Page 36 of Ocean Prey


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They followed theconcrete channel to 103rd Street in Miami, turned west to 27th Avenue, then back north to 131st Street and then east, and Lucas said, “What are we doing? We’re driving in circles.”

“The streets get all tangled up,” Bob said, looking at the map on his phone. “This was the quickest way. Turn here.”

They turned south again and after a few hundred yards, again back west on Country Club Lane. The houses were small, flat, concrete block boxes generally separated from the street with chain-link or steel-bar fences. The narrow, blacktopped streets were potholed and cracked, all set in a flat landscape of palms and slick-leaved tropical-looking trees, along with a few cedars and rubber trees. Bob said, “Banana tree! Bananas grow upside down. See?”

“I knew that,” Lucas said.

“Bullshit you knew that... Magnus is around the corner. There’s a canal... It’s the green one.”

Elliot’s house looked across the narrow street and a canal toward the back of an apartment complex. They cruised the house, which was a sour chemical green with a tar roof, the yard surrounded by a chest-high steel-bar fence; each of the bars had a sharp arrow point at the top. The yard, like the neighboring yards, had ankle-deep grass, unmown for weeks. The driveway was gated, and a single pedestrian gate would open toward the street, if it hadn’t been chained shut.

“A little fort,” Lucas said, as they drove past. “You’re wearing Nikes, right?”

“Yeah. I can’t vault that fence, if that’s what you’re thinking. I’d wind up getting one of those arrowheads right in the nuts.”

“That’s not what I’m thinking. What I’m thinking is that there’s no curb, so I drive right up to the fence, nose in, we climb on the hood of the truck and jump down. Don’t want to dent the hood, though, so Nikes are good.”

“Let me loosen up my gun and put on a marshal vest,” Bob said. “If he’s a big-time dealer he might not be happy about unexpected drop-ins.”

They stopped at the end of the street and Bob stepped around behind the truck, popped the back lid, dug in his gear bag and got out two blue bulletproof vests that saidpolicein tall white letters and under that, in smaller letters,u.s. marshal. Lucas pulled off his sport coat, took his ID out of the jacket pocket and put it in the hip pocket of his jeans.

They got the vests on, turned the truck, rolled back up the street and Lucas swerved out toward the canal and then back toward Elliot’s gate. He stopped with the grille two inches from the gate, the back of the truck blocking six feet of the street. He and Bob popped their doors, stood on the front bumper, climbed on the hood one at a time, and dropped down over the fence.

Five seconds later, they were on either side of the front door, a yellow-painted slab of wood that did not look kickable. Lucas pushed the doorbell and they heard the sound of the bell through sets of louvered windows to the sides of the door. Bob knocked—pounded—twice and then moved closer to the windows and shouted, “U.S. Marshals!”

A man’s voice: “Hold on. I’m comin’.”

Lucas and Bob pulled their pistols and a second later the door cracked open on a chain that looked like it should have been used to pull logs out of the forest. Elliot’s face appeared above the chain. He looked at the vests and asked, “ID?”

Lucas pulled out his ID and flipped it open. Elliot squinted at it, then at Lucas’s face, and then at Bob’s, and said, “Gotta close the door to get the chain off.”

He stepped out of sight and pushed the door most of the way closed. He did something inside, Lucas thought, then the chain rattled off its hooks and Elliot opened the door. He was a large man, brawny, with both muscle and a heavy layer of fat. Blond, blue eyes, broad nose, heavy lips. He was wearing a pink golf shirt, khaki shorts, and sandals.

“What d’you want?”

“This is more of an interview than anything,” Lucas said. “We need to talk.”

Elliot took a step, as if to come out, but Bob put up a finger on his non-gun hand and said, “Inside.”

Elliot backed away and they followed him inside. The house was neatly kept, sparely furnished with a motley collection of chairs and tables. A two-drawer couch table sat to the right of the door, and when they were fully inside, Lucas put his gun away, reached out, and pulled open the closest drawer on the table. Elliot said, “Hey!” but Lucas pulled anyway, and sitting inside, on a copy ofGuns & Ammomagazine, was a blue-black .45 auto.

Bob glanced at it and said, “Oh. My. God. A felon with a gun.”

“This is a bad neighborhood,” Elliot said.

“And you’re one of the baddest neighbors in it,” Bob said.

Elliot: “Not by a long way, buddy.”

Lucas could see a kitchen at the back of the house with a breakfast bar and three stools. “Talk in the kitchen,” he said. He lifted the .45 out of drawer, popped the magazine, jacked the slide and a round flipped out, onto the ragged blue carpet. Lucas bent over, picked up the .45 round, shucked all the others out of the magazine and dropped them in the drawer and pushed it shut.

Elliot, backing toward the kitchen, watched him working with the gun. Bob pointed Elliot at one stool, and sat beside him, with Lucas sitting across the breakfast bar, the .45 still in his hand. He took a few seconds to disassemble the gun, then reached back and placed the pieces on the stove.

That done, he said, “Now. Bob and I have been running around town stepping on toes.”

“I hadn’t heard that,” Elliot said.

“Well, we have been. We’ve been specifically looking for guys like you, out on parole, or guys we can get for three-strikes offenses. For example, if we were to pull your house apart here, and find a joint... well, a joint is a federal offense, even if they don’t believe it here in Miami-Dade.”