The Reformed (23 page)

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Authors: Tod Goldberg

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction, #General, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Crime

BOOK: The Reformed
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“Why don’t you try something proactive,” I said, “like bugging that empty office next door? Get it ready for Junior’s occupancy.”
When they were gone, I sat down across from Father Eduardo, in the same chair Killa was in prior to my destroying his knee. “I know what I’m doing, Father,” I said.
“I know,” he said. “I know. Ernie, he told me you might make it look like I’m in an impossible situation, but that you would be in control. I just ... to see my brother that way. It was hard.”
“I had to show them that I have no fear,” I said.
“No, not that. That I understand. To see him subservient to Junior. To see him give up his own son to him. It made me sick. That’s me there, Michael. That’s what I used to do. I may not have killed directly, but I put that fear of suffering into other people. I have to make that right.”
“You are. Right here.”
“There’s more. There has to be.”
“We’ll figure that out,” I said. “In the meantime, it’s business as usual here. We’ll clear the storeroom next to your office and put Junior in there. We’ll give him a computer and a phone and all of the bugging devices money can buy.”
“How long will he be here?”
I had to think about that. “Two days, if everything goes according to my plan. If he’s still here by the end of the week, that just means we’ve both been murdered.”
Father Eduardo looked stricken.
“Kidding,” I said.
“He’ll come for you,” Father Eduardo said. “That’s his nature.”
“I know,” I said. “He won’t get the chance.”
“I hope you’re right.”
“I am,” I said. “In the meantime, you need to be in a safe house.”
“I am safe in the Lord’s house,” he said.
“I respect that,” I said, “but I’m the only one who does. Sam will be your shadow for the next few days, but at night, you’re sleeping elsewhere.”
Father Eduardo nodded his assent. “Do you have a secure facility somewhere?”
“You could say that.” I pulled out my cell phone and made a call. “Ma,” I said, “you remember Little Eddie Santiago from the other day? Turns out he’s getting his house fumigated and needs a place to stay for a few nights.”
“Michael,” she said, “is he in danger?”
“Of course, Ma,” I said.
“I thought he was a priest.”
“He is,” I said. “But he’s a priest who needs my help.”
“You lead a very strange life, Michael.”
“I know, Ma. I know,” I said. I checked my watch. “Sam will drop him off in a few hours. That okay?”
“Do I have a choice?”
“No,” I said. “You made me get the car washed, remember?”
“You just can’t stop blaming me for one minute, can you?”
“Appears not,” I said. “I appreciate this, Ma. And so does Father Eduardo.”
“I’ll put on some coffee,” she said, and hung up.
“All taken care of,” I told Father Eduardo.
“Fine, fine,” he said. He reached into his desk and pulled out a Bible. “Would you mind leaving me alone for a few moments? I need to pray.”
“Sure,” I said. “Of course.”
“You can let yourself out?”
I told him I could, and then got out of his office as quickly as possible. It was hard to see him as the religious man he was when in my mind he was Eddie Santiago, not Father Eduardo. He was a man to be feared, and now he had the fear of God. It was a turnaround I wasn’t practiced in, and not one I yearned to be overly familiar with.
 
