ideal spot. He came out with two guns-one with real bullets, one with the Etorphine. He didn’t wait. While holding the real gun on him, he shot Crisp with the Etorphine and kept his distance while the man passed out.
Win and Myron moved two rows back and sat next to each other. Mee, ever the professional flight attendant, ran through a full safety talk, demonstrating how to use the seat belt, how to secure your oxygen mask before helping others, how to inflate the life jacket. Win watched her with his patented rakish grin.
“Demonstrate the blowing in the tube part again,” he said to Mee.
Win.
The takeoff was smooth enough to be choreographed by Motown. Myron called Esperanza. When he heard about his father being back in surgery, he closed his eyes and just tried to breathe. Concentrate on the possible. Dad had the best medical care. If Myron wanted to help, there was only one way: Find Brad.
“Did you learn anything about the Abeona Shelter?” he asked Esperanza.
“Not a thing. It’s like it doesn’t exist.”
Myron hung up. He and Win discussed what they already knew and what it meant. “Lex gave me the answer right from the start,” Myron said. “All couples have secrets.”
“Hardly an earth-shattering revelation,” Win said.
“Do we have secrets, Win?”
“No. But we don’t have sex either.”
“You think sex leads to secrets?” Myron asked.
“You don’t?”
“I always thought sex leads to greater intimacy.”
“Bah,” Win said.
“Bah?”
“You’re so naive.”
“How so?”
“Didn’t we prove it’s just the opposite? Couples-those having sex like Lex and Suzze-those are the ones who keep secrets.”
He had a point. “So where are we off to?”
“You’ll see.”
“I thought we had no secrets.”
Crisp started to stir. He opened one eye, then the other. He didn’t react. He let it settle, trying to put together where exactly he was and what he should do next. He looked over at Myron and Win.
“You know what Herman Ache will do to you?” Crisp asked. Then: “You can’t be this stupid.”
Win arched an eyebrow. “Can’t we?”
“You guys aren’t that tough.”
“We keep hearing that.”
“Herman will kill you. He’ll kill your whole family. He’ll make sure the last thing your loved one ever does is curse your name and beg to die.”
“Well, well,” Win said, “doesn’t Herman have a flair for the dramatic? Fortunately I do have something of a plan. A win-win for all involved, including you.”
Crisp said nothing.
“We are going to pay dearest Herman a visit,” Win said to him. “The four of us will sit down, perhaps over a nice latte. We will all cooperate. We will reveal all. And then we will work out a mutually beneficial understanding so that no one gets harmed.”
“Meaning?”
“Detente. Have you heard of it?”
“I have,” Crisp said. “I’m not sure Herman has.”
Myron’s thought exactly. But Win seemed untroubled.
“Herman is a sweetheart, you will see,” Win said. “In the meantime, what happened to Myron’s brother?”
Crisp frowned. “The guy married to Kitty?”
“Yes.”
“How the hell would I know?”
Win sighed. “Cooperate. Reveal all. Remember?”
“I’m serious. We didn’t even know Kitty was around until she contacted Lex. I don’t have a clue where her husband is.”
Myron thought about that. He knew that Crisp could be lying-probably was-but what he said fit with what Lex had told them.
Win unfastened his seat belt and walked over to Evan Crisp. He handed him the satellite phone. “I need you to call Herman Ache. Tell him we will meet him at his Livingston residence within the hour.”
Crisp offered up skeptical. “You’re kidding, right?”
“I am indeed a mirthful fellow. But no.”
“He won’t let you in armed.”
“That’s fine. We don’t need weapons. If anyone touches a hair on our heads, the world finds out the truth about Gabriel Wire. Bye-bye, big money. We are also moving Lex Ryder-your cash cow, if you will-to a secure location. Do you see?”
“Cooperation,” Crisp said. “Reveal all.”
“I love it when we have an understanding.”
Crisp made the call. Win stood over him the whole time. On the other end of the phone, Herman Ache didn’t like what he was hearing, not at first, but Crisp explained what Win wanted to do. In the end Herman agreed to the meet.
“Wonderful,” Win said.
Myron looked at Crisp’s smile, then up at Win. “I’m not sure I like being kept in the dark,” Myron said.
“You don’t trust me?” Win asked.
“You know better.”
“I do. And I have it under control.”
“You’re not infallible, Win.”
“Correct,” Win said. Then he added, “But I’m also not always your faithful sidekick.”
“You may be putting us in a dangerous situation.”
“No, Myron, you did that. When you agreed to help Suzze and all those who came before her, you put us where we are now. I’m just trying to find us a way out.”
Myron said, “Wow.”
“The truth hurts, old friend.”
And in truth, it did.
“If there’s nothing more…” Win checked his watch and smiled at his favorite stewardess. “We still have thirty minutes before we land. You stay and watch our prisoner. I’m going into the bedroom for a little Mee time.”
32
Big Cyndi met them at the Essex County Airport in Caldwell, New Jersey. She put Lex, the nurse, and the baby in an SUV. Big Cyndi was going to bring them to Zorra, the cross-dressing former Mossad agent, and then Zorra would find a safe house and would tell no one-not even Myron or Win-where it was. This way, Win had explained, if his plan somehow backfired and Herman Ache grabbed and tortured them, they wouldn’t be able to tell them where Lex was.
“How comforting,” Myron had said.
Win had a car waiting. Normally he’d use a driver, but why put anyone else in danger? Crisp was fully awake now. They pushed him in the backseat and redid his restraints, adding some to his legs. Myron sat in the passenger seat. Win drove.
Herman Ache lived in a legendary mansion in Livingston, scant miles from where Myron grew up. When Myron