Authors: Adrian Magson
Next he needed transportation. Walking out of the terminal, he had narrowly missed stepping in front of a courier on a weather-beaten trail bike with a noisy engine. Unbelievably, the young rider had left the bike at the kerb without taking the key. Like all
mujahedin
, Kassim had ridden mopeds and Japanese motorbikes extensively in the mountains, often loaded with weapons; LA traffic was easy by comparison.
Now, walking down the alleyway, Kassim noted the garbage collector out of the corner of his eye. He ignored the rumble of nerves in his stomach and kept walking. The man might be genuine or he could be a policeman waiting for Kassim to make an appearance. A young woman peering out of a side door across the alleyway shooed off a scavenging dog, then went back inside. Another police officer?
Then he was in the doorway on his left and walking down a gloomy corridor. A sweet smell hung in the air, and the faint sound of music came from behind one of the two doors on the ground floor. He walked up a flight of bare concrete stairs. He hesitated on the landing, sniffing at the air. A large window at the end of the corridor let in the dying light. No signs of anyone lying in wait.
He had already torn away the edge of the pizza box nearest to him, and slipped his hand inside, grasping the rubberized handle of the shark knife he'd bought earlier from a local dive shop. He muttered a faint prayer and glanced at the fragment of blue cloth in his other hand.
He knocked on Bikovsky's door.
â
Pizza
,' he chanted, the way he'd heard the delivery boys do it. Here, his accent didn't matter; most delivery boys were of foreign extraction.
There was a shuffling sound inside, and a grunt as Bikovsky approached the door. Kassim felt his stomach tighten and a buzzing began in his ears as the adrenalin kicked in. A glimmer of movement showed in the peep hole, then the door clicked and swung open.
Kassim had a momentary flash of recognition as the man in the doorway emerged from the gloom within the apartment, followed by a fleeting second of doubt. Then the hunting mechanism took over. He flung the pizza box to one side and lunged forward with the knife, his arm as rigid as an iron bar. The blade bit deep, ripping through flesh and vital organs, and Kassim used his free hand to palm-heel the stricken man in the chest, causing him to stagger backwards until his foot caught on a rug and pitched him over with a crash. He lay still, making a hollow keening sound, his eyes wide with shock.
Kassim followed him down, pinning his shoulders. The man's heels drummed on the floor as shock crashed through his system, and his breathing became ragged.
Then Kassim stared at him with a sense of puzzlement and disbelief.
Something was not right.
He stood up and rolled the dying man on to his front. With the bloodied point of the knife he ripped open his rear pocket and took out his wallet, flipped it open to reveal a driver's licence.
It wasn't Bikovsky.
Then his nerves got the better of him and he was up and running, out of the room where death was hovering and along the corridor. He'd walked into a trap. Instead of Bikovsky, he had killed a police officer â maybe a member of the American FBI. It had been a close resemblance, but in the poor light of the apartment building, an understandable error.
As he ran past an open doorway, a woman stepping out saw the bloodied knife and screamed, a nerve-jangling wail which ran through the whole building.
H
arry and Rik heard the blood-curdling scream and were up and running together, scrabbling for purchase on the soft sand. Harry switched channels on his radio and called for backup from the LAPD, then concentrated on getting towards the alleyway through the groups of evening strollers.
As they entered the building, there was a crash of breaking glass from upstairs and the woman screamed again.
âHe's outside,' said Harry, and turned back towards the alleyway while Rik continued up the stairs. âCheck Bikovsky â but be careful!'
Outside a cluster of curious onlookers had gathered, forming a barrier across the alley. Over their heads Harry saw Maria, backlit in the kitchen door of the Tex-Mex. She was gesturing towards the far end, where the alley opened into the back streets of Venice Beach. He drew his gun and forced his way through the crowd, instantly making progress once people caught sight of the Ruger.
As he burst out of the alley, he nearly collided with a trail bike wheeling away with its engine screaming, the rider casting a glance over his shoulder. His face was thin and his eyes burning, and Harry knew without a doubt that this was the man they were looking for.