I found Sam in the empty office, stacking extra Bibles. It was one of strangest things I’d ever seen.
“Take a picture,” Sam said, “before I go up in flames.”
“Where’s Fi?” I said.
“She ran back out to get the bugs. Barry’s in the bathroom, shaking and sobbing quietly.”
“Really?”
“I dunno, Mikey, but he’s not made for hostage situations. That’s all I’m saying.”
“I thought he did well.”
“He’s lucky Junior didn’t plug him.”
“We’re lucky Junior didn’t try to plug all of us.”
“That won’t be the case next time,” Sam said. “How long we planning on pulling this off?”
“Couple of days is all we’ll need. Get him on tape in here, get the counterfeiting operation up and running, which should take only a day if we get some decent plates, and then see about maybe pulling it all together with a police action that doesn’t implicate anyone but Junior.”
“How you planning on doing that?”
“I was thinking of starting out with a Chechnyatype situation in the printing press,” I said, “but without killing anyone.”
“Good luck with that,” Sam said.
“You’ll be helping,” I said.
Fiona stepped back into the office then and set down a small container of bugs. One for the phone; a tracking device on the computer that would clone all of the work Junior did, as well as send cloned e-mails to a private server; and a small camera that would fit inside the spine of one of the Bibles.
“It’s on you, Fi, to put the cameras inside the books,” Sam said.
“Why, Sam, are you afraid?”
“You ever go to Sunday school, Fiona?”
“I grew up in Ireland,” Fiona said. “Maybe you heard of the place? Years of armed religious conflict?”
“Well, wonderful. Then you shouldn’t have a problem with doing things in the name of a greater good with religious icons. Me, it makes me a little nervous. My family came over on the
Mayflower
.” Neither Fi nor I bothered to respond to Sam. He wanted us to, so we didn’t. “So,” he said, after it became clear to all involved that we weren’t going to engage him on what had to be a lie, “I’m morally disallowed from bugging Bibles. Miles Standish runs through this blood, sister.”
“But shooting people for the last thirty years has been fine?” Fiona said.
“Hey, sweetheart, those were all in the service of this great country,” Sam said. “Or a lot of them, anyway.”
“Michael, I expect that you’ll speak for us at the pearly gates?” she said.
“I’ll do my very best,” I said.
“See, Sam? Nothing to be concerned about,” Fi said. “Oh, and here.” She handed me a sheet of paper with a bunch of numbers listed on it. “Your dirty work.”
“What’s this?”
“The license plate of the police cruiser, as well as the car number from the roof.”
“Nice.”
“I’m a professional, even when I’m saddled with a sweating Chatty Cathy,” Fiona said. “You know, I actually think Barry really did enjoy me cutting him.”
“Everyone is into something strange.” I handed the numbers to Sam. “You got someone you can check these with?”
“I’ll have to tread delicately here, Mikey. One wrong step, and these guys are on to our operation.”
“I know you’ll find just the right person,” I said. “Maybe you can use your standing as a founding father of the country to sway the right people.”
Fiona handed me a Bible. “Hold this open,” she said, and I did. She took a bottle of nail polish remover from her purse and poured about a teaspoon of the fluid down the interior spine of the book. She then shoved two fingers into the spine and gently pulled the pages from the binding—the nail polish remover had made the fine gold threading far more elastic, which is what you want to do if you’re going to hide something inside of a book instead of, say, cutting a hammer into the pages. Even people being spied on have seen movies, so they have a general idea what an amateur might do and may even look for a few telltale signs.
But what Fiona was doing was essentially the same process an antiquarian book restorer might do. Except that instead of restoring the Bible, she slid a small camera about four inches in length down the spine of the book.
Back in the Cold War—and in the 1990s, too—if you wanted to film someone, you needed to have a camera that was routed into a recorder somewhere, usually not too far from the camera itself. Any decent, paranoid person could discover these things in just a few minutes of frenzied searching. But the camera Fiona had just slipped into the book was no thicker than her thumb and was able to use motion-detection technology to record directly to a chip inside it. While we wouldn’t have remote access, we would have a fine digital recording of all Junior was doing.
Or, since I saw that Fiona had ten of these cameras, several digital movies of the life and times of Junior Gonzalez.
Fiona sealed the book back up, poked several small holes into the spine so that the camera could view the activity and then placed the book back onto the shelf.
“Good work,” I said.
“You should see what I put in your loft last week.”
“You bugged my loft?”
“You’ll never know without checking. Will you, Michael?”
I didn’t know whether to believe her or not, and fortunately I was saved by Barry’s appearance in the doorway. He’d washed his face some, but it was still a light pink color, and his clothes were covered in blood. He looked like a man who’d been strangled with a whip and beaten, essentially.
“Come on, Barry,” I said, “you’re going to help me with a secret mission.”
“I’d like to go home,” he said.
“You are home,” I said, “for now.”
“That wasn’t fake blood, Michael,” he said. “You let her cut me!”
“There is no letting,” Fiona said.
“She’s right,” I said.
“Free country,” Sam said. “It’s what we came here for.”
Barry looked like someone had just hit him in the back of the head, so I made it simple for him. “A little blood for a good cause, Barry. Namely, your life.”
“That makes sense,” Barry said. “And that it makes sense means that I have made some terrible mistakes in my life, doesn’t it?”
“You can always change,” I said. “Look at Father Eduardo.”
Barry considered this. “Where are we going?”
“I need you to get me the best money plate your money can buy,” I said.
“My money?”
“This is your problem we’re solving,” I said.
“I know a guy named Jacques,” he said. “He’s from the old school. He might not deal with you.”
“I’m sure you can be persuasive,” I said.
“I’m only saying I may need to take the lead here.”
“Like you did with Junior?”
“Similar situation, possibly,” he said, which meant to me that no matter what relationship Barry had with this Jacques, by the end of our time together, he’d understand who was really in charge, even if I didn’t make a single move.
“All right,” I said, “we’ll do it your way.”
“I’ll need some new clothes,” he said. “And is there any way we could get some lunch?”
When you’re a spy, sometimes your toughest job is keeping your informants dressed and fed. It’s not always about beautiful women, shiny cars and blowing things up.
Unfortunately.
15
 
Making money costs money. This is true as both a frothy maxim you might read on a poster and in reality. Each note the U.S. government prints costs four cents in simple materials, but the lead-up process is far more costly. The plates used in the production of money are hand engraved, a meticulous process that takes a substantial amount of time and dedication, but this is done for a very exacting purpose: You can re-create a computer’s etchings very easily, but it’s impossible to precisely emulate the hand of a human being. There will always be subtle differences.
So if you really want to counterfeit money, a printing system like the Latin Emperors had set up at the Ace Hotel would suffice only for the short term. You can print and press money using only computer software and a particularly detailed reproduction of an actual bill. But if you want to make money to make money, you’ll need a hand-engraved plate.
And it would help if you had Barry, too.
While Sam and Fiona finished setting up Junior’s office with the appropriate listening and tracking devices (and to ensure that no one came in and made an attempt on Father Eduardo’s life), and to manage the Leticia situation if she bothered to return to work, which was not something I was sure would happen, I set off to learn just how Barry handled his business.
Not that I didn’t have a pretty good idea as it was, but it was always interesting meeting new friends. Or new friends of friends. And, really, Barry was eager to help this project along.... Or, well, he was eager for this project to be over so he could leave town for as long as possible without worrying about his family being killed.
I sat in my Charger and waited for Barry to come out of the Dillard’s department store he’d gone into to purchase a new outfit, since the one he was wearing just had too much blood on it. I opted not to join him, figuring it would probably be better all around if security cameras picked up one shady, blood-covered individual and not his friend, too. And since this Dillard’s was housed inside a nice suburban mall in Doral, I really didn’t want to have to fight off a SWAT team.

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