Gone Missing Page 5
Jody squinted at the video. “Yup, there you are.”
They watched the videos as it showed them shopping for shoes and finally paying for them. The timestamp showed them entering the store at 11:37 and leaving at 11:55 pm.
Joslyn sighed and passed her hand over her eyes. Even if Edgar had let her see the video, it would have been the wrong timestamp to prove Clay hadn’t been involved in the accident. Thank You, Lord.
“Your friend’s being held by the police right now?” Jody asked.
Joslyn nodded. “Would you mind calling the police to come look at this? It’ll prove Clay couldn’t have been in the hit-and-run.”
“No problem.” Jody used the phone sitting on the desk next to the computer. “Mall security will call the police and escort them here.”
“Thank you so much for doing this for me. I can’t begin to tell you how much I appreciate it.”
“You poor thing. You must be so stressed and worried.”
“What’s worse is that the more we’re delayed, the further behind we are in our search for Clay’s sister.”
“When did she disappear?”
“About three weeks ago. Fiona Crowley?”
Jody shook her head. “Sorry, don’t know her.” She nodded to the frozen shot of Clay at the cash register and flashed Joslyn a grin. “He’s a cutie, though. Just a client?”
Joslyn felt her face burst into flame. “Um...yeah.”
Jody laughed. “What do you do for the O’Neill Agency?”
They chatted about Joslyn’s work until a police officer, accompanied by a mall security guard, knocked on the door to the security room.
“Hey, Jody,” said the mall security guard, “this is Officer Winchester. He’s a buddy of mine.”
“Nice to meet you.” Officer Winchester had a deep voice and a self-assured air about him. He shook Jody’s hand.
“Thanks for coming,” Jody said. “This is Joslyn Dimalanta.”
His large hand engulfed Joslyn’s, and his grip was strong.
“So what’s this about?” Officer Winchester asked.
“I have a friend in police custody right now,” Joslyn said. “The detectives say that his rental car was involved in a hit-and-run accident at noon today, and they won’t believe that he was here with me, because he spent some time in jail.”
Officer Winchester’s face was impassive.
Joslyn pointed to the video. “This is video feed from Jody’s store that proves he was here at the same time as the accident. I’m hoping we can turn it over to you and you can give it to the detectives in charge of Clay’s case.”
Officer Winchester gave a firm nod. “I can do that. Could I see the video?”
They played it for him, fast-forwarding through the entire eighteen minutes that they were in the store.
“I’ll take the video in,” the officer said. “Jody, I’ll need the originals.”
“Could I get a copy first?” Joslyn asked. “Clay’s lawyer is going to want to see it.”
While waiting for Benny to make a copy for her, she said to Jody, “Thanks again. I don’t know what I would have done if you hadn’t been so helpful.”
“Aw, sweetie, I could tell you were really worried. Of course I’d help. Besides, it was no skin off my back.”
“Thank you for doing this for me. For Clay,” Joslyn said to Officer Winchester.
His dark eyes were inscrutable, but he nodded. “I’ll take this to the station, but I’m afraid I can’t do anything else for your friend’s case.”
She knew he couldn’t make her any promises, but she hoped he’d at least do what he said. She was waiting to hear from Liam O’Neill about that lawyer for Clay, and hopefully she could fix this entire frustrating situation.
As she was leaving the store she felt it. That shiver across the back of her shoulders, that suspicion that she was being watched.
She had felt it often a few months ago, when she was on the run from Tomas, who had murdered her father. Most of the time, that feeling had been false, because if someone had been following her, Tomas would have found her a lot sooner than he had. She’d been paranoid and jumpy, exhausted by grief over her dead father and dead...
Her hand automatically went to her stomach and tightened there for a moment. Her counselor said she was making progress, but it still hurt like a physical pain.
Her shoulders tingled again. Was this the same thing, paranoia because of all the stress of the morning? It wasn’t every day she was almost killed by a bomb. She knew she had compartmentalized it—her counselor would use the term coping mechanism—but she’d have to come to terms with it.
Later. Not right now.
“Hello, sweetheart.” She didn’t recognize the gravelly voice, but she recognized the man’s face from the glimpses of him in the passenger seat of the car that had been following them this morning—his curly dark hair and sunglasses. He stood in front of her, blocking her way.
Stupid, stupid, stupid! If she’d been paying attention instead of taking a mental coffee break, she wouldn’t have been surprised by him.
By them. The second man stood just behind his left shoulder.
Maybe she should have paid attention to the feeling she was being hunted.
She reacted quickly, instinctively. She shoved hard at the man and sent out a high-pitched scream. “Get away from me! Help! Officer Winchester!”
The policeman had been behind her when she left the store, but he’d turned left when she’d turned right. Was he still within hearing range?
People around them stopped to stare. When she shoved the man, he’d stumbled backward into a young man, who looked like a college student, leaning against the wall of a store. “Hey, man, watch it!” the student said.
The second man had sidestepped to avoid his partner’s fall, and he moved in quickly to grab her elbow in a painful grip. “Let’s go,” he hissed.
She jabbed her fist into his throat.
