“Detective Stone, is that you?” I said. “I guess you missed me?”
“Of course I did. But I asked a serious question. I've been worried sick for three days. We all have, especially Nana.”
“Okay, here's what happened, and it's part of the case. It has to be. I was arrested at the airport.”
“Arrested?” Bree said it in a whisper that registered new concern. “By who? At the airport? On what possible gounds?”
“On the grounds that due process is a relative concept around the world, I guess. I was in a holding cell for two and a half days. They never charged me with anything.”
Her voice slipped a little-more Bree and less Detective Stone. “How bad was it?”
“Scale of ten, I'd give it a fifteen, but I'm mostly okay now. I'm at the Superior Hotel. Of course, that's just a name. There's nothing superior about this joint.”
I looked out the window, where dark thunderheads were rolling in over the gulf. The pool area, ten stories down, was starting to clear out. It was hard to believe I'd woken up in Kirikiri just that morning.
“Listen, Alex, I don't know if you want to hear this right now, but we had another multiple last night. Another family was slaughtered over in Petway. This time, the parents were Sudanese nationals.”
I sat down on the bed. “Same MO as the first two?” I asked.
“Yeah. Large knives, possibly machetes, extreme malice. Just ugly for the sake of ugly, cruel for the sake of cruel. Whether or not your boy and his gang were here, I'll bet his people were involved.”
“Apparently the murderer is called the Tiger. So I'm playing Catch a Tiger. He could have ordered a hit from anywhere.”
'That's right. Or he could be back in Washington, Alex.
You could be over there, while he's here.'
Before I could respond, there was a sudden flash from outside and a huge smack of thunder overhead. The lights in the room flickered, then went out, taking the phone with them.
“Bree?” I said. “Bree, are you there?”
But the line was dead. Shit. I hadn't even told Bree how much I missed her.
I'd seen candles and at least one propane generator in the lobby, so I guess they were used to this kind of thing at the Superior. I lay back on my bed and closed my eyes, figuring I'd go down and check things out if the power didn't come back on soon.
Meanwhile, what was the upshot of the new murders in DC? And what did they mean for me?
Was the killer I was chasing-the Tiger-still here in Nigeria?
Or had I come all this way…just to get my nose broken?
Cross Country
Chapter 49
MY PHONE WAS ringing.
And ringing.
I finally blinked awake, starting to come out of a deep comalike sleep. The clock flashed 12:00, 12:00, 12:00 on the bedside table next to my face.
It was morning, and the power at the hotel was obviously back on.
When I rolled over to answer the phone, my whole body resisted with an aching stiffness and the pain of severe bruising. It brought everything back into focus. Jail, the beatings, the murder of Ellie and her family, the investigation.
“Alex Cross,” I said.
“Don't do that.”
“Who is this?”
'It's Flaherty. Don't answer the phone with your name.
You never know who-'
“What time is it?” I asked Flaherty. Too early for a lecture anyway.
I stared up at the ceiling, then down the length of my body. I was still in my clothes, and my mouth felt like paste. My busted nose was throbbing again too. There were bloodstains all over the pillow, both dark and bright red.
“Eleven o'clock. I've been calling all morning. Listen. I can give you a couple of hours if you make it soon, and then I'm out on assignment till next Monday.”
“What have you got? Anything at all?”
“Besides the eczema on my ass? I've got the closest thing to a cooperative contact you're going to find in Lagos. You been to the bank yet?”
“I haven't been to the John yet.”
