The Final Twist Jeffery Deaver (ebook reader with android os TXT) đ
- Author: Jeffery Deaver
Book online «The Final Twist Jeffery Deaver (ebook reader with android os TXT) đ». Author Jeffery Deaver
Apparently satisfied there were no surveillance devices, or rifles, trained his way, he closed and re-latched the shutter. Walking to a far corner of the room, he turned on an elaborate LP record player and, pulling on latex gloves, removed an old-time album from its sleeve. He set the black disk gingerly on the turntable and, with infinite care, set the needle in the groove of the first track.
Music pounded into the room, some rock group. Anyone trying to listen in would hear only raging guitar and fierce drums.
La Fleur removed the gloves and replaced them in the box. He looked his intruders over. âYou two really have no clue whatâs going on.â
And with a defiant look at Russell, he grabbed the bong, lit up and inhaled long.
36
The smoke spiraled upward, dissolving at its leisure.
Never into recreational drugs, Shaw nonetheless found the rich smell of pot pleasant. He waited until La Fleur exhaled and sat back. A twitching tilt of his head like a squirrel assessing a tree. The man put the blue tube down.
âOh, yes, Amos found something, and he hid it. But it had nothing to do with the Urban Improvement Plan. I have no idea why youâre harping on that. Your father was wrong: there is no evidence against the company. If there were, Ame would have found it. He searched and searched. But there wasnât and thereâll never be any evidence. Helms and his peopleâre too smart to leave anything incriminating. They used cutout after cutout, encoding, anonymous servers, shell companies, encryption. The CIA should be as good as BlackBridge.â
âFacts,â Russell said. âNot drama.â
La Fleur shot him a look that managed to be simultaneously hurt and defiant.
âMy poor Ame . . . He got himself in over his head, didnât he? He took it upon himself to end the UIP. Helms had something his main client wanted desperately. It was code-named the Endgame Sanction. Braxton and some thug had found it in the Embarcadero. Maybe Droon. Looks like a rat, doesnât he?â
Shaw said, âThe Hayward Brothers Warehouse?â
âI donât know. But she found it and it was like . . . the ring of power. The client had wanted it forever, was paying a retainer of millions to track it down.â A faint chuckle. âAnd youâll never guess what Ame did. He heard Helms talking about it, about how it was the end-all and be-all . . . and when the big boss stepped out of his office, my Ame simply waltzed in and nicked it! Dropped it in his courier bag and walked out the front door with a nighty-night to the guards.â
âWhy?â
âHe was going to use it as leverage, get the company to shut down the UIP program. Or maybe stealing it, he thought the client would fire Helms, and then BlackBridgeâd go out of business. I donât think he had a plan. He was just sick of working for such a vile bunch of men and women.â
âWhat was this thing?â
âHe never had a chance to tell me.â His voice went soft. âHe stole it about five p.m. He hid it about an hour later. Then at ten that night he called me. Iâd never heard him so panicked. He said heâd done some research and found out what the Sanction was, and it needed to be destroyed. It was devastating. The client could never get it, no one could. He was going to destroy it himself but he couldnât get back to where heâd hidden it. He knew BlackBridge ops were searching for him. If anything happened to him, I was supposed to find it and get rid of it.â
Shaw looked toward his brother, who frowned. What on earth was it?
âAnd he died while they were torturing him to find out where it was?â Shaw asked.
âThatâs right, Iâm sure.â
A new track came on, louder. The men had to huddle close to hear and be heard.
Russell asked, âWhere did he hide it?â
âHe was afraid of the phone lines, so he gave me two clues. One was the âdog park.â He meant Quigley Square. A friend of ours lived there and weâd walk her dog if she was traveling.â
Shaw knew the place, a transitional neighborhood in the city.
âThe other clue was âItâs hidden underground, someplace youâd be expecting.ââ
Great, thought Shaw. More scavenger hunt.
Another hit of the weed. âThen I heard a shout. It sounded like he dropped the phone. Then it seemed like there was a scuffle.â He grew silent for a moment. âThat was the last time I heard his voice.â
âAny guesses where he meant?â
âNo.â
Russell: âYou ever think about going to Quigley Square and doing what he wanted to? Destroying it?â
His eyes, more tearful, looked down at the dimpled wood floor. âI thought, yes, but I didnât. Iâm a coward! Helms and Irena and Droon . . . they didnât know I existed anymore. I erased myself. I thought about it, finding whatever it was, doing what Amos wanted. But in the end, I balked. Theyâre so powerful, so dangerous. Theyâve got all the power of the police and the CIA!â His eyes grew wildâthe way their fatherâs occasionally had. âYou just donât know . . . Besides, he died before he told them, so hidden it was and hidden it would remain. Forever. It was like being destroyed.â
âExcept,â Shaw said, âtheyâre still after it. And we have to get to it first.â
âTo save that family.â La Fleurâs voice was low.
âThatâs right.â Russell called up a map of San Francisco on his phone. He focused in on Quigley Square. There were dozens of buildings bordering the park. Presumably theyâd all have undergroundsâcellars or maybe tunnels.
Shaw asked, âWould it be in the friendâs house? The dog friend?â
âAmos would never endanger anyone. In any case, she moved years ago.â
Shaw wondered aloud: âSewers? Transit system?â
âNo BART station there,â Russell noted. âWhere would we expect it to
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