Dead Man's Land Jack Patterson (classic novels txt) đ
- Author: Jack Patterson
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âRight. So you would beââ
âSheila Doleman, head of the Pacific Northwest for DHS.â
Waller wrinkled his forehead. âDepartment of Homeland Security? Whatâs this all about?â
âI was hoping you could tell me, Mr. Waller.â She leaned back in her chair and folded her arms. âYou were the agent in the field chasing Vicente Pradoâisnât that correct?â
Waller nodded. âYeah, but I still donât understand what this has to do with DHS.â
âJust answer her questions,â Williams said.
âWhat I want to know is very simple. What did you learn about Vicente Prado while you were chasing him?â
Hampton leaned forward. âHardly anything. By the time we got him in our vehicle, these two guys came out of nowhere and threatened to kill us if we didnât hand him over to them.â
âAnd you relented to their demands?â she said.
Waller nudged Hampton with his leg under the table. âWe didnât have a choice, if we must be perfectly honest.â
âYou mustâboth your futures depend on it.â
Waller cocked his head to one side. âI donât understand whatâs going on. Why the interest all of a sudden in some Cuban athlete who defected? We were told we were pursuing him because it fell into our jurisdiction.â
She flipped a few straggly tendrils off her shoulder with the back of her hand. âTechnically, yes. It did fall into your jurisdiction, but Iâm not here to make this some bureaucratic spitball fight. As long as I get the answers I am looking for, I donât care who captures him or why.â
âSo you know where he is?â
She nodded. âWe think so. We believe he returned to Cuba.â
âThatâs what we think too. It seems that was the kidnappersâ chief objective.â
She nodded and scribbled down a few notes. âWhat makes you think that?â
âThatâs what they told us.â
She slammed her pen down on the table. âIt wouldâve been nice if you wouldâve told me this up front.â
Waller threw his hands in the air. âWe put that in our report. Did you even read it?â
She glared at him. âI read every last word of it. Thereâs a big difference between saying youâquoteââthink heâs headed back to Cubaâ andâquoteââthe assailants said they were taking him back to Cuba.â Surely, you can see that.â
Hampton shrugged. âSo, weâre not wordsmiths.â
She slammed a file down on the table and started to pace. âPerhaps you donât understand what is at stake here.â
Waller sat up. âPerhaps you should tell us so we can understand. Otherwise, weâre groping around in the dark.â
She sighed. âWhat Iâm about to tell you is classified and doesnât leave this room. Got it?â
All three men nodded.
Thirty minutes later after she finished briefing them, she brushed her blonde hair out of her face. âNow, is there anything else you want to tell me?â
Hampton looked at Waller and nodded.
âWe think The Seattle Times reporter Cal Murphy might know something,â Waller said.
âWas this the man who was with Prado when they escaped from the bus?â she asked.
Waller nodded. âThatâs the one. He spent several hours running around with Prado, hiding from the kidnappers. Mr. Murphy called me not long after Prado was seized from our possession.â
âDid he say he knew anything?â
âHe called wanting to talk to Prado. He was looking for something he could write about.â
Williams leaned back in his chair. âHe and his editor called our office and wanted us to give him a statement.â
âYou didnât say anything, I hope,â she said.
Williams shook his head. âNothing quotable. But I made sure they werenât going to write anything. Not yet, anyway.â
She wagged her finger at him. âThey better not. Iâm holding you responsible if they blow this thing wide open. You all know whatâs on the line nowâand I suggest you do your best to make sure this remains a tight-lipped investigation.â
Waller squirmed in his chair and stood up. âAre we through? Weâve got a lot of work to do.â
Doleman paused and nodded. âJust make sure you circle back with that journalist, Mr. Murphy. Maybe give him a few breadcrumbs and see if he knows anything else that might be helpful for us. Keep him chasing shadows. Who knowsâhe could be a useful asset for us down the road.â
CHAPTER 22
CAL TRIED TO WIPE the ridiculous grin off his face. It was the same look he wore every time he found out he was getting to travel someplace on the newspaperâs budget. Especially a place like Cuba. It had been on his bucket list for a while, though he preferred to see the place time had forgotten as a tourist rather than a snoopy journalist. But he wasnât going to complain.
He walked into his house, found Kelly in the kitchen, and kissed her.
âSomeone must have had a good day at work,â she said.
âAfter youâve been chased by gunmen through the woods in the middle of the night, itâs safe to say that even taking Little League scores over the phone would be a marked improvement.â He entered the living room and swooped up Maddie.
âHow was your day today, princess?â he said.
Maddie poked her lip out. âI got an owwie at the doctor.â
âLet me make it feel better,â Cal said before he kissed her thigh where a small Sesame Street Band-Aid was. âAll better?â
She nodded. âThanks, Daddy.â
He put her down and slumped into his favorite chair. The grin remained on his face.
Kelly settled down on the couch and stared at him.
âWhat?â he asked. âWhy are you looking at me like that?â
âLike what?â
âLike that?â He mimicked her serious facial expression.
âBecause Iâm trying to find out whatâs going on since you wonât come right out and tell me.â
Cal chuckled. âOkay, okay. I was going to wait until after we put Maddie to bed to discuss it, but Iâll tell you now.â
She put her hands over mouth. âDid that magazine call about a job?â
He waved her off. âNo, no. Nothing that exciting, though Iâm not sure I would take that job now anyway.â
âWhat are you talking about? That was your dream job.â
âNever mind. Look, the reason Iâm so excited is that I
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