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    Guardian of Lies: A Paul Madriani Novel


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      Guardian of Lies

      Steve Martini

      In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies.

      —WINSTON CHURCHILL

      Contents

      Epigraph

      One

      To the drug lords of the Tijuana cartel, the man

      Two

      The upstairs study was a large room with a vaulted

      Three

      Once over the fence, “Muerte Liquida” moved swiftly across the

      Four

      At this moment Katia had but a single thought as

      Five

      He was halfway up the stairs when the steady sound

      Six

      Once in the garage, Katia quietly opened the driver’s side

      Seven

      Sometimes it’s how you back into things in life that

      Eight

      This morning Katia does not look nearly as young or

      Nine

      Alim Afundi longed for the arid Zagros Mountains of his

      Ten

      The fact that Katia told us about the note first,

      Eleven

      The request for services came from across the country, about

      Twelve

      Liquida picked up one of the gold coins, what collectors

      Thirteen

      You say that Pike’s first meeting with you was no

      Fourteen

      For three days after finding the binder and identifying the

      Fifteen

      Unless I am wrong, the killer tied the knot.

      Sixteen

      Ten en after seven in the morning and Zeb Thorpe

      Seventeen

      Alim waited in the trees at the edge of the

      Eighteen

      Harry and I are wearing a rut in the road,

      Nineteen

      We have to assume that as long as the man

      Twenty

      Larry Templeton’s facial features have always reminded me of those

      Twenty-One

      Anyone familiar with such things might have been skeptical, but

      Twenty-Two

      If the study of crime is a science, its first

      Twenty-Three

      As Harry and I enter the courtroom this afternoon, Templeton

      Twenty-Four

      Yesterday afternoon after she hung up the receiver in the

      Twenty-Five

      Harry and I had to wonder why, if the Foreign

      Twenty-Six

      If he ever got drunk and unruly in a bar,

      Twenty-Seven

      Kim Howard entered the room, followed by Zeb Thorpe, head

      Twenty-Eight

      Liquida was tired. He had spent nearly a week on

      Twenty-Nine

      Liquida watched as the bus made the left turn across

      Thirty

      I don’t want excuses,” said Liquida. He and the explosives

      Thirty-One

      Gil Howser was the lead homicide detective in the Solaz

      Thirty-Two

      Much of the inside of the bus was charred. Most

      Thirty-Three

      By the time Harry and I arrive at the University

      Thirty-Four

      At least the news from California was good. Alim read

      Thirty-Five

      Harry and I hoof it toward the parking lot at

      Thirty-Six

      It is a sinking feeling leaving Katia like this, alone

      Thirty-Seven

      The black SUV was parked at the curb around the

      Thirty-Eight

      Judgment day had finally arrived. Yakov Nitikin had made his

      Thirty-Nine

      Just before seven in the evening, Herman and I meet

      Forty

      As Herman works the lock, I stand at the corner.

      Forty-One

      The uranium projectile suddenly toppled from the muzzle of the

      Forty-Two

      I had just finished shaving when I stepped from the

      Forty-Three

      So what do I tell them?” Thorpe was already on

      Forty-Four

      Two minutes, seńor, to get my men into position at

      Forty-Five

      They had it all wrong. Colombian coffee was all right,

      Forty-Six

      Nitikin went to bed at his usual time, eight o’clock,

      Forty-Seven

      Liquida read the brief account of the fire in the

      Forty-Eight

      Within minutes, three of Alim’s men were overcome by motion

      Forty-Nine

      Alim felt the steel sides of the cargo container shudder

      Fifty

      This morning as Herman and I step out of the

      Fifty-One

      Liquida spent almost forty minutes trolling the San José neighborhood

      Fifty-Two

      Yakov woke to the sound of a train, the diesel

      Fifty-Three

      He stepped away for a moment.” The interpreter looked at

      Fifty-Four

      As he marched toward his car, Liquida knew the Arab

      Fifty-Five

      As Realtors will tell you, location is everything. For us,

      Fifty-Six

      Unfortunately the Gulfstream had everything on board but an in-flight

      Fifty-Seven

      It was edging up toward ten o’clock at night by

      Fifty-Eight

      Listen, thank him for us. How many units are they

      Fifty-Nine

      So they have no idea where the truck is headed?”

      Sixty

      In the late nineties, politicians eager to pocket million-dollar speaking

      Sixty-One

      After spending millions of dollars of his government’s money, Alim

      Sixty-Two

      From the middle of the bench seat in the U-Haul

      Sixty-Three

      After separating from the cargo carrier, the rental truck continued

      Sixty-Four

      I look at Herman as the truck begins to slow.

      Sixty-Five

      Alim opened the passenger-side door to the truck and climbed

      Sixty-Six

      I am sliding sideways under the truck so I can

      Sixty-Seven

      Herman finally realizes that what he needs is leverage. He

      Sixty-Eight

      It took a few days for the dust to settle.

