Dark angel, p.1

Dark Angel, page 1

 

Dark Angel
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)



Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  
Dark Angel


  Also by John Sandford

  Rules of Prey

  Shadow Prey

  Eyes of Prey

  Silent Prey

  Winter Prey

  Night Prey

  Mind Prey

  Sudden Prey

  Secret Prey

  Certain Prey

  Easy Prey

  Chosen Prey

  Mortal Prey

  Naked Prey

  Hidden Prey

  Broken Prey

  Invisible Prey

  Phantom Prey

  Wicked Prey

  Storm Prey

  Buried Prey

  Stolen Prey

  Silken Prey

  Field of Prey

  Gathering Prey

  Extreme Prey

  Golden Prey

  Twisted Prey

  Neon Prey

  Masked Prey

  Ocean Prey

  Righteous Prey

  Kidd Novels

  The Fool’s Run

  The Empress File

  The Devil’s Code

  The Hanged Man’s Song

  Virgil Flowers Novels

  Dark of the Moon

  Heat Lightning

  Rough Country

  Bad Blood

  Shock Wave

  Mad River

  Storm Front

  Deadline

  Escape Clause

  Deep Freeze

  Holy Ghost

  Bloody Genius

  Letty Davenport Novels

  The Investigator

  Stand-Alone Novels

  The Night Crew

  Dead Watch

  Saturn Run (with Ctein)

  By John Sandford and Michele Cook

  Uncaged

  Outrage

  Rampage

  G. P. Putnam’s Sons

  Publishers Since 1838

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  penguinrandomhouse.com

  Copyright © 2023 by John Sandford

  Penguin Random House supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to continue to publish books for every reader.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Sandford, John, 1944 February 23– author.

  Title: Dark angel / John Sandford.

  Description: New York : G. P. Putnam’s Sons, [2023] | Series: Letty Davenport ; volume 2 |

  Identifiers: LCCN 2022059972 (print) | LCCN 2022059973 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593422410 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780593422427 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCGFT: Thrillers (Fiction) | Novels.

  Classification: LCC PS3569.A516 D366 2023 (print) | LCC PS3569.A516 (ebook) | DDC 813/.54—dc23/eng/20221213

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022059972

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022059973

  Cover design: Tal Goretsky

  Cover images: (wing) Andrew Howe / Getty Images; (feather) Eskay Lim / EyeEm / Getty Images

  Adapted for ebook by Maggie Hunt

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  pid_prh_6.0_143037564_c0_r0

  Contents

  Cover

  Also by John Sandford

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  About the Author

  _143037564_

  One

  In the summer of 2021, the woman flew into Miami International with nothing to declare but the clothes she stood in, a phony passport, an iPhone with a broken screen, and a ballpoint pen. The pen didn’t work, but did conceal a two-inch-long razor-sharp blade that could be used to slice open a carotid artery (for example).

  She looked more than tired. Exhausted, but fighting it. She had dishwater blond hair that hadn’t been washed recently, a mottled tan, turquoise eyes, and a thin white scar that extended from one nostril down across her lips to her chin.

  The clothes she stood in were speckled with mud and what the young Customs and Border Patrol officer thought might be dried blood; the clothes reeked of old sweat and something else, like swamp water.

  Her ragged tee-shirt—the only clothing above her waist, worn paper thin, he could see her nipples pushing out against it—featured a drawing of a llama with a legend that said “Como Se Llama?” which the young officer understood as a Spanish pun. She had flown in on United, from the Aeropuerto Internacional Jorge Chávez in Lima, Peru. How she’d gotten on the plane, he couldn’t even guess.

  The CBP officer was giving her his best no-admittance stink-eye as he thumbed through her passport. He asked, “Your name is Angeles Chavez?”

  The woman shook her head: “No.”

  “What?” Hadn’t heard that before; he checked her turquoise-green eyes. “Then what is it?”

  “I’m not allowed to tell you that.”

  He was about to call for help when the head of the CBP unit stepped up behind his booth, took the passport from his hand, and said, “Let her in.”

  Hadn’t heard that before, either. He let her in.

  A man in a plutonium suit and tie was standing a few feet behind his boss, rolling a wooden matchstick between his lips. When the woman whose name wasn’t Angeles Chavez stepped past the CPB booth, the man took the matchstick out of his mouth, grinned, and asked, “How you doin’, honey-bun?”

  “I think I got a leech up my ass,” the woman said.

  * * *

  So then Letty Davenport was sitting on a battered swivel chair in a near-empty room on the second floor of a warehouse off Statesville Road in Charlotte, North Carolina, watching a door on another warehouse across the street.

