Jack grabbed my elbow and pulled me along at a jog. We looped behind the home and straight for the wooded path the thug had taken. Now, it would seem to me that the time to make a run for the car was
We skirted the wooded side field. Before we reached the path, Jack stopped. He surveyed the semidark forest, then prodded me into a thick patch.
We had to move carefully. The chill of the last few days had fulfilled its promise with an early morning frost and here, out of the sun, the undergrowth was still covered with a thin sheen of it, crackling with every ill-placed footstep. The thug didn’t bother with stealth, and we could hear him as easily as if he had maracas strapped to his legs.
“Wait.” Jack turned to go, then glanced back. “Duck down. Stay hidden.”
“And then what?”
“Don’t let him see you.”
He must have seen me already, but I knew Jack’s order had nothing to do with being overprotective. As the female half of the duo, I made the better target. And if I didn’t play “good victim”? I’d humiliate this thug, as Evelyn and I had done to Bert at the motel, and that would lead to the same result-we’d have to put the boots to him and intimidate him into giving up whatever information Jack hoped to gain.
While that thought didn’t bother me, Jack was my boss, the senior partner. I didn’t want to disrespect him by challenging him, not on this.
As for staying put, though, that was another thing. Jack might not be accustomed to working with a partner, might not understand a partner’s duties, but I did.
I crept forward, watching my step. The undergrowth was thick here, and I nearly stepped on a shallow puddle coated with ice.
Jack had stopped halfway to the parking lot, waiting in the bushes. A few minutes later, the thug returned, walking at a brisk clip back to the home. As he passed, Jack swung out, silent as a wraith, came up behind him and barrel pointed at the base of the man’s skull.
“Turn left and walk,” Jack said.
The man gave a tight laugh. “Into the woods? So you won’t have as far to drag my body? I ain’t making it easier for you.”
“I wanted you dead? Be there already. Got a message for Boris.”
“And you want me to play delivery boy?”
“You don’t want to? Fine. I’ll use the next guy.”
The thug let Jack steer him into the woods-on the opposite side of the trail. I crept as close as I dared, waited until they had their backs to me, then darted across the open path.
Jack stopped in a clearing. I found a spot ten feet away, with a good sight line. He made the thug kneel, hands on the back of his head, then trained his gun on the guy’s skull base. I aimed mine at the thug’s right shoulder-a disabling shot.
“You said you got a message for Boris,” the guy said.
“ Houston.”
“Wha-?” The thug tried to look over his shoulder at Jack, but a gun poke stopped him.
“That’s the message. Houston.”
“What the hell does that mean?”
“Boris knows. Tell him this is my business-”
“Who the hell are you?”
“ Houston. He’ll know. And my business? No concern of his. His business? No concern of mine. Got it?”
“Got what? That’s not a message. It’s code or some-”
“Repeat what I said.”
The thug sighed but, with prompts, repeated it.
“Good,” Jack said. “Boris comes after me again? I’ll know you fucked up the message.”
Jack let the thug go, then slipped into the woods to make sure he left.
The moment the guy’s car pulled out, Jack looked directly at where I was hiding. I stepped out, expecting to be lambasted. But he only waved me toward the car.
“So is that the last we’ll hear of Boris Nikolaev?” I asked as I climbed into the car.
“Better be,” Jack muttered. “Damned inconvenient.”
I shook my head and reached for the radio dial.
“Won’t change anything, Nadia.”
I looked at him, fingers on the knob.
“Find out now. Find out at Evelyn’s. Won’t change what happened.” His gaze slanted my way. “You
I nodded and turned on the radio.
THIRTY-TWO
As promised, the Helter Skelter killer had taken another victim at noon. As for whether he struck on the dot of noon, I’ll leave it for the more dramatically inclined reporters to speculate. What I do know is that the victim was found less than ten minutes past noon, when her friends called into the kitchen to see why she was taking so long with the coffee. At the time of the murder, they’d been tuned to CNN waiting for news of what was unfolding a few steps away. The irony of that would be lost on no one. Of everyone waiting for news of the next victim, one person
The audacity of the killing was lost on no one, either. Not only had he struck in an occupied home, but one with a state-of-the-art security system, in one of the most supposedly secure gated communities. The message was clear-if I can get to her, I can get to anyone.
That promoted exactly the kind of paranoia that gated communities preyed on. I’d pulled a hit in a “high security” private club, in the middle of a golf tournament, and let me tell you, I’ve done harder-much harder.
But of course the media was already playing it up, making it sound like he was some kind of phantom who’d slipped past not only the armed guards at the gate, but a fully armed home security system.
Fully armed, my ass. How many people rearm their system when they’re indoors entertaining, with friends coming and going? My guess was that the homeowner had reactivated it when she’d learned of the murder. If the system had been off, the Feds would figure it out, but I doubted
Jack needed to call Quinn before we got back to Evelyn’s, so he stopped at a Cracker Barrel near the state border. I went in to grab coffees to go, then got sidetracked by the display of old-fashioned candy. When I returned to the car and found Jack wasn’t back, I put the coffees and candy inside and went to look for him.
Jack was twenty feet away from the phone booth, standing by the edge of the parking lot. When I walked up behind him, he looked back at me, his eyes unreadable behind his dark shades.
“What happened?”
He looked my way, but said nothing.
“Quinn told you something, and now you’re trying to figure out whether-or how-you should tell me.” My mind leapfrogged to the obvious. “Another killing. Already? He just finished-”
“Not yet.”
I stopped. “Not yet what? The killing, you mean? He hasn’t done it yet, but he’s announced it already? Come on, Jack, don’t make me drag it out of you two words at a time, or I swear-”
He motioned for me to sit with him on the edge of the restaurant porch, and started talking.
The FBI knew where the killer was going to strike next. While it would have been nice to claim that they’d deduced this through painstaking hours of statistical and behavioral analysis, the truth was far more disturbing. They knew because he’d told them.