Read Guns Will Keep Us Together Online

Authors: Leslie Langtry

Guns Will Keep Us Together (22 page)

"Damn it. They told me you were partial to blondes!" Her eyes burned, "I dyed my hair for this gig. Now I have to do this the hard way."

I stood only a few feet away from her. I'd have the advantage if I charged. The old Bombay Family nursery rhyme popped into my head,
rush a gun—run from a knife.

"Who are you?" I asked calmly, as if a gun wasn't pointed at my chest.

"Never mind!" She fairly spat the words out. Wow. This bitch could go from zero to psycho in ten seconds. "Shit! Shit!" she cursed herself.

"Look." My thoughts raced, and I wondered if Leonie had sent her. Maybe National Resources had more than just five players? No, she said she didn't work for them. "What is it you want? Maybe I can help."

"Doc Savage needs something from you. I don't want to hurt you. I just need some files. Then I'll go."

I exploded, "I'm so sick of this Doc Savage bullshit! And if you didn't want to hurt me, why send those men after me? And why the gun now? What damned files do you want?"

Eva actually smirked. "I need the gun because you're supposedly dangerous. And I don't know which files. I was just supposed to knock you out and let this guy in once you were unconscious. He'd look for the files, and then we'd be out of here."

I shook my head, "Why are you telling me all of this?"

"I
don't know
! I've never done this before!" She started screaming and forgetting she had a perfectly good weapon in her hand, picked up a book from the end table and threw it at me.

I dodged it neatly (I'm not a total loser.), then dove for Eva and the gun. It only took me a few seconds to subdue her. She was telling the truth. She really hadn't done this before.

I managed to handcuff her by the ankles and wrists to one of the kitchen chairs.

"What time was this Doc Savage coming by, anyway?"

"One hour. He'll be here in one hour." The fight had pretty much gone out of our girl. I didn't push it. Whoever was in charge would be here soon, and then I'd find out what's going on.

In the meantime, I had a couple of cups of coffee to wake up so I could think. Eva wasn't much use to me as a conversationalist so I ignored her.

None of these Doc Savage attacks made any sense. They all seemed to focus on wanting something in my home. Well, except for the dude in the men's bathroom. Eva said they didn't want to hurt me, just wanted some files. What kind of files? I wasn't much of a paperwork guy. I didn't really have any use for it. Paris, on the other hand, kept everything all the way back to his first tooth.

No matter how many times I thought about it, it didn't make any sense. If the Council wanted something from me, they'd just send Grandma and her Uzi. Leonie was the only one left from National Resources. And I was pretty sure she was long gone.

All I did know, was that I'd had too much coffee and a full bladder. I stood and winked at Eva and headed to the bathroom. After a few moments of relief, I stepped into my hallway and felt a sharp, sudden pain on the back of my head. There was another blow before I could turn around and everything went black.

Imagine my surprise when I woke up alive (and just wishing I was dead) and in pain on the floor. A large knot on the back of my head indicated the 'how.' And a bent fireplace poker on the floor demonstrated the 'what.'  I staggered from room to room searching for the 'why.' 

My condo had been ransacked. Drawers hung open like astonished mouths, their contents all over the floor. Cushions were everywhere but on the furniture, and my clothes had attempted to make a break for it from my closet.

To my shock, nothing was damaged. I'd expected that. There was a huge mess, but nothing was ripped or broken. Of course, Eva was gone. But I was pretty sure she hadn't done this on her own.

Without knowing what else to do, I called Paris. He came over and helped me clean everything up.

"It's got to be associated with National Resources." Paris said. "You said this chick mentioned them. Who else would it be?"

I picked up the last spoon from the kitchen floor. Man, these were some nice spoons. I didn't even remember where I got them, but they were really nice.

"Dak."

"Oh, sorry," I shoved the flatware into the drawer. "I'm still a little dizzy from the two blows on the head."

"I think we need to tell the Council about everything."

I looked up sharply, "What? No! They'll insist I kill Leonie. I can't do that."

"May I remind you that you've had three attacks—two in your own home? It isn't safe to bring Louis back here until we close out this deal."

My perfect posture slumped. "I didn't think about that."

