CHAPTER 25
WHEN WAYNE Weston and Aaron Kinkaid went into business together, Hubbard came to them through a referral from Richard Douglass. The job description was simple and open-ended—perform the most thorough background investigations possible, whenever and on whomever Hubbard requested. He offered big money, and they took it. There was never a case for the rich man’s wife, Kinkaid explained; that was just bullshit offered to Joe to establish an initial connection between Weston and Hubbard.
There had also never been a legitimate problem between the two partners over Julie Weston. “There was nothing between Julie and me,” Kinkaid said. “I got drunk and hit on her once, but we both laughed that off.”
So the pair had worked for Hubbard for a while, but it quickly became evident that Weston was better at the type of assignments Hubbard had to offer, and soon he was working almost exclusively for the multimillionaire. Kinkaid and Weston talked things over and decided a separation was the logical solution. Hubbard agreed to fund Kinkaid’s security company in Sandusky as a silent partner. He left the city, and Wayne Weston stuck around, doing some legitimate cases but basically working as a professional blackmailer. He was good at it, and Hubbard was making him rich.
Then came the past winter and Hubbard’s vision of a building project in the Flats. Weston went to work collecting background information on Beckley and the owner of The River Wild. It was then that he ran into the Russians.
“Wayne found out the owner was in bed with the mob, and he wanted to back off,” Kinkaid said. “But Hubbard thought it was a great opportunity, you know? He wanted to be able to threaten this guy with criminal charges if they could get any sort of real evidence. So Wayne broke into the bar and set up a wireless camera to get an idea of what was going on in the place.”
Most people wouldn’t be foolish enough to try to threaten men connected to Belov, but Hubbard had been so big for so long that he could no longer even comprehend the idea of being afraid of someone, even someone like Belov. So when Weston got the tape, his rich, arrogant boss decided to use it, Kinkaid said. He sent the tape to the strip club owner, but he didn’t tell Wayne Weston. The next day, Krashakov came looking for Hubbard. Apparently, he had intercepted the tape before Dainius Belov received it.
“He made them a deal—he’d keep his mouth shut if the Russians would sell the property to him,” Kinkaid said.
“And they took that?” When he nodded I was stunned. “The Russians made a deal with him? Why the hell didn’t they kill him?”
He shrugged. “I guess because they wanted to use him. They saw the potential there; I mean, Hubbard’s about the richest guy in town. Why would they want to kill him when they could use him in the future?”
Good point. “So where did you come in?”
“I called Hubbard to warn him about you guys when Pritchard came out to interview me. A day later, he calls me back and says you two showed up in his office asking questions. He explained everything that had gone down with Wayne and the Russians, and he offered me big money if I could get involved with you and keep him informed. I told him I wasn’t going anywhere near it unless I could talk to the Russians and be sure they weren’t going to consider me a threat. I met with Krashakov and explained how it would be beneficial for all of us if I hung around. He never liked having me involved, but he wanted to find Julie and that tape, so he went with it.” He looked at me as if he were about to let me in on a secret. “Krashakov’s one scary son ofa bitch.”
I wanted to hit him again, but I didn’t. “Who set up Belov’s son?”
“All I know is Krashakov wanted to make a power play, and Belov’s son was the first obstacle in his path. There’s been some tension between those two for a while, I think.” He wiped at the blood on his chin. “I’m in a bad spot, too, Perry. Wayne thought the Russians were going to kill him, and now I’m playing the same role. You think I want to be part of this? Shit, no.”
“So why are you part of it, Kinkaid?”
He snorted. “You think I got a choice? Hubbard owns my business. Hubbard owns me. You don’t just walk away from a guy like that.”
I moved away from him, pacing the little room. He watched me warily.
“Does Hubbard own Cody, too?” I asked.
He looked at the floor. “I don’t know.”
I reached down for him, and he threw an awkward punch that I avoided easily as I got my hands under his arms and lifted him. I slammed him back against the wall, twice, hard enough to make the door rattle in its frame. Julie and Betsy had to hear it, but I was too mad to care.
“Yes,” he said, “yes, dammit, he’s paying Cody. Now get the hell off me, Perry. I’m telling you the truth.”
I dropped him and stepped back. “So what’s Cody’s game, exactly?”
“He’s almost legitimate. He was working on the FBI task force that’s trying to take down Belov, and he knew Weston was involved with them from the wiretaps. Hubbard paid him to keep his name out of it. He wasn’t supposed to derail the investigation, he was just supposed to steer it away from Hubbard.”
“Which means he was derailing the investigation,” I said. “So let me get this straight—Krashakov was making a power play by eliminating Belov’s son. But who was selling Hubbard the club?”
“Krashakov. He was the muscle in charge of it, even if he wasn’t the owner on paper.”
“Dainius didn’t know about the River Wild deal?”
“No. That was Krashakov’s move. He had the authority to sell the club as long as Belov got a cut.”
“You sent the Russians down to South Carolina after me, didn’t you?” I said.
He pushed himself back against the wall as if he were trying to burrow into it for protection, but this time he was smart enough not to lie. “Yes.”
I thought about Rakic and the fat, pale man, about that shotgun swinging toward me, and gritted my teeth. “What about Hartwick?”
“He wasn’t a weapons smuggler.”
“No kidding. I mean what about his murder, Kinkaid. Did you set that up, too?”
“No.”
