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Pike let Darko walk away. He felt a stab of regret about the the deal he made with Walsh, but he needed something from her maybe even more than he needed to kill Darko.

Pike climbed back into his Jeep, and called her as he pulled into traffic.

“I need to see you.”

“A red Jeep Cherokee was seen leaving a scrap yard in Lake View Terrace yesterday. Was that you?”

“Yes.”

“Damnit, did you kill five people up there?”

“Six. I need seven hundred fifty thousand dollars.”

“What the fuck are you doing?”

“I met Jakovich. I just left Darko. Do you want the guns or not?”

“You met with them? Face to face?”

“Do you want the guns?”

Pike was in Hollywood, she was in Glendale. They split the difference and met in a Silver Lake parking lot on Sunset Boulevard. Pike arrived first, and stayed in his Jeep until he saw her pull into the lot. She was driving a silver Accord. Her personal car. He went over and climbed into the passenger seat. The agitation in her voice on the phone was gone. She seemed cool, and removed.

“You’re in deep doo-doo, buddy. The police want to arrest you, and they’re blaming me for getting them involved. You want to explain how six people came to be dead?”

“They were holding Milos Jakovich’s grandson hostage. Now I have him.”

“Excuse me?”

Pike told her about Petar Jakovich, and Rina and Yanni, and the rest of it. She had been completely out of the loop.

“Frank didn’t have anything to do with the gun deal. Jakovich told me that himself. Frank and his family were collateral damage. Darko went in because of the nanny.”

“Ana Markovic? You’re telling me those people were murdered because of a twenty-year-old nanny?”

“Her sister stashed the old man’s grandson with Ana to hide him from Darko, but Darko found him anyway. Darko thought he could use the kid to force Jakovich into a deal, but he was wrong.”

“How old is this child?”

“Ten months. A baby.”

“And where is he now?”

“With me. Darko was holding him at the scrap yard, but now he’s with me.”

Walsh wet her lips again, and her jaw flexed. As if there was too much information to process, and the swell was lifting her too high and too fast to catch her breath. She finally nodded.

“Okay. I’m listening.”

“Jakovich wants Darko. Darko wants the guns. I have something they both want, and I’m using it to play them against each other. I believe I can put them together with the weapons.”

“How?”

“Jakovich thinks I’m going to buy the guns, and Darko thinks we’re going to steal the guns. They each think I’m going to double-cross the other.”

“Jesus, Pike, are you an adrenaline junkie or what? What’s our timeline here?”

“Later today. Darko’s on board. I’m waiting to hear from Jakovich. I need three things to make it happen.”

“Let’s hear it.”

“I haven’t been working alone. The people who are helping me, they get a pass. In writing. I get a pass, too. In writing. Absolution from any and all charges arising out of our activities in this matter, now and in the future.”

“This isn’t a double-oh license to kill.”

“I’m not finished. I need seven hundred fifty thousand dollars, and I’ll need it in a few hours. Darko promised to front the cash, but he may or may not deliver. If he doesn’t, I can still make the play on Jakovich, but he needs to see cash.”

“Jesus. Three-quarters of a million dollars?”

“If I can’t show Jakovich the cash, he won’t show me the guns.”

She nodded, slowly.

“Okay. I understand. I think I can make it happen.”

“One more thing. I get the boy. You’re going to supply him with a U.S. birth certificate and full citizenship, so I can place him with a family of my choosing. This placement will not be a matter of state or federal record. No record will exist that his biological family can use to find him.”

Walsh was silent on this point even longer than when he asked for a pass on the killings. She finally shook her head.

“I don’t know if that’s possible. I mean, even if I wanted to, I don’t know if it’s legal.”

“I don’t care if it’s legal. I just want it done.”

Walsh let out a long sigh. Her fingernail ticked on the console between them, as precise as a metronome. She finally nodded.

“I’d better get started.”

Pike returned to his Jeep and drove back to Cole’s. Cole, Stone, and Pike spent the rest of the morning getting together their gear. When it happened, it would happen fast, and it started at ten minutes before noon.

Pike’s cell vibrated, and now it was Jakovich.

He said, “You have this money?”

“I can get it in four hours.”

“Cash.”

“Yes. Cash.”

“And Michael. I will want Michael.”

“If I get the guns, Michael is yours.”

“Yes, he is mine.”

“Where do I meet you?”

“Here. On the boat. I will be here.”

They agreed on a time, then Pike hung up and immediately called Kelly Walsh.

“It’s on.”

42

WALSH AND FOUR AGENTS from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms arrived at Cole’s house an hour later. Two stayed with their cars, but two male agents came in with Walsh-a tough-looking Latin guy named Paul Rodriguez and a tall lanky guy named Steve Hurwitz. Hurwitz was wearing an olive green Special Response Team jumpsuit. SRT was the ATF’s version of SWAT. They spread through Cole’s living room with an air of watchful suspicion, as if someone might jump out of a closet. Jon Stone had brought in a large box of his surveillance gear, and Cole was helping him set up. Cole was shirtless, but had strapped on a bullet-resistant vest. Pike couldn’t blame them for being wary, especially with the cash.

Seven hundred fifty thousand dollars in cash didn’t take up much room. It could be packed in four shoe boxes, and fit in a single grocery bag.

Walsh carried the money in a gym bag slung over her shoulder. The bag was smaller than Pike thought, but he could see the weight in her walk.

She hefted it onto Cole’s dining room table, and opened it, letting Pike see why the package was small. The bills were in vacu-packed bricks, bound in clear plastic wrap.

She said, “It isn’t all real. Half a million is funny money we took off a drug dealer.”

Cole said, “What if Jakovich checks?”

Hurwitz laughed.

“You’d better start running.”

Walsh placed a form on the table and handed a pen to Pike.

“You have to sign for it. If Darko delivers, don’t use it, but it’s the best I could do with this little time. C’mon, sign, and let’s figure this out. I have a lot of people to coordinate.”

Cole said, “Aren’t you going to let him count it?”

“Stop being stupid.”

Pike signed, and pushed back the form.

Walsh said, “Where’s the girl’s sister?”

Cole brought Rina from the guest room. She looked shrunken, and even more pale. Rodriguez placed her under arrest as Cole snipped off the plasti-cuffs. The agent immediately turned her around, and cuffed her again. Hurwitz repeated everything Rodriguez told her in Serbian.

Pike said, “For what it’s worth, at the end, she helped.”

“Goody for her. If she helps when it comes time to testify, it might do her some good.”

Rina looked at Pike as Rodriguez led her out, and said something in Serbian, but Pike didn’t know what she said.

Hurwitz looked at him.

“You speak it?”

“No.”

“She hopes you do it for Ana.”

Walsh looked irritated, as if they were wasting time.

“What about the kid? Where is he?”

“Someplace safe.”

She started to say something, but shook her head and changed course.

“Forget it. Okay, let’s go through this. What are we doing?”

Pike said, “Jon.”

Stone held up something that looked like the GPS locator he removed from Pike’s Jeep.

“Remember this?”

Walsh reddened as Stone went on.