Kathryn Dance walked up from the side of the building, where her car was parked, the gray Pathfinder. Nose art from her dogs decorated the back windows. Stemple liked her dogs; he knew them pretty well, being a regular visitor to the Deck. He was after Dance to let him borrow the flat-coated retriever, take her hunting and bring back a dressed duck or two for the family. He’d made the mistake of mentioning that in front of Dance’s kids; the look in her eyes, the response, was a hard one to describe. It meant no in a lot of different ways.
Allerton was eyeing Dance neutrally as the CBI agent walked up. She looked around, then moved closer yet. ‘Al.’
A nod.
‘Carol, there’s something I want to talk to you about. Both of you, really.’
‘Sure, Kathryn.’
Stemple gave a second nod. Maybe a grunt.
‘I heard you had a lead to Serrano.’
The DEA agent hesitated.
Dance said, ‘Well, I know you do. TJ told me. He’s my inside man. You’re going to talk to this lead now?’
Allerton held her gaze. ‘We are.’
Dance said, ‘I want to interview him.’
‘Well …’
‘I know the turf, Carol. I don’t know this particular subject but I know the crowd he’d hang with. That gives me a huge leg up.’
‘But Charles,’ Allerton said. ‘He suspended you.’
Stemple watched Dance’s lips tighten. ‘All right. The other thing?’ She glanced at Stemple, then decided, it seemed, to plunge ahead. ‘You don’t know Charles as well as I do. If I were a man and what happened with Serrano happened? He wouldn’t’ve busted me. Hate to say it but …’ Dance shook her head. ‘You’ve been through this too, Carol. You know how it is.’
Her expression said: Women in law enforcement. Yes, I do.
Dance added, ‘I’ll give you full credit for everything I find out. And that’ll go all the way to Washington. I’ll disappear.’
‘No, that’s not necessary.’
‘Actually, yeah, it is. Charles can’t know anything, that I’m involved. All I want is to nail Serrano.’
‘Sure,’ Allerton said, nodding. ‘I get it. Completely sub-rosa.’
Whatever that meant. Though Stemple hammered out a definition.
Now another glance his way.
Dance said, ‘I may already be under the bus—’
‘Charles’d do that to you?’ Now Stemple couldn’t control the grunt.
‘—already under the bus, but we get Serrano back, Sacramento won’t be clamoring for my head quite so loud. It’s the only chance I’ve got to pull something out of the fire here.’
Allerton was scanning the parking lot, thoughtful, not looking for acquiring targets, though, as Stemple was doing. ‘The fact is, Kathryn, I could use your help. I’m not the best interviewer in the world.’
‘Deal, then?’
‘Deal.’
Dance’s eyes swiveled to Stemple.
‘You asking me? I’m just backup. Do whatcha want.’
They walked to the car, Stemple easing into the driver’s seat. The big Dodge bobbed under the weight. The women, too, got in. He fired up the growly engine and they squealed out of the lot toward the highway.
A half-hour later Stemple turned onto surface streets in Seaside and eased the cruiser along a crumbling asphalt road, bordered by grasses, dusty brush, rusting wire fences. A hundred yards along they came to a development, probably fifty years old, bungalows and Cape-style houses, tiny, all of them.
‘That’s it,’ Allerton said, pointing to the scabbiest house there, a lopsided one-story structure that had last been painted a long, long time ago. White originally. Now, gray. The yard was half sand, half yellowing grass. Thirsty, Stemple thought. Everything was thirsty. This drought. Worst he could remember.
He shut the engine off. Everyone climbed out.
Stemple scanned the perimeter while the agents, looking around, headed toward the front door. Allerton knocked. No response. Dance pointed to the side, where there was a patio. They disappeared that way.
Stemple walked around the property, looked at the houses nearby, wondered why somebody had taped a massive poster of a daisy in a window. Was it a sunscreen? Wouldn’t a sunflower’ve made more sense?
Mostly, though, he was looking for threats.
This wasn’t a cul-de-sac but it wasn’t highly traveled. He counted four cars pass by, all seeming to contain families or individuals on their way to or from school, work or errands. That didn’t mean there
But no one in any vehicle paid him any mind.
He walked back to the cracked sidewalk and was looking down at some vibrant purple plant, when there was from inside the bungalow a crash of something containing glass, a lot of glass.
Followed by a woman’s scream.
CHAPTER 24
An hour later, back at CBI headquarters, Al Stemple was leaning back in a Guzman Connection task-force conference-room chair. It groaned under his weight.