my end.”
It was a straightforward op, the kind that should go off flawlessly. Only the job in L.A. was supposed to have been the same kind of thing.
Quinn couldn’t help wondering how this one was going to get screwed up, too.
“IF WE’RE TOO LATE …” PETRA LET THE SENTENCE hang, not wanting to give voice to her biggest fear.
So much time wasted.
Bangkok. Hong Kong. New Jersey. And yesterday Los Angeles.
All a waste of time.
In each case they’d been too late. The only positive Petra could take from any of it was that they seemed to be getting closer. While McKitrick, Chang, and Thomas had been dead or missing before she had arrived, Winters had at least still been alive. For a while, anyway.
That left Moody. If they didn’t find him, then the promise she and the others had made to those who had died would go unfulfilled, the justice they sought rendered permanently unfinished.
But Moody had proved frustrating in his own way. Mikhail’s search for him had led from Philadelphia to Manhattan to Boston.
Only Boston wasn’t the end, either. It was just another stop on Moody’s trail. He
It was a 112-mile drive north to Portland, but traffic made it seem twice as far. They were already past the two-hour mark, but only halfway there. If it was possible, the traffic here was even worse than it had been in Los Angeles.
“We’ll get him,” Mikhail reassured her.
Petra glanced at him, surprised that he could read her so well. They were in the back seat of a Nissan Maxima, Mikhail with his laptop propped on his lap and a cell phone in his hand, and Petra holding nothing but her fear that they would fail again. Kolya was up front driving.
“Hello?” Mikhail said into his phone.
He hung up the phone and looked at Petra.
“What?” she asked.
“Stepka got an address,” Mikhail said.
“How old?” she asked.
He shook his head. “Not old.” He smiled. “Current.”
They reached Portland at nine- thirty, and twenty minutes later entered the small town of Gorham.
“There,” Mikhail said, pointing at a house on the left, set back from the street.
“I don’t see any lights,” Kolya said. “Maybe he’s not home.”
They drove past, continuing down the road another hundred yards before Petra told Kolya to pull to the side.
“What now?” Mikhail asked.
Petra considered their options. They could get out of the car here and work their way back in the darkness. Take some time to observe the house, make sure nothing was amiss before making a move. That would be the cautious approach.
But so far the cautious approach hadn’t worked for them.
“We go knock on the door,” she said.
While the day had been cool, the night was bordering on damn cold. Quinn was wearing two T-shirts, a thick sweater, and a wool jacket. He’d even put thermals on under his jeans. Still, he swore he could feel his body temperature lowering.
Nate was similarly attired. But if he was as miserable as Quinn, he wasn’t saying anything. They’d been waiting in the woods for an hour, having worked their way in from a half mile away.
They’d found a suitable hiding place between some trees and bushes, a small area that had been flattened by either kids or an animal. Not quite the fort Quinn had had in his youth, but it would do.
They were behind the garage, and from that angle could see only part of the back of the house and none of the front yard. The windows on this side were all dark. Perhaps the target had turned in early.
Donovan’s voice came over their comm gear. “Position check.”
“Set,” five voices replied, one after the other in a prearranged order. Quinn and Nate remained silent. Donovan was only interested in his ops team at the moment, not the cleaning crew.
Quinn checked his watch. Seven minutes until show-time.
“How long do you think it’ll take them?” Nate whispered.
Quinn kept his eyes on the dark house. “We’ll get the call at 10:05.”
“My money’s on 10:07,” Nate said.