He coughed, his grip loosened. She wrenched her arm away and ran back the way she’d come.
She wove through the crowd, her breath harsh in her ears. Was the man following her? Were they both following her?
Two firm hands grabbed her shoulders and stopped her. She was about to scream again when she looked up into Officer Winchester’s stern face.
“Behind me,” she said. “Two men.”
He pushed her aside firmly to head back the way she’d come. She spotted a bench a few yards away and leaped onto it, scanning the crowd. She saw the two men running toward her, their expressions changing when they spotted Officer Winchester. They stopped, but the cop had seen them. They turned and bolted.
Soon the men’s dark heads were at the edge of the crowd, then they tore away at a dead run to the parking lot. She tried to keep track of them, but they ducked behind a large minivan, and then she couldn’t see where they went.
The policeman was too far behind, hampered by the crowds. When he finally got to the parking lot, he looked this way and that, but appeared to have lost track of them. The two suspects were smart and didn’t go tearing out of the parking lot, drawing attention to their vehicle, and the lot was full enough that they could sneak around behind cars and avoid detection.
Joslyn hopped down from the bench and fought her way through the crowd to the parking lot. Officer Winchester was standing near an exit, scanning all the cars slowly leaving this section of the lot, but the men could also have driven out the other exit.
The policeman gave her a grim look. “Sorry, miss. Looks like we lost them.”
FIVE
It was an unbearably sweet sight for Clay to see Joslyn outside the police station, holding out to him a paper bag with grease stains along one corner.
She smiled. “Fiona mentioned you liked bacon
cheeseburgers. Is that still the case?”
“You are a dream come true.”
She laughed, then turned to his lawyer. “I bought one for you, too, Ms. Harnett.”
“Call me Jo.” The blonde lawyer smiled broadly. “And I love bacon cheeseburgers.”
Elisabeth Aday had come through for Joslyn and Clay. Since Elisabeth still volunteered at a local domestic abuse shelter, she knew several lawyers, and one of them had put in an urgent call to his friend Joanna Harnett in Phoenix. Joslyn had given Jo the copy of the video. Officer Winchester had apparently delivered the original video to the detective in charge of Clay’s case as promised, but the lawman had been stubborn about releasing Clay even when faced with clear evidence that he was innocent. Jo had pulled strings, because Clay was finally released an hour later.
They sat on a bench outside the police station to eat their burgers. The salty bacon, melting cheese and juicy beef was exactly what he needed after the frustrating afternoon in police lockup.
None of the people he talked to would believe him. He’d spent two years in jail for being a low-level thug for that Chicago mob family, and he’d gotten a good job as a bouncer for a nightclub in the years since he’d been out, but none of that mattered to them. He felt as if he would never be able to escape his past.
All he wanted to do was to find Fiona, to apologize to her for that last fight they’d had before she left Chicago. To show her that he’d changed. To make up for all the grief he’d put her through.
“The detective will look into the accident,” Jo said around a mouthful of burger. “It wasn’t on a street with many businesses, so there isn’t a good chance some bank ATM camera caught it on film or anything like that.” She had a slight Southern lilt to her voice.
“I don’t understand why they’d do that,” Clay said. “They tried to kill us with that bomb at Fiona’s house, then they followed us, but then they arranged to have me arrested. That’s like a step back.”
“We still don’t know for sure that they’re the ones who set the bomb,” Joslyn said. “But...I think I know why they wanted you arrested—to take you out of the picture. To separate us.”
Clay’s shoulders grew rock hard. “What happened?”
“They tried to kidnap me at the mall.” She spoke quickly, as if nervous about telling him.
“What?!” And he’d been stuck in a cage, unable to protect her. What good was he if he couldn’t protect people?
“It was fine, a police officer happened to be right there,” she said. “But they ran and he couldn’t catch them. It was the same officer who delivered the security video of you in the shoe store to authorities.”
“That was smart of them,” Jo said reluctantly. “Separate the two of you so they could more easily grab Joslyn. Then with Clay in jail, they could afford to wait and take care of him later.”
Joslyn swallowed. “That’s what I was thinking. They’re probably upset you got Clay out of jail so fast.”
“They could’ve tried something,” Clay said, “but I wouldn’t go down so easily.”
“What are you going to do now?” Jo wiped her mouth. She’d inhaled that burger.
“We still don’t know where Fiona is or why she disappeared,” Clay said.
“I want to get online to do some research on Fiona and Martin Crowley,” Joslyn said, “but I can’t do that if we’re being followed. Those men would interrupt us before I even had a chance to log in to my computer.”
“Those creeps have to know something about Fiona. I want to set a little trap so we can find out more about them.”
“Nope, I don’t want to hear this.” Jo stood. “As your lawyer, I don’t want to know.”
“We won’t do anything illegal,” Clay said. He’d learned his lesson years ago and was still paying for it now.
“Regardless, it’s probably best if you don’t tell me.” Jo smiled at the two of them. “I hope I’ll see you again, but maybe somewhere other than the police station.”
“You bet.” Clay shook her hand. “Thanks a lot.”
Joslyn watched the lawyer walk away. “She was nice.”
