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Wicked Prey

Wicked Prey

Titel: Wicked Prey
Autoren: John Sandford
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should have told me what you were going to do.”
    “Didn’t know how you’d react,” Cohn said, in apology. “I’m sorry if this offends you.”
    “That’s not what I meant,” Cruz said. “What I mean was, if you’d told me, I’d have figured out a better place to do it. He’s bleeding, ah, for Christ’s sakes, if they find blood in the carpet . . .”
    She took three long steps to the closet niche, snatched a HomTel plastic laundry bag off a hanger, and as the men watched, bent over Spitzer’s body, lifted his head by the hair on the back of his skull, and pulled the bag over his head. Then she tugged the head to one side and said, “The carpet’s okay. Goddamnit, Brute, try thinking about consequences once in a while.”
    Cohn was embarrassed and shrugged, and said, “Sorry, babe.”
    “Go wash that wrench. We’ll throw it out the car window somewhere,” she said. “And don’t call me babe.”
    McCall looked at Lane, who shrugged. “Be good if nobody found out about this for a while.”
    “We’ll take him out in the woods and bury his ass,” Cohn said. “When I was buying the wrench, I bought some garbage bags at Home Depot. We can pick up a shovel on the way out.”
    They looked down at the body, and Cruz said, finally, “Four guys would have been better.”
    Cohn grinned at her: “You’ll just have to carry a gun yourself, darling.”
    She shook her head. “I need to be outside. If I’m not outside, I can’t manage the radios and all the other stuff. Three is okay, four would be better. I don’t know how many people we’ll be handling.”
    Cohn looked at Lane. “How about your brother?”
    Lane shook his head. “We can’t go on the same job. You know, so there’ll be somebody to take care of the families, if something happens.”
    McCall asked, “You remember Bob Mortenson from Fresno?”
    Cohn nodded.
    “He had a wheelman named Steve Sargent, he was in Chino until last year. He got caught on a jewelry deal that broke down in LA after Mortenson quit. I know him, some, he’s careful, he can keep his mouth shut. If we needed him . . .”
    “We’ll talk about it,” Cohn said. “But I’d rather not work with someone new. Look what happened when we brought in this piece of shit.” He prodded Spitzer’s body with a toe of his shoe. “We’ll work it with Rosie, see if we can do it with three. What happened with Mortenson? I haven’t heard about him in years.”
    “He retired. He’s in Hawaii,” McCall said. “Got a place there. Goes fishing a lot. Plays golf.”
    “That’s what we’re talking about,” Cohn said, the enthusiasm lighting his eyes. “That’s what this job’ll do for us. Rosie says this should be large: we pull this off, we’re all done.”
    Lane levered himself to his feet. “In the meantime, we gotta get rid of Jack,” he said.
    “You’re the farm boy,” McCall said. “You know about the woods. I’m city, man. I’m scared of them bears and shit. Wolves.”
    A bad smell was coming from the body—flatulence, emptying lungs, or maybe death itself. Cruz said, “We need to get some air freshener. Some pine scent, that’s what the motel uses.”
    Lane said to Cohn, “You know, even if we weren’t here for a job, Jack would have been worth doing. I feel a hundred percent safer already.”
    McCall said to Cohn, “If you got that garbage bag . . .”
    But then Lane asked Cruz, “What’re we gonna hit, anyway? You never said.”
    “Not one hit,” she said. “Maybe six or eight.”
    Lane and McCall stared at her for a second, and Cohn said, “She’ll tell you all about it—but let’s get rid of Jack and she can lay it all out.”
    “Just give me one minute of it, right now,” Lane said. “Not the details, just the outline.”
    Cruz said, “There are two parts to the deal, but they’re not really connected. The Republican convention is starting, and the people who run the party down at the street level are here, as delegates and spectators. So these big lobby guys come in with suitcases full of cash, and pass it out, expense money. They call it street money, hire guys to put up signs and all that, off the books. Everybody knows about it, nobody tells. Can’t tell, because it’s illegal. I’ve got the names and hotel rooms for seven of them. They could have anywhere from a quarter-million to a million dollars, each. We hit them until we feel nervous. We’ll have to feel it out as we go, but three or four guys anyway.
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