“We’ll keep you out of the hot spot, but linked in so you know what’s going on.”

“Just tell me where you want me.”

Moving on, Eve thought as she climbed into the van with her team, fit on her earpiece. Step by step.

Link with building security, establish eyes and ears in and out. Establish target is on-site. If so, locate and disable his vehicle. All teams move into secondary hold positions. Disrupt apartment security, disable elevator. Move into corridor, block stairwell, lock down building. Trap him like a rat.

Break in the door, go in hot. Take him down.

If target wasn’t on-site, wait until he was and proceed.

Bree shifted over to her. “I wanted to thank you for requesting me as part of your team.”

“Maybe I just wanted to keep an eye on you so you don’t screw up.”

Bree offered a tight smile. “I won’t. My parents are with Melly, at our place. I didn’t update them. Just in case.”

“That’s best.”

“I want to be able to tell them we got him.”

“Then let’s make it happen.”

“I know Nikos got in your face, and Ricchio’s, about Price. Things get around.”

Cop shops, Eve thought. Some aspects had no geography. “Yeah, they do.”

“I know you stood up for him.”

“He didn’t screw up. It was bad luck, that’s all. Nikos knows that, too. She’s just pissed and frustrated.”

“Yeah, but still. It’s appreciated.”

“You can buy me a drink when this is done.”

“You got it.”

Here we go, she thought as the van pulled over. “Team Two in position,” she said into her mic. “Sound it off.”

She listened as team leaders reported, gestured to the e-man on her team. “Bring it up. Let’s have a look.”

She studied the building, all shimmering gold and glass in a wide curve. Railed balconies spread into longer, deeper terraces on the upper levels.

And McQueen’s, the top level, east corner. “Zoom it in on target.”

She edged forward. Unless he had a parachute or a personal jet lift, he couldn’t escape by way of the terrace. With the elevator and stairs blocked, he wouldn’t have access to the roof.

The only way out would be through a wall of cops. He wouldn’t make it.

“Do a sweep, ground level,” she ordered.

She spotted the softclothed cops in position or moving into. The couple having coffee at the sidewalk café nestled beside the building, a man sitting on a wall above a bunch of flowers working a PPC. Still another window-shopping.

She counted off the rest.

She’d given strict orders not to approach or pursue should McQueen be spotted outside. The last thing she wanted was another chase, and any opportunity for him to slip the net.

“We’re in,” Roarke said in her ear.

“Copy that. Show me.”

The monitor switched again, showing her the lobby area—glossy, elegant—droid at a long, low table to check in visitors, deliveries, cleaning crews. Lots of flowers in angled glass vases along one wall.

While he took her through maintenance areas, security stations, utility rooms, Team Four’s leader sounded in her ear.

“Sensors read empty, Lieutenant.”

She thought, Crap. “We hold. Team Five, move on the garage. Let’s see if he’s on the road or on foot. If you locate the vehicle, disable.”

She settled back. “Roarke, let’s see his floor.”

She studied the corridor, the placement of other apartments, the position of the stairs, the elevators. And the security on McQueen’s door.

“Target’s vehicle in assigned slot. Now disabled.”

“Acknowledged. We hold.”

And, she thought, we wait.

A few blocks away McQueen browsed the selections of a gourmet market. He’d missed this—missed the time to do as he liked, missed enjoying a meal of his own choosing when he chose to enjoy it.

He intended to make himself a very special dinner, the last before he had some company.

The last before Eve joined him.

It would work very well, he thought as he considered the artichokes. He knew just where to find her now.

The hotel security on communication was, as you’d expect from a Roarke property, perfection. But the Dallas police weren’t quite so clever or well-funded. It hadn’t been difficult to triangulate her signal during their last contact. And tonight, he’d pay her a visit. He would, undoubtedly, have to kill Roarke, which was a shame considering all that lovely money that might have come into his hands.

But Eve was worth the cost.

Just a few more details to iron out, which he’d do after marketing.

He found himself staring, unable to make a decision on olives. So many different choices, all those little jars. How was he suppose to pick one, to know what he’d want in an hour? In two?

Annoyed with himself, he grabbed one at random, then another, then two more. Of course he knew what he wanted, what he would want. He just had so many things on his mind. Gaining entrance to the hotel, then to Eve’s rooms wasn’t a snap, after all. Not that it was beyond his reach, but it did take careful planning. Hardly a wonder he couldn’t decide on olives.

He took out his PPC, where he’d carefully noted down everything he’d need for his special meal. Calmer now, he continued to browse. Everything was so much better when it was noted down, organized.

He studied the little berry tomatoes for a long time.

“Something’s going on at the Gold Door.”

McQueen came out of what felt like a trance. “What did you say?”

“Cops.”

He jerked, fumbled, and nearly dropped his basket. With his head swiveling from side to side, he prepared to run.

Then he saw the stock boy talking to another one of the staff.

“Cops at that place?” the stock boy snickered. “What, did somebody trip over their money and fall out the window?”

“Maybe bigger. I had a delivery over there. When I came out I see this cop.”

“So. Cops are everywhere except when you want them.”

“You took your cynical pill this morning. Not just a cop, a detective, and he must’ve been undercover.”

“Then how do you know he’s a detective?”

“Because I know him. Detective Buck Anderson. He came in to talk to my criminology class a couple weeks ago. He’s pretty chill, man, made me think about being a cop.”

This time a snicker and a snort from the stock boy. “As if.”

“I’d be a mag cop. I spotted an undercover detective, right? He’s sitting on the wall over there, jeans and a T-shirt, sunshades, but I recognized him.”

“Maybe it’s his day off.”

“No way, ’cause when I said hi to him, he acted like he didn’t know me. I talked to him after class for like twenty minutes. He gave me his card and everything. Like I said, he was chill, but he said I had it wrong. ‘Do I look like a cop,’ he says to me, and tells me to get lost.”

Вы читаете New York to Dallas
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