Too True to Be Good
By Joseph Bauer
()
About this ebook
“I didn’t want to move while reading The Patriot’s Angels”
“Another gangbusters, can’t put it down book.”
“A true page turner.”
When aging DC police detective Jack Renfro first enters a room in the Willard Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue and sees a body on the king-size bed, it initially appears the murder is a probable organized crime hit. But this time, his instincts tell him something doesn’t add up. After he secures the scene, he asks his young partner, Audrey Sanderson, to contact Homeland Security. Fearing possible terrorist involvement, Renfro has no idea that the victim looks eerily similar to an FBI agent. As a meticulous assassination plot begins to unfold, US President Del Winters and her father, Henry, are forced to go into lockdown at Camp David with Henry’s friend, Stanley Bigelow, and his German shepherd, Augie. Renfro partners with anti-terrorism chief, Admiral Tyler Brew and FBI agent, L.T. Kitt to understand the planned attack. But little do they know how much influence a K-9 hero will have in their efforts to take down an evil mastermind.
Joseph Bauer
Joseph Bauer divides his time between homes in Charleston, South Carolina, and Cleveland, Ohio. He is the author of The Accidental Patriot and The Patriot’s Angels. Too True To Be Good is the third book in the Stanley Bigelow, Augie and Del Winters series. Each book is a complete and independent story; they can be enjoyed in any order. Mr. Bauer’s fourth novel, Sailing for Grace, will be published next year by Running Wild Press. For more about his writing visit www.josephbauerauthor.com
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Too True to Be Good - Joseph Bauer
Copyright © 2023 Joseph Bauer.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Archway Publishing
1663 Liberty Drive
Bloomington, IN 47403
www.archwaypublishing.com
844-669-3957
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
ISBN: 978-1-6657-4123-1 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-6657-4103-3 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-6657-4102-6 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2023905564
Archway Publishing rev. date: 04/13/2023
In memory of Katie, dear big sister and first writing partner.
When sorrows come, they come not single spies, but in battalions.
—William Shakespeare
CONTENTS
PART ONE
Chapter 1 Murder at The Willard
Chapter 2 Where is Evan Reese?
Chapter 3 Human Error in Human Resources
Chapter 4 A Terrorist Should Know Who He Hates
Chapter 5 Identification
Chapter 6 A Hurried Departure
Chapter 7 Eyes are Special
Chapter 8 Fifteen Minutes to Game Time
Chapter 9 Audrey Sanderson Looks the Part
Chapter 10 More Killing Near the White House
Chapter 11 Third Inning Pandemonium
Chapter 12 Too True to be Good
Chapter 13 Enter Admiral Brew
Chapter 14 Chameleon
Chapter 15 Body Doubles
Chapter 16 The Days of Brick and Mortar
Chapter 17 Encounter at Grand Central
PART TWO
Chapter 18 Cover Intact
Chapter 19 Splicing Time
Chapter 20 Even a Rich Terrorist Can’t Buy Happiness
Chapter 21 White House Manners
Chapter 22 A Dead End. Literally
Chapter 23 The Altoona Curve
Chapter 24 Hope Often Makes a Fool
Chapter 25 A Patriot’s Instinct
Chapter 26 Contrition
Chapter 27 Ends and Means
Chapter 28 The Temperament of Terrorists
Chapter 29 Remember the Wife
Chapter 30 Augie is Unsettled
Chapter 31 Mutual Intuition
Chapter 32 A Dog’s Heaven
Chapter 33 The Center Field Camera
Chapter 34 It Could Have Been Worse
Chapter 35 Even a Paranoiac is Sometimes Optimistic
Chapter 36 Another Fifty-Seven Minutes
Chapter 37 A Grim Historical Fact
Chapter 38 Mysteries of Camp David
Chapter 39 Life is too Long to Suffer Shoddy Things
Chapter 40 How it Came Down in Brooklyn
PART THREE
Chapter 41 It Beat Greenland, They Said
Chapter 42 The First Rule of Holes
Chapter 43 Dead Man Walking
Chapter 44 Ukrainian Hospitality
Chapter 45 GPS Doesn’t Lie. But You Can Lie
About GPS
Chapter 46 When Evil Succeeds
Chapter 47 Teamwork in Rockville
Chapter 48 The Tailor was Thanked
Chapter 49 A Playpen for Evil
Chapter 50 Taxis, Taxis, Everywhere Taxis
Chapter 51 Eighteen Hours and Nothing to Show for It
Chapter 52 Clue from an Unlikely Source
Chapter 53 The Dots Connected at Last
Chapter 54 An Immediate Decision
Chapter 55 Golf at Camp David, Abbreviated
Chapter 56 The Brave Citizen and the Mistake
Chapter 57 Luck is Earned
Chapter 58 Frenzy at Camp David
Chapter 59 The Scientist Didn’t Sugarcoat It
Chapter 60 Death at Thirty-Second Intervals
Chapter 61 All as Planned
Chapter 62 He Had Told Hiram the Truth.
