ELEVEN
Rob stared at the lobby entrance, watching for anything that seemed out of place. Han's goon squad had to know they wouldn't get very far in the Malibu, not with the Chevy as damaged as it was. The Korean mafia would be looking for them, but Manhattan was a crowded place. The thugs might eventually find them, but it'd take time.
He couldn't believe Hernรกndez sold them out, and it was too fantastic to believe that both Drew and Lou were moles. No. There had to be another explanation. But what was it? Every time Rob reached out to someone for help, Han came down on them. There had to be a leak in the service somewhere, but where? He didn't have a plan, and he was still pondering how they'd been ambushed, and what to do about it, when his phone rang. It was Lou.
"Cogburn," he said, putting the phone on speaker so Bae could hear. She was neck deep in this too and deserved to know what was happening.
"Where are you? It's almost noon. Martinelli is getting antsy."
"Han's men jumped us," he said, his tone neutral as he listened for Lou's reaction.
"What! When? Where?" she shouted. Lou was either actually surprised or was a hell of an actress.
"About five blocks from DPM," he said, using the marshal service's shorthand for the Daniel Patrick Moynihan building.
"Are you shitting me? How'd they know?"
"That's the question, isn't it?"
"Are you okay? Is Han safe? Tell me where you are and I'll come get you."
He thought about it. "We're safe, and let's leave it at that. They were waiting for us, Lou."
"You think I tipped them? Rooster! You know me better than that!"
"I trust you, but look at it from my point of view. Every time I--"
"I understand that!" Lou snapped, cutting him off. "But you have to trust someone. You can't do this alone."
"We need another plan. Who did you tell we were coming?"
"Nobody that didn't need to know."
"So the leak could be anywhere. The Marshals office, Martinelli's office..."
"We didn't tip them, Cogburn," Lou said, her voice hard. He knew she meant the Marshal Service. It was hard to believe it would be anyone in their office, but someone, somewhere, sure as hell had been talking.
"Any word from SDM Gwynn?" he asked.
"No. We've issued a BOLO for him, but nothing yet."
"BOLO?" Bae whispered.
"Understood." He leaned over to Bae. "Be On the Look Out," he whispered to answer her question.
"Tell me where you are. I'll come get you," Lou repeated.
"No. Han has to be watching. You'll lead them right to us." Since it was Saturday, DPM, and practically everything around it, was closed. Any car leaving there would be easy to follow.
"Then I'll bring a dozen men. We've got to get you off the street!"
He considered it. Lou's plan was a solid one and was right out of the U.S. Marshal playbook. Surround the witness with bodies. Once they were inside the security cordon surrounding DPM, they'd probably be safe. Probably. There were so many unknowns.
He was still thinking about her proposal when Lou spoke again. "Shit. Martinelli is calling. Let me call you back," she said and was gone.
Bae was looking at him, her fear and questions clear in her eyes. "The shit is about to really hit the fan now," he muttered.
"If you trust this Lou chick, why don't you let her help us?"
"Because I can't figure out how Han knew we were coming. He's been one step ahead of us all the way."
He looked around the lobby. They were off the street, but they were still exposed. The hotel lobby was a good place for an emergency shelter, but it wasn't ideal if Han was systematically checking hotels and restaurants. A shootout in a hotel lobby was near the bottom of the list of things he wanted to be involved in.
"Let's get a room. I don't like sitting out here in the open. I feel exposed."
He checked them in, using his badge to clear away some of the bullshit. "Listen to me," he said firmly. "This woman is in federal witness protection. I want a room other than the one you assign us in the system. If
anyone
comes asking for us, I want you to follow your procedures. However, if they threaten you, I want you to be as cooperative as possible, for your own safety, but I want you to send them to the room listed in the system. The men looking for her are not nice. Don't try to warn me. Do exactly as they say. Let them see the check in record for themselves if they want to. Give them a key if they ask for it. If it comes to it, your best chance to survive this is to tell no one, play dumb, and let them decide I gave them the slip on my own. They've already killed a federal marshal. They won't hesitate to kill you too, understand?"
Drew might not be dead, but if Han had him, as Rob suspected, it was almost certain that if Drew wasn't dead, he was probably wishing he were.
The woman behind the counter, Tracy according to her name tag, nodded, her eyes huge. "I understand."
Rob leaned on the counter, his face hard. "Now, let me make something very clear. If someone kicks in my door, you'd better pray they kill me, because if I survive, I'll have you thrown so far under the jail you'll never see daylight again. Have I made myself clear?"
She nodded and swallowed hard. "Yes, sir."
He smiled. "Now relax. Chances are they won't show up. If they do, do exactly as I've instructed. We'll be gone by morning. If they show up after that, tell them I was here but I'd checked out. Let them see for themselves if they want. Understand?"
She nodded again. "Yes, sir."
"Good. What room are you assigning us?"
"1022."
"Make sure you keep the rooms immediately around 1022 unoccupied if you can."
"Yes, sir."
"I'll take one of the ones near 1022 you're going to keep unoccupied."
"Yes, sir." Fearing for her life made Tracy very cooperative.
"Do you have a master key, like housekeeping uses? I'd like to have that in case I need it."
"Yes, sir. I can make you one of those."
"Do it."
After a moment she passed the card to him. "Now, where are we, if anyone asks?"
"Tenth floor, room 1022."
"Good. Best to forget we were ever here. We're just another couple checking in. I made no mention I was a federal marshal. We're just Mr. and Mrs. Rob Cogburn."
"Understood, sir."
"Relax. It's going to be okay. Just follow your procedures until they threaten you, then tell them everything you know except that I identified myself as a marshal, and you don't know anything about the extra room. They'll believe you and you'll be okay."
"Yes, sir. I understand."
He nodded, took Bae's arm, and escorted her to the elevators. They rode up to the tenth floor, and as they walked down the hall, he tried the card on several doors. It unlocked them all. He opened room 1027, two doors down and across the hall from their assigned room. From there he should be able to hear someone kick the door open, and he'd definitely hear any gunshot other than a suppressed.22. Now all they had to do was sit back and wait for word from Lou. They'd had breakfast, but lunch and dinner, if they were still there, was going to be slim pickings. They'd probably have to eat out of a vending machine. He didn't dare take Bae out of the room, and having room service deliver to an unoccupied room would be a dead giveaway if anyone thought to check.
As soon as the door swung shut, Bae turned and stepped into his arms. He wrapped her up and held her, resting his cheek against her head.
"You saved me... again. Thank you," she whispered.