“What do you think? This
“With what I have on you, you guys are real jerks to play a stunt like this. Whoever broke into my apartment and took my stuff out ought to be canned.”
“Actually, that was me. Name’s Koller.”
“Like the toilet,” MacCandliss snapped.
“Different spelling,” Koller said with an unsettling grin.
MacCandliss opened his bag and pulled out clothes for an overnight stay, toiletries-
“What the-?”
“Not yours?”
“No, they’re not fucking mine. I’ve never been into this sort of thing.”
“Oh, my mistake,” Koller said, happy to see MacCandliss touch a number of the pictures. “Let me make it up to you.”
He snapped open the briefcase and flipped up the lid. Hundred-dollar bills-stacks of them.
“That’s more like it,” MacCandliss said, greedily snatching one of the stacks.
Beneath the single hundred, there was only blank paper.
“You can count it,” Koller said calmly. “It’s all there.”
Before MacCandliss could straighten up, he felt a sharp jab at the base of his neck. In that same instant, with just a small amount of pressure, the succinylcholine was in his body.
Koller’s powerful arms had him before he could even mount a struggle. Less than twenty-five seconds later, restraint was unnecessary.
“You’re a very stupid man,” Koller said.
MacCandliss, terrified, felt the muscles in his body begin to quiver as though insects were burrowing below his skin. The man let go of him and he dropped to his knees, then toppled over onto his back.
“What have you done to me?”
“Did you really think your little safe-deposit box would protect you? It took me ten minutes to find the key you taped under your bureau drawer. Ten minutes. Your lawyer’s name was all over papers in your desk. We’ll have no trouble getting him to cooperate with us when we reason with him and he learns about the perversions you’ve been involved in.”
MacCandliss was wide awake and alert, but nearly helpless. His chest was tightening, squeezing on his heart.
“I’m dying…”
Did he say that aloud, or just think it?
“You’re not dying, but you will die,” Koller said. “I didn’t inject enough sux to overdose you. I wouldn’t want you to miss your fall. You see, you’re going to jump out this hotel window and splatter. I do hope nobody is underneath when you land.”
MacCandliss’s lips felt like stone, unmovable. The quivering of his muscles had stopped.
“Why?” he mouthed before he could no longer move his lips.
“I love it,” the killer said. “It never fails. Always the same question from you guys.
“So you checked into this hotel last night. Brought only a few of your things, which you’ve already seen here. Nobody is going to question why Phillip MacCandliss jumped out the seventh-story window of the Crescent Hotel. The sux will already be metabolized, so your autopsy won’t show any drugs. ‘And he had two little girls,’ everyone will say. ‘Such a shame.’ ”
Nearly effortlessly, Koller lifted MacCandliss off the floor and turned so that his mark could get one last look at the money.
“Easy come, easy go,” Koller said. “My advice is to just relax and enjoy the ride.”
Phillip MacCandliss felt himself being maneuvered over the windowsill. For a moment, as he hung down, his lids fell open, giving him a view of the scene seven stories below. Then he felt hands pushing on his bottom, and he began to slide forward.
But it was.
He slid off the sill and was instantly airborne. The wind whipped past his face as the world rose up to meet him. Despite what he had read on several claim filings from vets who had near-death experiences, his demise wasn’t painless and beautiful, or filled with a warming, beckoning light. There was only pain, brief and beyond excruciating. Nearly every bone in his body shattered at once. His skull erupted against the hood of a parked car. Fragments of his brain exploded onto the windshield like a spattering of bugs.
Seven stories above, Franz Koller mussed the bedspread, scattered the pornographic photos about, set the toiletries on the sink, and left Room 727 through Room 725, pausing only to check that the door between them was locked.
CHAPTER 38
“If there ever was a DVD recording of the Aleem Syed Mohammad operation, it’s gone now.”
Saul Mollender sounded bewildered, but also more energized than Nick had ever heard him.
It was nearly half past midnight, and the Mole had just returned the call Nick had left on his machine at seven, giving him details of Jillian’s meeting with the nursing school dean. Patient volume on the four-stop Baltimore loop had been unusually light, and Nick and Junie were already parked on the street by her house, nearly done cleaning up the RV.
“Does that make any sense?” Nick, now slouched in the driver’s seat, asked Mollender. “We’re talking about one of the most high-profile cases that Shelby Stone has ever had. Since they had the capability to do so, how could it not have been recorded?”
“I don’t have any record of the surgery in my database either.”
“That’s crazy.”
“But there’s more. When can we meet?”
“Now?”
“Of course now. Do you want to know what’s happened here or don’t you?”
Nick rubbed at the gritty fatigue stinging his eyes. The day had started early, and the ecstatic exhaustion from his time with Jillian had never gone away.
“You can’t tell me over the phone?” he asked.
“If I wanted to tell you over the phone, I would have told you over the phone,” the Mole said, suddenly sounding like his old testy self.
Junie, who had finished restocking, waved that she was done, and motioned Nick to lock up.
“Jillian won’t be off duty until one,” he said after Junie had left. “I want her to be there.”
“Does she have my plaque?”
“If she does, she’ll bring it.”
“I don’t want to meet in or near the hospital.”