After a Fashion
Chapter 63 Comedic Relief at the Motel 6
Chapter 64 Don’t Be Rude, Balish
Chapter 65 Admirals and Generals Should
not be Overruled
Chapter 66 Rendition in Tehran
Chapter 67 Summons to Camp David
Chapter 68 Two Presidents Speak
Chapter 69 Another Day, Another Murder
Chapter 70 An Undetected Assassin. Mostly
Chapter 71 Thirty-Three Minutes to Detonation
Chapter 72 Augie is Aroused
Chapter 73 The Run of Evan Reese
Chapter 74 She Wanted to Say One Thing. She
Said Another
Chapter 75 Today it Wasn’t
Afterword
About the Author
62756.pngPART ONE
1
MURDER AT THE WILLARD
J ack Renfro, the graying homicide detective from the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police, knew it from so much experience it seemed almost boring when he stepped into the room and saw the scene before him. Mob killings in hotel rooms usually involved a quickly subdued male victim who knew his executioners, with little or no signs of struggle. And yes, a pillow with a bullet hole through it.
And those were Renfro’s first thoughts when he entered the room in the ever-elegant Willard Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue and saw the body on the king-size bed. Housekeeping, delivering afternoon bathroom supplies, had discovered the body only thirty-six minutes earlier. If there had been nothing else, Renfro promptly would have sized up the murder as a probable organized crime hit, the elimination of a member who couldn’t keep his mouth shut, or maybe his pants buckled around the boss’s wife.
But this time something didn’t rhyme.
On the body, a scribbled note was left, to which four one-thousand-dollar bills were paper clipped. To Jack Renfro, that changed everything.
Burial money for the family was all it said.
It was not entirely unheard of; Jack had seen it himself once before in an Italian mob hit thirty years ago. A sort of morbid death benefit for a mostly well-meaning minion gone astray, emblematic of the perverse magnanimity of a delusional don just human enough to require some balm for his conscience. Oh, the painful decisions we must make in this business. May he rest in peace. A little something for his family. We aren’t completely evil. We have sympathy too.
But in this room, and from the looks of this victim, Renfro thought the five-word message struck a decidedly discordant note. He adjudged the dead man, facedown and bound at hands and ankles, to be midthirties. Wiry and fit. He was well dressed, to say the least, with polished European shoes and longish black hair, expensively coiffed. He looked nothing like a man destined for a pauper’s grave.
The fact that he was bound with plastic strip ties meant there were at least two perpetrators, the detective knew. A lone assailant could never have incapacitated a strong victim like this without obvious signs of struggle.
After taking three dozen photos with his smartphone camera, he lifted the pillow lying atop the back of the murdered man’s head. The blood visible on the bed all had flowed to the victim’s right side, and a single burned hole appeared in the pillow. Jack surmised initially a single gunshot. Trained killers normally fired only once in a hotel. Two or more shots, even muffled, were exponentially more likely to be heard by someone than a single burst. But when he lifted the pillow, he saw clearly that two shots had been fired into the back of the man’s head—one about even with the top of his ears and another lower, nearly at the neckline.
Odd,
Renfro said to his young partner, Audrey Sanderson. And stupid.