  August was slipping away, but the heat was holding on with both hands, and the warehouse was only somewhat air-conditioned. When she lifted her arms to look through her binoculars, she could smell her armpits, if only faintly, and her face was . . . moist.

  Letty was twenty-five, of average height, dancer-slender and dancer-muscled, with dark hair that fell to the nape of her neck. Crystalline blue eyes. A whiff of Tom Ford’s Fucking Fabulous perfume mixed with the perspiration. She was an investigator for the inspector general of the Department of Homeland Security, although her real boss was a U.S. senator.

  She’d suffered a spasm of fame, or notoriety, after a shoot-out in the Rio Grande town of Pershing, Texas, the year before, in which she’d killed two men. She’d shot to death a third man earlier in the same trip.

  All for God and Country; Country, anyway.

  Behind her, in the long, wide, near-empty room was a ping-pong table. Three youngish FBI agents were taking turns being bad at ping-pong when they weren’t trying to determine her relationship status.

  Nothing had come through the door across the street in the two hours that Letty had been watching it, but she wasn’t bored. She had a laptop where it was supposed to be—on her lap—and she was riding on a wi-fi signal from the food wholesaler next door.

  From Bing, the search app, she’d learned that South Koreans now disliked China more than they disliked Japan, that housing prices might be peaking. She’d also read in the New York Times about five fascinating things she could do this weekend, if she lived in New York City, which she didn’t, and if she was easily fascinated, which she wasn’t.

  Without warning, a door popped open behind her.

  Letty swiveled and reflexively picked up the Sig 938 from the windowsill as a woman came through the door, saw the pistol, lifted her hands and said, “Don’t shoot.”

  Letty: “Cartwright?”

  “That’s me.” The woman with the turquoise-green eyes had a fresh set of clothing. “I wanted to be here for this.”

  “I was told you had a leech up your ass.”

  “All taken care of,” Cartwright said. She waved to the three FBI agents, but strolled over to Letty. “Tequila works wonders, when properly applied. You know. By drinking it.”

  Letty smiled and said, “We were supposed to get a call to say you were on the way up.”

  Cartwright shrugged. “I dunno. The drop-off guy just dropped me off and said to go to the second floor.”

  “Sounds about right for government work,” Letty said. She looked back across the street. “Bogard and Holsum haven’t shown up yet. Dupree walked around the truck and looked inside, an hour ago. That was the last time I saw him. The feds over there”—nodded at the FBI agents—“are all looking for dates, so you might keep that in mind.”

  “I will.” Cartwright looked through the dirt-spotted window at the semi-trailer backed up to the loading dock across the street. Like Letty, she was average height and dancer-slender. Her blond hair was pulled back in a short efficient ponytail. Like Letty, she was wearing jeans, but with a khaki overshirt to hide her pistol. She was seven years older than Letty, but they might have been sisters.

  “Got a good spot here; how long does it take to get across the street?”

  “From here, standing start, eleven seconds to get across the room, down the fire stairs, to the exit, which is right below us,” Letty said. “They’ll see us coming.”

  “You think they could be trouble?”

  “Don’t know. I interviewed Dupree. You should have gotten a transcript.”

  “I did. Sounded fake-cooperative,” Cartwright said.

  “Exactly. But, I got him jumpy, with the urge to move. When I saw him, he wasn’t carrying. On the other hand, he’s an office worker in a government building. Bogard and Holsum are the reddest of necks and they’re freelance. Even if they’re not carrying, I’d be surprised if they didn’t have a few guns around.”

  “And this will go off around six o’clock?”

  “Yes. Most of the employees get out around four-thirty. I think they’ll wait until it’s quiet. Give it an hour or so.”

  The FBI agents had given up on the ping-pong and come over to meet Cartwright. One of them said, “An hour or so if it happens at all.”

  “It will,” Letty said. “They want to move it fast, before I have more time to dig around in there.”

  Letty had a CI, a confidential informant, inside the FEMA warehouse. The CI said Dupree, Bogard, and Holsum were planning to steal eight forklifts from the FEMA warehouse; the CI also wanted Dupree’s job, so there was that.

  The three-and-a-half-ton-capacity, rough-terrain, four-wheel-drive forklifts were valued at $12,500 each, making eight of them worth $100,000 if sold in Charlotte.

  If sold in Chancay, Peru, to JuFen Industries, a Chinese company working on the construction of a spanking-new Pacific Ocean port, they’d go for twice that price, less the $1,200 apiece that it cost to ship them.

  Small potatoes compared to the $1,500,000 they’d gotten for the five hundred FEMA army-style field tents they’d sold to the same Chinese company to shelter the families of its Peruvian workers. Still, two hundred grand is two hundred grand, especially when it was tax-free.