"And it looks like the N.R. guys have more resources than we thought. Maybe we just can't get them all by ourselves."

Leonie or Louis. That's what it came down to. "I can't do it." I shook my head. "I can't sick the Council on Leonie."

Paris put his hand on my shoulder. "Maybe they won't go after her. I mean, they gave Gin a reprieve. After what they put you through last time, maybe they'll let her off the hook?"

I looked at my cousin for a long time. He'd never hurt me. And I had to take care of Louis. It was a long-shot, but I had to try.

Paris stood up and pulled his cell phone out. "I'll do it. You go clean yourself up."

I nodded, grateful to have him handle things. Paris definitely had a cooler head. If anyone could manage to pull this off, it would be him.

Of course, no one was answering the bat phone on Santa Muerta. It was 2:00 a.m. here, which would make it…oh hell, my head hurt too much to calculate the time difference. Paris sent me to bed and insisted on sleeping on my couch, just in case.  Good man. He was always someone you could really depend on. A dependable assassin.

I woke mid-afternoon, to find Paris in the kitchen making eggs and bacon. What a guy!

"Any news?" I asked, not really wanting an answer.

"I talked to Dela this morning. She was going to call an emergency Council meeting for—" he paused and looked at his watch "—right about now." He pushed a plate of scrambled eggs, hash browns, and bacon toward me. "Might as well eat."

The food was excellent. I didn't realize Paris could cook. We said nothing as we ate. Both of us were probably thinking the same thing, coming up with no answers. I finished quickly and decided on a shower.

While I felt clean and full, I also felt numb. Leonie's break-up had devastated me more than the attack last night. And now Louis was in jeopardy. I toweled off feeling nothing but despair and pulled on a pair of jeans and a black T-shirt.

I walked into the living room just in time to see Paris ending a conversation on his cell. My heart lurched. The moment of truth.

Paris winced as he hung up his cell. "Well, I guess you are off the hook on this dilemma."

"Is the Council calling the hit on Leonie off? That's great! Now I just have to find her and convince her everything's going to be alright!" I jumped up and hugged my cousin.

But Paris pushed me away. "No. That's not it. Grandma doesn't want you to have to hunt the woman who made you grow up. She still feels bad about almost killing you last year."

I frowned. "That's good news, isn't it?"

"They still want her dead."

His words sunk slowly into my skin, ending in a pool of ooze around my ankles. "Oh no," I whispered.

"No." I said more forcefully using the anger that welled up in my throat. "That's not going to work. I can't let them do that."

Paris nodded as if he knew this was going to be my reaction all along. "All right. I'm in this with you. Let's go get her."

"Really? You'd come with me?" I couldn't believe it.

He grinned. "Hey, if there's no hope for you to have a chance at true love—then I'm screwed."

I slapped him on the back. Maybe he drank sissy drinks and wrote poetry. Maybe he was anal retentive and wore silly pajamas. But he was still my wingman.

"How do we find her?" I asked.

Paris thought for a few moments, then smiled. "Why don't we call Missi?"

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

 

 

"We've got a blind date with Destiny—and it looks like she's ordered the lobster."

~the Shoveler, Mystery Men

 

 

It turned out that Missi was at a technology convention in Vegas. She agreed to meet with us, so Paris and I made plans to hop a red-eye, meeting her at her room about 1:00 a.m.

"What are you doing?" Louis had his arms folded over his chest as he watched me pack.

"What are you doing up? You have school!"

"I'm going with you." He added a frown to his stance, appearing very menacing for a six-year-old.

I sat down next to him, ignoring Paris who was tapping his wristwatch to tell me we had to leave.

"You can't go with me. It's going to be very dangerous. Remember when I told you what we do for a living? Well, there are some dangerous people out there chasing Leonie. Paris and I are going to find her and bring her back." 

"You promised you wouldn't leave without me!" This time he stamped his little foot.

 "Louis. I know I promised that. But taking you would mean putting you in danger. And I just can't do that. You are too important to me. I need you to stay here with Gin and Diego until I get back."

My son didn't look convinced. But there was no way I was taking him with me. Losing Leonie would be devastating. Losing Louis would kill me.