What do you mean?
she asked.
The killer fired two shots and through the same hole in the pillow.
Why is that stupid?
For one thing, the only reason to shoot through a pillow in the first place is to keep the sound down,
Renfro said. That and … well …
Back spatter,
Sanderson filled in the blank.
Yeah. And you lose some of that—a lot more than you’d think—when you fire again through the same place. Someone might notice it, hear it.
Maybe he had a suppressor and wasn’t worried,
Audrey said.
Possible,
Renfro said. But it’s pretty foolish to put a firearm that’s been discharged against a pillow, even with a suppressor. Especially with a suppressor. That weapon was hot for the second shot. He could have started a fire. He was lucky he didn’t.
What’s a little fire after you’ve committed murder?
Audrey said.
On the twelfth floor of the Willard? It would set off the fire alarms almost immediately. That would shut down the elevators. You’d have firefighters and security people climbing every stairwell. And this place is so close to the White House.
Indeed, the stately landmark nearly abutted the Old Executive Office Building that was literally connected to the White House, where many executive branch department chiefs were located. As such, it was a preferred hotel for government dignitaries and political events. Police and Secret Service are always crawling around here,
he said.
What are you getting at?
asked Audrey.
I doubt these were experienced hit men,
said Jack Renfro. At least not American style.
He reached into the dead man’s left hip pocket, removed his wallet, and held up the New York driver’s license he found in it. He paused, squinting to read the lettering against the hologram. "And I doubt that Mr. David Kahn here—if that’s his real name—was too experienced either. Probably a messenger or courier who knew something he couldn’t keep knowing."
Maybe he had no idea what he was involved with or that he was in danger,
said Sanderson.
"Or maybe he knew exactly what he was involved in, and that’s why he was in danger," said Renfro.
The detective placed the note and money, still clipped together, into a small evidence bag. But this note,
he said to Audrey, this is just a sham. Amateurish. A poor attempt to make this look like a mob hit out of the movies. And so is that driver’s license. This guy could be anybody.
Without moving the body, he knelt next to the bed to see as much of the man’s face as he could. When he returned to his feet, he motioned to Sanderson to do the same.
What do you think?
he asked her. American? Or not?
He’s a little dark for a Caucasian,
she said. Sort of looks Eastern European or Eurasian. Romanian or Turkish maybe? Or even ethnic Russian. Chechnya? But he could be American. Hard to say.
Renfro patted down the man’s pockets and checked the suit coat that lay next to him.
No cell phone,
he said. No weapon either.
He returned the driver’s license back to its slot in the wallet and looked in the bills compartment. A colorful, thick ticket sprang out and fell to the floor.
What do you know? He’s a baseball fan,
Renfro said, picking up the ticket and examining it. This is for tonight’s Nationals game.
He handed the ticket to his partner. "This is an odd one."
"It’s some seat, Audrey said.
Field level, near home plate. Right next to the owner’s suite, I think."
Right, I forgot. You’re a fan too.
The senior detective was pleased. How do you look in a vendor’s uniform?
he asked. Sanderson was average height with short auburn hair and tomboy looks. She looked the part, Renfro thought. I think you’re going to the ball game. Maybe Mr. Kahn here wasn’t going alone. It would be interesting to find out.
Do you really mean it about the vendor outfit?
Absolutely. With a wire and earpiece.
Why don’t I just use the ticket?
Think about it,
Jack said. They leave this drummed-up note on the body. Then they find this ticket. They know not many people go to a ball game alone. So they go themselves—thinking the same way I am—to see if somebody else is meeting him there. Learn if he’s working with somebody who knew the same things he knew, the things they don’t want out.
So they’re smarter detectives than they are killers?
Sanderson couldn’t resist.
Or maybe they missed this ticket altogether,
Renfro said. "But we know this guy intended to go to the game. And if he was meeting somebody there, we need that person. He or she’s bound to know something about what he was into. What got him here. There may be more to this than either of us can imagine now."
