Authors: Ken Douglas
“
Shit,” the cop said.
* * *
“
Go back to the hotel,” Izzy said.
“
Not a hospital for Black?”
“
No, not right away.”
“
You know what you’re doing?”
“
I hope so.”
“
Me too, but why back there?” Lila said as she turned the car in the direction of the Marriott Suites.
“
We’re going to hide in plain sight. It’s the last place they’ll look for us.”
“
Gotcha,” Lila said. “Good thinking.” At the hotel she pulled the car into the same spot it had been parked in about fifteen minutes ago.
“
I’m guessing they’ve already figured out who we are and how stupid they were for letting us get away,” Izzy said.
“
Yeah, probably,” Lila said. Then, “Did you check out? Do you plan on us using the same room?”
“
No, I think the woman at reception might have recognized me. Besides, I was off the books and the people who paid for the room could show up at anytime.”
“
I’ll get us a room.” Lila started to get out of the car.
“
Wait!” Izzy said.
“
What?”
“
If you use your credit card, they’ll be able to track us.”
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Please. I’ve got more IDs than you can shake a stick at.” She got out of the car.
“
Get a room near the back entrance,” Izzy said after her.
Lila didn’t turn around. She just raised her right hand and waved it as she walked away.
“
Right,” Izzy muttered to the dog, who’d scooted over into Lila’s place behind the wheel.
Lila stopped at a black XKE Jaguar, reached behind the passenger seat and pulled out an expensive looking grip. She slung it over her shoulder, then entered the hotel.
Izzy curled her fingers into fists, fighting an urge to bite her nails. It seemed like she’d been waiting forever when she saw Lila push out through the hotel doors.
“
How’d it go?” Izzy said, when she reached the car.
“
Fine.” Lila didn’t seem tense at all. How’d she do it? “I got us the room by the back entrance. Told the woman I was a heavy smoker and would be going out a lot.”
Izzy started the car, moved it to the spot closest to the rear entrance.
“
Coast is clear,” Lila said and the two woman helped Black, who was conscious and able to assist, out of the car, with the dog following. Lila keyed the back entrance and then the door to their room, 114, which was directly opposite the last room Izzy had been in. Inside, they led Black through the suite to the closest bed.
“
Blood’s gone,” Lila said as they eased him onto the bed.
“
Yeah,” Izzy said.
“
I don’t remember anyone cleaning it off.”
“
No, no one did.”
“
I understand why we couldn’t take him to a hospital, what with a couple dead cops back there, but it seems like we never really had to take him to one, after all. Did we?”
“
Doesn’t look like.”
“
So, when you rubbed your bloody hand into his wound, is that what did it?”
“
I don’t know. It’s just a guess.”
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Darned good one, it looks like.”
“
Seems so.”
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Sweet,” Lila said. Then, “I know you think hiding out here is a good idea and it probably is, but we have to do something about the car. I don’t think those cops got the tags, but they’re not stupid, they got the make and model and one of them is more than likely going to remember it’s got Nevada plates on it, so we should move it and I’m thinking we should drop it off by one of the used car lots up the street.”
“
Why?”
“
Because we’ll need to get another car. We’re four, with you and the dog. We can hardly all fit in my little Jag.”
“
I knew that you were going to stay and see it through.”
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How’d you know that?” Lila smiled.
“
You wouldn’t be here if you weren’t in it till the end.”
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Yeah, the end,” Lila said. “I’m guessing you don’t have a clue.”
“
Not a clue.”
“
So we’re gonna be like Thelma and Louise, us against the world and we die in glory, that what you think?”
“
Not like Thelma and Louise.” Izzy smiled. “We got a dog.”
“
And a large black man who thinks fast and is very good with a gun.”
“
A couple handy traits. With him and the dog, maybe we can change the ending.”
“
That would be cool.” Lila held out her hand.
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You’ll stay with me? All the way, no matter what?” Izzy took Lila’s hand.
“
No matter what.” Lila squeezed Izzy’s hand, not too hard, but hard enough so that Izzy knew that whatever happened, they were in it together. “Now, about the car, you take it. I’ll follow. We gotta go now, before they start looking.” Lila glanced down at Black. “Think he’ll be okay?”
“
Yeah, I kinda do.”
“
Then let’s go,” Lila said. “Only instead of taking the car to a car lot, which would just tell them we got another one when they find it, and find it, they will. We’ll take it to the airport and put it in long term parking. They’ll find it there, as well, but maybe they’ll think we got on a plane. Then we’ll drive back and pay cash for something down the road.”
“
Sounds good,” Izzy said.
Fifteen minutes later Izzy parked the Crown Vic between matching white vans at the Medford International Airport. She locked it, then jogged to the terminal where Lila was waiting in the passenger pickup outside of U.S. Air in her black Jag.
“
What kind of car you wanna get?” Lila sounded like a kid at Christmas. Her eyes were sparkling, almost as if she’d been brought back from the dead.
“
Jeez, you look happy.”
“
Yeah, it’s a change for me.” Lila smiled. “A lot’s been going on in my life. I thought I’d been slipping up, getting sloppy, but I don’t think that’s it. I think I’m altering my priorities.”
“
And is that a good thing?”
“
I didn’t think so, but I do now.”
“
Then that’s good. Now let’s go get a car.”
* * *
Mansfield Wayne hated depending on others, especially those he considered beneath him, and he didn’t consider himself better than most, just luckier and maybe bolder. But there were those who were cut from a coarser cloth and Peeps Friday was one of them. But sometimes one had no choice.
He pulled his iPhone from his pocket, scrolled through his contacts, tapped on Peeps. The man answered on the second ring.
