Read The Cain File Online

Authors: Max Tomlinson

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Thriller & Suspense, #Women's Adventure, #International Mystery & Crime, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Spies & Politics, #Assassinations, #Conspiracies, #Espionage, #Terrorism, #Thriller, #Thrillers

The Cain File (35 page)

BOOK: The Cain File
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The open front door was riddled with bullet holes.

Someone was out there, waiting. They’d shot the lock off the door, kicked it in. She pointed the .38 at the door. She figured she had three more shots.

Friend or foe?

“Want what he just got?” she yelled in Spanish, her hands buzzing around the pistol. Then, in English, for good measure, because she didn’t know who was out there. “This gun’s loaded!”

“Maggie?”

“John Rae?” It hurt her head to speak, her nose full of blood from Lita’s fist.

Behind her she heard the teenager. She swiveled around. He was staggering out of the room, holding a blood-soaked pillow to his neck.

-31-

“I’ve seen worse,” John Rae said, pulling back the blood-soaked pillow on the teenager’s neck just enough to inspect the gash Maggie had inflicted with her length of glass. Maggie jerked back in disgust. A crooked slit, twice as wide as a mouth, dripping without the pillow. John Rae let the teenager squeeze the pillow back into place. “He’ll probably live.”

The kid, for his part, was now a creature owned by fear. Speechless and terrified, he gripped the cushion tightly to his neck.

“Got a cell phone?” Maggie asked him. Her voice sounded strange to her and she pinched her nose, painfully pushing it this way and that to see if it was broken. The boy got his phone out of a pocket with a trembling hand that immediately went back up to clasp the soggy pillow. Maggie took the phone, her right wrist hastily bandaged with torn sheet, growing red where the plastic tie had cut into it. She dialed 911, Quito’s emergency number, instructed the operator to get an ambulance there quick, while John Rae knelt down, went through the pockets on Paavo’s lifeless, bullet-ridden body. She hung up, kept the phone. She didn’t need the teenager calling anyone.

“Nice shooting, Maggie,” John Rae said, standing up, holding Paavo’s phone. “We don’t want to leave this around for him to use.”

They heard neighbors talking excitedly downstairs, no doubt alarmed by the gunshots. But no one was out on the landing, or on the stairs. In a neighborhood like this, people minded their own business. They probably had a pretty good idea that an apartment with as many unsavory types as Cosecha Severa milling around was to be avoided to begin with.

Maggie guided the boy over to an armchair. “An ambulance will be here soon.” Christ, she needed a box of tissues and a painkiller.

His lips moved, the words tortured and strained. “You can’t just leave me here,” he rasped.

“And what were you going to do to me?” Maggie said, raising her eyebrows. “I reckon you’re getting a bargain,
amigo
.” Trembling, he sat down, clasping the pillow.

Maggie didn’t see her laptop bag anywhere. She didn’t have time to look for it. She’d have to disable it when she got a chance.

“We need to get out of here, Maggie,” John Rae said. “Before the cops show up. We can still make the bank. I’ll call and have backup send someone out to pick us up.”

“From downtown? In Quito traffic?” Maggie shook her head. “It’ll take forever. Besides, you need your manpower down there to grab Cain. And they’re not too far ahead of us anyway. We can grab a taxi. I hope you have cash.” Maggie was already on the liberated cell phone dialing 105—operator assistance—as they pulled what was left of the front door shut. She got the number for a radio taxi and started punching in numbers as they descended stairs. As Maggie predicted, no other residents were out. Just eyes at windows, looking through cracks in blinds as she and John Rae hustled.

She jumped when she saw Señora Gomez trudging up with sacks of shopping. She was more than a little surprised to see Maggie as well. “
Buenos días
,
Señora
,” Maggie said, flashing a brilliant smile as she and John Rae tore by. “There’s a bit more cleaning for you to do up there now, I’m afraid.”

Señora Gomez stood on the stairs, mouth open, watching the two of them dash out into the unfinished street.

