The Widow File

Read The Widow File Online

Authors: S. G. Redling

Tags: #Thrillers, #General, #Fiction

BOOK: The Widow File
3.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

Text copyright © 2013 S.G. Redling

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

Published by Thomas & Mercer

PO Box 400818
Las Vegas, NV 89140

ISBN-13: 9781477808610
ISBN-10: 1477808612
Library of Congress Control Number: 2013906096

This book is for the Hitches—Gina, Debra, Tenna, Christy, and Angela—I wouldn’t trade one of you for hard black shoes.

CONTENTS

BOSTON

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

BOSTON

Shooting people is so boring, Booker thought as Mazan dropped to the floor. Or maybe it was Jusef. He hadn’t paid much attention when they’d introduced themselves. The little one in the kitchen had been a fighter, nearly making enough noise to alert his friends before the garrote finished him. Now
that
was a job. That’s why he made the money he did and had the reputation he had—hands-on craftsmanship. Shooting goat-eyed fools who didn’t have the sense to run? Beneath him. They weren’t even armed. Yet.

Booker unpacked the case the students had thought was research material from the university and began assembling the weapons. The calfskin gloves barely slowed him down at all. He shook his head.

“Wouldn’t you think,” he said to the dead boy flipped over in the chair, “that you’d notice something like a man not taking off his gloves? You’re from Syria, for crying out loud. Aren’t you guys born knowing stuff like this?” He slid two AK-47s underneath the couch and rose to hide the smaller guns in the kitchen. Stepping over the bent boy on the floor, he tossed a 9mm into a junk drawer and then taped another under the kitchen table. From where he knelt, he could look into the young man’s bloodshot eyes.

“But hey, maybe I’m just jaded. It’s good that people trust.” He laughed. “And for all I know, you may not really be from Syria. See? I trust too. What are you going to do?” He tapped the boy’s cheek and realized what he most disliked about jobs like this—the lack of conversation. It was worse than cold. It was uncivilized. He pulled out his phone and was happy to see a message waiting for him from his previous client. Why did
he know he’d be hearing from them again? One job at a time, however. He hit redial.

The current client answered with a terse “Yes?”

“I’ve put the groceries away.” He rolled his eyes at the ridiculous code phrase the client had chosen. Why they made these things so complicated was beyond him. His last client had insisted he recite “Hey Diddle Diddle” so he supposed it could be worse.

“Yes.” The client sounded like he was smiling. There was something off about the volume. He must have someone in the room with him. In trying to sound natural, he sounded to Booker as if he was twirling his mustache while kicking a puppy. “Why don’t you go ahead and finish the paperwork? Oh and thanks for calling. Uh-huh.”

Booker tossed the phone in the open case. There were two laptops on the table. Unfortunately the one closest to him had been open during the hit and the keys were a mess. It was unlikely law enforcement officials would believe the young men had roused themselves from their death throes long enough to check their Facebook. Wiping the fingertips of his gloves inside his jacket pocket to remove any traces of blood, he lifted the lid of the other laptop carefully. The blood spattered across the top had already congealed enough to not run.

The computer glowed to life and once again Booker shook his head. Not even password protected. “It’s a good thing you guys really aren’t terrorists,” he muttered to himself, clicking on the Facebook shortcut. “You would be terrible at it.” Like the computer itself, the social media opened with no need to enter the password he had memorized. He typed in the message he had also memorized and posted it as Jusef’s status. Before closing the page, he scrolled through the newsfeed. Most of it was in Syrian, in which Booker wasn’t fluent, but there was a video link of a baby penguin squealing as a zookeeper tickled it.

“That’s adorable.” Booker clicked the “like” button.

CHAPTER ONE

Choo-Choo looked hung over. He threw down his headphones. “You know, if we’re going to get paid to sit around and do nothing, we should at least get to do it in our underwear.”

Dani gnawed her thumbnail and prayed the blond analyst wouldn’t turn around and see the blush warming her face. She’d spent far too much time imagining those long, pale limbs sprawled and bared. Fay described Choo-Choo as “an obsessive compulsive nerd underwear model.” Dani just thought of him as Viking Porn.

“Your underwear would be a damn sight more appealing than that mess you’re sporting now.” Fay dropped her bright orange Kate Spade bag on the desk across from Dani. She squinted at the blue shirt he’d wrapped himself in. “What is that? Flannel? Are you even allowed to wear flannel? I thought you’d burst into flames or get kicked off the society register.”

