Deadly Lode (Trace Brandon Book 1) (34 page)

BOOK: Deadly Lode (Trace Brandon Book 1)
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C
hapter
2
7

A
l
Pantelli
was having a qui
e
t dinner with his brother
,
Pino
,
at
Delmonico

s in the Quarter
.


You know
.
Al, that Malcolm character bothers me.


How so
? O
ther than he

s a f
reakin

rat
?


I worry about him spilling his guts to the feds.
W
e

ve got a
chance to make some real dough with our
Montana Creek Mining
shares.


I

m listening, brother.


Well, if
Malcolm
starts spouting off about inside info going to Cyrus and payoffs to lab employees
,
it could cause a lot of problems
,
a
nd knock hell out of the share price.
Another thing,
I don

t think he owns any shares himself.
The shares are
all
owned by
Twisp River
or
Carib
,
w
hich is to say
,
Cyrus.

Al took a sip of h
is wine and looked to see if anybody was listening
.


Y
ou think it

s worth a hit?

he said
,
quietly.


All I

m saying is
,
why take a chance
?

Al nodded
.

I could send
t
he
C
hemist to see him.


Might not be a bad idea.
Malcolm
looked like he was under a lot of stress when he came to see us. Guys
under stress
have strokes all the damn time.

 

 

 

 

 

C
hapter
2
8

I
called Red and
shut the drill down until after
N
ew
Year’s
.
Nothing much happens
in the
public
markets
during the holidays.
Hedge fund guys and investment bankers
flee
New York in favor of some island paradise
,
and
the dirty hula.
It was a good time to
shut down
and
catch up
.

I
asked
Tina
to join me
on a little winter break
to the Caymans
.
It t
ook her all of a n
a
no
-
second to say yes. We

d leave the day after
Christmas
a
nd come back on January
2
.
Ellensburg
is cold and windy in
the winter.
A bit of
time in the sun with Tina in a bikini, or less, sounded
pretty damn good.

I called Cyrus to see if he was going down
to the islands
for the holidays.
He wasn

t
and kindly
offered Tina and
me
the use of his
George Town
condo for a week.
Which I thought was fair compensation for all the trouble he

d stirred up
in the past
.

Tina and I flew to Houston the day after Christmas.
From Houston w
e caught
an
i
sland commuter f
ight to George Town. We were safely ensconced in Cyrus

s th
ree-
story, two
-
bedroom, two
-
bath condo in time to see the sun sink into the Cari
b
bean
. The view from Cyrus

s balcony was breathtaking.
Everything else aside,
t
he Virus knew how to live.

We changed into bathing suits and hit the pool. Tina wanted to swim in the ocean, but I reminded her of what a Mexican fisherman had once told me
.

No
se
ñ
or
, there are no
sharks
at this fine
beach,
but do not swim after the sun goes down.

So, w
e swam some laps
in the pool
.


Ready for some dinner?

I asked
,
Tina as we toweled off.


Starved.
Do you know a good place?


Jack

s in the Colonial Hotel
. It

s just up the road. I made reservations while we laid over in Houston.


Tough place to get in?


Without a reservation
,
or Cyrus, it

s tough.

I
said with
a laugh.

Something about swimming with a beautiful wom
a
n, wearing nothing but a skimpy bikini
,
makes me incredibly horny.


We

ve got about an hour
, a
nd it

s best to be fashionably late,

I said
,
as I came up behind
her
and untied her bikini top. I ran my hands up her f
lat
belly and cupped her
firm
breasts.

She turned and kissed me deeply on the mouth
,
while her right hand moved up the inside of my right leg.


I think we

ve got time
for a
quickie,
big fella
,

she
whispered
,
in a sultry voice.

We were only twenty
-
five minutes late. Which
,
by
i
sland time, is right on time.

The week
flew by. We jogged on the beach, swam, made love at least twice a day
,
and ate some of the best seafoo
d in the world.

 

 

It was a shock
get
ting
off the plane
back
in Spokane to fifteen
-
degree temperatures and blowing snow.

Back in my Ellensburg office, tanned and fit, I set up a conference call
with
Wally, Will
,
and
Cyrus
. Jim Lee was
e
n route to New York
,
and I

d catch up with him in the morning.

We would start drilling and coring again in a couple of days. It

d been pretty quiet, as expected
,
over the holidays.
Cyrus reported that the
Chinese
were still steadily accumulati
ng
our stock.
He
figured
they wouldn

t tip their hand until they could attack in force.

Korea
n
style
,

as Cyrus put it.

 

 

 

 

 

C
hapter
2
9

A
l
Pantelli
met with
Pete
r
M
a
netti
,
aka
, t
he Chemist,
in
Al

s
office
on
Saint Louis Street
,
in the French Quarter
.


Peter
, we

ve got another job for you. Almost a clone of the last one. Same city,
similar type
target,

Al said, handing
Peter
a legal
-
sized manila envelope
containing
information on Malcolm Trueblood.

The Chemist took the envelope and looked through the contents.


Read it over carefully
,

Al said
,

t
hen burn it all.

Peter
nodded
.

A
ny particular method in mind for this one?


It needs to look like a
heart attack or stroke. This fellow
is
stressed out
,
business troubles
,
s
o
it won

t be any big surprise when he croaks. We

ll wire the money to your offshore account.
half
now and
half
when it

s done. Same as always
.
Capisce
?

The Chemist nodded, stood up
,
and shook hands with Al
.

I

ll let you know when it

s done.

 

 

Not too far from where Al and
t
he Chemist were meeting,
Agent
Monroe was meeting with his assistants in the
New Orleans
,
FBI
offices
.


Okay, boys and girls, what

ve you come up with?

Agent
Wilson
Allen stood up.


We interviewed every
Pantelli
family
associate
doing time in Louisiana.
As
bait
, w
e
used
the possibility of a reduced sentence in return for any information on a
hit
-
man
with the nickname of
the
Chemist.


Any luck?

Beau asked.


The last guy
,
on our last day
of interviews
, gave us our only lead.


Never fails. Go on
,

Beau said, his adrenalin
e
starting to kick in.


The guy

s name is
Vince Bugati
. He

s
doing a nickel in Pollack
for possession with intent to distribute
. S
ays he heard about
a
hitter
,
called
t
he Chemist. He said word on the street was this wacko had a PhD
in chemistry
.
Bugati
also
said th
e
fellow did wet work for the
Pantelli
family
,
a
nd always used poisons.


Anything
else?


I told him if his information panned out, we

d
look at trying to get his sentence reduced.


How much time

s
he got left?


About three years.


Okay, damned fine work people. Let

s start checking local universities and colleges for PhD chemists with major malfunctions
, p
ersonal problems, gambling or drug habits,
ex-wives
, dead wives. You know the drill.
And start with
Louisiana colleges and universities

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