  Cartwright had spotted the tents while doing research in Chancay for an Unspecified Agency of the U.S. government. Her research had included cutting serial number labels off several of the tents, which had later been identified as FEMA property. That vandalism, when discovered by a Chinese security officer, had led to a brief chase across the desert and then an unscheduled swim in the Rio Chancay, followed by a hitchhiking trip to Lima in clothing stolen off a clothesline.

  After Cartwright arrived in Miami, the Unspecified Agency had dropped a note to the powers that be at the Department of Homeland Security, and Letty had been sent to Charlotte to investigate the status of the tents.

  In the warehouse where they should have been, she’d found an empty space. Dupree had explained that the tents had been shipped to Africa to shelter children at a free school, that all the paperwork had been perfect, and he hoped the kids appreciated their new homes.

  Nope.

  * * *

  Cartwright, as it happened, wasn’t a great ping-pong player, but she was better than any of the feds. After they’d chatted for a while, to bring her up to the minute on their plan and determine her relationship status, she held the table for six consecutive games, until Letty called, “We got Bogard and Holsum.”

  The two had just arrived at the parking lot across the street in Holsum’s pimped-out red Chevy Camaro, and Holsum was talking on his cell phone as he got out of the driver’s side. Letty was watching them through a pair of Leica binoculars. When Bogard got out of the passenger side of the car, he did a hitch-up to his pants and Cartwright asked, “You get that?” and Letty said, “Yeah,” and one of the feds asked, “What?” and Letty said, “Bogard’s carrying.”

  Another of the feds said, “Let’s gear it up,” and the three agents began pulling on armor.

  Dupree opened a door, and Bogard and Holsum disappeared inside. Two minutes later, the overhead door at a loading dock rolled up, and Letty said, “Let ’em load, let ’em load.”

  A minute after that, the first of the forklifts rolled through the loading door, across the dock, and into the semi-trailer, with Holsum driving, Dupree keeping watch, and Bogard sucking on a Tootsie Pop.

  “Go,” Letty said, and the three feds headed for the stairway fire door at a trot.

  Fifteen seconds later, as Letty and Cartwright watched, the three agents were running across the street, guns in hand. Dupree saw them coming, apparently shouted a warning to the others, and turned and ran into the warehouse.

  Bogard, who’d been watching from the other side of the semitrailer, jumped off the dock and began running to the far side of the warehouse. The feds didn’t see him because their line of sight was blocked by the truck.

  Letty headed for the door, her 938 in her hand.

  Cartwright, following: “What?”

  “Bogard can’t get out that way. The chain-link fence hooks on to the next warehouse. He’ll have to run down an alley at the other end of the building . . . He’ll be coming back to us.”

  Eleven seconds later, they were out the door with Letty leading the way up the street, Cartwright next to her shoulder, both of them running easily. One of the feds saw them running and shouted something at the other two agents and began running after them, but fifty yards back.

  The warehouse was a full block long and Bogard wasn’t a runner: he was overweight with the red face of a longtime drinker and smoker; but, he was carrying.

  As they came up to the alley, Letty split left and Cartwright went right, and when Bogard staggered out from behind the building, Letty screamed, “Stop! Stop or we’ll kill you!” Bogard turned toward them, almost fell, saw three guns pointed at him as the fed came up, and put his hands over his head.

  “I’m having a heart attack,” he said, and to prove it, he toppled over, hitting the ground facedown, like two hundred and fifty pounds of uncooked beef; he half rolled, clutching his chest, and groaned.

  The agent said, “Good gosh! I think he really is.” He pulled back Bogard’s shirt and dug a chrome revolver out of his belt.

  Bogard groaned again. “Call an ambulance . . .”

  Letty was already on her phone, calling 9-1-1.

  “Another beautiful day in the American Southland,” Cartwright drawled, looking down at Bogard as Letty finished the 9-1-1 call. She turned to Letty and asked, “What would you have done if he’d pulled?”

  “Shot him,” Letty said. “I would have tried not to kill him with the first shot.”

  “Then you’re a better woman than I am,” Cartwright said. “I would have shot him in the eye.”

  “You think you could have hit him in the eye from thirty or forty feet, when he was moving?” Letty asked.

  “You’re looking at the best shot in North Carolina right now,” Cartwright said.

  Letty slipped her 938 back in her jeans, smiled, showing some teeth, and said, “No, I don’t think so.”

  Cartwright, cocking her head: “Really.”

  Letty nodded: “Yes. Really.”

  Bogard belched, loudly, and the fed said, “Maybe it was just gas.”

  Bogard moaned and cried, “Help me . . .”

 

Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183