Kassim was heading across a patch of open ground towards Pacific Avenue, where Harry guessed there would be a hundred and one ways for him to disappear. For a brief second he considered trying for a shot at the killer, but two kids on bikes appeared in the background and he lowered his gun.
In the distance he heard the wail of police sirens, and thumbed the safety catch, slipping the Ruger under his shirt. This was no time to be caught waving a handgun in the middle of Los Angeles by a nervous and trigger-happy cop who might shoot first and ask questions later.
âIt wasn't Bikovsky,' he told Deane twenty minutes later. He was watching a paramedic drape a green sheet over the body in Bikovsky's apartment. The dead man was Eddie, the batter. It explained why Maria had shown no signs of recognition when the man had walked by.
Further along the corridor other officers were questioning the woman whose screams had alerted them to Kassim's presence. She had been fortunate to survive with nothing more damaging than a jolt to her system and a small cut from flying glass when Kassim had made his exit through the window.
Harry handed his mobile to a crime scene officer so that Deane could vouch for his and Rik's presence. The detective listened and handed it back with a nod, and Harry promised to call Deane later when they were cleared to leave.
It took only a few minutes, with the arrival of an LAPD crime squad lieutenant named McKenzie, to add a surname and occupation to the dead man.
âIt's Eddie Cruz, professional scumbag,' the cop muttered coldly. âHe finally got his true and just deserts.' He bent and peered with professional interest at the knife wound, then into Eddie's sightless eyes. âI guess it's true: there is a God up there.'
âYou know him, then?' said Harry. The cop probably knew all the local names on his territory, right down to their shoe sizes.
McKenzie looked sour. âYeah, more's the pity. He was a strong-arm guy for a local organization and reputedly moonlighting for one or two others. He breaks things for people . . . arms and legs, mostly. We figured him for a recent murder up in Bel Air. Some kid making porno movies was getting too big a share of the market. The established guys didn't like it and they warned him off. He kept working. Next thing was we found him in a dumpster with his head caved in. We couldn't prove it was Cruz who did it, but the signs looked right.'
âDo you know his friend Marty?'
The cop looked surprised. âFor someone who's only visiting, you get around the nicest people. Yeah, we know Bell. Him and Cruz are two of a kind, like evil twins. How come you know them?'
Harry explained briefly about his encounter with the men, drawing a fresh look of appraisal from McKenzie, who looked as if he would like to have seen it.
âWhen that news gets round,' he said shortly, âyou'll make a lot of new friends â mostly in the porno business.'
A few minutes later, Harry and Rik were walking down the stairs.
âWhere are we going?' Rik asked.
Harry had got away from McKenzie by using the excuse that he needed to confer with Deane in New York. What he really wanted was to talk to Bikovsky before the LAPD and the FBI put the ex-Marine off-limits.
âI've got a feeling Bikovsky knows more than he thinks . . . or more than he's letting on.'
They were met outside by a crowd of onlookers being pushed back behind a police cordon. Among them were Jerry, concerned about the apartment he let to Bikovsky, and Maria. She was hugging her arms around her, face creased with concern.
âIt's not Bikovsky,' Harry explained to Maria. âJust a man who was unlucky enough to look like him.'
Maria nodded, relief flickering briefly across her face. âThank you,' she said, and turned away, disappearing into the crowd, anxious to distance herself from the presence of so many police officers.
âHey â what about my apartment?' Jerry demanded, pushing forward. âDid they tear the place up? Am I gonna have to get the place cleaned or what, huh? That no-hoper, Bikovsky . . . he's nothing but trouble!'
A few miles away, on the outskirts of Los Angeles International, Kassim pulled out of the heavy evening traffic and turned in to a block of cargo warehouses. Satisfied he was unobserved, he killed the engine and dumped the trail bike behind a garbage skip, retrieving his rucksack and throwing it over his shoulder. He could see the airport buildings in the distance, and quickly made his way on foot towards them. He was beginning to shake from the kill and the subsequent chase, and was experiencing dizziness again and loss of vision. He badly needed to get cleaned up and to rest, to let the reaction pass before showing up at the Marriott to collect his new passport and travel vouchers.
