A few seconds later, they circled the roundabout and sped off.
“You didn’t like his answers,” Drew said through winded breaths.
“He’s a damn liar. I’m certain Mom
“I’d say it’s time to nail someone.” The screech of tires failing to hug a corner punctuated Drew’s comment.
“You’ve got an eight-month pregnant wife. This is up to me.”
“What’s my wife got to do with this?”
“Everything, Drew. They’ll go after your family if they have to. You hang back. Relay messages.”
“No—”
“Yes. I’ve got a plan,” Peter lied. “It doesn’t require your direct help.” Peter sensed that Drew somehow understood the danger, not to himself, but to his wife and unborn child.
“You better keep me in the loop, White Bread.”
“I will,” Peter said, lying for the second time in less than twenty seconds.
Half an hour later, again on his own, Peter phoned for messages. When he got Kate’s urgent directive to meet for dinner, he checked his watch. He had four hours to kill. Fifteen minutes later, he accessed and withdrew cash from an automatic teller machine. With four hundred of those dollars, he purchased a twenty-one speed, all- surface bike. Peter decided he didn’t dare rent or borrow a car. For the time being, he figured he’d be much tougher to locate on a bike or on foot.
Peter rode the new bike into Del Mar to wait for Kate. He sat in a corner of a bar, ordered a beer, and watched the front door as nonchalantly as he could manage. At half past five, he checked for messages on his home answering machine and in Drew’s mailbox.
He never returned to his table.
Howard Muller couldn’t be happier. All he needed was for Neil to pick up his messages, phone for instructions, and get his ass to the office. It was nearly perfect. Neil confronting ex-Detective Ellis had everybody paranoid. That Neil alluded to Sarah Guzman and mentioned Carlos Nunoz by name had sealed his fate.
While Guzman and Nunoz operated in the background on their own complex plans, Muller had made the unilateral decision to take matters into his own hands. He didn’t need Nunoz’ help. He didn’t even need to consult with the sub-intelligent wetback. He had figured out a way to solve several problems at once. He’d get those damning papers back, not because he cared about Nunoz or Guzman—on the contrary, he’d just as soon see their bodies in a state of decomposition—but because his name was attached to nearly every illegal Stenman transaction in the last five years. Even those idiot bureaucrats at the SEC would be able to trace his involvement. In some ways, even more satisfying than settling that matter would be scaring the shit out of Neil. Maybe, as payback, even break him. And once the documents were safe, Neil’s life expectancy would be days if he was nimble, hours if he wasn’t. Muller laughed. This felt better than watching a company he was short declare bankruptcy.
Muller looked around the room and approved. He had chosen his office as the place of confrontation for a simple reason: he owned every person on these premises. If the unforeseen happened and a problem arose—which he didn’t think could happen since he controlled all the information—then he had the ability to erase everything. Stenman’s crews were all former government agents, and they knew how to clean up a mess and make it disappear. And they would do anything for the right kind of money, and Stenman Partners had more than enough of that particular commodity.
Muller had only a small fear that Neil might not take the bait. Failing to check for messages in time would puncture his plan. He kept his fingers crossed that Neil didn’t screw this up for him.
Near six p.m., Muller’s phone rang. He hit speaker.
“You son of a bitch!” Peter’s voice sounded like an attack-dog’s bark.
Good, Muller thought. He’s primed. “Get your ass moving,” Muller ordered, having a hard time working the words through a ridiculous grin. “The guards’ll wave you through.”
“Where is she?”
“I’ll look forward to explaining.” Muller hung up.
He rose from his desk and went to the file cabinet. He opened the drawer and took out a thin, two-inch by three-inch metal box. He depressed a red button located next to a small antenna. The process made him feel warm inside.
Sliding the metal box across his desk as if it were an attacking queen, he said, through an exultant laugh, “Checkmate, Mr. Neil. Check
Peter hung up and reached into his pocket for additional change. He silently cursed himself for having left his cell phone at home. The sloppiness did nothing for his already waning confidence.
Before pedaling the last quarter mile and confronting Muller, Peter phoned Drew at home. Drew picked up on the first ring.
“Any word from Monica?” Peter asked.
“No. Where are you, Bread?”
“I’m checking things out. Don’t leave the house unless you hear from her. I’ll call you as soon as I find out anything.”
Peter hung up, jumped on his bike, and began pedaling through the dark.
None of this made sense, he thought as he struggled to focus on the white curb. Muller had called Peter’s home and left a message. “I have a trade in mind,” he had said. “Someone’s welfare for some papers—I’m certain you know what documents I’m referring to. Check with your friend Drew Franklin. He’s missing something valuable.”
Peter had called Drew. “Monica’s gone,” Drew had told him. “Left no message. This isn’t like her, and I’m worried.”
“I’m sure she’s fine,” Peter said, not at all sure.
Now, approaching the guarded gate, Peter couldn’t figure out why Muller was so mindless as to leave an incriminating message on an answering machine. If the fool had kidnapped Monica and planned to use her as leverage to get those registered letters returned, why leave such a blatant trail? It didn’t add up, but Peter didn’t have the time to deliberate.
As promised, the guards waved him through Stenman’s main entrance. He downshifted and coasted down the hill leading to the front doors, not dismounting his bike until he reached the steps. Ignoring the watchman’s gaze, he dropped the bike on the lawn at the base of the stairs, used his pass card to enter, and signed in at the front desk. As he stepped inside the elevator, he saw the downstairs guard make a call.
On the third floor, Peter stepped into the half-lit hallway. Past experience suggested that the only people in on a Saturday evening were research analysts on the second floor and weekend cleaning crews. No cleaning crews on the third floor, though. A mop stood upright, its cloth tendrils soaking in an aluminum pail—obviously left behind by someone told to leave in a hurry.
Reaching the keypad outside of trading, Peter heard the lock disengage before he could enter the password. He opened and stepped into the room, completely darkened except where a crack of light leaked from between Muller’s drawn curtains. The main door retracted at Peter’s back and self-locked. Feeling his way along the desks, he took care not to trip over trashcans or electrical cords. Disinfectant now masked the predominant weekday aroma—fried food. The silence unnerved him. The place no longer felt familiar.
Peter mentally reviewed what he knew about Muller’s office. Stuart had mentioned large amounts of cash behind one panel. Muller kept his desk key in a card file in a far corner, and had Civil War crap mounted behind glass cabinets—probably wired to an alarm in the event of theft. The interior office walls were see-through, like glass, but soundproof. With the drapes drawn, that meant that whatever went on inside would remain private, even if somebody stumbled into the trading room.
What else? He racked his brain. Peter recalled a fire alarm and numerous overhead sprinklers. Also, the locks on his office door were sophisticated. Muller changed the code weekly, Stuart had said.
Before Peter knocked, the door swung open. Looking self-satisfied, Howard Muller sat perched behind his desk with a smart-ass grin pasted ear-to-ear. “I realize you are in a bit of a rush, so please step in,” he said.
Peter complied. This door also self-shut and locked. “Where’s Monica Franklin?” he snapped.
Muller, a bundle of explosive energy, looked like he enjoyed the confrontation with Peter. “You have