Identity Unknown (A Parker & Coe, Love and Bullets Thriller Book 1) (17 page)

BOOK: Identity Unknown (A Parker & Coe, Love and Bullets Thriller Book 1)
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"
I'm
a quick study, too. The faster I give in, the happier we'll both be, so what's the point of fighting over it? Just do me a favor and call me if there's even the slightest hint of trouble. Which there won't be, right?"

"Wilky assured me it's a cake walk."

"Uh-huh. Will you be traveling public or private?"

"They need him in L.A. tomorrow, so Wilky chartered a transport plane. I'm meeting them at Eastman Air in an hour."

"That should make things easier. Just watch yourself, okay?"

"Don't worry, hot stuff, I'll be packin' heat."

Parker groaned. "You really need to switch to game shows."

THREE

Eastman Air Charter was a small private airline that had seen better days.
 

Boasting its own terminal in Northeast Houston, it was the hub of unfettered travel for CEOs and occasional rock stars until poor management, the country's economic implosion and spiraling fuel costs had nearly shut it down. It was subsequently sold at a loss, and judging by a sadly deteriorating infrastructure, now catered only to budget-minded clients.

One of those clients was Wilky, an associate of Parker's I'd met a few weeks earlier at a Sunday barbecue for local court and law enforcement personnel. Parker had taken me there in hopes of scaring up some business for PC&A, and much to my surprise, I had actually enjoyed myself.
 

Wilky—whose full name was Arlin Wilkinson—had hosted the party at his home, and was not the stereotypical lowlife bondsman you see in the movies. He was an articulate, well-dressed gentleman in his mid-fifties who spoke with a soft South Texas accent and seemed quite comfortable in his alligator boots.

He now waited for me outside one of Eastman's smaller hangars, his butt propped on the left front fender of a well-maintained Lincoln Continental that looked as if it had once belonged to his grandfather. He broke into a warm smile as I parked my Honda and started toward him across the tarmac.
 

"Please tell me you aren't one of those gals who gets her dander up when a fella throws a compliment her way."

"Depends on the fella and which body parts are involved."

Wilky chuckled. "There's that wit again. You were tossing it around quite a bit at that little shindig last month. That's why I thought of you when this job came up. Figured if anyone's a match for a smooth talking jackal, you're it."

I stopped next to the Lincoln. "Is that the compliment?"

"No, ma'am. What I was about to say is that Parker is one lucky son of a gun. If you weren't half my age, I might try to steal you from him. But then I've always had a thing for beautiful blondes."

"Thanks, but how do you know
I'm
not the lucky one?"

"I've seen you both in jeans."

He took me inside the hangar where a battered old twin engine prop plane sat facing the open door. I saw the pilot through the front windshield, fiddling with the controls as he took a swig from a thermos that I hoped contained coffee. He was in his mid-sixties, thin, sallow-faced, and looked in desperate need of a jolt from a defibrillator.

Was this some kind of joke?

The plane was even older and less healthy-looking than the pilot and I wasn't thrilled by the prospect of climbing inside.

"You want me to fly to L.A. in this? With him?"

Wilky grinned. "Don't you worry. It might not look like much, but it's safe." He raised his voice. "Isn't that right, Hap?"

The pilot looked up mid-sip and gave Wilky a vague smile and a thumbs up, but I couldn't be sure he knew what he was responding to.

"Hap's gettin' close to mandatory retirement," Wilky went on, "but don't you worry, he's one of the best. He's been handling runs like this for years. He can do a loop-the-loop in this little bugger without breaking a sweat."

"Let's hope it doesn't come to that. Where's the prisoner?"

"Inside, where he belongs, handcuffed to his seat. The less I see of that yappy bastard, the better." He dug into his pocket and produced a key, then took a folder from under his arm and held both out to me. "And you'd better keep him cuffed at all times, no matter what he tells you. He's all gurgle and no guts, but I wouldn't trust him for a minute."

I took the key and folder. "Does he have a name?"

Wilky gestured. "It's all in there. Name. Offense. Criminal history. Got a sheet longer than Tallahassee's tail."