      Sixty-Nine

      Tonight Liquida was back at the auto-body shop where he

      Author’s Note

      About the Author

      Other Books by Steve Martini

      Credits

      Copyright

      About the Publisher

      ONE

      To the drug lords of the Tijuana cartel, the man was an urban myth—and the cops were singing off the same page. According to the Mexican Federal Judicial Police, the assassin referred to in scattered press reports as the “Mexecutioner” did not exist.

      To hear them tell it, the killer was a figment of the “button boys’” imaginations, the teenage hoodlums who fueled the violence in the rampaging narco zone near the border, where rumors of his five-figure contracts were threatening to raise the city’s minimum wage for death.

      It is true, these kids were illiterate and violent. They came from the barren Baja and the meager villages of Sinaloa, out of the mountains of Chihuahua, all looking for the same things: opportunity if they could get it, survival if they could not. They lived in banged-up sea containers and the tar paper barrios that dotted the hillsides around the city, and eked out an existence by offering their lethal services to the narco trade.

      Get crosswise with this commerce and for a few thousand pesos an
    d your car’s license number for identification, these kids would find you. They’d speed through the city on motorbikes with the silenced muzzle of a Mac-10 poking them in the ass down the back of their pants. They would twist the bike’s throttle with one hand and use the other to blow your brains all over the inside of your nice new Lexus.

      To these concrete cowboys, the Mexecutioner was not only real, they knew him by a different name for the soundless way he took his victims, and always at night. He was like the mountain of water rising from the darkness, washing his victim from a tranquil beach, a kind of unexpected, rough wave—muerte líquida, “liquid death.”

      The fact was, he liked it. It was a name that appealed to his dark sense of humor, so much so that at times he even used it on hotel registries—“M. Liquida,” though always with discretion. He played variations on the theme when abroad. For travel in the U.S. he possessed a credit card in the name of J. Waters.

      The house was located on a tree-lined lane in a neighborhood of large, expensive homes. Many of these could only properly be called estates. The one in question was the black swan of the area, run-down and in need of repair. Or so it looked. It sat back from the road, perhaps sixty yards, behind a wrought-iron gate. The house overlooked the Pacific Coast Highway and the town of Del Mar, California. It had an unobstructed view of the ocean in the distance, and in daylight you could see the beach, perhaps a mile away.

      A seven-foot fence, made up of hundreds of black anodized metal stakes, each topped by a sharp spearlike finial, surrounded the entire property. This seemed out of place. It was too much fence and far too expensive for the dilapidated structure that sat behind it.

      The only opening in the fence was the main gate out to the street. It was remotely controlled. He had seen the owner’s car come and go. The gate automatically opened and closed behind him each time. There were no guards and no dogs and very few visitors. In fact, during all the hours he had watched the house, he had not seen one, only a few Federal Express and UPS delivery vans.

      The fence itself was not electrified. There were none of the small yellow signs showing black bolts of electricity that warned people not to touch it. Only in America would you spend thousands of dollars installing an expensive electrical security system and then warn intruders not to harm themselves.

      Liquida scurried along the ground just outside the fence, moving through the darkness, a vaporous, fleeting image that seemed not to leave a shadow.

      A broken wooden balustrade across the back deck of the house leaned out, as if it was about to topple into the garden below. A shutter on one of the tall side windows hung askew. It seemed to dangle from a single hinge. Some of the wooden shingles were missing from the roof, and the exterior was in need of fresh paint.

      He smiled at the ingenuity of it. Anyone cruising the neighborhood looking for a place to rob would certainly not pick this one. But the people who hired him had sent photographs, interior and exterior, close-ups, along with a diagram of the floor plan inside. Where they had gotten these he did not know, nor did he care, as long as they were accurate.

      He slipped seamlessly through the line of bushes outside the fence, careful not to make contact with any of the iron bars.

      He checked the fence one last time for signs of contact sensors. He looked for the small gray plastic conduit that might contain wires. These could carry signals to the house and an alarm system. This was the third time he had checked the fence and the ground under it. By now he was certain there were no wires and no conduit to carry them.

      The security system for the grounds relied entirely on the motion sensors deployed in the yard, nearer the house. He had discovered the location of two of these on his first visit ten days earlier. In the middle of the night, he threw several large clods of compacted dirt over the fence. Each time he waited to see what would happen. Finally, after several tosses, lights went on in the house. Ten minutes later a small sedan with a security company logo on the door showed up. They checked the yard but found nothing. The motion sensors had been adjusted to levels of low tolerance. A small bird landing near one of the sensors in the yard might not set it off. A crow flapping its wings and bouncing around on the ground probably would.

      Over the next week he set about taking down the motion sensors. For this he used more than a dozen cats, strays he collected during the day from streets and alleys downtown. He transported them in cardboard boxes in the back of his car at night. He baited the cats with nip and then threw small weighted bags of catnip as far as he could toward the house. Then he released a cat through the fence.

