Blindside

7



There was more Native American art on the walls of the main terminal building when they came out of the customs hall. Cahill pointed to a sign suspended above them indicating the way out.

‘Let’s go find a cab,’ he said.

Logan nodded and followed after Cahill. They went down a short, wide corridor to automatic doors leading out of the terminal concourse. Logan was suddenly aware of two DHS uniformed officers behind them. He couldn’t be sure, but it felt as if they were being shadowed by the two men.

‘Are we being followed?’ he asked Cahill.

‘Yeah. You just noticed?’

‘For how long?’

‘Since we left the immigration desks.’

‘But why didn’t they detain us there? I mean, wouldn’t that have made more sense?’

‘Maybe they want to wait. See what we’re going to get up to.’

‘You don’t believe that.’

Ahead of them, a dark car pulled up outside the exit doors.

‘No, I don’t,’ Cahill answered after a pause.

‘So what’s up?’

‘I reckon it’s the FBI that is involved with this thing with Tim. So the DHS guys are probably just keeping an eye on us until the Feds show up. They’ll want to take us to the local field office rather than get stuck out here. That’s their comfort zone.’

The door of the car facing the terminal opened and a Hispanic man in his early thirties got out. He was wearing a dark suit. Another man got out of the other side of the car. They both had dark hair parted neatly on the side.

‘And here they are,’ Cahill said.

The men walked forward as Cahill and Logan stepped through the automatic doors. Logan could see the flat expanse of the land beyond the airport, with the sun still high in the clear sky. The air was pleasant, but with an underlying chill as the day wore on. Snow was visible on the Rocky Mountains to the west.

Logan turned to look for the DHS officers and saw them standing inside the doors.

‘Mr Cahill?’ one of the suits asked, stepping up to within a few feet of them.

‘That’s me.’

‘You must be Mr Finch.’

Logan nodded.

The man reached into his jacket and took out a leather wallet. He showed his identification.

‘I’m Special Agent Martinez and this is Special Agent Ruiz. We’re with the FBI.’

‘You don’t say,’ Cahill said.

Martinez cocked his head to one side, like he didn’t understand what Cahill had said.

‘Would you come with us, please?’

Ruiz opened the rear door of the car.

‘What’s this about?’ Logan asked, stepping in front of Cahill. ‘I mean, we’re not under arrest, are we?’

Martinez looked at Logan, then at Ruiz.

‘No, sir,’ Ruiz said.

‘We’re hoping you could help us with our inquiries,’ Martinez said, turning back to face them.

Cahill stayed quiet, content for Logan to take the lead.

‘Can you tell us anything else?’

‘We can speak more comfortably at our office in town, sir.’

‘I’m a lawyer and I’d prefer to know what this is about before I get into that car.’

Ruiz spoke again and Logan began to wonder if he was the more senior of the two agents, even though Martinez had taken the lead initially.

‘I’m afraid we’re not at liberty to discuss that with you right now, sir. But I’m sure it will all be clearer when we get to the office.’

Cahill looked at Logan and shrugged: it’s up to you.

‘We’re not under arrest?’ Logan asked Ruiz.

‘No, sir.’

‘And you have no plans to send us back the way we came on the first available flight?’

‘That’s correct, sir. You’re welcome to stay here. Mr Cahill is a US citizen after all.’

‘You just want to ask us some questions about Tim Stark?’

That got a reaction. Martinez drew in his breath sharply and stared at Logan.

‘No one said that.’

‘But that’s what it’s about, right?’

‘As I said, sir,’ Ruiz interrupted, an edge in his voice like he was annoyed with his partner for reacting. ‘We can go over everything in town.’

‘I guess we could do that.’

Cahill took his bag from over his shoulder and held it out to Martinez.

‘Would you mind?’ he said.

Martinez hesitated and took the bag. Logan left his on the concrete and followed Cahill past Martinez and into the back of the car. He looked up to see Martinez set his mouth in a thin line before picking up his bag and heading to the back of the car. He could’ve sworn that Ruiz smiled a little before he closed the door.

