Wicked Prey
all that shit,” Lane said. A moment of silence, and he added, “Little more than an hour from now, we’ll know how it all came out.”
Cohn laughed and said, “That’s what I think when I’m going into the dentist’s office. An hour from now, and you’ll be walking out.”
* * *
THEY AMBLED along, taking the night air, looking for other street-walkers while forcing the minutes down the line: spotted some cops outside the X, but in twos, rather than in crowds. “Most of them have been sent home,” Cruz said. “That’s a bonus. If there was a riot somewhere, and they were all running around, that’d be another uncontrolled factor.”
They turned another corner, walked down the street the hospital was on, and turned down toward the parking structure again. Cohn looked at his watch a last time. “If we drove out of the parking garage right now, we’d get to the hotel at three-fifteen,” he said. “No point in slow-walking anymore.”
* * *
BACK IN the van, Lane took the wheel, Cohn sat in the passenger seat, and Cruz got in the back, popped her travel case, took out a gray pinstriped women’s business suit, and changed over, aware that Cohn was paying attention to her ass.
“Thanks for caring,” she said, as she buttoned the blouse.
“Hell, it’d be kinda insulting if I didn’t,” Cohn said.
She pulled on the jacket and snapped on a small red tie, and then an expensive long brown wig, looked at herself in the window, getting it all straight. Lane had had to make a loop away from the Xcel, circling, to get back through town to the parking ramp behind the St. Andrews. He pulled into the ramp, wound up three floors, and stopped behind one of the emergency cars. Cohn got out, popped the trunk on the parked car, and transferred the weapons bags, tool bags, gloves, and masks into the van, and slid the door shut. Lane took them back down the exit and out, and left, past the St. Paul Hotel, around the corner, down the street, and into the front turnout in front of the St. Andrews.
Cruz hopped out, shut the door, and walked inside, moving easily past the front desk, past the closed bar, past the gift shop, past the closed restaurant—and found two men sitting in the restaurant talking quietly, a liquor bottle and two glasses between them. Breath coming a little faster now, heartbeat picking up. She went back to the front desk where two young women smiled at her, and she asked, “Is anything open? Anyplace where I could just get a snack? I’m famished.”
One of the women shook her head. “Everything’s closed, I’m sorry. You could still get room service.”
“Okay. Well, thanks.”
Outside, Cohn popped the door on the van and she said, “We’re good. Two women at the desk, two drunks in the restaurant, right inside the door, in the dark. That’s it.”
Cohn looked at Lane: “You good?”
Lane nodded and said, “I guess.”
* * *
THEY ALL pulled on latex gloves and Cohn rolled a mask up like a thin watch cap and then pulled a big baseball hat over it. The hat sat too high on his head, and looked a little goofy, but what the hell, there was a political convention going on, and goofier-looking people with goofier-looking hats were all over the place. Cruz pulled off the wig, put the end of a rolled-up nylon sock around the top of her head, and then pulled the wig back on. Cohn retrieved a silenced 9mm pistol from the weapons bag, and another, smaller, unsilenced weapon that he handed to Cruz. A silenced Uzi remained in the bag, with a big Cleveland drill and a bunch of spare drill bits—Lane’s stuff. “All right?” Cohn asked.
“All right,” Cruz said.
* * *
THEY POPPED out of the van, Cruz and Cohn together, and walked through the gilt front doors of the hotel, toward the two women still behind the desk. Except for the Muzak—playing an orchestral arrangement of “A Hard Day’s Night,” heavy on the strings—the hotel was utterly silent.
Cohn stepped up to the desk and said, “Good evening, ladies,” smiling, and they smiled back, and Cohn lifted the gun and said, “This is a robbery—If you don’t do exactly what I tell you, I’ll kill you. I’m not joking.”
* * *
THEY MOVED the two stunned, frightened women into the darkened nondenominational chapel, which featured a small group of pews looking at a stand with nothing on it. Cruz pulled down her mask—the stocking obscured her features, while still allowing her to see. They ordered the two women
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