Because The Ghost’s third assignment of the day was to make sure he never did.
His next stop was the cousin’s house. It was located in a working-class neighborhood, fairly empty this time of day. There were two cars in the drive. A gray Suburban, and to the right of it, looking like a pygmy in comparison, a red Toyota Tercel.
Parked at the curb out front was an unmarked sedan with a small scanner antenna on top.
This would be the cousin’s car.
The Ghost drove past the house twice, checking the windows, but the shades had been drawn and there was no way to see inside. The presence of the cars, however, was a fairly good indication that Pope was still here and wasn’t alone.
Feeling the need to assess the situation, The Ghost parked under some trees near a vacant lot about two blocks north of the house.
The cousin was undoubtedly inside questioning Pope about his altercation with the twin defenders and the events that had led up to it. Pope had clearly threatened Troy over the phone, promising to spill his guts if he wasn’t left alone, so The Ghost had to assume that that was exactly what he was doing. Which meant that a single mark had now become multiple targets, the number of which depended on how many people were in that house to hear what Pope had to say.
The Ghost would have to kill them all.
This did not make him happy. He considered, for a moment, simply driving away and telling Troy he was on his own with this one. It was Troy’s own paranoia that had created this mess in the first place.
Instead, he picked up his cell phone and dialed.
A moment later, Troy’s voice was on the line. “Talk to me.” “You’ve put me in an impossible situation,” The Ghost said. “He’s not alone in the house and there’s no way to know how much he’s told or who he’s told it to.”
“What are you suggesting?”
“Nothing. I don’t make suggestions. You know that.”
“So, in other words,” Troy said, “you want more money.”
“That would be the gist of it, yes.”
“How much?”
The Ghost thought about it.
“Why don’t we do it this way. Take whatever the hypnotist owes you and multiply it by five.”
“Are you fucking nuts? That’s a lot of cash.”
“Do you want this situation contained, or don’t you?”
There was a long beat of silence on the line. Then Troy said, “All right. Whatever you want.”
“Make sure it’s in my Cayman account by close of business day. I’ll be checking. And if it’s not there…”
“Relax. It’ll be there. Just make sure you shut that son of a bitch up.”
“Consider it done,” The Ghost said. And as he clicked off, he couldn’t help but smile. Troy’s constant paranoia never ceased to amuse him.
Truth be told, Pope was not really all that much of a threat. He was a gambler and a womanizer and could easily be painted as an unstable, unreliable witness if it came down to that. And what he didn’t know about Troy’s business activities would probably fit in a small ware house.
No one had to die over this.
All Troy had to do was make a few adjustments, shred a few documents, rely on his “contacts” in the police department and Federal Prosecutor’s Office to grease a few wheels and make sure that Lady Justice turned a blind eye to his lawlessness. He was a rich man, and that’s what rich men do. Always have.
But Troy was also a man who lived in fear. And The Ghost was more than happy to reap the benefits of that fear. A couple more scores like this and he’d be a rich man himself.
He was thinking about what he might do with all that money when he noticed movement down the street.
Grabbing his field glasses, he aimed them toward the cousin’s house. The door was open and two men and a woman were moving quickly down the walkway, Pope among them, followed shortly by a another woman carrying a small boy in her arms.
The boy looked listless. Sick.
What was this all about?
They climbed into the gray Suburban, and before the tail-lights lit up The Ghost tossed the field glasses aside, uttering a curse as he started his engine.
Moving targets are always problematic. This assignment was getting far more complicated than he’d like.
It looked as if he was really going to have to earn his money today.
An hour and a half later, The Ghost found himself parked, of all places, in a gas station just off the Oasis lot, his field glasses trained on the front gate of the neighboring Nevada Women’s Correctional Facility.
He could not fathom what these people were up to. A trip to the hospital had been followed by a straight trek out here, leaving the child and the second woman behind. He would not harm a child, but the woman was a loose end he knew he’d have to take care of at the earliest possible opportunity.
Following the Suburban, he at first thought they were headed to the Oasis to confront Troy directly, but rather than make the turn, they had continued on to the prison.
The only reason he could figure for this stop was a visit to Pope’s wife. The child killer.
But why?
It made no sense.
Unless it had nothing to do with Troy at all. Unless they were up to something that was entirely unrelated to Troy’s paranoia.
The Ghost had to admit he was curious. But when it came down to it, none of this made a difference. It was not his job to understand these people and their motivations. His only concern was logistics.
The assignment might have become more complicated, but it hadn’t changed.
Troy wanted the spillage mopped up.
The situation contained.
And all The Ghost could do was wait for the perfect opportunity to strike.
3 3
It was growing dark by the time they left the prison.
Anna could tell that Pope was in no mood for conversation, so she sat quietly in the backseat of the Suburban, thinking about Susan’s words.
And about her madness.
As much as she understood Pope’s desire to see the woman dead or locked up here forever, Anna didn’t believe she deserved either. What she needed was help. A long, heavy dose of psychological therapy. And even that wouldn’t guarantee she’d ever be whole again.
Anna knew it all stemmed from that moment in the alley. If Susan’s terror had been only half of what Jillian’s was-or Anna’s, for that matter-then it was more than enough to permanently damage her.
Then again, maybe Susan wasn’t so crazy after all.
She believed that her son had visited her, had forgiven her for her sins. But if Anna’s mother could pay a visit, why not Ben? Perhaps the dead return when we need them most. To reassure us. To guide us.
To save us.
If nothing else, Anna now knew that the world did not quite operate the way she once believed it did. There were entire levels of existence at play that most people never even knew about.
So where did she draw the line when it came to deciding who was crazy and who was not? Or what was real