I flipped open the folder and read the summary. Richard Henson. Arrested for bank and insurance fraud, larceny, forgery, investment schemes and impersonating a law enforcement officer. All strictly white collar. His bail was set at two million, but he had been due in court the previous week and his last contact with his bail bond agency was three months ago. Attempts to reach him had been unsuccessful.

"He should run for Congress," I said. "How did he wind up with you?"

"The agency in Los Angeles got wind that he'd been spotted in Houston under the alias Eric Pritchard. We've got a cooperation agreement, so they asked me to find him and we picked him up at the Haversham Hotel, smack in the middle of another Ponzi scheme. He's insisting we have the wrong man."

Where had I heard that before?

"So do you?"

"Do I what?"

"Have the wrong man? I don't see any photos in this file."

Wilky looked vaguely insulted, but then a memory surfaced. "Oh, that's right. You told me at the barbecue how you and Parker met."

I wasn't sure
I
was the one who had told him, but that didn't much matter. I wasn't about to be party to another case of mistaken identity.

"I understand the concern," he said, "but trust me, he's our man. And the court only gave us a one week window, so if we don't get him back to L.A. by tomorrow afternoon, a lot of money goes bye-bye."

"Just as long as you're sure he's who you think he is."

"I've been doing this for thirty years, darlin', and I haven't made a mistake yet."

I considered this and nodded. "That's good enough for me."

"Glad to hear it. And thanks again for stepping in at the last minute."

"Any time," I said and shook his hand. "I'll call you once he's been delivered."

He grinned again. "I wish every job was this easy." He doffed an imaginary cap and started back toward his Lincoln. "Nice to see you again, Ms. Coe. And tell that lucky sonofabitch Parker he'd better treat you right."

"So far so good."

When he was gone, I turned, accessed the plane again and said to Hap,
 
"Are we set to go or should I call a tow truck?"

He frowned at me through the windshield and cupped an ear, indicating that he couldn't hear me—just as I had suspected.
 

He leaned over and opened a side window. "Happy to make your acquaintance, ma'am. You go ahead and climb on in and we'll be underway shortly."

"You sure you wouldn't rather take a nap first?"

If he was insulted, he didn't show it. "I'm saving that for when we're in the air. Now hurry it up. I'd like to get to L.A. sometime today."

Considering it was barely past eleven, I didn't think that would be a problem, but I did as he asked, moving to a tiny hatch of a door that stuck when I tried to open it.

"She needs a little persuasion," Hap said. "Just give her a good yank."

I did and the door protested, coming open with a groan.
 

What the hell had I gotten myself into?

I was pondering this question as I ducked down and reluctantly stepped inside—

—only to be stopped in my tracks by the site of the prisoner, who was cuffed to his armrest on the left side of the plane.

My heart started thumping and I blinked a couple of times, convinced that I had just stepped through a portal into the past. Because the man in that seat was not Richard Henson. That may have been what people called him, and that may have been the name he was arrested under, but it wasn't his.

The man in that seat, staring back at me with equal amounts of surprise and confusion, was none other than Ethan Robert Rider.

My old high school boyfriend.

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PRESENT TENSE
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CONTENTS

Title Page

Copyright

Books by Alana Matthews

Introduction

Identity Unknown

PART ONE

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

SEVEN

EIGHT

NINE

TEN

ELEVEN

TWELVE

THIRTEEN

PART TWO

FOURTEEN

FIFTEEN

SIXTEEN

SEVENTEEN

EIGHTEEN

NINETEEN

TWENTY

TWENTY-ONE

PART THREE

TWENTY-TWO

TWENTY-THREE

TWENTY-FOUR

TWENTY-FIVE

TWENTY-SIX

TWENTY-SEVEN

TWENTY-EIGHT

TWENTY-NINE

THIRTY

PART FOUR

THIRTY-ONE

THIRTY-TWO

THIRTY-THREE

THIRTY-FOUR

THIRTY-FIVE

THIRTY-SIX

THIRTY-SEVEN

THIRTY-EIGHT

THIRTY-NINE

EPILOGUE

FORTY

Coming Next

Present Tense

BOOK: Identity Unknown (A Parker & Coe, Love and Bullets Thriller Book 1)
7.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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