176454.fb2 The Face of the Assassin - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 42

The Face of the Assassin - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 42

Chapter 42

When they heard the phone ring, the three of them exchanged puzzled glances. They were gathered around a receiver and a digital recorder, watching the lime green display numbers flying by as if they were comprehensible words.

“Cabbie’s phone,” Mattie conjectured.

“No, he’s not answering it,” Lupe said.

“Well, it’s not Bern’s cell,” Mattie countered.

She and Kevern were sipping soft drinks. Lupe was still nursing a cup of coffee. All three of them were sitting on chairs, leaning over notepads on the table in front of them. Lupe was doodling, drawing caracoles, three elaborately spiraled snails.

The phone stopped ringing.

“Nobody’s talking,” Kevern said. They could hear traffic in the background.

“He’s listening,” Lupe said. “Bern is.”

“Not on our phone, he isn’t,” Mattie insisted again. “Where’d he get another cell?”

They exchanged looks.

“Those were your people who took Susana?” Bern asked incredulously.

Kevern was leaning his beefy forearms on the table, making it sag a little, staring hard at the receiver. Bern continued, asking the person on the other end what he was doing, what he wanted. Silence while Bern listened, and then he asked, “You’re still trying to find Baida?”

“Oh shit,” Kevern said in dismay. “He’s talking to Vicente. It’s Mondragon.”

“I was with Kevern when he called you, told you to hold off… What’re you doing?”

They listened to more expressions of Bern’s incredulity. And then: “Insurance? Insurance against what?” Bern asked.

Silence ensued while Bern listened to Mondragon. And then Bern said, “Baida wants to defect.” Silence. “Yeah, that’s right.” Silence. “No, he doesn’t suspect anything.”

“Well, there it is,” Mattie said. “Now Mondragon knows why you pulled him off the hunt.”

Heated words from Bern followed as he insisted that Baida didn’t suspect anything, that he would know if Baida did, that he would sense it.

Then Bern told Mondragon where he was going and what he was supposed to do when he got there.

“We should’ve told him the phone was live,” Lupe said, shaking her head, looking at Kevern. “He could’ve worded all of this differently. He could’ve been more informative, passed a lot more to us.”

Kevern shook his head resolutely. “It would’ve been a mistake. He would’ve tried to tell us too much, repeated things Mondragon was saying to let us know what was going on. Vicente would’ve been all over that. No, we’re fucking lucky we didn’t tell him.”

“The paperboy,” Mattie said, still bothered by the sudden appearance of another cell phone. “He threw the phone in there. That’s what happened.”

“Listen, listen.” Kevern leaned into the recorder. Nothing but traffic, horns, someone yelling, hawking something. The screech of brakes.

“He’s giving him instructions,” Lupe conjectured. “Wants him to do something?”

“And the third thing?” Bern asked.

Silence. More traffic. A snippet of music. No more conversation.

“He’s giving him a list of things to do,” Mattie said.

Lupe had left off wth the snails. “Or not to do,” she said. “Vicente’s threatening him.”

“That’s what picking up Susana was all about,” Mattie said. “Mondragon wants Bern to do something. And Susana’s screwed if he doesn’t do it.”

Kevern began his subdued groan, seeming to hold it back. The two women looked at him.

“What the hell is Mondragon planning?” Kevern asked no one in particular. “He wants to get to Baida anyway?”

He stood up and looked at his watch. Grunting softly, he moved around the room, rubbing the back of his neck, his head down.

“He’s not calling us,” Mattie said. “You’d think he’d call after he got off the phone with Mondragon.”

Kevern shook his head. “Vicente threatened him, like Lupe said. Vicente didn’t want him to call us.”

“So Bern’s holding on to our phone,” Mattie said, “and he’s sure as hell hanging on to Mondragon’s phone, too.” She listened to the transmissions. Again street sounds, but they were fading. “They’ve turned off Insurgentes,” she said. “He’s going to be at Jardin Morena pretty soon, Lex. What’re you going to do? Do we call Bern?”

“No,” Kevern snapped, stopping his pacing and turning to them.

“Call Mondragon,” Lupe said. “Tell him he’s about to screw up in a fucking big way.”

“Then he’ll know Bern’s wired,” Kevern said. “He’ll work around it. This way, if he thinks the threat to Susana is going to buy Bern’s cooperation-and it looks like it will-he’ll think he can communicate with him. We’ll have a shot at it at least.”

Kevern’s situation looked bad. Though he directed the operation and controlled the purse strings, he had to use Mondragon’s tech people, Mondragon’s intelligence, Mondragon’s muscle. Now it seemed that Mondragon suddenly had his own agenda, leaving Kevern toothless.

Normally in an emergency situation, he would automatically turn to the CIA station’s technical services. But of course this wasn’t a normal situation. If he did that, he would be blowing Heavy Rain, which was running off the books right under the Mexico City station’s nose. Not only would it cause a shit storm inside the Agency, but the resulting brawl within the Agency could very well boil over into the intelligence community’s gossip mills. Within hours, it would be in the press, and that would automatically trigger an international incident.

But if his hunch was right, he just might have to take that risk anyway in order to save Baida from being assassinated by Mondragon. Jesus, talk about irony.

Why Mondragon was hell-bent to do this, Kevern couldn’t imagine, and he didn’t have time to try to figure it out. But he was sure of it. He felt it in his gut-shit, he felt in his nuts, right down inside the core of him, so solid, so right, he had no doubt about it at all. No proof, but it was a fucking certainty.

Lexington Kevern was scared.

He looked up, unaware that he had had his head ducked, staring at the floor, until he saw the two women staring at him. Then suddenly, they heard another transmission. Bern was paying the taxi driver.

Kevern had to decide. In for the bet, in for the pot.

“Lupe, get the GPS monitor,” he snapped, going to his desk, taking his handgun out of the drawer, and clipping it onto his belt. He pulled his cell phone out of his pocket and hit a number. “Jack, get the car.”