He’d almost reached the central court when Orlando said, “I got something.”
Quinn stopped, instinctively turning east toward the part of the park she’d been in.
“Is it him?” he asked.
“Might be. I’m down near the east end of the lake, along that small walkway between the tar and the fence near Wilshire Boulevard. I have a good view here of the Curson gate.”
Quinn pictured the spot in his mind. “All right.”
“Two men just entered. Not tourists. Casual suits. Looking very serious.”
Quinn thought about all the office buildings that were within a few blocks of the park. “Could be a couple of businessmen trying to get some air.”
“Could be,” she said, “but they have the look.”
He knew what she meant. Tough, focused, not letting anything escape their gaze. Quinn looked at his watch: 11:15, still forty-five minutes until the meeting was to occur. Advance men, maybe? Doing the same thing Quinn and his team were doing? Or another assassination team, like the one in Ireland, getting into place?
“This
Quinn was about to tell Nate to knock it off, but he stopped himself.
“Keep an eye on them,” Quinn said. “Could be nothing.”
“Copy that,” Orlando said.
Instead of continuing toward the central court, Quinn headed down the path that ran along the back side of the Hammer Building, toward the tar lake.
“What are they doing?” he said.
“Hold on,” Orlando whispered.
Quinn picked up his pace as much as he could without drawing attention.
Five seconds passed. Then ten.
“What’s going on?”
Nothing.
“Orlando?”
There was a single cough over the receiver. The message was clear. She was there, but she couldn’t talk.
“I’m moving in to help,” Nate’s voice broke in.
“No,” Quinn said. “Hold your position.”
“But she might need—”
“Just hold your position.”
Quinn peeked through the bushes, trying to see what was happening. But Orlando was too far away, and the black wire mesh fence that surrounded the lake was between them.
He pulled out his phone, accessed the camera function, then activated maximum zoom and pointed the lens toward the lake. The image on the display screen jumped wildly as he moved the lens from right to left. There was a couple walking down the path, holding hands. Beyond them, a couple of kids were trying to throw rocks over the fence into the tar. Nothing for a while, then near the east end of the lake, a man in a suit leaning against the railing and looking through the wire mesh at the mammoth caught in its daily struggle for freedom. A hard man. A man with
Quinn continued scanning past her for a moment. She had said two men. But there was only the one. Where had his friend gone?
“Nate,” Quinn said. “Up and moving. Head toward the café, then take the ramp down into the park. One of the suits is next to Orlando’s position. Don’t worry about him, I’m on that. But I don’t know where his partner is. Locate him. Do
“Copy that,” Nate said.
As he watched, Orlando pulled her camera phone out of her pocket and held it up to her eye, acting the part of tourist. She could pass, probably. But if the guy in the suit was a legitimate concern, something must have caused him to be interested in her.
“I think he’s made you,” Quinn said. “But you’re too public there. Let’s get him someplace we can deal with him. You think you can get him to follow you?”
A low, grunted “Uh-huh.”
“Good.”
Quinn thought for a second. The problem with a public place was that there was too much public around. But he knew one place that might work.
“Head west, behind the museum. There’s an observation pit of an old excavation area. It’s covered by a cinderblock building, but there’s an opening on the north side. When I was there a few minutes ago, no one was around. I’ll wait inside.”
Another grunt of understanding.
Quinn watched through his camera as Orlando straightened up and began walking around the east end of the lake, then turned and headed west through the park. The man in the suit didn’t move at first.
“Come on, you son of a bitch,” Quinn said.
After fifteen seconds, the man began to follow. Quinn waited to make sure it wasn’t just a coincidence, then said, “You’ve hooked him.”
“Great,” Orlando whispered, not sounding thrilled by the prospect.
Quinn slipped his phone back into his pocket and made his way to the observation pit.