had beautiful blue eyes, intense and intelligent. Straightening, she pulled on the edges of her angora crewneck sweater, wanting to show off her figure.
‘Good evening,’ he said. ‘I was hoping you might have a room available.’
Definitely from somewhere overseas, she thought. ‘I’m sure I can accommodate you.’
‘Thank you so much.’
She told him the rate.
The man took a wad of cash from his pocket.
‘I need a licence and a credit card,’ she said. ‘Security deposits and all of that fun stuff.’
‘I’m afraid I’ve lost my licence.’ The man handed her a hundred-dollar bill. ‘Will this be enough to cover a security deposit?’
‘That’ll do it. Just give me a name and address.’
‘Ted Parker.’
‘Your accent,’ she said, typing in his information. ‘What is it, British or Australian?’
‘Australian, mostly, although I did spend a good number of my formative years in London.’
Something about the man triggered a comparison with one of her favorite actors, Russell Crowe. Maybe it was simply the Australian connection, because this guy certainly didn’t talk like Crowe did in his movies, and there was absolutely no physical resemblance. That wasn’t a bad thing. Ted Parker was certainly doing just fine in both the looks and the body departments, and he had that same animal magnetism Crowe gave off in his movies, that rugged sense of… well, manliness. The kind of testosterone-fuelled alpha male who always won in a bar fight and had his pick of women. A man, she suspected, who knew how to treat a woman right.
‘I’m pretty sure the bars and restaurants in the area are closing down for the night on account of the storm,’ she said. ‘If you’re hungry, I can make you a sandwich. Dale — that’s my father, he owns the place — he has some beers in the fridge. Bud cans, nothing fancy. I can bring some on by if you like.’
‘That’s very kind of you, but I’ve already eaten this evening.’
Lisa gave him her best smile as she placed the key on the counter.
He paid in cash, thanked her again and left. Lisa watched him all the way to the car, wanting to know more about the mysterious and charismatic Ted Parker, why he made her feel safe.
Fletcher parked around the side of the dingy motel, where his car couldn’t be seen from the highway. In a few minutes’ time, it would be covered with snow, and no one would recognize it.
He popped the trunk, selected the rucksack and carried it with him to his room. The stale air smelled of bleach and industrial cleaners. He drew the curtains and turned on one of the bedside lamps. Dust swarmed in the cone of light. He suspected the room hadn’t been cleaned in weeks.
Not wanting to leave fingerprints, he switched his leather gloves for a pair of latex. He slid the desk chair across the room and wedged it underneath the doorknob to prevent intrusion. He doubted anyone would come inside, but he had to be careful. He hung up his coat and carried the rucksack to a bathroom decorated with salmon-coloured tiles.
Fletcher removed his contacts. Wearing them even for a few short hours irritated his eyes. He put in a few antihistamine drops and turned on the shower to allow the water to warm up. He undressed carefully, his ribs screaming in protest.
One of the rounds had managed to penetrate the vest’s Kevlar fabric, lodging itself in the cracked ceramic plating — not surprising, given the short distance from which it had been fired.
Slowly, Fletcher bent down and reached for the tactical knife strapped to his calf. He used it to remove the slug, then pitched the edges between his long fingers and held it up to the cheap fluorescent bulbs mounted above the mirror. It was a 9-mm round, but not one he recognized. His suspicions had been confirmed. He dropped the slug inside an evidence bag and continued to undress.
Standing under the hot water, he examined his chest. The tanned skin above his abdomen and left pectoral was red and swollen, tender to the touch. Encouraged by his steady but painful breathing, he doubted he had suffered any internal injuries. He’d been lucky. If he had been shot with a. 44 Magnum or an armour-piercing round, he would have bled to death.
Within a few days’ time, the skin would bruise and then fade. The cracked ribs would take at least six weeks to heal. The pain could be managed with ibuprofen.
Dressed in fresh clothing, he removed a Ziploc bag from his rucksack, went outside and packed it with snow. He wedged the chair back underneath the doorknob, propped up the pillows and sat down on the stiff bed. He took out a pad of paper, and with the cold plastic bag placed over his cracked ribs he sketched the face of the woman who’d shot him.
Time passed. Fortunately, there was no need to return to Key West. Before leaving Florida, he had wiped down the rental home and packed his meagre possessions inside the pair of suitcases resting in the Audi’s trunk. He had called the woman he’d been seeing, an art-gallery dealer, and told her that he had business in France and didn’t believe he would be returning to the States in the foreseeable future. The woman expressed her disappointment. It was a shame, she said; she’d liked the time they had spent together and had hoped their relationship would develop into something more serious.
Fletcher had thought about her during the long drive to Colorado. He wished he could have got to know her better. Stayed a bit longer.
Even if Karim hadn’t called, it was time to move on. Fletcher hadn’t been caught because he had followed a certain set of rules, the first of which was not staying in one spot for too long. He always had to be on the move, ready to run at a moment’s notice. He didn’t get too friendly with the locals, he didn’t make friends, and he avoided emotional entanglements. He had to lead a compartmentalized life and stay forever vigilant; if he grew, he would make mistakes. No rational person would choose to live this way, but this was his life, and there was nothing he could do to change it. It was what it was.
Fletcher stopped sketching and examined the result. Satisfied, he put the pad and pen aside and then lay down. He stared at a cobweb on the ceiling, wishing he had a bottle of Chateau Latour to keep him company.
The wind battered the motel room’s rickety windows. Fletcher wondered if he would die this way — alone in a motel room of beige frieze carpet, seeing, as his last images, bad watercolour landscapes hung in cheap frames on mustard-coloured walls.
He closed his eyes and, as though he had entered a private screening room, again replayed what had happened at the Herrera home. His attention kept drifting back to Theresa Herrera, kept seeing the woman sprawled across the foyer floor, her limp arm hanging over the threshold.
Malcolm Fletcher did not indulge much in regret. Still, he wished he could have saved the woman’s life. Wished he had acted sooner.
11
Fletcher woke early on Saturday, looked out the window and found the snowstorm was still raging. There was no way he could drive today. He paid for a second night and spent the morning inside his motel room working on his netbook. He wrote several pages of notes, ate the protein bars he kept in his rucksack, and used the room’s coffee-maker and complimentary packs of coffee.
Under normal driving conditions, it would take him sixteen hours to reach Chicago. But he had to factor in the storm. That would add extra time. He was on the road by early Sunday morning.
He reached Chicago on Monday morning, in the hour before dawn.
While he enjoyed most big cities — their large and fluid populations allowed him to wander without arousing suspicion — he was particularly fond of Chicago, drawn to its cosmopolitan history, its noted architecture and varied nightlife. He especially enjoyed watching the Cubs play at Wrigley Field.
Fletcher had purchased the townhouse for a song when the real-estate bubble burst during the financial crisis of 2007, which was, at least according to some prominent economists, still ongoing. Located in the historic Prairie Avenue District and nestled between multimillion-dollar mansions, the spacious, four-level brick home had been upgraded with modern amenities by the previous owner, who had also invested a considerable amount of money into custom lighting, two marble baths and a dual-zone HVAC system. Two large decks offered sweeping views of