“Kinkaid, it’s over now. Understand that, you cowardly son of a bitch?” I drove my foot into the wall just beside his head, and he jumped as if I’d struck him. “Now tell me what happened with Hartwick.”
“I only lied a little about Hartwick,” he said. “I wasn’t lying when I said he was the most dangerous person I’d ever known. He was a loose cannon up here, Perry. Hubbard couldn’t afford to have him here, and neither could Krashakov. As soon as I heard Hartwick was in town, I knew he was here for blood. That’s how it worked with Randy. He wasn’t here to investigate, he was here to kill.”
“Bullshit,” I said. “He was trying to figure out a way to buy some safety for Julie and her daughter, just like Joe and I have been. If he’d wanted to kill Krashakov, he’d have done it and gone back to South Carolina.”
“I don’t know.”
“I’m sure you don’t, Kinkaid. So Hartwick showed up in town, and you told Krashakov where he could be found, didn’t you?”
He was looking at the floor, where drops of his blood were gathering in a small pool. “They were in the cemetery with me. When I left you and Pritchard and went out to smoke a cigarette, I called them, and they parked near your office and waited. They took the shot from the hill in the cemetery and left. I killed a few minutes and then went over the fence when I heard you shouting for me.”
“Who made the shot?”
“Krashakov. He’s had sniper training.”
“Why’d he only take Hartwick out?” I asked. “Why leave Joe and me alive?”
“I told them about the progress you were making, and I said if they gave me a few days to work with you, I might be able to find the Westons and the tape. Hartwick was too dangerous to . . .” His voice trailed off, but I knew how that sentence was going to end. Too dangerous to leave alive.
“And when I did find Julie, then you called Krashakov and told him where to find us?” I thought of Betsy Weston alone in the hotel room just minutes before Krashakov and his thugs had arrived, and I was filled with a surge of anger unlike any I’d felt before. Kinkaid had called them and told them where to find us, then let them fly down to finish the killing.
I took three steps back toward him, ready to grab him and slam him against the wall until I put him all the way through it, but before I could get my hands on him the door opened and Julie Weston stepped inside.
“Lincoln,” she said, staring at Kinkaid’s bloody face, “what’s going on?”
“Get out,” I said. “I’m not through here.”
She started to object, then looked at the blood on the floor and turned quickly, closing the door behind her. I turned back to Kinkaid. He was staring at the door.
“There’s something I need to tell you,” he said.
“No shit, Aaron. There were a lot of things you needed to tell me.”
“It’s more important. Krashakov knows where we are.”
“What?”
“I called him when I found out you’d gone to the prosecutor’s office. He went crazy about it, and he made me tell him where the girl was staying.”
“You son ofa bitch. How long ago was this?”
“Maybe an hour. I tried to calm him down, but he was threatening to kill me. I didn’t want him to refocus that anger on me, but now that I’ve seen the little girl . . .”He looked up at me.“You’ve got to get her out of here, Perry. Krashakov will kill her. He’ll kill all of you.”
I stepped away from him, hearing Thad Cody’s voice in my head when he’d told Joe and me about the Russian mob’s thirst for revenge. “We Italians will kill you,” he’d quoted from the wiretap, “but the Russians are crazy—they’ll kill your whole family.” If Krashakov knew that we’d gone to the prosecutor, it meant he’d be coming to kill, and only to kill.
“Shit, we don’t have much time,” I said.
I threw open the door and stepped out of the bedroom, holding Kinkaid’s gun in my hand. Betsy saw it and ducked behind her mother. “Put Betsy in my truck,” I said. “We’re leaving.”
Even as I spoke, I heard the crunch of tires on the gravel drive. I ran back into the bedroom, ignoring Kinkaid, who was cowering on the floor, expecting me to strike him again, and went to the window that looked out up the drive. At the top of the drive a shiny black SUV had come into view through the pines.
There was no time to think, only time to react. We could not drive away, and the little cottage would not offer protection for the fire-power the Russians would bring. We could flee into the woods, but they’d see us, and eventually they would catch us.
I stepped into the living room and pressed Kinkaid’s gun into Julie’s palm. “They’re here. Take Betsy and go down the back steps and into the crawl space where she hid before. Keep Betsy absolutely quiet. If anyone tries to come inside, use the gun, but don’t waste bullets.”
She stared at me, her mouth open, jaw slack, but I spun her and shoved her forward, out the door and onto the deck. She grabbed Betsy and ran down the steps and around the corner of the cottage. The cottage would screen them from view from the drive, but if they ran away from it they’d be seen. Now I was left alone inside with Kinkaid and no weapon. My gun was still locked in the center console of the truck, and I’d never make it there.
“What should we do?” Kinkaid said, stepping out of the bedroom, looking as scared as Julie. I knew he was scared, and because of that, I also knew he’d tell Krashakov exactly where I’d sent Julie and Betsy. I took one quick step toward him and threw an uppercut at his jaw, dropping my shoulder and using my legs as a source of power for the punch, the way it’s supposed to be done. I hit him flush on the chin. His head snapped back and he sagged to the ground. I clubbed him once on the back of the skull for good measure as he dropped. At least he’d be quiet now.
I stepped away from Kinkaid and into the kitchen, pulling open drawers in search of a knife. Before I found anything more useful than a corkscrew, Alexei Krashakov stepped inside from the deck and pointed a 9-millimeter Beretta pistol at my chest.