Tags:
Fiction,
thriller,
Suspense,
Thrillers,
American Mystery & Suspense Fiction,
Suspense fiction,
Political,
Missing Persons,
Fiction - Espionage,
Security consultants,
International business enterprises,
Corporate culture
the FedEx package will get delivered to the drop site and probably transferred to some actual office, where it’ll get opened.”
“Maybe. Maybe not.”
“Maybe not,” I conceded. “Still, it’s worth a try. Once they open it and see a tracker inside, they’re going to destroy it. But at least I’ll get the real location that way.”
“You think so, huh?”
“I hope so. That’s why I’m calling you.”
“Well, here’s the deal. If you want a GPS logger that can broadcast its location in real time, it’s gonna be a little beefier than that Letter Logger device. It’ll send out real-time position data as SMS text messages. Lithium-ion battery. Should stay powered for ten days.”
“Think you can pop one in the mail later on today?”
“Soon as I get back to the office.”
Another call was coming through. I recognized the number, told Merlin where to send the package, and said, “Thanks, man. Good fishing.”
Then I picked up line 2. “Lieutenant Garvin,” I said. “Thanks for getting back to me.”
“Good to hear from you, Mr. Heller,” the cop said. “Funny coincidence, actually. I’ve been wanting to talk to you about your brother.”
13.
T he headquarters of the Violent Crime Branch of the Washington Metropolitan Police was hidden away in the back of some dismal shopping center in southeast D.C., off Pennsylvania Avenue. I headed over there right after work. I was buzzed in and entered a dimly lit corridor that smelled of vomit, the stench not quite masked with some deodorizing spray that was almost as bad. I passed an open conference room that had crime-scene tape stretched across the doorway, probably to keep people from accidentally stepping into the mess on the floor.
Detective-Lieutenant Arthur Garvin met me halfway down the hall. He wasn’t quite what I expected. He had an almost professorial appearance: thick steel-rimmed glasses, scraggly white goatee, red-rimmed nostrils. On the way over, I’d called in to the office and asked Dorothy to do a quick backgrounder on the guy. He was sixty-four, with thirty-two years of service, and had gotten a retirement waiver. The police and the fire department had a mandatory retirement age of sixty, but they made exceptions in special cases. Most cops want to retire as soon as they can, I’ve found. The ones who get retirement waivers are the ones who love what they’re doing.
He wore a light blue shirt with a button-down collar, neatly creased; he had his shirts professionally laundered, and they came back in boxes. Not a polyester kind of guy. Neat and orderly, though a large dark grease stain in the middle of his shirt pocket marred the effect.
He shook my hand. His was damp. “Come on back to my office. Ordinarily, we’d talk in the conference room, but it’s undergoing maintenance.”
“Smells like someone couldn’t hold their Jack Daniel’s,” I said.
He scowled. “Nah, something’s going around the office. Some kinda stomach virus.” He sounded congested, kept sniffling.
He didn’t share an office since he was a lieutenant. His was cramped and windowless, with a bad rug and wood-veneer paneling and a lot of framed certificates and awards. It reminded me of a home office in someone’s finished basement.
Garvin sat behind his desk and took a long swig of coffee from a giant mug. “Coffee?”
“No, thanks.”
“So, snake-eater, huh?”
I shrugged. He’d checked me out, too.
“Isn’t that what they call you Green Berets?”
No one I knew in the Special Forces ever used the term “snake-eaters.” We all went through a pretty nasty training program called the Q Course, but you didn’t actually have to cook and eat snake. Maybe in the old days you did. No one ever called us “Green Berets” anymore, either. Not since John Wayne.
“Guess so,” I said.
“You’ve been with Stoddard Associates for about three years.”
“That all? Seems a lot longer.”
“Now, I assume you’re here for personal