He walked to the open room door where a uniformed officer stood with two dark-suited men from hotel security. The veteran detective spoke first to the hotel men, amiably, as if he were a house guest asking where he might find lunch in the neighborhood instead of delivering instructions at the scene of a murder.
I want to keep this under wraps for the rest of the day,
he said to them. Better that the killers not know he’s been found so soon. No report to anybody. Change the lock code so no one else can get in. Electronically, without touching the lockset. It hasn’t been dusted yet. Can you promise me that, or do I need to speak to the hotel manager?
We can handle it,
the older of the two security men said. And we’ll talk to the housekeeping person who found him and tell her to keep it to herself for now. She’s reliable.
Renfro turned to the police officer with them. You too,
he said to the uniform. Nothing at the precinct. Tell them I need you outside at the street for the rest of your shift, and your replacement needs to stay there too. Anyone at the station has a problem, have them call me.
No yellow tape here even?
the uniform asked.
None. I’ll tell the coroner to stay away until midnight.
Got it,
said the security man.
The police officer nodded.
Renfro signaled for Sanderson, and the two of them started down the hall. Then Renfro paused and walked back alone to the two security men. He handed them each his card.
One other thing,
he said. "Get the hallway camera on that door. Anybody goes to it, anybody, call me right away."
It was three thirty when Renfro and Sanderson reached the sidewalk outside the hotel. Jack motioned to the bellman standing next to his unmarked car at the curb that he would be to it in a moment.
Have you ever dealt with Homeland Security?
he asked Sanderson.
Not yet.
Call them on the liaison line. Tell them we’ve got a one-eleven homicide and that I’m sending over the vic’s wallet for print forensics.
What’s a one-eleven homicide?
Possible terrorist involvement.
2
WHERE IS EVAN REESE?
I n her three years leading the bureau’s financial crimes unit, Hannah Harris had never sensed what she’d been feeling lately. A break was coming, she thought. All the planning and research, all the costly resources, were paying off.
The signs, vague and confusing as they were, pointed to a growing pool of money streaming into the country from a web of small tributaries. A few of the capillaries had been ridden to ground and found innocuous. But many others remained tantalizing, a Rubik’s Cube of transactions clicking and twisting through the global banking system, their ultimate intended destination and purpose still to be determined. Important dots, though, were beginning to be connected, including a steady flow of accumulating cash pulsing through a serpentine route from New York to Washington.
But as the afternoon grew late without word from her agent working deep undercover, Hannah Harris grew more nervous with each quarter hour. She sensed her anxiety but at first put it down to the importance of the day.
Her man undercover had been working, until today, only in greater New York. This was the first time the criminal syndicate had dispatched him to Washington to make a delivery, and it was the first time a single drop was for a large sum: $250,000. It was much more than could ever be directly deposited in a banking institution by the usual business without being flagged. But what was most intriguing to Harris and her unit was its delivery point. The smaller, earlier deliveries all had been made to the usual kinds of smaller, cash business depositaries. Dry cleaning shops, restaurants, side street law offices. Such establishments easily could blend small amounts—ten and fifteen thousand dollars—into their customary business banking deposits without notice. But according to yesterday’s report from her agent, today’s delivery was to be made at—of all places—the Washington Nationals baseball game shortly after the first pitch at 7:10 that evening.
Evan Reese, the agent she had personally selected for the assignment, had seemed at the time ideal for the circumstances, or nearly so. Born in Minnesota to Romanian immigrant parents who changed their surname to better assimilate in the upper Midwest, Evan could put on an Eastern European accent better than any other agent she knew. Even his Russian was more than passable, no small virtue in gaining the trust of the Ukrainian conclave, known simply as the Kievs, that he had infiltrated in Brooklyn, posing as a driver looking for a job as a taxi driver. But most important to the bureau, he was a certified public accountant, entirely at ease in financial vernacular and nuance. Before joining the FBI, he had worked in cyber security and fraud detection for Deutsche Bank. He could read the intricate pathways of the international banking system the way most people could read road maps.
Evan Reese did have one drawback though. A wife.
I wish you weren’t married,
Hannah had said to him in their final meeting before he took the assignment.
