“Are you okay?” Nick asked Rachel, turning so he could look into her eyes.
“I…I’m okay…I guess,” Rachel answered. She took stock of her physical condition, while trying to calm her heart rate down before the organ burst from its chest cavity position. “Did somebody try to shoot me?”
“Does anyone want you dead? A few of my readers have e-mailed me about pooling their money together for my demise, but -”
“How did you know?” Rachel broke in, ignoring Nick’s attempt at levity. “I’d have been dead if -”
“Hey…you two alright?” Grace called out, as the sound of sirens drew closer. “I think it’s over.”
“We’re okay. You’re probably right, but maybe we should stay where we are until some help arrives,” Nick suggested. “Hey, Grace, you civil servants are pretty well armed.”
Nick heard a stifled laugh from across the way.
“Tim and I are trying to figure out whether you paid for this just to impress Kimmy,” Grace shouted back, drawing laughter from Nick as the first approaching squad car screamed up in front of the Marriott entrance, joined by three others in short order.
Nick turned to see Rachel staring at him questioningly. He stopped laughing. “I hope you don’t think -”
“How did you know, Nick?”
“I saw a glint in the distance and decided looking like a fool would be preferable to one of us getting shot,” Nick answered truthfully, lowering his voice as the police sirens cut off. “So, I yanked you to the side. I figured if I was wrong, I could tell you I tripped.”
“That was fun.” Grace leaned down to give Rachel a hand up. “Nice moves for a writer, Nick.”
“I wasn’t always a writer.” Nick stood up away from the car, allowing Grace to handle Rachel.
Tim walked over to join them. “Maybe we should go back inside.”
“Another Long Island sounds pretty good to me,” Rachel said.
“I have no objections,” Nick added. “I’m staying here.”
“Margaritaville, here I come.” Grace guided Rachel back inside the Marriott’s entrance, walking carefully over to the side away from the glass. Tim walked slightly behind Nick and to his right.
“May I make a suggestion?” Nick stopped, when they were all inside the lobby area. “I think every person walking through any entrance here should be on camera: a good camera, not those grainy, piece of crap, security cams. Also, if it’s not being ordered yet, every person through the doors should be monitored. Anybody expressing interest in my name or room at the front desk should be investigated.”
“You don’t think the sniper’s out of the area by now?” Tim asked.
“Professional assassins have complete disregard for law enforcement and they won’t panic. A silencer was used, so pinpointing the source, even if your investigators narrow down the trajectory, is remote. It might be possible to catch one unawares. They’ll want to know if you’re going to move Kim or not, and any new acquaintances she has in or out of the area.”
“You’re beginning to worry me, Nick.” Tim exchanged concerned looks with his partner.
“I could pretend I’m stupid. I wrote a book titled -”
“
“Can I get that drink now?” Rachel interrupted.
“You go ahead, Grace. I’ll run these suggestions by the locals and see what I can come up with. I don’t want to steal your thunder, Nick, but can I speak as if these suggestions are mine?”
“If you want any chance of them getting followed, you’d better.”
Tim nodded with a smile and left. Grace, Rachel, and Nick took seats again at the same table Nick had reserved earlier. Grace and Rachel ordered their drinks but Nick ordered Iced Tea.
“Not drinking with us, huh partner?”
“Nothing personal, Grace, but I’m not your partner, and I have a sneaking hunch I might end up answering questions all night long in front of a spotlight.”
Grace laughed. “Fair enough.”
The waitress brought over their drinks, including the extra Margarita Grace ordered for Tim.
“You don’t really think he had anything to do with this, do you?” Rachel asked Grace, after gulping a quarter of her drink.
“I’ll have to get back to you on that one, right Nick?”
“She’ll have to get back to you on that, Kim.” Nick relayed the answer as if he were an interpreter.
“I’m sorry I mixed you up in this -”
“Kimmy!” Grace cut her off. “Slow down on the booze, girl.”
Tim arrived at their table a moment later. He took a grateful sip of his Margarita. “They like the suggestions, mostly because they don’t have William Petersen and the CSI Las Vegas cast here to do all those magic tricks like on TV. Did I miss anything? You were saying something about one of Nick’s books?”
“Diego takes a job involving this murderous scumbag who had decided to turn on the mob in exchange for witness protection and a new life. He buys his way in at twenty-five grand a pop, picking people he can get info from in the justice department until he locates the scumbag.”
“Did he shoot him from long range?” Rachel leaned forward uneasily.
“Nope.” Grace shook her head. “Diego blew the crap out of him with a car bomb. The interesting part of the book is how every one of the people who tipped Diego off ended up behind bars but they couldn’t finger Diego. Nick here knows a lot about the Witness Protection Program, don’t you, Nick?”
“Six months of intense research went into that one,” Nick admitted, remembering the hit on Paulo Cortesa. He had scared Cortesa into fleeing the program to Mexico, by planting notes where only Cortesa could find them. “I wrote the whole book first and filled in the details concerning the US Marshalls’ service afterward.”
“You’re just dying to ask us, aren’t you, Nick?” Grace kidded him.
“I’m a writer. I have an imagination and I can add two plus two. No, I don’t care to know anything more than I do right now. If I could put Pandora back in the box, I would have eaten my meals at Denny’s instead of Applebee’s. That’s all you’re gettin’ out of me, Coppers.”
Even Rachel laughed this time.
“Hello, Nick.” Grace waved animatedly as she walked into the interrogation room with Tim behind her. “Sorry about all this.”
“I’m okay with it. I didn’t figure you’d let me toddle along as if I weren’t there. The Detectives have been very nice. The good cop was good and the bad cop was good. Is it time for you two to take a shift? How’s Kim doing?”
“Kim’s getting some sleep at a safe house until we figure this out. You’re a little too calm in interrogation, Nick.” Grace raised her hand in warning as Nick started to speak. “Don’t give me that ‘I wrote a book on it’ nonsense either. I know you did.”
“They’ve been going over my military record since you left me off here last night. You know I was in Delta. We do train for anything, including interrogation.”
“We told them, Nick.” Tim sat down opposite Nick. He placed a cup of coffee in front of him. “We told them you saved Kim and us.”
“We told them we know right where to get you.” Grace sat next to Nick, a big smile on her face. “Want to hear what finally got through to them?”
“Will it get me out of here?”
“They caught him. It was like you wrote the scene. He waited until five in the morning, when everything was quiet, and approached the desk dressed like a business executive. When he asked if you were still checked in, our guy at the desk hit the switch and sniper Sam was surrounded – false ID, false documents, false passport, the whole smear. The bad news is he picked you as his accomplice.”
Nick burst into laughter, nearly choking on his coffee, with Tim and Grace joining in.
“I told them we were acting on your suggestions,” Tim informed him after many moments. “They believe you had nothing to do with the hit – and it was a hit.”