"I'm an awful father for breaking this promise, I know. But I love you so much it hurts. And if anything happened to you, I would never, ever forgive myself. You are my son, and I need you to stay here." I put on what I thought was a very convincing stern-father face.

Louis exploded into tears and threw himself into my arms. I held him while he cried, trying desperately not to sob myself. After a few minutes, I took him by the shoulders.

"You need to stay here and help Gin take care of everyone. Okay? I'll be back. I promise. And I'll never leave you again—unless you want me to."

Louis sniffled and wiped his eyes on his sleeve. "Okay Dad. But you better come back."

I nodded, and Paris and I left. I spent the next two hours on the plane fighting back the tears.

We found Missi as soon as we landed. It took only about half an hour to fill her in on everything.

"Let's see what we've got." Missi pulled out the weirdest looking laptop I'd ever seen and began to turn it on.

"What is that?"

Missi grinned like a kid in a chocolate play room. "Do you like it? It's my latest thing."

Paris and I looked at each other, then turned back to the computer. It was about the size of any other notebook, but it had all kinds of weird attachments and wires sticking out of it. Closed, it resembled the kind of sandwich a robot would eat. Once opened, I could see that the monitor was really four small screens, and the keyboard had ten rows of keys instead of the usual six.

"Holy cow." Paris whistled under his breath.

"How does it work?" I asked a little louder.

Missi smiled. "I guess you could say it works like a laptop. It's just tricked out to my specs. With four screens, I can multi-task more efficiently. This puppy has infra-red capability, satellite feeds to U.S., European and Asian government space programs, and the best GPS system I could put together."

She touched the keyboard, and the thing quivered to life. "I added some special touches to the keyboard to make it work easier. Each monitor is color coded, and I just switch back and forth between them using the touchpad."

I held my hand up to interrupt. "Okay, it's totally cool. But let's just get to the part of how we can find Leonie before Doc Savage, National Resources or the Council does."

Missi had the good grace not to look crushed that I interrupted. I figured Paris would ask her more about it later, but Leonie's life hung in the balance.

"Sorry. I just get carried away sometimes," she said. "I can't take stuff like this to the convention."

"My bad, Missi. I'm being insensitive." This caused her to jerk her head toward me in surprise. Apparently, I wasn't just shocking my immediate family with my personality make-over these days.

"Wow," she said. "No, no, you're right. We have to find your girlfriend before anyone else does." She began typing on the weird keyboard. "Give me everything you know about her."

I told her that her family ran a funeral home in Oregon, and it didn't take long to find the Doubtfire Funeral Home in Portland. Missi plugged a green wire from the keyboard to the monitor as the funeral home came up on monitor #1. When I raised my eyebrow, she told me she'd hacked into their security system. I filled her in on everything I knew about Leonie, from Crummy's to current and former addresses, to physical description.

Missi kept working, plugging wires in, and tapping on the keyboard, until all four monitors showed different aspects from Leonie's life.

"Here—" Missi pointed at the first monitor—"I'm tapping into her family's home and work phone lines. I can actually record conversations past and present. No future ones though. But I'm working on it."

How the hell could she do that? 

"This monitor shows her current home and cell phone lines. I can tap into those too. I can access them as far as three days ago. That should give us some info on where she's planning to hide out."

"And this," she grinned broadly, "is a GPS tracking program. I've typed in her name, description, phone numbers and Social Security number. I should have her located in no time."

I slumped to the bed, my head whirling. Paris looked like he'd been hit with a Taser.

"Does the Council know you have this technology?" he asked weakly.

"Hell no. Nobody—not even Mom knows. I think Monty and Jack suspect something though, because once when they said they were at the library I tracked them to this kegger in Belize. . ."

"Missi!" I shouted.

Her face went from dazed, back to the present. "Oh. Right. Anyway, I just want you to know that I understand what you're going through so that's why you now know about Lulu."

Other books

Angeline by Karleen Bradford
The Laird (Captive Hearts) by Grace Burrowes
Finding Amy by Carol Braswell
Albany Park by Myles (Mickey) Golde
Provence - To Die For by Jessica Fletcher
I Kissed The Boy Next Door by Suzanne D. Williams
Seven Deadly Samovars by Morgan St James and Phyllice Bradner
The Floodgate by Cunningham, Elaine