CHAPTER 13
“The Cleaner has arrived?” Romero asked.
“Yes,” Harris replied. “He proved a bit of a challenge, but nothing that couldn’t be handled.”
“I don’t care about any difficulties. He’s here. That’s all I need to know.”
“Yes, sir.”
Truth was, Quinn’s capture had been more than just a challenge. If Harris hadn’t forced that idiot Moreno to continue the search and set up roadblocks after the cleaner got away in Monterrey, Quinn would have been in the wind, and they may have been staring at that one small error Harris had warned about at the start.
He had expected the taking of the cleaner to be difficult, just not
To achieve their goal, Harris needed to get someone close to Quinn to feed information to the group of police officers Moreno had put together. The problem wasn’t who that person would be. That was easy. Harris simply trolled the lower levels of the freelance world and plucked someone more interested in money than loyalty. Burke had served his role well.
Getting Quinn to hire Burke, though, was another issue. Harris’s research had shown that the cleaner had a small group of operatives he’d consistently worked with over the last few years. Jamming their schedules had been a necessary first step before even offering the job to Quinn.
The hardest person to deal with in Quinn’s select little group turned out to be a man named Daeng from Thailand. According to several sources, Quinn had been using him a lot as of late. When Harris tried to find a way to contact Daeng and put him on the same kind of hold as the others, the people he talked to said the man only worked for Quinn, no one else.
Harris decided it was time to get a little actual dirt on his hands, and followed a lead back to the man’s home country, where he was able to finally figure out a way to get Daeng out of the picture. It had been a while since he’d killed anyone, but he hadn’t forgotten how. More importantly, the ploy had worked.
Daeng was moved out of the way, Burke was hired, and now Quinn was here.
“The shooter?” Romero asked.
The shooter was the only one on the list left to pick up. “In progress, sir.”
“So he’ll be here…?”
“Tomorrow.”
In contrast to Quinn, taking the shooter had been the easiest to set up, so Harris had saved him for last.
“You will inform me when he arrives,” Romero said dismissively.
Harris tilted his head in acknowledgment, but it was a wasted gesture. Romero was no longer paying him any attention.
CHAPTER 14
San Paolo, Brazil
Maurice Curson could not believe his luck. For four years, he’d been persona non grata in the secret world. The only suitable employment he could find for someone with his particular skill set was as a bodyguard for rich losers.
But the asshole clients weren’t the worst part. It was the other bodyguards who really annoyed him. While there were a few ex-military types who Curson could respect, he was convinced the majority had all come straight from gyms where they’d spent their time lifting weights, taking steroids, and mostly likely watching that stupid Kevin Costner-Whitney Houston movie over and over. Smoke blowers who acted like they’d come straight out of the Secret Service and knew best what to do in any situation. Only none of them had been in the Secret Service.
In Curson’s old career, he’d done jobs in over thirty different countries, had killed, been shot at, and successfully protected people a hell of a lot more important than the latest winner of
Amateurs. A whole mess of idiotic amateurs.
That’s why when he’d been offered the gig-an actual, honest-to-God black ops situation-he had jumped at the chance. To hell with the fact it meant backing out of a previous commitment. And it didn’t even matter that it wasn’t a trigger-man position. He didn’t care. He was back
The op was pretty straightforward. A snatch and grab. The target: a Brazilian economist who was stirring up trouble and needed to be convinced to adjust his thinking. While Curson would have preferred to be on the snatch team, he was content to be in charge of getting the package from the op site to the safe house-in effect, a glorified driver.
Two days of planning, a dry run, and he and the other team members were ready. Hell, he’d been ready for years. It was all he could do to keep the smile off his face as he sat in the appropriated ambulance, waiting for the target to be brought to him.
Four years in the cold-exiled for a mistake that could have happened to anyone-were finally behind him.
“Sixty seconds.” The voice came over the comm in his ear.
This was it. The grab had been made and they were on their way.
Maurice climbed out of the ambulance and walked around to the back. He checked the street, confirmed it was as deserted as it had been before, and opened the rear doors.
“Thirty seconds.”
He climbed inside, ready to accept the package.
The three-member snatch team appeared at the back right on time, the target propped up under one of the men’s arms like a passed-out drunk. Working quickly, they transferred the Brazilian onto the gurney inside, and Curson buckled him down.
“Set?” the team leader asked.
“All set,” Curson told him.
“He’s all yours.”
The men disappeared down the street.
As Curson checked the buckles one last time, he realized his cargo didn’t appear to be breathing.
He checked the target’s pulse, or tried to, because there was none.
The snatch team had delivered him a stiff.
He immediately began CPR.
“Come on, come on,” he implored the lifeless body.
No response.
He glanced at his watch. If he didn’t leave now, he’d be behind schedule.
He tried another go at CPR, but there was no bringing the man back.
He knew this would somehow become his fault. His grand reentry into the realm of secrets and spies thwarted before it could even get going.
He took a deep breath.
He climbed out of the back, circled around the vehicle, and got in behind the wheel. Sticking to his