returned.
“Here’s where we are.” He slid a sheet of paper across the table at Nate. A large stamp proclaimed, ATTORNEY WORK PRODUCT-CONFIDENTIAL. There was the witness list, the eight familiar names.
The whole black plot, confirmed.
“Anastasia Shevchenko had two prior DUIs and was driving on a suspended license,” Abara said. “Which means they’ll nail her on a Watson murder. She’s staring at a life sentence. They have her dead to rights.”
Finally they were into the meat of the matter. Nate forced himself to slow down, to parse the matter properly so they could come out the other end rather than run frenzied circles. “So her only way off,” he said, “is if Pavlo kills the witnesses.”
“Pretty much. She smashed that family to shit and ran away, like you said. At which point her old man swung into cleanup mode, reported her Jag stolen, all that. So her lawyers-her dad’s all-star
“No other witnesses?”
“No.” For the first time, Abara looked weary, his eyes puffy. But beneath the fatigue was something harder- edged-a calm fury. Knocking off a van load of witnesses to protect a drunk driver probably hit a level of lawless disregard that even an FBI agent didn’t encounter every day. “After the hit-and-run, she ran to Nebesa, a Ukrainian club-she’s there every fucking Tuesday. Given who her old man is, good luck reversing an alibi out of that joint.”
“How did Urban get his hands on the witness list?”
“Not sure. He had some known associates who are skilled hackers, so maybe they cracked it out of the prosecutor’s hard drive. It was confidential as hell, that’s for sure. The prosecutor went to great lengths to protect the names. Blacked out the police report. All proceedings in camera-judge’s chambers with only one side present, no transcript available to the defense. The judge had had a turn or two around the dance floor with Pavlo, knew the colorful backstory. She figured the risk of witness intimidation was high enough to keep the names of material witnesses secret.”
“And the trial is…?”
“Next month.”
“Thus the urgency,” Nate said. “Why didn’t the witnesses know about all this?”
“If they knew who they were testifying against, it might spook them.”
“Might?” Nate said.
“Never know. One of them might be a crazy-ass loose cannon. Like you.”
Nate blew out a breath. “So what now?”
“We’ll get to those witnesses right away, make sure everyone’s safe until this thing settles.”
“How quickly can you get Pavlo in custody?”
“A case like this takes a while to build,” Abara said, “let alone file.”
“Your confidence is comforting.”
Abara’s mouth tensed. “Believe me, crimes this …
“What would you need to make it airtight?”
“A confession.” Abara snickered at the thought. “Flipping his daughter, maybe, in exchange for immunity on the drunk-driving murder. Getting any of the club witnesses to change their story. In other words, shit that won’t happen given who Shevchenko is and the power he has over these people.”
“With what you
“Probably. But with his lawyers? He’ll be out on bail. Plus, his men…”
“What about his men?”
“We know some of the names in his orbit,” Abara said. “The old-school blues with the tattoos, all that. Yuri Ivashko just applied for naturalization. Valerik Koval. Dimitri Zotov. Sure. We can roll them up, see if we can make something stick. But word is, Pavlo has a new hitter off the boat from the old country, a stone-cold pro.”
“Misha,” Nate said. “Number Six.”
“We don’t know who he is, let alone where to find him.”
Nate’s teeth ground, a muted shriek of frustration inside his skull. “My family,” he said.
“We can dispatch agents to your house right now.”
“If sedans pull up to our front door, you might as well paint a target on my daughter’s forehead,” Nate said. “Can you get her and Janie into Witness Protection?”
“We will make sure they’re safe.”
A cold flutter moved through Nate’s stomach. “That’s not what I asked.”
Troubled, Abara pivoted aside in his chair and regarded his reflection in the one-way. “A lot of people have been waiting for a break on Pavlo Shevchenko for a long time, not least of all the DA’s office. The head deputy of Major Crimes wants to press the strongest plays with the cleanest links and the most physical evidence-solicitation of murder for Danny Urban and the names on that list. As for you, your wife, your daughter, unfortunately, none of you are witnesses. You’re not actually testifying to anything.”
“That asshole
“Not a scrap. It’s your word against Pavlo’s. Watch your average rape trial to see how well those cases turn out.” Abara’s even features tensed into a grimace. He smelled of cologne or scented deodorant. “Plus, no one’s been killed.”
The two men stared at each other, the cold of the room chilling Nate’s lungs. His arms were crossed, his left wrist giving off an ache that would have been agonizing if he were of a mind to focus on it.
Abara spidered his fingers on the table. “I have a buddy at the Marshals Service. I’ll call him to look into WitSec for your family. But it’s a long shot. And there’s a process-”
“What the hell are we supposed to do in the meantime?” Nate didn’t like the panic he heard creeping into his voice beneath the anger.
“As I said, we can roll a couple sedans right now.”
“It’s not
“Look, we can send a patrol car around at intervals, keep an eye on them-”
“Like you did me after the bank robbery? Because within eight hours Pavlo had me ensconced in a fucking ice block!” The throbbing intensified in the bones of Nate’s left hand. He clasped it under the table, but it refused to form more than a loose claw. “Given that man’s reach, are you really telling me that half-assed police protection is a good idea?”
Abara pursed his lips. Said nothing.
“The FBI can’t move into our house and play nanny indefinitely,” Nate said. “I get it. Then let me out of here.
“You’re wanted on charges. Remember? Terrorist threat to an airliner.”
Nate stood quickly, his chair toppling, and Abara matched him, one hand raised calmingly.
“You’re not keeping me in here,” Nate said. “If
“You gonna shoot your way out, Nate?”
“You saw what I did at the bank.”
Abara’s pulse beat at his temple. A tense smile. Then he said, “Why don’t we sit a second.”
“I don’t have a fucking second. You put me in jail, Janie and Cielle are dead. Plus, tell me a guy like Pavlo can’t get to me in jail. Easier than on the street. He’ll have me gutted in there.”
Abara eased back into his chair, strummed his fingers. “Despite all logic and reason, I like you, Nate. So I’m not gonna lie to you. Having a patrol car check on your family at intervals does carry some risk-”