Having deposited the children at school and nursed a coffee in the car while having a good-morning chat with Jon Boling, Kathryn Dance was halfway to CBI headquarters when she heard the news.
‘… authorities in Sacramento are now saying that the Solitude Creek roadhouse tragedy may have been carried out intentionally. They’re searching for an unknown subject – that is, in police parlance, an unsub – who is a white male, under forty years of age, with brown hair. Medium build. Over six feet tall. He was last seen wearing a green jacket with a logo of some type.’
‘Jesus, my Lord,’ she muttered.
She grabbed her iPhone, fumbled it, lunged, but then decided against trying to retrieve the unit. This angry, she’d be endangering both her career and her life to text what she wanted to.
In ten minutes she was parking in the CBI lot – actually left skid marks, albeit modest ones, on the asphalt. A deep breath, thinking, thinking – there were a number of land mines to negotiate here – but then the anger lifted its head and she was out of the door and storming inside.
Past her own office.
‘Hi, Kathryn. Something wrong?’ This from Dance’s administrative assistant, Maryellen Kresbach. The short, bustling woman, mother of three, wore complex, precarious high-heels, black and white, on her feet and impressive coifs on her head, a mass of curly brown hair, sprayed carefully into submission.
Dance smiled, just to let the world know that nobody in this portion of the building was in danger. Then onward. She strode to Overby’s office, walked in without knocking and found him on a Skype call.
‘Charles.’
‘Ah. Well. Kathryn.’
She swallowed the planned invective and sat down.
On the screen was a swarthy, broad man in a dark suit and white shirt, striped tie, red and blue. He was looking slightly away from the webcam as he regarded his own computer screen.
Overby said, ‘Kathryn. You remember Commissioner Ramón Santos, with the Federal Police in Chihuahua?’
‘Commissioner.’
‘Agent Dance, yes, hello.’ The man was not smiling. Overby, too, was sitting stiffly in his chair. Apparently the conversation had not been felicitous thus far. The commissioner was one of the senior people in Mexico working on Operation Pipeline. Not everyone south of the border was in favor of the effort, of course: drugs and guns meant big money, even – especially – for the police down there.
‘Now, I was telling Charles. It is a most unfortunate thing that has just happened. A big shipment. A load of one hundred M-Four machine-guns, some fifty eighteen-caliber H & Ks. Two thousand rounds.’
Overby asked, ‘They were delivered through the—’
‘Yes. Through the Salinas hub. They came from Oakland.’
‘We didn’t hear,’ Overby said.
‘No. No, you didn’t. An informant down here told us. He had first-hand knowledge, obviously, to be that accurate.’ Santos sighed. ‘We found the truck but it was empty. Those weapons are on our streets now. And responsible for several deaths. This is very bad.’
She recalled that the commissioner was, of course, adamant to stop the cartels from shipping their heroin and cocaine north. But what upset him more was the flood of weapons into Mexico, a country where owning a gun was illegal under most circumstances although it had one of the highest death-by-gunshot rates in the world.
And virtually all those guns were smuggled in from the US.
‘I’m sorry to hear that,’ Overby said.
‘I’m not convinced we’re doing all we can.’
Except that the ‘we’ was not accurate. His meaning: ‘You aren’t doing all you can.’
‘Commissioner,’ Overby said, ‘we have forty officers from five agencies working on Operation Pipeline. We’re making progress. Slow, yes, but it still is progress.’
‘Slow,’ the man said. Dance looked over the streaming video. His office was very similar to Overby’s, though without the golf and tennis trophies. The pictures on his wall were of him standing beside Mexican politicians and, perhaps, celebs. The same category of poses as her boss’s pix.
The commissioner asked, ‘Agent Dance, what is your assessment?’
‘I—’
‘Agent Dance is temporarily assigned to another case.’
‘Another case? I see.’
He had not been informed about the Serrano situation.
‘Commissioner,’ Dance pressed on, even under these circumstances not one to be shushed, ‘we’ve interdicted four shipments in the past month—’
‘And eleven got through, according to our intelligence officers. Including this particularly deadly one, the one I was mentioning.’
She said, ‘Yes, I know about the others. They were small. Very little ammo.’
‘Ah, but, Agent Dance, the size of the shipment probably is of no consequence to the family killed by a single machine-gun.’
‘Of course,’ she said. Nothing to argue about there.
‘Yes, yes,’ said Overby. ‘Well, we’ll look at the statistics, year end. See the trend.’
The commissioner stared at the webcam for a moment, perhaps wondering what on earth Overby was talking about. He said, ‘I have a meeting now. I will look into the situation. And I will look forward to hearing next month about a dozen interdictions. At least. Adios.’
The screen went blank.
‘Testy,’ she said.
‘Who can blame him? Over fifteen hundred people were murdered last year in his state alone.’
Then Dance’s anger returned. ‘You heard?’
‘About what?’
‘It was on the radio. The Solitude Creek unsub’s description went out, after all. It’s all over the press. Now he knows we’re on to him.’
Overby was looking at the blank computer screen. ‘Ah, well. Yes. I heard too.’
‘How did it happen? I mean, did you release it?’
Overby loved any chance to chat with the press. But she doubted he’d directly undermine her, especially after he’d agreed to back her position – besides, if he’d done it, the story would have featured his name prominently.