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“You can’t take this kind of risk alone, John.”

“Message received. Just go home and sleep on it, would you?” He added, “Listen, if I do this, the Sturgeon General will be sure it was Hayes. You know he will.”

“The grand jury will sit Thursday. Alekseevich testifies. A week or two from now and Svengrad’s in lockup.”

“So take a vacation.”

“I don’t want you doing this alone.”

“I heard you the first time. So?”

“So,” Boldt said, after a moment of thought, “I’m coming with you.”

“What’s going on?” Liz asked from the warm side of the bed.

Boldt, in the familiar act of dressing into street clothes in the dark, said, “I’ll be back within the hour.”

“Are you going to tell me?” she asked in a groggy voice.

“No,” he said. “Better if I don’t. Better that you could answer questions honestly.”

“Questions from whom?”

“Internal Investigations.” That silenced her for a moment.

“I’m sorry,” she said, sensing her own role in whatever it was he had pla

“Me too,” he said. “But maybe this is the end of it.”

“If only,” she said. “Is it dangerous?”

“I don’t think so. Not particularly.”

“It’s not worth it if it is.”

He stood over her at the side of the bed. He could just make out her face in the gray light that leaked around the perimeter of the window blinds. “You never woke up,” he said. “Never noticed me missing from the bed.”

“If you’re trying to scare me, it’s working.”

He left the room, stopping in the kitchen to make a traveling cup of tea.

LaMoia’s Jetta was parked behind an art supply store in Ballard, as pla

“Yo,” the detective said, as Boldt slipped into the passenger seat. LaMoia looked like it was twelve noon.

They drove to within a hundred yards of Svengrad’s warehouse in complete silence. Then LaMoia pulled over and withdrew a “drop gun” from the glove compartment. Not SPD issue, and if shots were thrown, it wouldn’t be traceable to LaMoia.

“I don’t like the look of that,” Boldt said.

“Get over it.”

“You’re nervous.”

“I have no idea what that thing in the trunk is going to do. What I do know is that I’m not parking anywhere near that warehouse because cars these days are all about computer chips, and that thing fries computer chips. So here’s the deal: You’re the wheel man. You drop me off, wait exactly two minutes, and return to pick me up. I can’t keep a phone or radio on me, the thing will fry them too, so it’s all about timing. You hear shots fired, I’d appreciate some backup.”

“You’ve got the roles reversed,” Boldt said. “If anyone’s putting himself at risk, that would be me.”

“I got briefed on the operation of this thing,” LaMoia said. “Besides, you’re technically challenged operating a toaster, for Christ’s sake.”





“Two minutes,” Boldt said. He came around the car. LaMoia popped the trunk so that it was already open, and Boldt drove them toward the warehouse.

He glided the car into position, LaMoia directing him with hand signals. LaMoia flew out the passenger door, lifted the trunk, then left it unlatched as he slapped the car to signal Boldt’s retreat.

As Boldt pulled away, he saw LaMoia struggling with what appeared to be a very heavy metal box. It looked like a miniature window-mounted air conditioning unit. Three blocks away he reversed the Jetta so it aimed back toward the unseen warehouse. One eye tracked the second hand on his wristwatch while he divided his attention, focused on the darkened street before him.

All at once, Boldt heard a loud explosion, and his foot went to the accelerator faster than conscious thought. He removed his weapon and laid it in his lap as he drove at a breakneck speed down the rough, potholed roadway. He caught sight of the orange glow in the sky and the smudged black plume of smoke billowing from what turned out to be a phone pole. An electric transformer on the pole was afire, raining viscous drops of flame down onto the crusted blacktop below like some medieval cauldron.

Boldt saw LaMoia by the side of the building, embracing the bulky steel device in both arms. The car rocked as LaMoia deposited the device into the trunk. The detective hurried around to the passenger side and said, “Go,” although he was only partially inside.

Boldt hit the accelerator hard, and the Jetta raced off. No sign of any trouble behind them, as both men strained toward their respective door-mounted mirrors.

“Shit!” LaMoia said. He was sweating and breathless. “Little kink they’re going to have to work out. I hit the button and that transformer blew like it was part of the plan.”

“So it worked,” Boldt said, somewhat astonished.

“Apparently so.”

“The transformer. That could help us. Whatever happened in that warehouse, maybe it gets blamed on the transformer’s problems.”

“You think it’s designed to do that?” LaMoia asked, suddenly beaming behind a smile. “Yeah, I suppose that’s possible,” he said. “Power company gets blamed for it. I like that. That’s what they get for raising our bills every six months.”

Only then did it fully dawn on Boldt that the master videotape of his wife’s indiscretions was now erased, and that at the same time Svengrad’s import company had been dealt a serious setback, losing all their business data.

He heard sirens behind them, responding to the burning transformer.

“Thing scared the shit out of me when it blew like that,” LaMoia said, reliving the moment. He was twisted around in his seat trying to get a look toward the fire. But he gave up and came back around, facing the windshield.

“Definitely not something we want terrorists to have.” He explained himself, saying, “The way I see it, I was just doing a little homework.”

“John LaMoia, the good student,” Boldt suggested. “Why doesn’t that work for me?”

“Give it a rest, Sarge.”

As Boldt drove, the sun brightened the eastern horizon. Boldt would be in bed before it was fully dawn.

“Thank you, John.” Said to the windshield, but as sincerely as he could make it.

“I love shit like that. Blowing stuff up. Setting shit on fire. My pleasure, Sarge, believe me.” LaMoia chuckled to himself. “Besides, what are friends for?”

Boldt searched the papers the following morning for any mention of an unexplained power outage in south Ballard. He found a paragraph about the transformer fire. He’d been placed on administrative leave pending a full review of the Special Ops at the theater and WestCorp Center. Pahwan Riz and Marc O’Brien were too experienced not to recognize internal interference when they saw it. Proving it would be next to impossible, given the loyalty of Daphne, John, and Bobbie Gaynes. Boldt would ride it out, as he’d ridden out other challenges in the past.

Da

Liz returned from a meeting at the bank that Tuesday afternoon, Boldt having gassed up the car and packed it for the drive to Wenatchee. They were to pick up the kids there and keep driving. Sun Valley. Yellowstone, with the tourists gone. They would loop around on one of the most beautiful highways in the country, on the western border of Montana, and on up to Coeur d’Alene, where they’d spend most of the next week doing nothing. Boldt didn’t know how it would go; he wasn’t great at doing nothing.

Liz was quiet for the early part of the drive. She’d climbed in with a stack of papers, her purse, and a newspaper.

“What’s going on?” he asked.

“I’m not going to be offered a contract with MTK.”

“You’ve been fired?” This news hit Boldt in the center of his chest. Not only did Liz love the job, but she’d been one of the top five officers in the bank. There’d never been any question of her being worked into the merger.

“The tape, maybe,” she said. “You think?”