The Fix (Amos Decker #3)

He glanced over at Natalie. It was then he noticed that she had two toes missing on her right foot.

“Are you sure she’s okay?” asked Jamison.

“Until the hangover kicks in.”

They turned to see Ellie standing in the doorway. “I’ll take it from here.” She ushered them out and closed the bedroom door after them. “This really has destroyed our family,” she said.

“I guess so,” said Decker.

As they walked outside, Jamison said, “So maybe Miss high-and-mighty Harper Brown lied to us. Maybe Walter Dabney didn’t have a gambling problem.”

Decker went over to Jamison’s car and stood next to it, surveying the property but not really seeing it.

“What is it?” she asked.

Decker didn’t answer, because the frames were whizzing by in his head. He went from first to last and last to first. Then he turned to Jamison.

He said, “Brown told us that Dabney was selling secrets.”

“Right. To pay for his gambling debts.”

“She never said they were his gambling debts.”





CHAPTER

24



HARPER BROWN HAD just sat down across from Decker at the café where Walter Dabney had gone right before killing Berkshire. She was dressed in a black two-piece suit with a seafoam-green blouse. The slight bulge at her waist showed where she kept her pistol.

Decker had on faded jeans, a rumpled flannel shirt, and a windbreaker.

Brown eyed his clothing and said, “I take it the Bureau has suspended its dress code for you?”

“Bogart already told you, I’m not a real agent.”

“Your phone call was interesting,” she continued.

“As I’m hoping your answers will be. So whose gambling debts were they?”

“As I already told you, I haven’t decided whether you’re on or off this investigation, so I can’t possibly answer that.”

“As I’ve already told you, I don’t think that’s within your power to decide.”

“Did you forget the phone call the SecDef can make?”

“I checked on that,” said Decker. “That won’t be happening. That was bullshit on your part and you know it.”

She sat back. “Can you at least buy a girl a cup of coffee while you accuse her of dishonest things?”

Decker rose, bought a black coffee, and carried it over to her.

“Thank you,” she said sweetly. She took a sip and smiled. “Good and hot and just coffee. I could never understand all the crap people put in their cup.”

Decker studied her and took a drink of his own coffee. “When I was a cop back in Ohio, I ran into someone who reminded me of you.”

“Another cop?”

“No, she was a criminal. Con artist. Really good at what she did.”

“You flatter me, Decker.”

“Then I must have said it wrong.”

“I was raised in Alabama by God-fearing parents. They instilled a sense of honor and integrity in me.”

“Alabama?”

“Yes.”

“So they’re fans of To Kill a Mockingbird.”

“You got that from my name?”

“Harper Lee, yeah.” He leaned his bulk in toward her. “So last night didn’t you say you owed me? If you don’t want to pay the debt, enjoy your coffee and I’ll get on with my day.”

When she said nothing he started to rise.

“Just hold your horses,” she finally said, motioning for him to sit back down. She looked around the nearly empty café as Decker dropped back into his chair. “This is not the ideal place.”

“Then let’s take a walk.” He eyed her cup. “As you can see, I got your coffee to go. Just in case you came over from the dark side.”

Out on the sidewalk a breeze swirled Brown’s hair around her shoulders. The wind also caught her jacket and revealed her sidearm. Decker saw this and said, “A Beretta. That’s what Dabney used to kill Berkshire.”

Brown buttoned her jacket closed. “So this is the route he took?”

“You know it was. We were talking gambling debts.”

“How do you know they weren’t Walter Dabney’s?”

“Because you never said they were. And I’ve decided to take you quite literally.”

“I actually always try to be as vague as possible.”

“So much for honor and integrity. So was it Natalie?”

She shot him a glance. “What makes you say that? Have you met her?”

“You could say that, although we never actually spoke, principally because she was in an alcoholic stupor.”

“But what makes you think it was her with the gambling problem?”

“Her three sisters were distraught about their father, but none of them got so drunk they passed out. And she had farther to come, and was the last to arrive, which means she had more time to process the news. But she was shit-faced in the morning while her sisters were out making funeral arrangements and her mother was downstairs all by herself. I understand everyone is different, but, other things being equal, it struck me as odd. And the other sisters were angry about what happened. They were in disbelief. But Natalie didn’t look angry or surprised. And even though she was drunk, there was something in her expression, in the eyes, really, that made her look…guilty.”

“And you can tell when someone looks ‘guilty’?”

“I was a cop for twenty years, so I had a lot of practice,” he shot back.

They walked along for another minute in silence. They passed by the guard shack and Decker nodded at the uniformed man inside. He was the same security officer from the morning Dabney had shot Berkshire.

Across the street, workers were hauling construction materials through the open doorway of a building that was being renovated. Taped to the front window was a building permit. D.C., like New York, was constantly being stripped down and rebuilt. Decker had traveled to New York once, where a cab driver had told him that there were only two seasons in the Big Apple: winter and construction.

Brown said, “We don’t think it was Natalie. We believe it was her husband, Corbett.”

“He had the gambling debts?”

She nodded. “And they were enormous. Apparently, some very bad people loaned him the money, and they wanted to get paid back. We’re talking Russian mobsters.”

“So they were threatened?”

“It was more than a threat. If the debt wasn’t paid, Corbett, Natalie, and their four-year-old daughter were dead.”

“So she called her dad?”

“Last hope. He had money, but not nearly enough in liquid assets, apparently.”

“So he sold secrets to raise the money?”

“That’s the way we see it.”

“So Natalie blames herself?”

“Looks like it.”

“But that doesn’t explain why he killed Berkshire.”

“No. We haven’t gotten there yet.”

“How did you find all this out?”

“Legwork. Asking questions, doing follow-up. We got a tip on Corbett’s end and ran it down from there. We got on to Dabney after we found out about his son-in-law’s gambling debts. Dabney’s firm is well known to DIA. Any connection to him that would lead to possible national security issues raises a red flag for us. It was connect-the-dots fieldwork.”