39
MARCH 27, 2010
SATURDAY, 11:49 p.m.
SATURDAY, 11:49 p.m.
I think we can give ourselves a
compliment,” Colt said to Grover. Colt was driving, and Grover was
studying the MapQuest directions. “That little event was carried
out extraordinarily well.”
The event he was referring to was their surprising
the watcher and transferring him from his car to the back of a
rented black Ford van. At the moment they’d burst into his SUV,
which he’d failed to lock, the man, whom they later learned was
Duane Mackenzie, had not been doing much watching, except for
watching the ongoing neighborhood basketball game. As a
consequence, Grover and Colt had been able to get their hands on
the SUV’s front door handles and the doors open before Duane could
react. By that time, he had two suppressed Smith & Wesson
automatic pistols pressed against his neck while he was being
relieved of his own weapon.
“Now, here’s what you are going to do,” Colt had
said to the shocked and terrified Duane. “We’re going to get out of
the SUV and walk directly across the street and climb into the back
of that black Ford van without making any fuss. If you do, you are
going to get blown away. Am I understood?”
“Who are you?” Duane tried to demand, but his voice
quavered in terror.
“Shut up!” Colt had snapped. Then to Grover: “How
clear does the neighborhood look?” He wasn’t about to take his eyes
off Duane.
“It looks good,” Grover had said, avoiding using
Colt’s name. “No pedestrians except two heading away, and no
oncoming cars.”
Colt, who had been on the driver’s side, had yanked
Duane out of the SUV and had marched him quickly down the street.
Colt had lowered the gun temporarily to his side. Grover had caught
up to the other two at the back of the van and had opened the back
doors.
Once the doors were wide open, Colt had forced
Duane inside in a smooth and practiced fashion. Inside the van was
an open, domestic oriental rug, onto which Duane was forced to lie
prone. Grover had climbed in as well, and as Colt kept the barrel
of his gun pressed against Duane’s neck, Grover had bound the man’s
arms with duct tape, gagged him with a small rag secured with duct
tape, and then rolled him up in the rug. The whole episode, from
entering Duane’s vehicle to his being bound inside the rug, had
taken less than a minute, and the only person to have been a
witness was Jack. Thanks to the discussion the previous evening, he
had noticed the SUV and had been watching it continuously.
“Where should I turn east?” Colt asked, as he
headed south on Central Park West.
“Either at Fifty-ninth or Fifty-seventh,” Grover
responded. “Fiftyninth will be fine.”
They were on their way to Woodside, Queens, where
they had rented a small two-story house. It was brick, with a
garage entered from a back alleyway. The garage had been key. They
wanted to avoid any curiosity when unloading their guest.
“Do you think he is adequately terrified?” Colt
asked. Part of the technique was to scare the hell out of the
victim to loosen his tongue.
“I think so,” Grover said. “I certainly would be.”
He checked his watch. “I hope this doesn’t take too long. We’ve a
lot to do today.”
They crossed over the Queensboro Bridge and onto
Northern Boulevard, then onto 54th Street. The house they had
rented was in the middle of the block. Colt turned into the
alleyway. The garage door had an automatic opener, one of whose
buttons Grover pressed as they approached. The garage door rattled
upward, and Colt expertly pulled the van in and killed the
engine.
“Let’s get our tools in first, get set up, and then
come back for our guest.”
“Sounds good to me, but let’s not make this our
life’s work,” Grover said.