Lost(55)
I took the bait and asked him what the problem was.
“The goddamn Colombians say they gonna kill me. Ain’t nothing like the Cubans. The Cubans’ll listen to you. The Cubans are reasonable. But these Colombians is crazy. I need protection.”
“So all of a sudden you don’t hate the police?”
“Never really hated the police. It’s just fun to screw with you. Even if I did hate the police, I don’t hate no more. Can you help me?”
We helped him. Walter Slates turned his life around. He now works for Florida Power and Light somewhere up near West Palm Beach. He made it a point to come by and thank me a few years ago.
I knew that by putting the word out at the station, I could count on tips from contacts on the street. The beat cops heard we hadn’t found all the people who’d been in the container, and it took them only about an hour to round up the rest. Now we had almost all of them. Except one. A blond Polish girl named Magda who spoke some English.
Finding that girl was our only goal this morning.
Instead of hello, the first thing Marie had said to me when I met her in the lobby of the downtown Marriott was “I just got off the phone with my best informant. Hanna and Albert Greete are in Miami, looking for a girl who fled from the boat. She has a backpack with a fortune in diamonds hidden in it.”
“Let me guess—it’s the one girl we haven’t found yet. Magda from Poland.”
“Exactly.”
“Does she know she has the diamonds?”
“I don’t think so. I heard they’re supposed to be sewn into the strap.”
We got busy checking shelters and streets near the port and downtown.
Around midmorning, I grabbed a doorknob that turned out to be covered with grease. Someone had smeared the knob with goo as a joke or as a way to put people off, but in any case, I now had bicycle grease all over my right palm.
Marie was speaking with a woman who ran a homeless shelter and I was looking for a paper towel to wipe my hand when I noticed someone coming in my direction.
There are a lot of men wearing suits in Miami, but not many with goatees dyed blue. It was Billy the Blade, Rostoff’s muscle. I immediately realized he was doing the same thing Marie and I were. He didn’t know how many people we’d rescued from the ship and he was probably hoping to recover some of his investment right now.
I turned to face him, and after a few seconds, he looked up and noticed me. That’s one of the benefits of my size—I can be very obvious when I want to be.
I’d obviously caught the Russian by surprise. It took him a moment to put on his usual smile. Then he strutted toward me in his expensive cream-colored Brooks Brothers suit.
Billy kept his broad smile as he said, “Detective, did you already get kicked off your task force? You have to work the streets of Miami again?”
I gave a little chuckle and said, “I think you overestimate your boss’s influence.”
“I’m not sure it’s possible to overestimate Mr. Rostoff’s influence.”
“The better question is why you’re working the streets of Miami.”
“We’re not far from my office. I just thought I’d go for a walk and get some fresh air. By the way, how’s your lovely sister?”
He’d pushed the right buttons. I decided to keep my mouth shut.
Billy said, “We’re not that different, you know.”
I held up my left hand—the clean one—and said, “Hold it right there. We could not be more different. You’re a predator, plain and simple. You’re a dirtbag here just like you were in Russia. Leopards don’t change their spots.”
“Believe what you want, but the truth is that you’ll die poor while I live near the beach in Fort Lauderdale.”
“Maybe, but you’ll die a lot younger than me.”
“Is that a threat?”
“A fact. Go ahead and try to point out the old gangsters in Miami. There aren’t any. Even the Colombians don’t last much past fifty, and that’s if they’re lucky.”
Billy shook his head and said, “Drugs are a dangerous and dirty business.”
I leaned in a little closer. “Can I give you some friendly advice?”
“Sure, why not?”
I gently placed my right hand on his shoulder and said, “Your boss is going to go down. You don’t have to be on the ship when it sinks.”
Billy let out a laugh. “This isn’t Russia. There are many rules the police must follow here. I don’t think you can harass us for no reason.”
I just smiled as I removed my hand. I admired the perfect grease handprint on his otherwise pristine cream suit. “You have a nice day, Billy.”
“Same to you, Detective.” He turned and left.
I could see my handprint on the suit even from a block away. I knew we had to find the missing girl before the Russians did.
CHAPTER 81
MAGDA ANDRUSKIEWICZ OPENED her eyes with a start. It wasn’t until she glanced up and saw the blue sky past the rough metal roof that her body relaxed slightly. The long ride to the United States in the shipping container with the others had been horrifying. Especially when people started dying. Even the girl she’d worked so hard to comfort in Amsterdam had fallen sick and died the day before they’d arrived in Miami.
James Patterson's Books
- The 20th Victim (Women's Murder Club #20)
- The 19th Christmas (Women's Murder Club #19)
- Killer Instinct (Instinct #2)
- The Inn
- The Cornwalls Are Gone (Amy Cornwall #1)
- Red Alert(NYPD Red #5)
- Cross the Line (Alex Cross #24)
- Kiss the Girls (Alex Cross #2)
- Along Came a Spider (Alex Cross #1)
- Princess: A Private Novel (Private #14)