Choo-Choo graced Fay with one perfectly arched brow. “Well we can’t all dress like escapees from a Caribbean brothel, can we?”

“You wish you could pull this off,” Fay said with a laugh. She ran her long nails through the mountain of curls piled on top of her head, a chartreuse elastic band struggling to contain it. “I make this mess look sexy.”

Dani giggled and Choo-Choo snorted. Everything about Fay was larger than life. Every inch of her nearly six-foot frame was draped in a rainbow of brilliant colors. And despite a profound lisp, Fay nonetheless peppered every sentence with as many S words as she could manage. After working together for five years, Fay was the best friend Dani had ever had.

“Seriously,” Fay said, sprawling in her chair, “the way you two dress. You’ve got teeny tiny Dani curled up in her teeny tiny black clothes. What are you supposed to be? A comma?” Dani laughed out loud at her friend’s teasing. “And then you,” she waved at the blond man smirking at her. “I bet you sported something sexier than that last night for whoever she was. Or he was. Or
they
were.”

Choo-Choo feigned offense. “What are you implying, Fay? That I’m a th-lut?” Fay threw her head back, letting out a loud barking laugh. Dani settled in. They could go back and forth like this all day, getting funnier and funnier and never getting offended. She never tired of the show. Then she saw Choo-Choo turn his pale eyes toward her. She shrunk down in her chair.

His voice was a purr. “Why are we always talking about my sex life? How come Dani never tells us of her exploits with her latest conquest? Bob? Ben?”

Fay snorted. “Ben’s a dick.”

“Ben? A dick?”

“Ben-a-dick!” Fay laughed at her own joke. “Ben-a-dick Arnold—‘I regret that I have but one small penis to give to my girlfriend.’”

“Fail.” Choo-Choo threw a pen at her. “Patrick Henry had but one small penis to give.”

Dani spoke up. “That’s Nathan Hale.”

“Nathan Hale had a small dick?” Fay asked.

“No, he had but one life to give for…” She saw them both laughing at her and she buried her hot face in her hands. “I hate you guys. I really do.”

“You adore us. Well, me, at least,” Choo-Choo said. “Fay is take it or leave it.” He dodged the pen Fay hurled back. “In any event, you’re stuck with us since you’re unfit to work anywhere but here. Just like us.”

Here was Rasmund, a private security firm specializing in corporate espionage, extortion, and threat assessment. Many of Rasmund’s clients could be recognized by their well-known NASDAQ codes; the rest operated at a much lower profile and a much higher profit margin. Rasmund didn’t advertise in trade magazines. The people who needed their unique services operated within an information network that needed and desired no publicity.

Dani and Fay made up a small part of the team currently working on assignment for their latest client, Swan Technologies. Internally, their crew went by the designation Paint, so called for their ability to cover every inch of a scene without being noticed, blending into the background. Choo-Choo was their audio analyst. They waited in the well-appointed room for another part of the assigned team, the part known as Faces.

Faces were just that—the public face of Rasmund, or as public as such services demanded. The Faces went into the businesses and situations being investigated with cover stories and artificial backgrounds. They were operatives trained at information retrieval and, due to the high-end lifestyle of most of their clients, their personal styles had to reflect the same. Faces got to go to parties and galas and travel in private jets and on yachts. Faces also risked personal safety, often finding themselves on-site when questionable situations turned dangerous. Dani couldn’t think of anything she would want to do less than be a Face.

Not that there was much chance of that had she so desired. Coming in at five feet tall and showing a distinct lack of fashion sense, Dani didn’t mind that she fit perfectly the company’s stereotype of Paint. Her short black hair stuck up in erratic tufts, trained in an unruly pattern by her habit of wrapping rubber bands around random locks while lost in the data. She spent more evenings than she liked to admit untangling the tiny hair prisons before heading out into public. As for her habit of doodling on the insides of her wrists, all she could hope for at this point was that people assumed they were tattoos.

The door swung open and a perfectly dressed couple strolled into the room. Fay let her head loll on the back of her chair, stage-whispering to Dani, “Thank God the Faces have made it. We’re saved.”

Other books

Room 1208 by Sophia Renny
The Lights of Tenth Street by Shaunti Feldhahn
Family Interrupted by Barrett, Linda
Heartbreak by Skye Warren
She's Out of Control by Kristin Billerbeck
An Angel for Christmas by Heather Graham
The Frozen Shroud by Martin Edwards
Plastic by Susan Freinkel