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The Night Stalker_ A Novel of Suspense - James Swain [38]

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This morning, Ronnie told us that Jed left the house when his son was kidnapped, and went next door to see a neighbor.”

“I know,” I said.

Burrell looked surprised. “Jed told you?”

“Yes.”

“Did Jed tell you who his neighbor was?”

“He said his neighbor peddled drugs, and he wanted to score a joint from him.”

Burrell flipped over the second photograph. “This is Jed’s neighbor, a drug-pushing lowlife named Cody Barnes. Barnes has been peddling drugs since he was fifteen years old. Mostly weed, but also coke. Now, here’s where it gets interesting.”

Burrell flipped over the last two photographs. They were both aerial shots, and showed two Hispanic guys, one skinny and missing several teeth, the other older and overweight. It was the same pair I’d chased on I-95 that morning.

“Where did you get these?” I asked.

“They’re from the DEA, courtesy of my friend with the FBI. The skinny one’s named Pepito Suarez, and his partner just goes by Oscar. They’re Colombian hit men. They worked for the Cali drug cartel, then got involved in a shootout down in Miami and killed two DEA agents. They’ve been on the run ever since. Word is, they hire themselves out to drug dealers, and help them collect their money.”

“These are the guys I saw this morning,” I said.

“That’s what I figured. Guess who they’re friends with?”

“I have no idea.”

Burrell tapped the photograph of Cody Barnes. “Jed’s neighbor, that’s who.”

“And you think Jed asked Cody Barnes to hire these goons to watch his son,” I said.

“That’s exactly what I think.”

I pushed myself away from the desk. The scenario Burrell was suggesting looked great on paper, and that’s the only place it looked good. It had FBI written all over it, and I sensed that Burrell’s friend at the Bureau was behind it.

“You’re wrong, and so’s your friend at the FBI,” I said.

Burrell threw her Gatorade at my head. I ducked, and heard the bottle hit the wall.

“Prove it,” she said angrily.

Scotch-taped to the wall were several photographs of Sampson, and I pulled down the one that showed him riding a bright blue tricycle.

“See this tricycle?” I said. “I saw it in the backyard of Jed’s house, along with a dozen toys and a plastic swimming pool. I also saw a bedroom filled with toys, and cute wallpaper with cartoon characters. Do you know how much that stuff costs?”

Burrell shook her head. The look on her face said she wanted to kill me.

“Try hundreds and hundreds of dollars,” I said.

“So what?”

“Jed Grimes was trying to be a good father.”

“What does that have to do with this?”

“Everything. What kind of father hires a pair of professional killers to guard his son?”

Burrell swallowed hard. “A bad one.”

“That’s right, a bad one. Bad fathers feed their kids cold SpaghettiOs and let them watch X-rated movies. They don’t buy them tricycles and expensive toys.”

I picked up her bottle of Gatorade from the floor, and put it on the desk. Then I headed for the door. “You’re going down the wrong road. Jed Grimes is a victim. If you arrest him, you’ll end up ruining your career. I’d be willing to put money on it.”

Burrell sank down into her chair. “What should I do?”

“You need to refocus your investigation. Yesterday I gave the chief a photograph of Sampson sitting in a dog crate in a hotel room. Has anyone tried to figure out which hotel chain the photo was taken in?”

“The techs examined it. They couldn’t tell which hotel it was.”

“Then call Sally Haskell. She should be able to help us.”

“I thought Sally was running security for Disney,” Burrell said.

“She is. A guy on her staff is an expert at identifying hotel interiors. He helped me find a man who’d abducted his daughter, and was sending his ex-wife photos. Sally’s guy identified the hotel chain they were staying in, and where it was located.”

“I’ll call her right now.”

I opened the door while continuing to stare at Burrell. I had trained her the same way I’d trained every detective who’d ever worked for me. It was all about following your instincts. She was losing sight of that, and letting outsiders cloud her judgment.

“How long did you

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