29
MARCH 26, 2010
FRIDAY, 12:47 p.m.
FRIDAY, 12:47 p.m.
Brennan had figured out at least one reason
why Louie had sent six people instead of two, which he had assumed
would have been adequate. The moment he and his four-man crew had
entered Central Park, the nanny and the child had seemingly
disappeared. What Brennan had not noticed in his excitement when
he’d first seen the pair come out of the house was that the nanny
was wearing running shoes.
Assuming that the nanny and her charge were just
out of sight down the serpentine footpath, Brennan had insisted
that everyone run, hoping to catch up to the pair. But Brennan and
the others were seriously out of shape, and the footpath was
surprisingly hilly. After only a little more than a hundred yards,
Brennan and the others had stopped running. With his chest heaving
and his hands resting on his knees, he managed to say, “This is not
going to work. She must be a goddamn marathoner.”
“All right, here’s what we are going to do,”
Brennan continued, once he’d caught his breath. “We’re going to
split up to search for the nanny and the kid and stay connected by
our cell phones.”
“Most runners in the park run around the
reservoir,” Duane Mackenzie offered. “Why don’t me and Tommaso head
over there. It’s east of here and a little south, if I remember
correctly.”
“Sounds like a plan,” Brennan said. They quickly
exchanged cell phone numbers. “You guys stay with me,” Brennan said
to the two Japanese men. “We don’t want you getting lost in here.
We’ll head directly south.”
The group started off together, with Duane and
Tommaso looking for a pathway to branch off to the west.
As he walked, Brennan wasn’t happy. He had never
appreciated the park’s size and its hilly topography, and had not
imagined that they would lose the nanny and the kid so damn fast.
He wondered what the hell he was going to say to Louie, especially
with this being his first time in charge of an operation. As the
group progressed, he began to believe they’d probably have to
return to where the nanny and the kid had entered the park and just
wait for them to return. The worry with that plan was whether they
would be alone.
Then serendipity shined down on them. Off to the
right they came across a playground with tire swings, a couple of
tree houses, monkey bars, a brick pyramid, and a large sand area
where the child had been deposited. The nanny was using the monkey
bars to stretch her hamstrings.
“Bull’s eye!” Brennan said to himself. Taking out
his cell phone, he called Carlo.
“We’ve found the nanny and the kid,” he said
softly. “They are at the West One hundredth Street Playground. How
about you drive down here, but I want you on the northbound side of
the street. Just pull over to the curb and wait! Got that?”
“Of course I got that,” Carlo responded without
enthusiasm. He disconnected abruptly.
Brennan flipped his own phone closed. As wired as
he was, Carlo’s acting out wasn’t completely over his head. Brennan
intently looked at the others with a devilish grin. “This is almost
too good to be true. The playground is empty except for our target.
How good is that?”
“How do we know for sure it’s the kid we want?”
Duane asked innocently, reawakening Brennan’s major worry.
“We saw them come out of the house, didn’t
we?”
“Yeah, but what if there are apartments in the
building? Or what if this lady was visiting whoever takes care of
the doctor’s kid? I mean, we could be making a lot of effort here
and end up with the wrong kid. Shouldn’t we make sure
somehow?”
Brennan took a deep breath and looked back at the
woman.
“Why not just ask her?” Duane suggested.
“Ask her what?”
“If the kid is whatever his parents’ name
is.”
“She’s not going to give me that information,”
Brennan said snidely.
“I bet you she will with this,” Duane said as he
pulled out a distressed leather wallet and flipped it open.
Attached to one side was a shiny gold police badge. It said
Montclair, New Jersey.
Taking the proffered badge, Brennan examined it.
“Where did you get this?”
“On eBay. Ten bucks.”
“Is it real?”
Duane shrugged. “They said it was real, but who
knows. The point is that it looks real and it works. All you do is
flash it like they do on TV. I’ve had fun with it. Everybody thinks
I’m an undercover cop.”
“Why not?” Brennan said at once. From his
perspective, it was the one major concern that had been nagging him
since the nanny and child had emerged from 494 106th Street.
“There’s our ride,” Tommaso said, pointing over to
Central Park West. Carlo was just pulling up to the curb.
Holding the questionable police badge in his left
hand, Brennan speed-dialed Carlo while watching the vehicle come to
a halt. The call was answered immediately. “Are we clear?” he asked
before Carlo had a chance to speak.
“No cops,” Carlo said.
“We’re on our way.” Brennan hung up. He licked his
dry lips, repositioned his holster so it was more comfortable, and
switched the police badge to his right hand. Squaring his
shoulders, he began walking toward the playground.
“You’d better be quick,” someone said from behind.
“Here comes a woman with a toddler.”
Brennan quickly twisted to look. It had been Duane
who’d sounded the alarm. Looking in the direction Duane was
pointing off to the south, Brennan could see a woman had just
rounded the bend in the footpath about a hundred yards away,
pushing an empty stroller. The toddler was staggering along out in
front by about ten feet.
Glancing back at the nanny, who was now no more
than twenty or so feet ahead, Brennan made the snap decision to go
ahead with the snatch. JJ was now off to Brennan’s left, lying
prone in the sand and making a kind of sand angel but in reality
just kicking up a bunch of dust.
“Excuse me, ma’am,” Brennan said, flashing open the
police badge and walking directly up to Leticia, who was still
stretching. “Is this child from the Montgomery-Stapleton
household?”
“Yes, he is,” Leticia said, but as soon as the
words left her mouth, her face clouded in sudden fear. Intuitively,
she knew she should not have answered the stranger, especially when
the badge disappeared and a gun came out in its place. Brennan had
realized in the last seconds he’d forgotten his mask.