“This should be easy,” the muscley one said. He walked over to the trash can by the BBQ, lifted out the liner, and dumped the trash on the lawn. “He’s a fucking retard.”
“No,” Trevon said. “I’m high-functioning.”
“Either way,” the raw one said, flicking open a folding knife, “you’re coming with us.”
The muscley one put the trash bag over Trevon’s head, and everything went dark, and he got panicky and sucked in, but the bag filled the whole inside of his mouth.
Then a hand palmed the back of his head and something punched through the trash liner into his mouth and nicked the side of his cheek, and then he could breathe through the slit in the bag, but only barely if he sucked in and blew out really hard.
The Scaredy Bugs were running crazy inside his body, but he breathed as hard as he could to get air and told the Scaredy Bugs they weren’t in charge, that he was the boss of them, and when the men shoved him to walk toward the gate, he didn’t complain, because we don’t cry and we don’t feel sorry for ourself.
13
Good Little Lamb
From Terre Haute, Indiana, to the outskirts of D.C. was a straight shot on 1-70, ten hours and change without traffic.
But traffic had gotten worse in the past 1,779 days, and by the time Judd Holt steered the shitty Nissan Maxima into the motel parking lot, it was full dark.
He’d no sooner parked than the flip phone buzzed in his pocket. He thumbed open the clamshell and read the message: RM 7.
Okay, then.
Public housing loomed all around. A crackhead jittered across the crosswalk, head back, lips parted, ruinous yellow teeth grinning at the moon. Dealers were out, sitting on the hoods of cars, floating by in lowriders, working on their scowls.
Knox Hill wasn’t the worst neighborhood Orphan A had operated in. Next to Jalalabad, it felt like Palm Beach.
He got out of the Maxima, ambled over to the row of bushes hemming in the parking lot, and took a long and satisfying leak.
He didn’t like to head into trouble with a full bladder.
He walked over to Room 7 and knocked.
There was no point bothering with surveillance or a cautious approach. They wouldn’t have had him drive all this way just to put him down.
The door opened. The guy inside was not what Holt expected.
White boy, soft from good meals and good living, some college-athlete muscles in there attempting to hold on. He wore a gray plaid suit like it was 1955 and sported one of those beards that was trying too hard to be noticed.
Holt said, “Who the fuck are you?”
The guy bristled. Stepped back.
Only once the door was closed behind them did he say, “I’m our mutual friend’s deputy chief of staff. The fact that I’m here personally should show you the importance of what we’re about to discuss.”
Holt sat on the bed, bounced a bit to test the mattress. “The fact that I walked out of a federal penitentiary showed me the importance of what we’re about to discuss,” he said. “So I don’t need no foreplay.”
“The Orphan Program is no longer what it was,” the man said, sitting on the other bed and facing Holt so their knees almost touched. “It’s virtually shut down, and there are … compliance issues with our former operators.”
“Meaning they know shit that could be trouble for the Man.”
“Because of your shared history, there’s a level of trust between you and the president.” The man licked his lips. “You’re the only Orphan he ever interacted with directly.”
Holt pulled his shoulders back and down, stretching them. He’d gotten used to it in the box, all the small, compact movements to keep his muscles from languishing.
He thought back to when Bennett was a star on the rise at the DoD. As the inaugural Orphan, Holt had been tasked with reading him in on the Program. He’d also helped Bennett in the operational planning of the first missions he’d overseen.
“He wasn’t like the other DoD suits with their shiny little Glocks,” Holt said. “Naw, he was steel. Could’ve just as easily been on our side of the fence. Yeah, we saw eye to eye.”
“That’s why we want to task you with this essential job.”
“Doing what?”
“Eliminating Orphans.”
“Which ones?”
“All of them.” The guy reached for a briefcase on the ugly-ass comforter next to him and popped the brass catches like he was in a spy movie. He removed a few files. “As you can imagine, information has been scarce. But we’ve managed to locate a few.”
Holt lifted a hand, palm up, and flicked his fingers inward. “Give ’em here.”
He took the files and flipped through them.
The first contained a phone bill with a few matching numbers circled and nothing else.
The second showed a woman in her late thirties, now a single mother of two in Albuquerque. Holt stared at her face, the PTA makeover. As a former Orphan, she’d be harder to catch off guard than her appearance dictated, but she had kids, so there’d be strings to pull, levers to tug, plenty of incentive for her to go to slaughter like a good little lamb.
The third held a surveillance-screen grab from Grand Central Station. The Orphan looked unwell, a bulge at the waistline, gaunt cheeks, eyes wide and paranoid. He’d be rusty. Holt studied the wrecked face and thought about where he’d place the bullet.
He thumbed through the remaining files, most of them sparse. Each Orphan’s personal background information and operational history had been redacted; all that remained was intel that pertained to tracking them down.
The guy clearly feared a good old-fashioned silence. “As you can see, we’ve been hard at work these past months.” He loosened his tie and undid his top button. Then he fished up a lanyard and showed off the flash drive dangling from it like a pendant. “We have it cached digitally as well, but I was told you were more old-school.” The drive vanished into his collar once again, and he tidied himself back up. “These files—like the Program—are deep black, totally off the books.”
Holt scratched at the stubble curling from his jawline and stared at the man. Aggressively. To his credit, the guy held Holt’s gaze, but Holt could smell the fear coming off him, leaking through the pores.
Holt said, “What’s your name, son?”
“Doug. Wetzel.”
“Wetzel. Let me tell you something. This is all well and good.” Holt dropped the stack of files back into the kid’s lap. “And I will get to them. I can promise you that. But it’s gotta wait. There’s something I need to take care of first. When I’m done, I’ll come back and we can run the table with these fuckups.”
“What’s so pressing that you’d turn down a presidential order?”
“I think you know the answer to that. You didn’t move heaven and earth to get me released to handle this non-urgent bullshit. So refine your sales pitch instead of trying to walk me into a honey trap.”
Wetzel folded his hands. His fingers looked like little sausages. “Our interests are aligned.”
“No shit. I want Orphan X. He’s got the most dirt on Bennett.” Holt stood up. “This meet? Didn’t need to happen. All you had to do is unlock that cell door and leave me the fuck alone.”’
“Sit down,” Wetzel said. At Holt’s stare he quickly held up a hand. “Please,” he added. “There’s more.”
Holt said, “Speak.”
Wetzel told him about the assassination threat and the sniper rifle they’d found with the photographs of dead Orphans.
Holt sat back down, the springs complaining under his weight. “What about the Secret Service?”
“The Secret Service can’t hunt.” The knot of Wetzel’s tie was still pulled to the right side from his show-and-tell with the flash drive, but the rest of his getup was unrumpled, butter smooth. “We’ll get you anything you want. Guns, rifles, explosives.”
“I’ll let you know. For now I’m gonna go—What’d you call me? ‘Old-school.’ But I do need one thing.”
“What’s that?”
“Cannon fodder. Going up against X, I’ll need numbers.”
“This is totally covert. I don’t know how we can provide you—”
“At my prison,” Holt said, “there were two brothers, went by Sound and Fury. They’ll do just fine.”
“You want us to release these men?”
“You said you’ll get me anything I want. Well. I want.”
“What are they in for?”
“Torture, rape, homicide.”
Wetzel said, “Oh.”
They stared at each other some more.
Wetzel finally said, “You expect me to free convicted rapists and murderers from prison?”
Holt said, “Yes.”
Wetzel smoothed his beard. “I don’t know that that’s—”
“You want to get a job done, you need the right tools,” Holt said. “Wade and Ricky Collins are the right tools.”
Wetzel sipped in a breath. “I’ll see what I can do.”