key. SIS had to watch Rahmi's apartment, but Pike only needed to watch the Malibu, and a place to hide without being seen.
The driver made a loud sigh.
Ain't you seen enough?
Pike said, Let's go.
Pike picked up his Jeep, then drove north into East L. A. A friend of his had a parking lot there, where he kept vehicles he rented to film companies. Vintage cars, mostly, but also specialty vehicles like dune buggies, decommissioned police cruisers, and customized hot rods. Pike rented a taco truck with faded paint, a heavy skin of dust, and a cracked window. A flowing blue legend was emblazoned along the side: ANTONIO'S MOTORIZED RESTAURANT, HOME OF THE BBQ TACO! The legend was faded, too.
Pike put it on his credit card, left his Jeep, then drove the taco truck back to Compton. He parked three blocks from Rahmi's on the opposite side of the street in front of what appeared to be a tow yard and a row of abandoned storefronts.
Pike shut the engine, cracked open the windows for air, then moved back into the kitchen bay where he would be hidden from people on the street. Three blocks away, the SIS spotters would ignore him. They were too busy watching Rahmi's apartment.
Pike couldn't see the apartment, but he had a good view of the Malibu, and the Malibu was all he needed.
Pike settled in. He breathed. He waited for something to happen.
The First Rule
10
AT EIGHT-FIFTY THAT NIGHT, the Malibu pulled away, came toward Pike until the first cross street, then stopped before making the turn. The light was poor, but the black-on-black Malibu gleamed beautifully and the polished chrome dubs glittered.
Pike watched.
A dark blue Neon approached on the cross street as the Malibu signaled to turn. The Neon was dirty, and missing the left front hubcap. When the Malibu turned, the Neon continued across the intersection behind it. Pike figured the Neon was SIS, and at least two other vehicles were maneuvering into surrounding positions.
Pike waited another five minutes before he slipped out of the taco truck. No lights came on when he opened and closed the door.
When Rahmi left his apartment, the spotters would have radioed the officers in their nearby cars, and the drivers would have scrambled to get into position. After that it was their show. For the first time in hours, the spotters would relax. They would kick back, check email, call their significant others, get some exercise. They wouldn't be staring at Rahmi Johnson's door because Rahmi was gone.
Pike trotted up to the same intersection, then rounded the corner to the next street and vaulted a fence into the yard butting the back side of Rahmi's building. A dog barked, mincing and scraping at the door of the neighbor's house, but Pike slid past the door and lifted himself over another chain-link fence directly behind Rahmi's apartment.
Pike stood in the shadows, waiting to see if someone would turn on a light. The little dog continued barking, but a woman in the house shouted, and after a few seconds the barking stopped. Pike got to work.
Each of the apartments had only a single window on the back of the building, one of those high, small windows you find in bathrooms, but the windows were caged by iron bars. Rahmi's window and the window in the street-side apartment were lit, but the rear apartment was dark. Pike wondered if it was filled with SIS operators.
The bathroom door was open. The bathroom light was off, but lights and the television were on in the outer room. The television being on, Pike figured Rahmi would return soon, but couldn't be sure.
Pike examined the security bars. The bars were not individual bars, but a single cage formed of vertical rods welded to a frame like a catcher's mask. More expensive security systems were hinged on one side, but these bars had been installed on the cheap and were likely against the building code. Pike ran his fingers along the bottom frame plate and found four screws. The owner had probably sunk wood screws through the
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