Gregg Hurwitz - Last shot

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Bear said wearily, "You had to go and do that."

Yves chuckled as Bear frisked her and tightened flex-cuffs around her chubby wrists. Then Bear fought with the remotes, clicking past a vacuum-seal storage bag infomercial and a parrot on ice skates before finding a mute button. The abrupt silence was blissful.

"Okay," Tim said. "Let's start this over. We're deputy U.S. marshals. We have a few questions for you."

Bear deposited the woman on a La-Z-Boy. Yves remained standing.

Tim walked over to the adjacent kitchen and dug through the freezer. He tossed a bag of frozen corn at the woman, which she pressed to her eye.

"Thanks," Yves said. "Now, what the fuck do you want?"

"I want to ask you about Walker Jameson."

"Can't say I've had the pleasure."

Tim reached over, pulled the L.A. Times front section from the cable-spool table, and held the photo of Terminal Island's watchtower in front of Yves's face. "Really?"

"I don't know nothin' 'bout that," Yves announced proudly. "I don't read."

Tim's eyes flicked to the silenced TV. Melissa Yueh, KCOM's tireless anchor, was gabbing from location at the San Pedro landfill, a photo of Walker Jameson occupying the upper right quadrant of the screen. "Blind, too?"

"My eyes work good enough to see an illegal search of my private property."

"Okay. You want to play this game? Battery on your woman here. You're the AB's top dog for Southern California, you've got responsibilities now. Do you really want another stint in the pen?"

"That shit only works on smart people."

"Reason?"

"Intimidation."

"Pretend you're smart, then."

Yves took a deep breath and held it. His exhale smelled of marijuana. He aimed a finger at Walker's picture on the TV. "I ain't makin' no specific threats, and I ain't sayin' I'll do nuthin', but that boy's a dead man. Period."

"Thank you," Bear said.

"For what?"

"For punctuating your sentences. I have a hard time keeping up otherwise."

Tim rose and pulled the woman to her feet.

"Don't you fuckin' talk to Jenna. You can't take her away. That's an infraction of my constitutional rights."

"Actually," Tim said, "Gonzales overturned the right to keep your battered girlfriend within arm's length at all times."

"I ain't battered," Jenna said.

"Don't you fucking take her out of my sight." Yves emphasized his words with a stabbing finger that Tim had learned generally presaged violence. Not wanting a carpet dance, he pretended to let his own temper flare to back Yves down.

"Relax, assfuck. Let me treat her eye so it doesn't get infected, and you won't have to waste your precious fucking time driving her to the hospital."

As Tim reached the door with Jenna, he heard a chuckle behind him. "Assfuck," Yves repeated to himself, amused.

Tim sat Jenna on the curb, still in flex-cuffs. He returned from Bear's rig with a first-aid kit, but she jerked her head away from him.

"Just lemme do it myself later. Y'all always screw it up anyhow."

"Okay." Tim knelt, bringing himself to eye level. "We think your boyfriend's going to be involved with a hit on Walker Jameson. I want some information from you, right now, or I'm gonna go in there and arrest him and say it was on your word."

Fear widened her eyes. Tim was surprised by his easy cruelty, but also, oddly, reassured.

"You can't do that."

Tim just stared at her.

"He don't do wet work. Not no more. Wet work comes outta Vegas."

"No shit. Can you give me a name?"

"If I wanna end up on the wrong side of the dirt."

Tim walked her back inside and handed her off to Bear, who cut off her flex-cuffs and sat her on the couch. Tim's Nextel vibrated, and he signaled Bear to give him a second and stepped outside again.

Guerrera's voice came quick and excited. "I found one of Walker's platoon-mates, right here in the VA in Westwood. Medical discharge. They shipped him home from Germany, but he had to go back into the hospital due to complications."

Tim jotted down the name. "Great. And how's it coming with the family?"

"I found a birth certificate so I could track down the parents. His mom's doing a slow fade in some home up in Sylmar-"

"Dying mom's good," Tim mused.

"— and I'm still looking for the father."

"Get a local unmarked, preferably females, to sit on the Sylmar nursing home in case Walker pays Mom a visit before Bear and I can get there." Tim signed off and dialed Ian Summer, a friend who'd recently transferred to the Vegas office. He caught Ian on a stakeout and therefore eager to talk.

"Yeah, we got good intel on the AB chapter out here," Ian said, "especially through the task force."

Tim and Bear had worked closely with the Service-sponsored Vegas Task Force in the past, having Ian track down collateral leads for them in Nevada. He and Bear had returned enough favors to consider Ian a long-distance partner. "I heard these guys use hit men from the Vegas chapter. Do you know who the enforcers there are?"

"No, but a couple of the Metro PD guys have been keeping up files. I'll dig into the intel this afternoon, keep an eye out, and throw you a heads-up if we catch wind of any movement. If it's for the over-the-fence you're dealing with, I'm sure the chief'll be happy to toss some man-hours your way."

Tim thanked him and headed back inside. Her legs tucked under her, Jenna sat beside Yves on the couch, leaning on him and teasing his hair with her fingernails. Yves looked vaguely worried, focused on Bear, who was bent over the Doberman in the corner. The dog still hadn't roused. Tim put two and two together when Bear shook his head, tensing his mouth. "What happened to the dog?"

Yves's eyes were gleaming. "Died of old age."

Bear's gaze lingered on the dog's caved ribs, and then his jaw set, dangerously. "You think this is funny, motherfucker? You lose your temper, hit your woman, kick your dog." He started sharply for Yves, causing him to recoil, but veered instead and headed out the door.

Tim started after him, then stopped. "Look, I have to ask. Do you want to press charges?"

Jenna went on rubbing Yves's bare chest. "For what?"

He'd seen enough domestic violence to know that these two would probably continue to fight it out until one gave the other a street divorce, served by the business end of a. 45.

Offering her a resigned nod, he left them to their marital bliss.

Chapter 21

A stray dog licked the necks of soda bottles in the recycle bin at the curb, paws pressed into the extra black bags piled beside the garbage cans. Walker looked up and down the street, then crossed to the tract house. Within a moment of his ringing, a man in his late sixties appeared at the door wearing a barbecue apron that read DON'T * amp;^%# WITH THE CHEF! Dense chestnut hair powdered with white capped a square-hewn face. Age loosened the skin of his powerful forearms just slightly enough to add texture, and his hands hung like lifeless slabs. The hazel eyes took in Walker with a single sweep.

"Come 'round back." The door closed.

Walker reached across the side gate to raise the latch, then stumbled over a golden retriever all the way to the back deck, where the man awaited him at a picnic table. Wisps spiraled out of holes in the closed barbecue as it self-cleaned. Through a picture window, Walker saw two kids chasing each other in circles around a plush denim couch while an attractive woman in her forties sealed leftover chicken into neat Ziplocs. Pierce threw a rubber chew toy onto the lawn, and the dog sailed after it.

Walker sat down opposite his father. "You don't look surprised."

"I thought you just might be dumb enough, yeah."

"Can't take up a trail a year and a half later."

"No, you can't." Pierce gave a dead grin. "So I guess you did what you had to do."

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