Part 11 (1/2)

Jack straightened up and looked down at the four men who groaned on the ground.

They're no longer a threat.

”Excuse me?” A girl's voice called out as the door partly opened. A young girl, her eyes wide, slowly stuck her head in. Jack watched her from the corner of his eye while he still looked at the pile of men.

”Excuse me. Please come now. The owner needs to speak to you.” Her forced smile trembled slightly.

The owner?

Jack nodded and then followed the girl down the short hallway where they turned the corner and stopped. All of the customers were gone. One man sat at a large round table in the middle of the restaurant. Jack counted at least seven guys around him, all armed.

You really thought this through...

Three men walked forward: two kept pistols pointed at him while the third patted him down and took his gun. The man seated at the table was in his late thirties with short gray hair, gleaming white teeth, and black eyes. He held out his hand and gestured to the chair across from him. Jack walked forward and sat down.

The man stared; he didn't glare or scowl but simply sat there and studied Jack. Finally, he spoke.

”I am the owner. Why are you here beating up my employees?” His voice was even and calm.

”They started it. I didn't come here to fight. I came looking for my friend.”

The owner angled his head slightly as the waitress came over to pour Jack a cup of tea.

”I have already given my answer to the Mancinis, but you are not with them.” He looked at Jack's gun. ”You are a police officer.”

There are no markings on my gun. He's guessing.

The stupid trick of saying the building was surrounded flashed through Jack's head, and he smirked.

The man smiled back.

”You are a friend of Angelica? Do you have a name?”

”Friend,” Jack replied.

The owner nodded. ”Now I understand. Angelica Mancini went into witness protection. Even though you fear she has been kidnapped, you still try to hide where she was relocated. That is why you will not tell me your name and it also explains why you have no wallet or phone.”

This guy is good. Dangerous.

The man took a sip of his tea. ”Since you are alone, I wonder if your colleagues even know you are here?”

”I don't have an issue with you, and neither did Angelica.”

The owner's lips pursed as he nodded.

”True. Since you are a policeman, and I do not want to deal with any repercussions from you not walking out of here, I will explain something to you. Look around. Look at me. We operate a business. Not like the old ways. You followed the Mancinis to the same blind conclusion. Severino's daughter goes missing and your knee-jerk reaction is that it must be my organization? You need to ask the right question, friend. Even if we are not allied with the Mancinis, why would I kidnap Severino's daughter?”

”I don't care about why. I just want her back.” Jack held his ground.

”You have to look elsewhere, then. I know nothing about her.”

Jack studied his face. The owner watched him calmly.

Jack put his hands on the table. ”You should know this. If something was to happen to Angelica, I'll hold you responsible.”

The owner crookedly grinned, and his head gave the slightest shake. ”That is the second time today I have heard those words. Are you a friend of Paolo?” He set his teacup down. ”My answer to you is the same I gave to him. I had nothing to do with the girl's disappearance. Do not come back to Chinatown.”

Four men walked up; two moved on either side of Jack.

Jack stood up and looked down at the owner, who took a sip of his tea and didn't look up.

The men escorted Jack to the door. At the bottom of the stairs, a guy on his right handed him back his gun. As Jack walked out into the suns.h.i.+ne, his mood turned black.

I have no idea where she is, and now I'm in way over my head.

Another case Jack took a right as he came out of the restaurant and walked two blocks. He crossed the street and glanced back to see whether he was followed. Farther down the road, two j.a.panese men in suits walked side by side. One crossed the street.

Thank you for being so obvious.

Jack walked around the corner and saw a men's clothing store two doors down. He walked to it calmly and entered. The store had a mixture of urban clothing for young men. Jack grabbed a baggy T-s.h.i.+rt, thin jacket, blue jeans, sungla.s.ses, and a bottle of hair gel and then tossed them on the counter. A pimply faced teenager, who looked bored out of his mind, rang him up, using one finger to press each of the cash register keys. Jack used all his cash except a ten dollar bill.

”Hey. I'm trying to surprise my girl,” Jack began. ”You know what that's like, right?” The kid puffed up. ”I'm going to change real quick into this stuff. Does this place have a back door?”

The teenager's mouth opened and then closed. He shook his head and then s.h.i.+fted his weight from leg to leg. Jack held up the ten. The kid s.n.a.t.c.hed it and nodded.

Jack hurried into the dressing room, where he threw all his clothes in the bag. He dressed quickly and ran the gel through his hair, spiking it straight up.

Leave the bag. Go. I've been in here too long.

When he stepped out, the teenager who was waiting for him looked surprised at his new appearance.

”Thanks. She's really gonna flip out.” Jack grinned.

”Go this way. It says fire exit, but it's turned off so we can sneak a smoke.”

Jack hurried out the door to the alley. It ran both ways so Jack doubled back. He stuck one hand in his pocket and let the other one swing wide.

This should work...from a distance.

He walked at a pace that was slightly hurried but would fit his look. He stayed close to the buildings as he made his way back to the Impala. When he reached the street with his car, he walked past it to make sure no one followed. He glanced around. Nothing raised any flags.

Best I can do.

He headed back to the car. One last look, and then he got in and headed out. He drove in the opposite direction of the highway exit he had used.

I'll drive into the city and get out a different way.

Jack drove for another half hour to the on-ramp. Once he hit the open highway, he gunned it all the way back to Darrington.

When he pulled up in front of his apartment building, he froze halfway out of the car. His car door was buzzing.