“It’s a lot stupider to dick around like this,” she snapped.
“What’s the idea?”
“What if Oscar is calling the good Doctor and trying to bargain his way out?” I said. And I was right; it did sound stupid.
Debs snorted. “Bargain with what?”
“Well,” I said, “Doakes said he’s carrying a bag. So he could have money, bearer bonds, a stamp collection. I don’t know. But he probably has something that might be even more valuable to our surgical friend.”
“Like what?”
“He probably knows where everybody else from the old team is hiding.”
“Shit,” she said. “Give up everybody else in exchange for his life?” She chewed on her lip as she thought that over. After a minute she shook her head. “That’s pretty far-fetched,”
she said.
“Far-fetched is a big step up from stupid,” I said.
“Oscar would have to know how to get in touch with the Doctor.”
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“One spook can always find a way to get to another. There are lists and databases and mutual contacts, you know that.
Didn’t you see Bourne Identity?”
“Yeah, but how do we know Oscar saw it?” she said.
“I’m just saying it’s possible.”
“Uh-huh,” she said. She looked out the window, thinking, then made a face and shook her head. “Kyle said something—that after a while you’d forget what team you were on, like baseball with free agency. So you’d get friendly with guys on the other side, and— Shit, that’s stupid.”
“So whatever side Danco is on, Oscar could find a way to reach him.”
“So fucking what. We can’t,” she said.
We were both quiet for a few minutes after that. I suppose Debs was thinking about Kyle and wondering if we would find him in time. I tried to imagine caring about Rita the same way and came up blank. As Deborah had so astutely pointed out, I was engaged and still didn’t get it. And I never would, either, which I usually regard as a blessing. I have always felt that it was preferable to think with my brain, rather than with certain other wrinkled parts located slightly south. I mean, seriously, don’t people ever see themselves, staggering around drooling and mooning, all weepy-eyed and weak-kneed and rendered completely idiotic over something even animals have enough sense to finish quickly so they can get on with more sensible pursuits, like finding fresh meat?
Well, as we all agreed, I didn’t get it. So I just looked out across the water to the subdued lights of the homes on the far side of the causeway. There were a few apartment buildings close to the toll booth, and then a scattering of houses almost as big. Maybe if I won the lottery I could get a real estate agent 1 7 4
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to show me something with a small cellar, just big enough for one homicidal photographer to fit in snugly under the floor.
And as I thought it a soft whisper came from my personal backseat voice, but of course there was nothing I could do about that, except perhaps applaud the moon that hung over the water. And across that same moon-painted water floated the sound of a clanging bell, signaling that the drawbridge was about to go up.
The radio crackled. “He’s moving,” Doakes said. “Gonna run the drawbridge. Watch for him—white Toyota 4Runner.”
“I see him,” Deborah said into the radio. “We’re on him.”
The white SUV came across the causeway and onto 15th Street just moments before the bridge went up. After a slight pause to let him get ahead, Deborah pulled out and followed.
At Biscayne Boulevard he turned right and a moment later we did, too. “He’s headed north on Biscayne,” she said into the radio.
“Copy that,” Doakes said. “I’ll follow out here.”