The Devil's Code
place . . .”
“An easy mistake to make, in such a big building,” I said.
“Yeah. I went up these stairs and eventually I found Ralph and he took me back downstairs and showed me the reception desk. I left the flowers for Annebelle and we got to talking. He came on to me a little and I gave him a little shine. I wouldn’t give him the phone number, but I took his.”
“Nice guy?”
“Good-looking, forty-two, divorced. Big shoulders.”
“With that skirt and your ass, the poor guy never had a chance.”
“Exactly. And . . .” She paused for dramatic effect.
“What?”
“The clubhouse is open all night. Twenty-four hours. The door that connects the clubhouse to the office suite can be slipped. At the back of Ralph’s office is a big wooden flat file that has the names of different buildings on different drawers, four names to a drawer.”
“Architect’s drawings?”
“That’s what I think. Couldn’t see for sure. But the office has something to do with maintenance.”
“Tonight. We cross the fence onto the golf course, watch the building; when it’s open, we go in.”
“Absolutely,” she said.
W e got a call from Green at eight; they were in Houston, and he and Lane would be heading for Dallas as soon as it got light. LuEllen and I replayed the movies she’d made at Lago Verde, until I knew my way around the place as well as she did.
We went into Lago Verde at ten o’clock, carrying nothing but a thick woolen Army blanket we got at a salvage store, a dinner knife I stole from a Denny’s, and a penlight. We parked on a residential street a block off the golf course, after spotting a convenient tree along the edge of the course; the course was bordered by an eight-foot chain-link fence, but without any guard wire at the top. We both wore jeans, black gym shoes, and crimson jackets. Dark red is as good as black for concealment, as long as nobody throws a light on you. If a light is thrown on you, you look a lot more innocent in red than in black.
The tree at the edge of the golf course was halfway between two streetlights, along a commercial strip. Across the street from the tree, a paint-and-wallpaper place closed at eight o’clock, and the adjoining high-end stereo place at nine. At ten, with a good space between cars, we jogged across the street. LuEllen tossed the blanket over the top of the fence, and I lifted her up to it, and she was over. I did a quick climb, pivoted on my belly on the blanket, and dropped to the other side. We both squatted behind the tree, to look at the passing cars. Nobody slowed. We waited, out of sight, for ten minutes, and then headed across the golf course.
Once we were away from the strip, the golf course was dark as a coal sack. I’d never had a mental image of Dallas as a place with trees, but it has about a billion of them: from the air, the city looks like a forest. Golf courses are even denser with them, and most of them seem to have thorns. We crossed a fairway, moving slowly, I stepped into a thorn bush, backed out, fell in behind LuEllen, and we groped our way toward the apartment light three hundred yards away.
Fifty yards out of the clubhouse, we found a soft patch of grass between two trees, spread the blanket, and hunkered down. We could see lights both at the front of the clubhouse and at the back. The upstairs windows were dark.
The back of the clubhouse was framed by a wall of floor-to-ceiling windows. We could see a line of soda and snack machines along one wall, and a bunch of soft leather chairs, like the first-class lounge in an airport. There were a half-dozen people in the lounge. Two had apparently just come out of the exercise room; they were putting on tennis shoes. The other four were sitting in a group of chairs, talking.
“Could be a while,” LuEllen said.
A bout three hours, in fact. The group in the lounge stayed for an hour and a half, an animated conversation that seemed to go on forever. When they finally left, a couple of other people had settled in. More came and went from the exercise room. Traffic slowed downafter midnight, but every time we thought to move, somebody else would show up. At one-fifteen, we hadn’t seen anybody for fifteen minutes.
“Let’s try,” LuEllen said.
We left the blanket and started through the dark to the clubhouse door. Twenty yards out, at the edge of the golf course, we came to a line of head-high shrubs. After we passed them, we’d be out in the open and
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