A minute.
Suddenly the agent scuttled out from behind the sofa and waddled toward the gray light that spilled in from the kitchen. At the doorway he was perfectly silhouetted.
Canning shot him.
Damon's right leg buckled under him, and he collapsed onto the kitchen floor, failing to choke back a scream.
Cautiously but swiftly, Canning got up from behind the easy chair and went after him.
Damon rolled onto his back and fired through the living-room doorway.
As he reached the kitchen Canning saw the gun coming up at him, and he threw himself to the left. When he heard the
When he finally let out his breath, Canning sounded like a bellows.
Lightning flashed again, revealing the bloodied body and the open, sightless eyes.
Canning took the magazine out of the Colt and replaced it with a fresh one. He slipped the pistol back into its holster.
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Canning stepped over the corpse, went to the kitchen door, and looked down at the courtyard. The two potted cherry trees shivered in the wind. So far as he could see, no other men were waiting out there.
He locked the door, reached for the light switch, thought better of that, got a flashlight from a drawer by the sink, and went to search the dead men. Being careful not to get blood on his clothes, Canning first attended to the agent who was sprawled on the kitchen floor. He found a wallet full of papers and credit cards in the name of Damon Hillary. There was also a thin plastic case which was full of business cards for Intermountain Incorporated. Intermountain was an agency front. He went into the bedroom and dragged the other man out of the closet. This one, he discovered, was named Louis Hobartson and was also an employee of Intermountain.
In the bathroom he washed the blood off his hands. He used a wad of tissues to wipe smears of blood from the wallets, flushed the tissues down the commode. He checked himself in the mirror to be certain that his suit hadn't been soiled.
He looked at his watch: three-fifteen.
In the bedroom again, he neatly laid back the covers on the bed, lifted the mattress, and slipped both wallets far back on top of the box springs. He dropped the mattress, pulled the bedclothes in place, and smoothed out the wrinkles. Now, if the Commiteemen retrieved their men before he had time to tell McAlister to come after them, Hillary and Hobartson would not disappear without a trace.
He took his suitcases out of the closet and carried them back into the living room.
He took his raincoat from the front closet and struggled into it on his way to the living-room windows. Parting the velvet drapes half an inch, he saw that the LTD was still parked across the street, the driver still looking this way. Canning glanced at his wrist-watch: three-eighteen. When he looked at the street again, a taxi was just angling in beside the curb downstairs. The cabbie gave three long signals with the horn.
Canning left the apartment, locked up, carried his bags downstairs. At the foyer door he hesitated, then opened it, pushed through, and hurried to the cab. Without getting out in the rain, the cabbie had thrown open the rear door. It was a high-roof, British-style taxi; therefore, Canning didn't have to lift his suitcases in ahead of him. He stepped in, cases in hand, and sat down, wondering if the man in the LTD would be crazy enough to try to shoot him right out here on the street.
Reaching over the front seat, the cabbie pulled the door shut for him. “The dispatcher said National Airport.”
“That's right. I have a four o'clock flight.”
“You cut it close.”
“Nice tip if we make it.”
“Oh, there's no chance we'll miss.”
As they pulled away from the curb, Canning saw the LTD fall in behind them.
That's all right, he thought. The bastard can't drive and shoot at the same time.
To make a successful hit in a public place like an air terminal, you had to have at least two men: one to do the shooting and one to either cause a distraction or drive the getaway car. This man in the LTD could do nothing but follow him, see which flight he boarded, and report back to the boss.
Canning realized, however, that The Committee would probably soon learn the Otley identity and his entire itinerary. Within an hour after they left Washington, agents in California — perhaps the same ones who had murdered the Berlinsons — would be outlining a plan to kill him when he changed planes in Los Angeles.
At four-ten the jet lifted off, and by four-twenty it was above the storm. From his window seat Canning