He arrived at a perimeter road, on the other side of which were the terminal buildings and public car parks. He remembered belatedly that Americans never walked if they could ride, and that he could have used the bike without standing out. He'd been careless, but he put it down to not feeling well. Even so, it was a lesson for the next few hours.
He arrived at the nearest terminal building and found a deserted washroom where he was able to clean himself up and change his shirt. He was covered in a film of perspiration and dust from his ride across the patch of rough ground, and had some minor cuts on his hands where he had burst through the window of the apartment block into the alleyway.
He glanced down and saw a patch of blood on the thigh of his pants from where he had shoved the knife before jumping from the building. He pulled the blade out and rinsed it under the tap, then wrapped it in some paper towels and put it in his rucksack. He would have to dispose of it later. For now, though, he felt safer having it within reach.
As he was holding his leg under a hot-air dryer, he felt a shock penetrate his gut. Something was missing.
The fragment of blue cloth. He'd dropped it!
He searched everywhere, but knew it was no good. He felt as if a piece of him had been ripped away. This was bad. Very bad. He walked up and down, shaking his head, trying to figure out what to do. It was pointless going back; he'd be seen and locked up â or worse, shot dead. Yet it represented a major part of why he was here . . . why he was doing this. How could he have been so careless? It must have happened after he'd killed the American, on his way out of the building.
He forced himself to remain calm and took a deep breath, then drank some cold water. It was time to let go. He could still complete his task. But first he needed to change his profile.
The men chasing him back at the apartment buildings would have got a partial look at him at least. One in particular, who had emerged from the alleyway just as he was leaving on the motorcycle: the Englishman, Tate. It had been close â too close â and he was amazed Tate had not used a weapon. Had it been him, Kassim would not have hesitated.
The outer door rattled and Kassim ducked his face into a basin. A man came in and used one of the cubicles, then stepped across to the basins to wash his hands. He was carrying a sports bag in one hand and in the other a lightweight tan windcheater with a dark blue lining. Kassim went into a cubicle, noisily locking the door, then counted to five before silently slipping the catch and stepping out again.
The man had his head down, soaping his face. His windcheater lay on top of the sports bag at his feet. As Kassim stepped past him, he reached down and scooped up the garment, and was out the door before the man even knew it had gone.
Ten minutes later, having reversed the windcheater and flung it across his shoulders, Kassim found a cafeteria and took a spare seat at a table of Spanish tourists, nodding gratefully as they made room for him.
As he drank a glass of iced coke, allowing his nerves to settle, he noticed a
Herald Tribune
lying on a chair. On the front was a picture of a war-torn building, scarred by fire and pockmarked by shell holes. The photo looked dated, with a woman standing in the centre of the shot, staring in shock at a body lying twisted and burned among the bricks and dust. Kassim was about to look away when he noticed a familiar name in a side column. He picked up the paper and followed the page reference.
UN SPECIAL ENVOY KLEEMAN RETURNING TO KOSOVO.
Inside was a large photo of Anton Kleeman.
H
arry also noticed the headline as Rik was scrolling for news on his laptop. They were in an airport hotel, waiting for Deane to call back. Harry had asked him to use his influence to gain access to Bikovsky. He would have to go through the FBI and the LAPD, both of whom were probably claiming primary control over him; the police for questioning about events at his apartment and the FBI for the wider investigation into the UN team murders.
âThis can't be good,' Rik commented. He clicked on a link and brought up the picture of Kleeman in a camouflage jacket, smiling into the cameras. It was not a current picture and Kleeman had put on a little weight since 1999.
âIt's not.' Harry immediately saw the significance and rang Deane. This couldn't wait.
âWhen was Kleeman's Kosovo trip planned?' he asked.
âI don't know,' Deane admitted. âI'd have to check. Karen Walters is right here.'
âAsk her. It's important.'