‘Game on,’ Cahill said, rubbing his hands together.

The air con was on full all the way in from the airport and Logan felt gooseflesh rise on his skin. Both agents wore aviator-style sunglasses like in the movies and Logan swallowed an urge to laugh. The journey along the interstate was uneventful and the traffic fairly light. The city looked compact to Logan, the real centre of it probably no bigger than Glasgow. High-rise buildings stretched up with the mountains looming in the background.

Logan did not know the geography of the city centre or the outlying suburbs so he was content to watch the world go by outside. They stopped at a set of traffic lights and two city cops on horseback stopped beside the car. Logan looked up at the men and saw that they wore dark-coloured Stetsons to match their uniforms. One of the officers looked down at Logan and raised a hand in greeting.

‘Welcome to the wild west,’ Logan said quietly.

‘What?’ Cahill asked.

‘Talking to myself.’

They drove on for another few minutes before the driver, Ruiz, indicated to turn left and slowed the car. Logan looked out of his window as they drove through the entrance to an underground garage that lay below an eighteen-storey office block.

The agents said very little after parking in a bay next to an elevator and going round to the back of the car to retrieve the bags. Logan pulled at the handle on his door but it was locked.

‘We’ll have to sit tight and wait for them,’ Cahill said.

Logan looked out into the garage and saw Martinez and Ruiz carry their bags over to another agent who had emerged from a door to the right of the elevator. He took the bags from them and went back through the door.

‘They took our bags,’ Logan said.

Cahill glanced out of his window as the agents walked back towards the car. Logan stepped out when the door opened and asked what they had done with the bags.

‘Don’t worry, sir,’ Ruiz told him. ‘We took them for safe keeping.’

His overly polite and officious language was beginning to grind on Logan.

‘You don’t have permission to open and search the bags. You know that, right?’

Ruiz said nothing for a moment.

‘Is there anything in the bags we should know about?’

‘No.’

They stood looking at each other.

‘Follow me please, sir.’

Ruiz walked towards the elevator while Martinez waited behind them.

Cahill motioned with his head for Logan to follow Ruiz, which he did. Martinez stayed five paces behind them until they got to the elevator. Inside, Ruiz pressed the button for the eighteenth floor and the doors slid shut quietly. No one said anything and there was no horrible muzak playing. Talk about uncomfortable silences.

The reception area of the FBI field office was decorated in muted earth tones with a representation of the shield on the wall behind a desk. A young black woman sat at the desk and smiled when they approached.

‘Where are we, Martha?’ Ruiz asked the woman.

‘Meeting room four.’

‘They in there already?’

‘Sure are. Go on ahead and I’ll let them know you’re coming.’

Logan had no idea who ‘they’ were, but was intrigued to find out.

He and Cahill dutifully followed behind Ruiz again as he used a swipe card to open a secure, frosted-glass door and walked along a narrow corridor past a series of meeting rooms.

They stopped outside a room near the end of the corridor and Ruiz knocked on the door before swiping his card to open it. Inside, two men sat at the far side of a long table. The sun shone in through high, narrow windows.

Both men stood as Ruiz held the door open and motioned for Logan and Cahill to enter the room. When they were in, Ruiz pulled the door closed leaving the four men alone.

One of the men took the lead, walking around the table and holding out his hand. He was a fit-looking black man just under six feet tall. Logan found it difficult to judge his age. Looked like he ran a lot, his smooth skin tight against the contours of his face. Logan stepped forward and shook his hand.

The other man stayed on the far side of the table. He was taller, probably six-two, with greying hair and small, frameless glasses. He clearly kept himself in shape too and his black suit was cut to fit his long frame just so.

‘Gentlemen,’ the shorter of the men said when he shook Cahill’s hand. ‘I’m Special Agent in Charge Randall Webb, head of the Denver field office.’

Logan nodded at him.

‘And this is Special Agent Cooper Grange. He leads the Joint Terrorism Task Force out of this field office. Have a seat.’

Logan wondered if Webb’s use of the word ‘Terrorism’ was supposed to scare him. It was working.





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