out over the day.”
“And sooner or later the enforcers show up.”
“That’s the idea.”
This was called baiting the enemy-Pike would pattern his actions to create an expectation, forcing the enemy to act on that expectation.
Later, Pike drove Rina back to the guesthouse. They rode in silence most of the way, she on her side of the Jeep, he on his. Up on Sunset, the kids were already lined up outside the Roxy, but Rina didn’t look. She stared out the window, thoughtful.
Yanni’s truck was at the curb when they pulled up.
Pike said, “You’re not coming tomorrow. No need for it. I’ll let you know what happened after.”
He thought she would object, but she didn’t. She studied him for a moment, and made no move to open the door.
“This is very much that you do. For this, I thank you.”
“Not just for you. For Frank and for myself, too.”
“Yes, I know.”
She wet her lips. She stared down the length of the street into the dark. Two people walked along the broken sidewalk, enjoying an after-dinner stroll.
Pike said, “You should go in.”
“Come in with me. I would like it.”
“No.”
“Yanni will leave. I will tell him. He doesn’t care.”
“No.”
The hurt came to her eyes.
“You don’t want to lay with a whore.”
“Go in, Rina.”
She considered him for a moment, then leaned across the console and kissed him on the cheek. It was a quick kiss, and then she was gone.
Pike didn’t go home. He cruised the length of the Strip, taking it slow, then turned up Fairfax to Hollywood, then up again into the residential streets at the base of the canyon.
The park was closed at night, but Pike left his Jeep and walked up the quiet streets. The air was rich with winter jasmine, and cold, and grew even colder as Pike squeezed around the gate and entered the park.
The canyon was his. Nothing and no one else moved.
Pike climbed the steep fire road, rising above the city, walking, then walking faster, then jogging. The ravines were pooled with ink shadows, and the shadows enveloped him, but Pike did not slow. The brittle walls above him, the ragged brush and withered trees beside him, and the plunging slope below were sensed more than seen, but the invisible brush teamed with moving life.
Coyotes sang in the ridges, and eyes watched him. Eyes that blinked, and vanished, and reappeared, pacing him in the scrub.
Pike followed the road up, winding along the ravine to the end of the ridge where the lights of the city spread out before him. Pike listened, and enjoyed the crisp air. He smelled the rough earth, and jasmine and sage, but the strong scent of apricot overpowered everything else, and was sweet in the raw night.
He heard a whisper of movement, and metallic red eyes hovered in space, watching. A second pair of eyes joined the first. Pike ignored them.
The canyon was his. He did not reach home until just after sunrise, but even then did not sleep.
29
ALL-AMERICAN BEST PRICE GAS was a ragged dump in Tarzana. Six pumps, no service bays, little mini-mart with a middle-aged Latina holed up behind a wall of bulletproof glass.
Cole and Stone went in first, Cole scouting the surroundings, Stone pretending to put air in his tires while he checked out the people in and around the station. Pike waited two blocks away until they called. Pike heard them through his Bluetooth earbud, which he would wear while he did what he had to do, Cole and Stone providing security.
Cole told him about the woman.
“One female. Strictly counter personnel.”
Pike didn’t like the idea of terrorizing an innocent woman.
“Will we have a problem with her calling the police?”
“Rina said no. These places get held up like any other gas station, so the employees are schooled to call their manager, not the police. That’s the front man who runs it for Darko.”
Stone, who was conferenced in, spoke up.
“That’s all well and good, but what if she’s got a shotgun behind the counter?”
“Rina said no. Listen, they’re selling diluted gas and they have skimmers on all the pumps. They don’t want the police sniffing around.”
Stone said, “Maybe Rina should rob the place.”
Pike said, “I’m rolling.”
Pike pulled up to the pumps outside the mini-mart, giving the woman inside a clear view of his Jeep. He wanted her able to describe it accurately.
Pike went inside, and immediately saw a security camera hanging from the ceiling behind the glass. He wondered if it worked, then decided this didn’t matter. He gave the