The 6th Target - James Patterson [80]
John Langer was Paul Renfrew.
Chapter 111
AT JUST AFTER NOON THAT DAY, Conklin and I were at Uncle’s Café in Chinatown. We’d both ordered the Wednesday special: pot roast, mashed potatoes, and green beans. Conklin had made inroads into his potatoes, but I had no appetite for food.
We had a straight-on view through the plate glass across the gloomy street to a row of brick houses and the Westwood Registry.
A pregnant Chinese woman in pigtails refilled our cups of tea. When I looked through the window a nanosecond later, Paul Renfrew, as he was calling himself, was stepping out of his doorway and heading down the front steps.
“Lookit,” I said, tapping Conklin’s plate with my fork. My cell phone rang. It was Pat Noonan.
“Mr. Renfrew said he’s going out for lunch. Coming back in an hour.”
I doubted it.
Renfrew was going to run.
And he had no idea how many eyes were watching him.
Conklin paid the check, and I made calls to Stanford and Jacobi, zipped my jacket over my vest, and watched Renfrew’s peppy march past herbal shops and souvenir stores as he headed toward the corner of Waverly and Clay.
Conklin and I got into our Crown Vic just as Renfrew unlocked the door of his midnight-blue BMW sedan. He looked over his shoulder, then entered his car and headed south.
Dave Stanford and his partner, Heather Thomson, pulled in behind Renfrew when he reached Sacramento Street while Jacobi and Macklin took a northern route toward Broadway. Our walkie-talkies bleeped and chattered as our team members called in their locations and that of the BMW, following, dropping back, weaving into place, and picking up the trail.
My heart was thudding at a good steady rate as we followed Paul Renfrew’s run to wherever the hell he was taking us.
We crossed the Bay Bridge and drove north on Highway 24, finally entering Contra Costa County.
Conklin and I were in the lead car as Renfrew turned off Altarinda Road onto one of the smaller roadways in Orinda — a quiet, upscale town almost hidden within the folds of the surrounding hills.
I heard Jacobi on the car radio, telling the local police we were conducting a surveillance in an ongoing homicide investigation. Macklin requested backup from the state police and then called the Oakland PD and asked for chopper surveillance. The next voice I heard was Stanford’s. He called for the big guns, an FBI response team.
“The SFPD just lost control of the takedown,” I said to Conklin as Renfrew’s BMW slowed, then turned into the driveway of a white multigabled house with blue shutters.
Conklin drove past the house, casual-like.
We made a U-turn at the junction at the end of the road, came back up the street, and nosed our car into a tree-shaded spot across from where Renfrew had parked his blue BMW next to a black Honda minivan.
It couldn’t be a coincidence.
That had to be the van used to abduct Madison Tyler and Paola Ricci.
Chapter 112
I RAN THE VAN’S PLATES on the car computer. I was thinking ahead to a search warrant, impounding the van, fanning a flame of hope that a speck of Paola Ricci’s blood could be found inside a seam in the van’s upholstery — real evidence to link the Renfrews to the abduction of Paola Ricci and Madison Tyler.
During the next hour, two perimeters were set up: The inner perimeter encircled the gabled house. The outer perimeter sealed off a two-block area around it.
There’d been no activity from the house, making me wonder what was going on inside. Was Renfrew packing? Destroying records?
It was almost four in the afternoon when five black SUVs rolled up the road. They parked on the sidewalk, perpendicular to the front of the gabled house.
Dave Stanford walked up to my car window. He handed me a bullhorn. His ponytail had been clipped to FBI standards, and the humor in his blue eyes was gone. Dave wasn’t working undercover anymore.
He said, “We’re calling the shots, Lindsay. But since Renfrew knows you, try getting him to come out of the house.”
Conklin turned the key in the ignition and