“
Listen up,” he said after Peeps identified himself. “I just got a call from one of my contacts. Isadora Eisenhower used her card to rent a motel room in Susanville. She’s not there now, doesn’t look like she used the room. But after a little investigation he found out she’s got a son living there.” Mansfield paused, coughed. “I called and got her daughter-in-law on the phone. Seems Eisenhower stashed her granddaughter there. She offered them a lot of money to keep her and to keep quiet about it.”
“
Doesn’t sound like she kept her mouth shut,” Peeps said.
“
I offered her a lot more. Besides, there doesn’t appear to be any love lost between the daughter-in-law and Eisenhower. The woman doesn’t believe Eisenhower will pay. She thinks it’s a trick of some kind, but she couldn’t afford to take the chance, so she agreed to keep Amy hidden.”
“
And you’re telling me, why?”
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I want you to go and get her, of course. I’ll have a couple of my people pick you up. They’ll also have the money I promised the woman.”
“
Why do you need me?”
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You’re a police officer. You’re older. You look believable. All qualities my men, good as they are, lack.”
“
So, you’re thinking Amy might not come peacefully, that it?”
“
That’s right. So it’s your job to see she does.”
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Alright,” Peeps said, but he didn’t sound enthusiastic.
“
Oh and, Peeps,” Mansfield said. “You bring me that girl and I’ll see you get more money than you’re able to imagine.”
“
Yes, sir.” Peeps perked right up. “But having your guys pick me up isn’t going to work very well, I’m in Medford, Oregon.”
“
What?”
“
We were with the FBI. We almost had the Eisenhower woman, but she got away, in large part thanks to Lila Booth.”
“
Say again.”
“
Lila Booth. She’s helping Eisenhower. Looks like they’re a team.”
“
Does anybody else know this?”
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No, sir,” Peeps said. “I recognized her straightaway, but I kept my mouth shut. I’m not stupid.”
“
Did your partner see her?”
“
Yes, but he doesn’t know her. He doesn’t have a clue as to who she is.”
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Alright.” Mansfield clenched his teeth. “I’ll give you the address. My guys are driving a white Escalade and they’re leaving from Reno now. They’ll be there in about an hour and a half. I’ll call the Medford airport and arrange a plane for you. How quick can you get there.”
“
Straightaway,” Peeps said.
“
When you land at Susanville, wait at the airport. My men will find you. They’ll give you the cash. Pay off the girl’s stepmother, then bring me the girl.”
“
I won’t let you down, Mansfield.”
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I know you won’t,” Mansfield said, only half believing it. He sighed, then hung up.
* * *
Mouledoux was having a cigarette with one of the Medford plainclothes cops as Peeps took his call. At first Peeps looked agitated, but he seemed to settle down. The guy was a bundle of nerves, this business was maybe too much for him.
Peeps put his phone in his pocket, waved, then approached.
“
I gotta go, wife’s sick,” he said. “One of the locals is letting me take his ride, said it was cool as long as I left it in short term parking.”
“
Cool, he actually said it was cool?”
“
I guess that’s the way they talk in Oregon. They’re very friendly.”
“
And he’s letting you take his unmarked?”
“
He cleared it, but why wouldn’t his chief okay it? They’re friendly, like I said.” Peeps smiled, but it didn’t look real. “You’ll need to be here for a couple days getting this all straightened out. I’ll be back.”
“
Alright, I’ll see you then.” Truth be told, Mouledoux was glad Peeps was going. The last thing he wanted was Peeps bumbling everything up with the feds. If he was going to find Eisenhower, he needed their help. And if she wound up in their custody, so be it. He just wanted to know what was going on, how she got to be the way she is.
“
Thanks, partner.”
“
Don’t mention it.” He took a final drag on his Marlboro, then stubbed it out as Peeps hustled across the parking lot toward the car. He turned toward his smoking pal. “You all think anybody’ll mind if I go over to the Carl’s Jr.” He pointed. “Get something to eat, then go back to my room, get a shower and change.”
“
How long you think you’ll be gone?” the man said.
“
Forty-five minutes, an hour tops. This circus is gonna go well into the night.”
“
Yeah, go ahead, go. I’ll cover for you, just like you’re gonna be covering for your partner.”
“
I’m not the fuck up he is,” Mouledoux said.
“
I can see that.” He smiled. “Go ahead, go.”
* * *
Peeps Friday checked the GPS application in his iPhone. He loved that app, didn’t know how he’d ever gotten along without it. He got on the freeway, heading north and got off on the next exit, making a right at Biddle, where he got the surprise of his life when he saw Lila Booth and Isadora Eisenhower blow past in Lila’s black Jag, heading south, away from the airport.
He pulled into the left lane, but there was a divider and it was impossible for him to make a U turn.
“
Damn.” He thumped a hand on the steering wheel. By the time he got turned around, they’d be long gone. Still, he had to try. He swung the unmarked left, jumped the divider, making as close a U turn as possible as the undercarriage scraped the divider.
A horn blared. A tow truck was bearing down on him. Peeps accelerated, almost lost control in the turn, barely avoided sideswiping a white minivan, which was going about fifteen miles an hour under the speed limit. He had to brake to avoid hitting it, instead of accelerating and swinging into the left lane. He could’ve made it. Braking was instinctive and stupid, because had not the honking tow truck’s driver been as fast on his own brakes, he’d’ve plowed into Peeps. As it was he got his truck stopped inches from Peeps’ turning vehicle.
And for reason’s unknown the slow going minivan screeched to a stop, smoking rubber, locking Peeps between the minivan in front and the tow truck behind. He hit the horn, wanting the mini van to get out of the way, but instead of moving, the door opened and a woman old enough and heavy enough to be his grandmother climbed out.
“
Are you crazy?” she shouted, marching toward him like a samurai warrior, cane in hand.