Evan Reese blushed. The FBI unit chief was an attractive woman, unreasonably so, and unmarried. She sat across from him in an armchair, her long legs crossed, a fairly high-heeled pump hanging off her foot.
What does that mean?
he asked.
"Oh, not that," Hannah said, now blushing too. "For Pete’s sake, not that. I mean, because this is deep undercover work. It’s dangerous. About as dangerous as anything a bureau agent would ever do."
I get that,
he said.
If you had kids, I wouldn’t even consider you,
she said.
But wives are expendable?
I’ll be honest. I looked for somebody single. Looked hard. Thought I found one too. Do you know Agent L.T. Kitt?
The woman from the Pittsburgh office?
he asked. The dog trainer?
L.T. Kitt, through no design or wish of her own, had become a kind of cause célèbre in the bureau after her fieldwork in matters of national security and involvement with the president, personally.
Yeah. She’s done a lot of undercover. Very good. But she just married Tug Birmingham, the ex–army ranger now working in the Secret Service on the president’s protection detail. And she’s in the DC field office now.
I think I did hear about that,
Reese said.
That puts her too close to public view. And we could never use anyone in the president’s orbit.
I see.
So it’s down to you, Evan. But only if you want it. I don’t want to force this on you. Not with all the risk. These are bad people, and you have a wife to think about.
It’s what we do,
he said. She knows that.
And so the life of Evie Rezcepko began.
His early embedding into the Ukrainian group in Brooklyn’s Brighton Beach neighborhood had gone smoothly. Hannah began to relax. She saw that he relied on his training, which was comforting. He didn’t rush anything or cause himself to appear prematurely interested in the group’s activities or entitled to know anything about them. The keys to ingratiation and integration with criminals were silence and passive compliance. You never asked a question too soon, and you didn’t ask any question until your acceptance was cemented. And even then, patience was critical.
Once an agent gained the trust or affection of one criminal member, it was tempting to begin intelligence gathering about the group’s designs. That was always a mistake. Thugs are pack animals. They make allegiances in threes and fours and fives. For an undercover agent, having only a single ally inside, unless it was the boss himself, was as good as having no ally at all. You needed a cadre of support, the confidence of an established subset of the group, to receive the larger pack’s blessing and become an insider in your own right.
His initial insertion was deftly managed. The bureau knew that the Kievs operated a ring of taxi medallions in Brooklyn and Queens. Most of the cabs roamed the boroughs legitimately. Their drivers, comprised mainly of Middle Easterners and Puerto Ricans, were unaware of the criminal ventures of the owners. But a central hub of the cabs was reserved for use solely in the Kievs’ clandestine activities and for the personal transportation needs of the syndicate members. When you thought about it, it was a sensible way for a criminal to get around New York unnoticed and untrackable. Just stay in a yellow cab—your own yellow cab.
The Kievs made sure that every driver in the spokes,
as they called the special cabs, was an Eastern European and very preferably Russian speaking. It was just easier all the way around. They were culturally compatible, prone to allegiance, and could tell a take-out order of borscht from wonton. Surveillance showed that the group hired its drivers for the hub cabs nearly exclusively from a small employment agency on Carroll Street near Utica Avenue in Brooklyn, catering to Eastern European job hunters.
Rather than directly approach one of the Kievs’ medallions to seek work—solicitation always risked suspicion—the bureau placed Reese in the lobby of the job agency so that the group would come to him. He spent hours studying surveillance photographs taken of the syndicate members making prior visits to interview and hire drivers. Many of the photos were blurry or taken from great distances. After four days of sitting and forty-four dollars in Starbucks coffee, it worked.
You understand the driving we need is not the usual, so to say,
said Yuri, the Kiev senior member, when Evan was introduced to him in the small interview room at the job agency. The tall, muscular Ukrainian was neatly dressed in a black shirt and tailored slacks. His tightly cropped full beard, a mix of grays and black, made his age difficult to assess, but Evan thought it early fifties, at most.
No, I don’t know what you mean.
"I mean you don’t drive around and pick up just anybody."
Then how do I make money?
"The money