Within a few minutes, an old yellow cab trundled up the dirt road, puffing exhaust.

~~~

“There it is,” Maggie said. “Cain’s van.” On the ride into Old Town, she’d cleaned up as well as she could and her nose felt a little less congested, but her words were still coming out nasally and painfully.

From their vantage point in the taxi on the adjacent side of the palm-tree-lined square in the Plaza Grande, Maggie and John Rae watched the Chevy van parked on the south side of the plaza, across the street from the National Bank of Ecuador. They couldn’t see the driver.

Scratchy music seeped from the taxi’s radio.

“Chevy van,” John Rae said into the red walkie-talkie, the device now in range. “South side of the plaza.”

“Check,” Achic replied, he and his team positioned around the plaza, ready. “The woman went into the bank with Beltran about fifteen minutes ago.”

“No sign of Cain?”

“Must be in back of the van, if he’s here.”

“He’s here,” John Rae said. “He’s not going to let that money get too far away.”

“Could take quite a while,” Maggie said. “If Cain’s account isn’t set up right. And especially if they’re planning to take some cash with them. Which I bet they are.”

“She had an empty shoulder bag.”

“Well, they can’t take all of it. Not even close.”

“How much can she carry?”

“In a shoulder bag like she has?” Maggie gave it some thought. “A million, if it’s shrink-wrapped and packed tight. But that would take the bank quite some time. Hours. They’d have to put a couple of people on it, supervise it. It would also create a huge alert if she attempted to collect that much in one visit without prior notice. And what is Grim Harvest going to do with a million cash in the jungle? Guard it round the clock?” Maggie shook her head. “So she might grab a hundred K or so. That wouldn’t raise a red flag. The rest will be transferred to an account. Which Cain will control.”

“So we could be here a while,” John Rae said.

“Maybe.” But not likely. Maggie smiled to herself with grim satisfaction. Cain didn’t know what lay in store. None of them did. She’d made sure of that.

“And there are my guys,” John Rae said with a note of pride, nodding at operatives stationed around the plaza. One sat on a park bench, in dark sunglasses, pretending to read a newspaper. Another stood outside the tourist office next to the bank, daypack over one shoulder, browsing artisan crafts in the window. Achic was somewhere unseen. “As soon as Lita and Beltran appear and head to the van, that’s when we move in, make the arrest.”

“Is this is a milk run?” Maggie said wryly.

“Not quite the one I planned.”

“Why not just arrest Cain now?”

“For what? Sitting in a van?”

“Sitting in a van, running a terrorist organization.”

“The guys upstairs want to do it this way, make sure Beltran is freed, make sure Cain doesn’t have any recourse whatsoever in a court of law. We need to catch him with the money—or attempting to get the money. Proof positive.”

Maggie nodded.

John Rae ran a thumbnail along his bottom lip. “Hurry up and wait.”

“Any idea who turned you in?” she asked. “Back at the airport?”

He gave a soft laugh, followed by a frown. “No.”

“Me neither,” Maggie said. “But I think whoever did it has a hand in running this op.”

John Rae squinted. “I’m reserving judgment.”

“Sinclair knew of your plan to capture Cain.”

“Hell, no. I kept that on the down low.”

“I’m sure he could have found out easily enough.”

“Found out from who?”

“Sinclair knew all your movements.”

John Rae frowned. “He also knew yours.
You
weren’t turned in.”

“Because he wanted Beltran freed. But he didn’t want Cain arrested. Once he found out about your covert op to capture Cain, you were conveniently sidelined.”

John Rae seemed to mull that over. “Why would Sinclair want that?”

“Because he’s protecting Cain.”

“Why? You may not like Sinclair, Maggie, but his patriotism is not in question.”

“Sure it is. Everyone believes in the convenient fiction that this is all just business, but it’s anything but.” Maggie flashed on Yalu and Ernesto and Lita, all pawns on Cain’s personal chessboard, even Abraham, his second-in-command. Just as she and John Rae and Ed were all pawns on someone else’s chessboard.  “Everyone’s playing their own game in their own way for their own ends.” She paused, then said, “The Agency let him go.”

“So his fondness for applejack made him a target with the suits back in D.C. They gave him early retirement. I can’t tell you how many times that’s happened. The Agency takes it out of you. But Sinclair is highly respected and still in demand as a contractor. He’s also invested most of his career in this part of the world.”

“Yes, I know.” Did she.

“He’s committed. Why would he foul up an op?”

“Who knows what he’s thinking? But I’m going to find out.” She still wondered who her mysterious driver had been, back when she first escaped Quito. That was connected too, somehow. Not to mention all the ICE pings.

