airport and no one at his office knew about it. Or maybe they did, but considering their political views, they weren’t going to admit to Aalto traveling to Cuba, much less in company of a well-known criminal.
“Someone at his office must have known. Men like Aalto and Maldonado do not talk without intermediaries. What about the bodyguards? What do we have on them?”
“Emiliano Ramírez and Jonathan Escudero.”
“Isn’t Ramírez Maldonado’s cousin?”
Mullen nodded. “Escudero has a niece with a drug habit and a rap sheet. As soon as he’s back on American soil, we’ll turn up the heat on him; let’s see if we can get him to snitch on his boss.”
Jack didn’t know which kind of trouble the niece was in, but it sure had to be a shitload of it for her uncle to risk crossing Maldonado.
“Get your men to pick up the girl. That should encourage Escudero to talk. What about the autopsy?” Maybe they’d get lucky and the coroner would find something.
Mullen cocked his left eyebrow. “Don’t get your hopes up. They had to scrape the body off the pavement with a shovel. After a car had run over it.”
Jesus Christ.
“We can’t let her walk out of here,” Mullen insisted. “Protective custody is the best solution.”
“I’ll watch over her.”
“Maldonado has long-reaching arms. He’ll find her in Boston.”
“Not if he doesn’t know she exists. Did you make every trace of her disappear in the reports?”
Mullen nodded. “The officer that first interrogated her at the scene was a rookie and got so nervous when she mentioned Maldonado that he didn’t fill out the paperwork. And we have restricted the access to her. No one knows about her.”
“Keep it that way until she has to testify.”
Jack just hoped Mullen found a way to get Maldonado that didn’t involve her taking the stand. Testifying against him was a sure death sentence. That, or enter the witness protection program and look over her shoulder forever.
Mullen stared at him, undecided.
“I will not back down on this.”
After a long, tense second, Mullen sighed. “Get her out of here and to Boston before I change my mind.” Shaking his head, he walked away. Then he stopped and turned around. “And, Jack? I hope you know what you’re doing.”
Jack hoped the same.
He opened the door and moved toward her quietly. Careful not to wake her, he took off his jacket and covered her up.
Fat chance. At the slight contact she jerked and blinked twice at him, disoriented. “You’re here. I thought I’d been having a nightmare.”
“Seriously, pet, what the fuck? You come to Florida for a short visit and you have to cross one of the worse criminals in the state?”
“How did you know? You stalking me?”
As if.
She gestured outside. “Did they send you in to arrest me?”
He ignored her snarky question. She’d find out soon enough that he was nobody’s errand boy. “Do you have any fucking idea how illegal what you did is?”
He could see his harsh tone was making her confrontational, but there was nothing he could do about it. She made him tense in the best of circumstances. Fucking tense. And this wasn’t anywhere near the best of circumstances.
“Which part, exactly?” Elle asked. “Because everyone around here seems to forget I came forward and helped them with Aalto’s murder.”
“You entered an international airport with a false ID. What were you thinking?”
She pursed her lips. “I beg your pardon; the ID wasn’t false. It wasn’t mine, which is a different matter. Be more precise when you scold me.”
Always the last word. Fucking attitude.
It looked like she’d gotten some rest, because the part with her hugging him tight and keeping her mouth shut was over.
“Impersonating someone else and entering an airport and its restricted areas under false pretenses and with someone else’s ID is a federal offense. Ten to fifteen in a maximum-security prison. Is that precise enough for