Solitude Creek

‘Serrano!’ she called. ‘Stop!’

 

 

He glanced at his car, realized he couldn’t get to it in time. He looked around and spotted, nearby, a slim redheaded woman in a black pantsuit – an employee of the CBI business office. She was climbing out of her Altima, which she’d just parked between two SUVs. He sprinted directly toward her, flung her to the ground. And ripped the keys from her hands. He leaped inside the SUV, started the engine and floored the accelerator.

 

The sounds of the squealing, smoking tires and the engine were loud. But they didn’t cover the next sound: a sickening crunch from the wheels. The woman’s screams stopped abruptly.

 

‘No!’ Dance muttered. ‘Oh, no.’ She rose to her feet, gripping her sore wrist, which had slammed into the concrete when he tackled her.

 

The others in the Guzman Connection task force ran to Dance.

 

‘I’ve called an ambulance and Sheriff’s Office,’ TJ Scanlon said, and raced to where the redhead was lying in the parking space.

 

Foster raised his Glock, aiming toward the vanishing Altima.

 

‘No!’ Dance said, and put a hand on his arm.

 

‘The fuck’re you doing, Agent?’

 

It was Overby who said, ‘Across the highway? There? On the other side of those trees. It’s a daycare center.’

 

Foster lowered the weapon reluctantly, as if insulted they’d questioned his shooting skill. He reholstered his Glock as the stolen car vanished from sight. Foster glanced toward Dance and, though he didn’t fling her words of the young man’s innocence back in her face, his body language clearly did.

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 6

 

 

What would the next few hours, next few days bring?

 

Kathryn Dance sat in Charles Overby’s office, alone. Her eyes slipped from pictures of the man with his family to those of him in tennis whites and in an outlandish plaid golf outfit to those with local officials and business executives. Overby, rumor was, had his eye on political office. The Peninsula or possibly, at a stretch, San Francisco. Not Sacramento: he’d never set his sights very high. There was also the issue that you could get to fairway or tennis court all year round here on the coast.

 

Two hours had passed since the incident in the parking lot.

 

She wondered again: And a few hours from now?

 

And days and weeks?

 

Noise outside the doorway. Overby and Steve Foster, the senior CBI agents here, continued their conversation as they walked inside.

 

‘… got surveillance on the feeders to Fresno, then the One-o-one and the Five, if he’s moving fast. CHP’s got Ninety-nine covered. And we’ve got One roadblocked.’

 

Foster said, ‘I’d go to Salinas, the One-oh-one, I was him. Then north. He’ll get, you know, safe passage in a lettuce truck. All the way to San Jose. The G-Forty-sevens’d pick him up there and he disappears into Oakland.’

 

Overby seemed to be considering this. ‘More chance to get lost in LA. But harder to get to, roadblocks and all. Think you’re right, Steve. I’ll tell Alameda and San Jose. Oh, Kathryn. Didn’t see you.’

 

Even though he’d asked her – no, told her – to come to his office ten minutes ago.

 

She nodded to them both but didn’t rise. A woman in law enforcement is constantly aware of the gossamer thread she negotiates in the job with her bosses and fellow officers. Excessive deference can derail respect, as can too little. ‘Charles, Steve.’

 

Foster sat beside her and the chair groaned.

 

‘What’s the latest?’

 

‘Not good, looks like.’

 

Overby said, ‘MSCO found the Altima in a residential part of Carmel, near the Barnyard.’

 

An old outdoor shopping center, with a number of lots for parking cars.

 

And for hijacking or stealing them too.

 

Overby said, ‘But if he’s got new wheels, nobody’s reported anything missing.’

 

‘Which may mean the person who could do the reporting’s dead and in the trunk,’ Foster offered. Implicitly blaming Dance for a potential death-to-be.

 

‘We’re just debating, would he go north or south? What do you think, Kathryn?’

 

‘What we know now, he’s associated with the Jacinto crew. They’ve got stronger ties south.’

 

‘Like I was saying,’ Foster reminded, speaking exclusively to Overby, ‘south is three hundred miles of relatively few roads and highways, versus north, with a lot more feeders. We can’t watch ’em all. And he can be in Oakland in two hours.’

 

Dance said, ‘Steve, airplanes. He flies to a private strip in LA, out in the county, and he’s in South Central in no time.’

 

‘Airplane? He’s not cartel level, Kathryn,’ Foster fired back. ‘He’s I’m-hiding-in-a-lettuce-truck level.’

 

Overby put on his consideration face. Then: ‘We can’t look everywhere and I think Steve’s is the more, you know, logical assessment.’

 

‘All right. North, then. I’ll talk to Amy Grabe. She’ll get eyes going in Oakland, the docks, the East Bay. And—’

 

‘Whoa, whoa, Kathryn.’ Overby’s face registered surprise, as if she’d just said, ‘I think I’ll swim to Santa Cruz.’

 

She looked at him with a critical furrow of brow. There had been a lacing of condescension in his tone.

 

She glanced at Foster, who had lost interest in her and was studying a golden golf ball on Overby’s desk, some award. He didn’t want to be seen gloating when she heard what she knew was coming. Better to look at small-time awards made of plastic masquerading as precious metal.

 

Overby said, ‘I’ve just been on the phone with Sacramento. With Peter.’

 

The director of the CBI. The boss of bosses.

 

‘We talked, I explained …’

 

‘What’s the bottom line, Charles?’

 

‘I did everything I could, Kathryn. I went to bat for you.’

 

‘I’m suspended.’

 

Jeffery Deaver's books