“You let him in?” Jack said, not quite believing this.
Kate shrugged. “He had a Bell Atlantic ID, with his picture and everything. What was I supposed to do?”
Jack didn’t want to go into how easy it was to fabricate photo ID. Someday he’d show Kate his extensive personal collection. But maybe it was all right. Maybe the guy had really been from the phone company and Jack was making more out of this than he should. But the fact remained that Terrence Holdstock seemed to know too much about what went on in this apartment. Maybe one of the bugs had gone bad and he’d sent someone to replace it.
“All right, what did he do while you were here? Tell me exactly.”
“I…I don’t know exactly. You see, he needed someone talking on one of the extensions while he…” She flushed as her voice trailed off. “Boy, that really sounds dumb, doesn’t it.”
Jack wanted to shout Yes! But this was Kate, so kept his voice level.
“It’s okay. You simply don’t have a fine-tuned sense of paranoia.”
“Like you.”
“Like me. How long was he alone in here?”
“Five minutes tops.”
Jack looked around the front room. This wasn’t good. The guy could have hidden any number of bugs in a zillion places, or—
Wait. Kate had said the guy carried a Bell Atlantic ID. Bell Atlantic didn’t exist anymore.
He motioned Kate closer and cupped his hands around her right ear.
“Ignore anything I say out loud from now on,” he whispered. “Got it?”
She gave him a puzzled look but nodded.
“Only five minutes?” he said aloud. “I guess he couldn’t have stolen anything significant in that time. Nothing missing, right?”
He motioned for Kate to chime in.
“Missing? No. Everything’s here.”
The best thing would be to go home and retrieve his bug detector for a 5-to-l,000 MHz sweep of the room. And he might yet have to do that. But for now a simple visual check would have to suffice. All he needed to vindicate his paranoia was to find a single bug. After that it was like being a little pregnant—didn’t matter how many more there were, he’d know they were under surveillance.
Which could work to his advantage by allowing him to spread some customized disinformation to the listeners.
He turned on the radio—loud—and started with the kitchen wall-phone. A seemingly obvious place, but only to someone looking for a bug. He disassembled it but found nothing. A search of all the lighting fixtures and the undersides of the counters and cabinets yielded nothing either.
Time for another perspective: he lay on the floor and slithered around like a snake, looking for anything that didn’t belong. His joints felt a little stiff, his muscles sore. He wondered why. Hadn’t done anything strenuous lately. And it felt kind of good to lie down. If he had a choice between a nap and hunting for bugs right now, he knew which one he’d take. But he had to keep looking.
He glanced at Kate who was staring at him as if he were crazy as he wriggled out of the kitchen into the dining area, checking out the underside of the chairs, the table—
“Holy shit!”
Jack’s saliva drained away as he stared at the bomb duct-taped to the underside of the table. And no question it was a bomb—fine wires running from a tiny travel alarm clock to the ends of a block of either Semtex or C-4.
“What is it, Jack?” Kate said.
Looked for the readout on the alarm clock but it was dark. Had the battery died? Couldn’t risk it. Might already be too late. Had to get Kate out of here as fast as—
Wait. Nothing sophisticated here. In fact a pretty basic piece of work. Could see the ends of the blasting caps jutting from the plastique. All he had to do…
“Jack, what did you find?”
Jack dried his hands on his pants and reached up to the bomb. His fingers trembled as he gently tugged the caps from the plastique—the one in the left end came loose first, then the right. As they fell free, dangling from the clock, Jack ripped the plastique from the underside of the table and rolled away.
Panting, sweating, he lay on his back with closed eyes, pulling himself together.
“What is that?” Kate said.
Jack sat up and looked at the block. As soon as he saw the olive drab wrapper he knew it was C-4.
“Enough plastique explosive to make a real mess of this building.”
One of Kate’s hands flew to her mouth while the other fluttered behind her, searching for a chair. It found one and she dropped into it.
“No!” Her blue eyes were wide in her ashen face. “You can’t…you must be mistaken!”
