what you think. Petar is mine. I was trying to save him-”
“Shut up.”
Stone’s Rover was in the parking lot. They shoved Yanni into the rear. Cole pushed Rina into the backseat, and climbed in after her.
Pike said, “Up in the canyon. Angeles Crest. Jon?”
“I know where.”
Cole held out his hands for the boy.
“Here, I’ll take him.”
“I got him.”
“How you going to drive, just you?”
“Go.”
Stone ripped away before the door was closed, throwing up gravel and dust.
Pike ran hard to his Jeep, and saw the oncoming flashers as he pulled into traffic, heading for the mountains, the old guys at Mom’s Basement watching him peel away. Three sheriff’s cars flashed past a quarter mile later, so Pike pulled to the right like everyone else. The kid was scared, and screaming, and Pike felt bad for it. He repositioned the little guy on his shoulder, and patted his back.
“It’s okay, buddy. Gonna be fine.”
They slipped under the Foothill Freeway, and climbed into the Little Tujunga Wash. The road rolled through the bottom of the ravine, and something about the motion settled the boy. He lifted the big head to look around.
Pike drove exactly six-point-two miles up the canyon, then turned onto a gravel road. He knew the distance because he made the drive often, coming up to the middle of nowhere to test-fire weapons he had repaired or built. He followed the gravel another two-point-three miles over a gentle rise, and saw Stone’s Rover parked on the flat crest of the hill. Stone and Cole were already out. Yanni was belly-down on the ground, and Rina was cross-legged beside him, hands still cuffed behind her back.
Pike turned to join the Rover, and the rocky ground crunched beneath his tires. The earth was littered with thousands of cartridge casings. Maybe hundreds of thousands, or millions. Most so old and tarnished, their once gleaming brass was black.
Cole came over as Pike got out with the boy, and painted him with a ragged smile.
“We could be professional babysitters. I hear there’s good money in that.”
“He’s loud.”
The boy arched his back again, and turned to see Cole. Cole wiggled his fingers and made a face like a fish.
“Cute kid.”
The baby broke wind.
Pike glanced at Yanni and Rina, and lowered his voice.
“Is she the mother?”
“None of that was true. They work for Jakovich. I don’t know who his parents are, but she isn’t the mother. Maybe Grebner was telling the truth.”
“Is Darko the father?”
“All I know is she isn’t the mother. Ana told a friend named Lisa Topping that Rina couldn’t have children because she was cut. That’s probably why she was so protective. That’s the only part of Rina’s story that was true.”
Pike watched Rina while Cole described what he knew and how he knew it. Rina had told the truth about Ana and their relationship, and about being a prostitute for Serbian mobsters, but she worked for Jakovich, not Darko. Rina Markovic had lied about damn near everything, and had been good at it, mixing her lies with the truth the way all the best liars do. Pike nodded toward Yanni.
“What about him?”
“Real name is Simo Karadivik, originally from Vitez. That’s Jakovich’s hometown. Yanni there-Karadivik-is one of Jakovich’s enforcers. He shows three arrests back in Vitez, and two under his true name since he arrived in Los Angeles. That’s why nothing popped up when I ran his alias. Janic Pevich doesn’t exist.”
Pike realized he had a long way to go before the kid was safe. Everything he thought he knew was lies, and the only truth seemed to be that Darko and Jakovich hated each other, and were willing to murder a ten-month-old baby to further that hate. Pike sensed this was something he could use, and stroked the baby’s back.
“Is his name really Petar?”
“I don’t know.”
Pike considered Rina and Yanni as he stroked the boy’s back. Her legs were twitching as if a nervous fire burned in her belly. Yanni’s face drooped, making him appear sleepy, but his eyes tocked from Pike to Stone to Cole like gleaming ferrets in twilight caves. They were scared. That was good. Pike wanted them scared.
The boy quivered, and, a moment later, Pike smelled a strong odor.
“He messed himself.”
“How do you know?”
“I felt it. Now I can smell it.”
Pike thought for a moment.
“We need to get some stuff for him. We have to get something for him to eat, too. He’ll get hungry.”
Cole came around and stood in Pike’s line of sight, blocking his view of Rina and