51

Customs at Miami International Airport was a breeze. At least it was for Alex. She sailed through without a bag search. Apparently an unmarried white male in his late twenties who’d made two very short trips between Miami and Colombia in the last month set off all kinds of bells and whistles. My bags they wanted to see.

I told Alex to go on without me.

“You sure?”

“Yeah. We’ll talk later.”

She was gone just a second before the customs agents exposed to the world my dependency on American-made toilet paper. I stuffed my personal items back in the bag, closed it up, and was ready to move on.

“Would you mind coming with us, please?” asked the agent.

I took a half step back, surprised. The elderly couple behind me took about five steps back, as if to announce that they weren’t traveling with me.

“What’s this about?”

“We’d like to ask you some questions. Could you please step out of the line?”

At this point my lawyerly instincts were kicking in, but I didn’t want to make a scene. “Sure,” I said. I grabbed my bag and followed the agent through an exit designated for airport employees and law enforcement. The agent used his electronic passkey to get us through another set of secured doors. On the other side was FBI Agent Huitt.

“Long time no see, Nick,” he said.

His sidekick was with him, the young female agent who rarely said anything but looked as if she could break me in two if she’d wanted to.

“Am I being detained?” I asked, knowing the legal significance of the word.

“Not at all,” said Huitt. “Just want to ask you some questions. You’re free to go if you don’t want to talk.”

“Then it was nice talking to you,” I said. “See ya.”

As I turned, he said, “Where’d you get the two hundred and four thousand dollars?”

I stopped, but I didn’t answer. Two-oh-four was the exact amount we’d wire-transferred, even though we’d ended up paying only a hundred.

He said, “Your Miami bank filled out a suspicious-transaction report. You must have acted nervous when you went in to wire the money, Nick.”

“It’s my money. If I want to wire it to Bogota and walk out of the bank with a suitcase full of cash, that’s my business.”

“Sure, so long as it really is your money. For your sake, I hope it didn’t come from your father’s partner.”

The remark had me thinking of Alex’s advice to borrow the full ransom from Guillermo. “It didn’t come from him.”

“I promised to get you and your entire family full immunity if you’d help me expose Guillermo Cruz for what he is. No way in hell the U.S. Attorney’s going to go for that deal if you start spreading around dirty money.”

“I pulled together every penny of that money with help from no one but my closest friends. I mortgaged my house, I-”

“Yeah, yeah. Spare me the sob story.”

“Then spare me the grief. We don’t need your immunity.”

“Let me give you a little advice. You keep crawling around with snakes, you’re going to get bitten. It happened to your old man, it can happen to you.”

“What do you know about my father?”

He stepped closer and spoke in a low, threatening tone. “I know that kidnappings like this one are rarely a case of an innocent person being in the wrong place at the wrong time. I know that your father went down to Colombia with five Nicaraguans to buy three shrimp boats that I suspect haven’t been used for shrimping in a very long time. I know all about the people he bought the boats from, and I know how vindictive they can be when someone double-crosses them in their particularly unseemly line of commerce. What do you know about your father, Nick?”

His words hung in the air, more an accusation than a question. I looked at him coldly and said, “Enough to know that you’re totally full of shit.”

I picked up my bag and walked out the door.

From the airport I drove straight downtown to the Miami-Dade County Courthouse. Though I’d refused to let him see it, Huitt had gotten to me. He made me realize that no matter how badly I needed the ransom, Guillermo really wasn’t an option. I had to do everything possible to get the money out of Quality Insurance Company.

I reached the courthouse just a few minutes before the lunch hour, and I planted myself at the top of the tiered granite steps at the south entrance to the building. In the shadows of massive stone columns, I waited. Though she clearly hadn’t remembered me, I’d second-chaired a weeklong trial in front of Judge Korvan about eight months earlier, which meant that I did little more than carry the trial bags back and forth from the courthouse to the offices of Cool Cash. If nothing else, the experience had taught me that Judge Korvan was a creature of habit when it came to the lunch hour. I knew she’d be passing by any minute on her way to the Boston Sub Shop.

“Judge Korvan,” I called out.

She kept walking, donning her huge dark sunglasses. I followed her down the first tier of steps, calling her name once more. She slowed her pace but didn’t stop.

“I’m Nick Rey,” I said, walking alongside her.

“I know who you are.”

We passed the hot dog cart on the street, then continued to the crosswalk. For an older woman, she walked at quite a clip.

“I have to talk to you, Judge.”

“Is this what I think it’s about?”

“My father’s case against Quality Insurance.”

“Then stop right there. You have a new judge.”

“Are you aware that the case has been put on hold?”

“I have nothing to say about that.”

The light changed, and we continued across busy Flagler Street.

“Do you think that’s a fair result?”

“I’ve recused myself. It doesn’t matter what I think.”

“It matters to me.”

“It’s completely inappropriate for you to confront me this way.”

“You’re right, but I’m running out of options.”

“Maybe I should report you to the Florida Bar, and we can see what they think.”

“Maybe I should invite you to my father’s funeral so that it’s clear I don’t care what they think.”

She stopped cold on the sidewalk. “Did something happen?”

“It’s about to. I have a week to raise three million dollars or they’re going to kill him.”

From the look on her face I could see that I’d pegged her correctly. She had a well-known reputation for fairness, and I’d sensed that she was a woman of compassion.

“I wish I could help you, but I can’t.”

“Why did you remove yourself from the case?”

“I can’t tell you that.”

“Judge, a man’s life is at stake here.”

Cars were passing in the street, a steady flow of pedestrians racing by us on the sidewalk. She seemed edgy. “This discussion should not be taking place.”

“I know what the rules of ethics say.”

“I’m not talking about the rules of ethics,” she said in a hushed but urgent voice. “I’m telling you this for your own good and mine. This conversation should not be taking place.”

Her tone chilled me. I thought I knew what she was telling me, but I wasn’t sure. “Are you saying that you stepped down because-”

“Every judge has skeletons in her closet. They found mine.”

I stood mute. She clearly had more of a conscience than I’d thought, and the shocking candor was perhaps her way of apologizing for having bailed out of my father’s case.

She touched my hand and said, “Watch yourself, young man. Quality Insurance Company does not intend to lose this case.”

With that she left me. She was well out of earshot by the time I uttered my reply.

“Neither do I,” I said beneath my breath. I cut across Flagler Street to my Jeep.

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