Dead Man's Land Jack Patterson (classic novels txt) đ
- Author: Jack Patterson
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Then he saw a man ahead of him slow-walking a bike, laden with fresh produce. Cal didnât want to inject the man into the chase, but he had no choice if he was going to make it to the footbridge before he got caught.
As he raced toward the man, Cal ripped the bike from the manâs hands and then rotated it and heaved it in their direction on the sidewalk. There was nowhere for the men to hide. They tumbled down and Cal spun toward the checkpoint, never looking back.
Prado stood at the gate with his passport out. He didnât know what to do, but Cal noticed him drumming his fingers on the side of his leg.
Cal held up his passport and begged the border agent to let him through as he pulled Prado with him.
âIâm Cal Murphy and this is Vincente Pradoâand DHS is looking for us,â he said.
Their names triggered a rapid response from the agent, who swung open the gate and pulled them inside. And not a second too soon, as Munozâs agents had recovered from their fall and were bearing down on them.
When Cal reached the other side, he let out a long breath and slumped into a chair.
âWe did it,â Prado said.
Cal nodded. âAnd I hope we didnât exchange the frying pan for the fire.â
Prado looked at him quizzically.
âItâs an American idiom. It just means I hope we didnât go from one bad situation to another bad situation,â Cal explained.
A faint grin spread across Pradoâs face. âI understand.â
***
FIFTEEN MINUTES LATER, Cal and Prado were escorted to a waiting area where Kelly and Corliss sat. Kelly leapt out of her chair and rushed over to Cal. She gave him a big hug and kissed him.
âThank you for coming back,â she said.
âDid you ever doubt me?â
She rolled her eyes as they both walked over toward Corliss. âThanks for coming down,â Cal said, offering him a hand.
âDonât thank me just yet,â Corliss said. âWe need to talk.â
CHAPTER 57
CAL OPENED A WATER BOTTLE and sat down at a table next to Prado. He took a sip and eyed Tom Corliss directly across from him. He wasnât excited about the prospect of an inquisition after all theyâd just been through, but anything was better than being hunted by Munozâs henchmen.
âWhat do you want to know?â Cal asked.
Corliss took a deep breath and interlocked his fingers behind his head as he leaned back. âIâm more concerned with what you saw, specifically what Prado saw the night he left Cuba for the first time.â
Prado withdrew and glanced at Cal.
âItâs okay,â Cal said. âAgent Corliss is a friend. You didnât do anything wrongâand heâs not going to send you back. Tell him what you told me.â
Prado rubbed his face with both hands and took a swig of his water before he leaned forward, both hands clasped. âI saw a man who was my friend murder another man connected to the Cuban government. My friendâs name was Juan Garcia, though Cal told me he didnât think that was his real name.â
Corliss nodded. âGo on.â
âThereâs not much more to tell. My cousin and I were taking money from my uncleâs safe when I heard a commotion going on at the docks nearby. I ran outside my uncleâs office to see what was happeningâand I was just in time to see Juan take the gun away from the other man and shoot him. The other man fell into the water while Juan ran away.â
âDid you go speak to Juan?â
Prado shook his head. âAt first I was more concerned with the other man lying facedown in the water. I thought maybe he could survive if I helped him. It didnât look like Juan was trying to kill him on purpose since the other man pulled the gun first.â
âI see. Please continue.â
âBut that wasnât the last time I saw him.â
âOh?â
âYes, on my most recent visit, I saw him step in front of several guards shooting in my direction. He was gunned downâand I donât think he made it.â
Corliss nodded. âThat would explain some things on our end, thatâs for sure.â
âOther than that, I donât have anything else to tell you.â
Corliss wrote a few notes down on a pad. âGood. This is what we needed to know.â
Cal shifted in his seat and cleared his throat. âPrado isnât the only one who knew him.â
âYou?â Corliss asked. âYou knew him too?â
âNot exactly, but he found me at a baseball game and handed me something, something he said I should give you.â
âMe, specifically?â
Cal shook his head. âNo, but someone who was affiliated with the federal government, so you qualify.â He reached into his pocket and fished out the flash drive. âHere you go.â
Corliss inserted the drive into his computer. After a few clicks on the computers, his eyes widened. âWow. This is amazing. You guys did great. The Bureau is going to flip when they see this.â
âWhat is it?â Cal asked.
âConfirmation,â Corliss said cryptically.
âFor what?â
âFor something we suspected Cuba has been doing for years nowâbuilding a centrifuge to help enrich uranium and make it weapons grade. We had eyes and ears on the ground thereâand reports about Cuba working with the Russians to construct this centrifuge and then selling the uranium to the Iranians.â He paused. âDid I mention, you canât write a word of this in the newspaper? If you do, Iâll have you locked up.â
âCome on, Corliss,â Cal pleaded. âAfter all weâve done for you and the Bureau.â
Corliss didnât flinch, refusing to look up from the images on his screen. âI said, âNo.â End of discussion. Not one word. Do you understand? Itâs a matter of national security.â
Cal nodded and muttered a resigned, âAll right.â
âMay God rest Agent Garciaâs soul,â Corliss said. âOr for those of us
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