“Well, find out, then.” John Rae let out a breath. “If anyone can, it’s you. You contacted Ed, got me popped from the brig. You’re a rock star. When you leave that boring desk job of yours, I better be the first person you call. We need more like you.”

“You don’t know how fondly I’m thinking of that dull desk job right now,” she said. “I can’t wait to get back and look for a few missing cents while I sip my nonfat latte and think about where to go for lunch. If I still have a job. And my freedom.”

“I’m just glad you got word to your mysterious friend and he got word to Ed. And the access code you made up: UIO593—the combination of the Quito airport code and the area code—just in case they couldn’t pinpoint the GPS.”

She smiled. “Thanks for covering my back there at the safe house. I got past that kid, but wouldn’t have made it past Paavo without you blowing in the front door and creating a diversion.”

“And you were supposed to head straight back home right off the bat if something went wrong.”

“It’s about Tica,” she said. And a promise she’d made.

“I haven’t forgotten.”

Maggie just hoped Tica was still alive. “You’ll probably have to remind Beltran, since I was left back at the ranch for MIA.”

“As soon as we nail Cain and his psycho girlfriend,” John Rae said. “First order of business.” John Rae’s radio crackled. He picked it up post haste. Someone spoke in his ear. He pulled the walkie-talkie away. “You can stop your frettin’, darlin’. They’re on their way out.”

Maggie stared across the plaza: Lita and Beltran leaving the bank. Beltran’s dazed frown and Lita’s empty shoulder bag did not bode well for either of them, or Grim Harvest.

“She doesn’t look too happy,” John Rae said.

“She shouldn’t,” Maggie said.

“Her money bag is empty.”

“That’s right.”

John Rae turned to Maggie. “You seem to know more than I do. They just got a two-million-dollar payday— didn’t they?”

Maggie shook her head slowly.

“They didn’t?” John Rae said.

Maggie smiled.

John Rae turned to Lita, then back to Maggie. “What are you up to, Maggie?”

“There is no money.”

John Rae blinked in apparent confusion. “And why is that?”

“Because I never set up the transfer in the first place.”

-32-

“Say what, Maggie?” John Rae said, mouth open. “You never set up the money transfer?”

“Afraid not.”

“But
why
?” John Rae’s voice conveyed the most surprise she’d ever heard from him.

“Because I started to distrust this whole setup—and Sinclair in particular.” She nodded at Lita and Beltran, about to cross the street to Cain’s van. “Shouldn’t you be keeping track of those two?”

John Rae turned back quickly, bringing the walkie-talkie up to his ear. “The deal was a bust, boys,” he said, hand on the car door handle. “But let’s grab Cain and Lita, and whoever else is in that van. Achic—separate Beltran from the rest, make sure he’s safe.”

Excited chatter popped from the walkie-talkie.

All of a sudden, a puff of smoke billowed out of the Chevy van’s tailpipe. The boxy vehicle squealed out into traffic.

“Cain’s taking off!” Maggie yelled, though she wasn’t really surprised. “He must have gotten a signal that the transfer didn’t happen. He’s bailing, leaving Lita for the wolves—just like I predicted.”

“Christ!” John Rae flung open the car door as he shouted into the walkie-talkie. “Cain’s pulling a runner! Grab Lita and Beltran. Backup unit—follow the van.” John Rae jumped from the taxi, narrowly avoiding a speeding car that veered around the open door, horn shrieking. He yelled into the walkie-talkie as he tore across the street toward the plaza.

The cab driver turned around in his seat and eyeballed Maggie suspiciously. “Now what?”

The cab wouldn’t make any headway in this traffic, already ground to a halt with all the commotion. But she was damned if she’d let the man who held her hostage get away scot-free. “We’re good,
vato
.” She tossed a hundred-dollar bill over the front seat and threw open her door. Just that small motion sent shivers of pain through her injured wrists.

Out on the street, she dashed across the plaza, taking a diagonal path in front of the cathedral. She looked around and saw the two ops who had been waiting for Lita and Beltran hustle toward them, guns drawn, along with John Rae. Lita jerked her head from side to side, watching the men close in. Beltran broke away, but was caught by Achic, appearing out of a doorway.

“Hands in the air!” John Rae shouted, gun leveled at Lita.

Lita hesitated, her left hand holding up the hem of her bow-collared blouse, right hand reaching down her blue pants.

“Don’t do it!” John Rae barked. “Slowly raise your hands!”

The van was speeding up Venezuela, dodging cars, hitting one with a loud
pang
before it pulled into the opposing lane and an onslaught of traffic, forcing vehicles out of the way. Maggie followed on foot, exiting the plaza onto Venezuela.

Maggie turned her head as she ran, saw Lita shaking a fist in the air.

BOOK: The Cain File
2.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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