“And effective. The police could have been stubborn and kept me locked up.”
“Not all policemen are like that.”
“It’s because of what I used to do. I’ve never had a good relationship with cops.” And it looked as if he never would.
Joslyn leaned forward on the bench. “So what kind of trap did you want to set?”
“Where’s your cell phone?”
“I left it on, like you wanted me to, but at the hotel so they wouldn’t know where I was going.” She blew out a breath. “It didn’t matter because they probably just followed me from the police station.”
“But since it’s still on, those guys may not realize we suspect the phones are trackable.” Clay held up his own phone, which the officers had returned to him. “I want to lure them in. We’ll drop the cell phones somewhere, make them think we’re there, while we hide nearby. We can find out their license-plate number, maybe snap some photos.”
Joslyn narrowed her eyes at him. “Tell me you’re not also hoping to capture one of them.”
Clay thought he’d be able to take them, although it would be a tough fight, but there was always the chance one of them would grab Joslyn. He didn’t want to put her in danger or allow the men to use her as leverage. But he hesitated a fraction of a second too long before saying, “No.”
“Clay—”
“Really, no. It’s too dangerous. But it might be dangerous to set this trap for them, even if all we’re doing is getting a look at them.”
“Get me a good photo,” Joslyn said. “I have a facial-recognition program I’m working on that can scan the web to try to find them.”
“Really? I thought that was only on TV.”
“You’d be surprised what real-life hackers can do.”
He nodded and stood. “You ready?”
They tossed their trash and then got into Joslyn’s rental car, although Clay got behind the wheel. “Let’s get your phone and then make sure we’re not being tailed,” he said. “We need to be a few minutes ahead of them.”
They went to Joslyn’s hotel where they picked up her cell phone, and she gathered her things and checked out of the room, just in case. She seemed to have very few things—she’d bought new clothes at the mall today, and only had one other change of clothing. As she was looking through her stuff, she suddenly held up a small electronic device.
“Is that a...?” Clay said.
“GPS tracker.” Her skin flushed. “They went into my hotel room and pinned it under the collar of my jacket.”
“Don’t ditch it yet,” Clay said. “That way the men won’t know that we discovered the trackers just yet. We can get rid of all that stuff later.”
Then he spent some time driving in circles and scouting out some of the parking lots in the Phoenix area. He looked at an empty business park parking lot, but decided against it. Once their pursuers saw it, they’d know something was up because there was no reason for Clay and Joslyn to be there. If the men suspected a trap, they wouldn’t fall into it.
Then he saw a rather run-down Mexican restaurant with faded yellow walls and a dark brown roof. The parking lot at Casa Rafael was only partially filled, maybe because it was still early for dinner, but it was the type of cars and the men Clay saw near the building’s front doors that decided it for him. He passed the restaurant parking lot, but turned in to the lot next to it, which was attached to a paint supply store. He parked in the farthest corner of the lot.
“Why here?” Joslyn asked.
“We don’t want them to see our car and know we’re near. Come on.” He grabbed his cell phone. He had to plant it quickly before their pursuers got within sight of the restaurant.<
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They climbed over the low brick wall separating the two parking areas and walked halfway down the lot, where Clay dropped his phone on the ground. He was about to walk away when Joslyn said, “Wait.”
She pulled out one of the burner cell phones she’d bought. She dialed, then answered on her cell phone and kept the call open. She put her phone on speaker, then dimmed the screen so it wouldn’t be easily seen in the darkening twilight and slid it under a car parked near where Clay had dropped his cell phone. She held up the burner phone. “We can listen in when the men get near enough.”
“That’s brilliant.” He grinned.
They scurried to hide behind some cars against the back wall of the parking lot where they wouldn’t be seen. Clay made sure he could see the restaurant’s front door, so he could see who was coming and going. Their hiding spot smelled like mold, and faintly of urine, but it was also shadowed. Unless someone was specifically looking to find them, they wouldn’t be noticed.
“What made you choose this parking lot?” Joslyn whispered.
“I didn’t want anyone getting hurt by those guys. They won’t try anything dangerous here.” He gestured with his head toward the restaurant. “Those big guys over there? Mexican gang members. Our friends will think twice before they cause a scene.” At least, he was reasonably sure about that. He’d worked with enough criminals to know that the two men would spot the gang members immediately.
They didn’t have long to wait. A white Taurus slid slowly into the parking lot. Unfortunately, they parked on the opposite side from where Clay and Joslyn were hiding.
Clay angled himself but couldn’t get a good view of their car, so he darted behind the next car parked along the wall. He saw the two men walking toward the restaurant. They eyed the Mexican gang members loitering outside warily, and received sharp looks in return, but were allowed to enter the restaurant.
Here was his chance. Clay made his way across the parking lot, darting between cars on a convoluted path so he could keep out of sight of the gang members near the restaurant, until he could get a clear shot of the men’s car. Luckily, it stuck out since it was parked near a black SUV and a souped-up pickup truck. He memorized the license-plate number, then made his way back to where Joslyn was hiding. He was halfway there when one of the gang members spoke.