      Each time the lights in the house went on, followed a few minutes later by the arrival of the small white security sedan. When the guard saw the cat he laughed, turned, and headed back to the gate and his car. A minute or two later the lights in the house went out.

      He did this for five nights running, each time in the wee hours, until finally one night the lights in the house did not go on. And security never showed up. The motion sensors had been turned off, at least until they could be adjusted for bigger game. It was a funny thing about human nature; it almost always operated to the detriment of the flawed creatures possessing it.

      Three nights earlier, working from the back side of the fence and using gloved hands, he propped a large leaf from a magnolia tree in front of the lens of the single security camera that covered this side of the house. He carefully wedged the leaf into the hinged camera mounting so that it looked as if gravity or the wind might have stuck it there.

      After three days, the fact that no one had removed it told him what he needed to know. There was no active monitoring of the cameras. The system was probably a continuous feed, analog or digital, it didn’t matter. It would be reviewed only if there was an incident, at which time all they would see was a close-up of a leaf.

      TWO

      The upstairs study was a large room with a vaulted ceiling and heavy beams, two stories high. An antique iron spiral staircase led to the catwalk on the second level. Dark wood paneling and custom wood cabinets with little drawers lined the walls on both levels. Each drawer was locked and labeled with a neat printed card slipped into a brass holder and listing the contents. There were hundreds of them. It was from this room that Emerson Pike ran his business, Pike’s Peak, investments in rare coins and precious metals. He had turned a small fortune in the last several years, especially as the stock market fell and wealthy people looked for tangible ways to invest their money.

      Tonight he sat behind his desk with a certain look of exasperation on his face.

      “Katia, please. You can’t wind yourself into the drapes. Sit down and relax or do something else.”

      “Do what?” She shot an annoyed glance at him and refused to budge from the alcove in the window twenty feet away.

      Katia was bored. Lately the only thing she wanted to talk about was going home, back to Costa Rica. This was the one subject he tried to avoid at all costs. He had hoped that with the meal tonight, and her joy in cooking a typical Costa Rican meal for a few friends, her mind would have been off the subject at least for a few hours. Unfortunately, this was not to be.

      All the guests had left and Katia now toyed with the five-thousand-dollar cashmere curtains, pulling and wrapping them around her body, like a sumptuous evening gown, over the dress she was wearing. She seemed in full Latin pout.

      To anyone keeping tabs, Katia Solaz was Emerson Pike’s latest flame. And she was gorgeous, five foot two, with a body to stop a clock, shimmering black hair, and a smile topped by smoldering eyes that could cause a man’s knees to buckle. She was also twenty-six, young enough to be his granddaughter.

      This invariably invited glares of disapproval in restaurants whenever he and Katia dined out. Emerson enjoyed sticking his thumb in the eye of convention. So eating out with Katia became the high point of his day.

      He would sit in the restaurant next to her with a brazen smile, swallowing up, like a galactic black hole, all the censuring furtive glances. Occasionally, he would set off
    a social panic, striking up a conversation with some lady’s husband and sending a nuclear shot of adrenaline through her heart by introducing him to Katia.

      But as they say, for every silver lining there is a black cloud, and for Katia it was her moods. Mercurial did not begin to cover them.

      Emerson had seen this often enough during the last five weeks that by now he thought he knew and understood her motivations well. In fact, he had no clue. Emerson thought that in Katia’s perfect universe, the woman always had both hands in the guy’s pockets, frog-marching him down the street like a human debit card toward the nearest ATM.

      In fact, Katia had little or no interest in his money as long as she had enough to survive. Katia had never known her father. There had never been an older male figure in her life. For this reason she enjoyed being with Emerson and caring for him. But she had come to California with a different agenda—education. Katia was interested in the colleges and universities in the area, if not for undergraduate studies then in hopes of one day pursuing a graduate degree in the States. And if Emerson was willing to help her financially, Katia would not say no.

      Emerson had his own reasons for bringing her here to his house, and none of them had to do with sex or some latter-day search for the fountain of youth. Katia had become the cheese in the trap. It was as simple as that.

      Perhaps “simple” was not the right term. Because lately she was asking a lot more questions, most of them arriving at the same point—when would they be going back to Costa Rica?

      He kept putting her off, trying to distract her with various forms of entertainment. As long as she was smiling and having fun, he thought, she wouldn’t ask to leave. To Emerson it was a test of his skills. If he was compelled to resort to force, it would be a clear indication that he was slipping, a warning that he had lost his mastery of the dark arts, the darkest of which was always deception.

      “What are you working on?” She twisted herself into the drapes and leaned so that her weight, petite as she was, hung from the rod overhead.

      Emerson was certain she would rip the curtain from under the valance. “Those are very expensive,” he told her.

      “What?”

      “The drapes.”

      “So? I am worth it, no?”

      He glanced at her, not exactly angry, but with paternal charm.

      Katia gave him one of those mischievous, dimpled smiles. She was playing it to the hilt tonight.

     


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