“I wish I were.”
“But that looks like modeling clay.”
Jack lay the C-4 on the floor and reached back under the table. He found the little clock, ripped it free of its securing tape, and held it up.
“And here’s the timing device.”
He placed the clock on the kitchen counter, found a carving knife, and chop-severed the wires to its two dangling detonators, scarring the Formica in the process. Had to be done. Blasting caps can do some mean damage on their own.
Kate had risen from the chair. She eyed the tinier like she might a snake. She opened her mouth to speak but no words came out.
“I know,” Jack said. “Who and why, right?”
She could only nod.
“Let’s think about that,” he said.
Possibilities were buzzing through Jack’s head like a swarm of killer bees. He retrieved the brick of C-4. Holding that in one hand and the timer in the other, he did his thinking out loud.
“Here’s the situation: We’ve got two people living in this apartment at the moment, one of them acting real strange. The other resident and her brother hear the strange one say some weird things, things they maybe weren’t supposed to hear. The strange one’s cult leader arrives out of nowhere and removes her from the premises. A couple of hours later someone calling himself a phone repairman shows up, maneuvers himself into being alone in this room, then leaves. Immediately after that we find a bomb. Let’s guess who the target might be.”
Kate slumped back into the chair, shaking her head. “No. I can’t believe it. Jeanette would never—”
“She’s not really Jeanette anymore, is she. But for your sake let’s give her the benefit of the doubt and say that she may not have known. But that doesn’t change the fact that someone wants you, and perhaps me as well, out of the way. Permanently.”
Someone wanted to kill his sister. Even the hint of such a thing should have sent him into a wall-punching rage. But the brick of army-issue C-4 in his hand cooled him, chilled him. Reminded him of a pair of brothers he’d been hired to deal with a few years ago. What were their names…?
Kozlowski. Right. Stan and Joe Kozlowski. They’d put the arm on somebody who hired Jack to take the arm off. And he had. Found the K brothers’ stash and torched it.
The stash had been chock full of C-4 bricks exactly like this one. Lots of domestic bombers made their own; not hard to do if you don’t mind working with red nitric acid. The international set tended to favor Semtex, usually of Czech origin. But the K brothers had built their rep with ultra-reliable U.S. military-grade C-4. Word was that Joe K had hijacked a truckload in the nineties, enough to stock them up for decades. Jack was sure that other bombers had sources for army C-4, but still…this olive-drab wrapped brick bothered him.
Could I be the target?
Didn’t seem possible. This wasn’t his place. And the Kozlowskis had vanished. With just about every law enforcement agency in the US looking for them, they’d gone to ground and no one had seen or heard from them in years. Everything else pointed to Holdstock and his cult, but Jack couldn’t bring himself to get on that train just yet.
“What do we do?” Kate said.
Good question. He looked at the little travel clock. The LED display had been disabled. Why? Only reason he could think of was so the glow from the numerals wouldn’t give away the bomb’s location.
Which could mean the bomb had been timed to go off later, after all the lights were out. Later…when odds were highest that the occupants would be home and in bed.
But what time had it been set for? The answer might be important.
Jack stepped to the window and looked down at the street. Watched the cars and the pedestrians cruising through the fading light. Someone down there might be the bomber; then again, the bomber might be miles away. But Jack would bet that, come the moment of the blast, the bomber—or the one who’d hired him—would be nearby, watching, waiting. Because this amount of C-4 was gross overkill. Irrational. Something more than simple murder going down here. Jack could all but feel the raw emotion radiating from the brick of plastique in his hand.
He turned to Kate. “Will you be all right if I leave for a little while?”
“Do you have to go?” He could tell from her eyes that she didn’t want to be alone here.
“I think so. It could be important.”
“Okay. Just don’t be long.”
“I won’t.” He’d disappeared on her once; he wouldn’t again. “By the way, you haven’t noticed anything around the apartment about escape routes during a fire have you?”
He needed to find a way to leave unseen.