driveway; another Realtor was showing the place.
“So, why did you get mad at me the other night?” he asked as she turned off the car.
“I wasn’t mad. At first. Then I got mad.”
“Because I drink beer with spaghetti.”
“No. Because… I don’t know. You took it for granted.”
“What?”
“Kissing me like that.”
“Kissing you? I thought after what we’d been through that—”
“That what?”
What had he thought? That he liked her, that he owed her, that he wanted her.
But he seemed unable to say any of those things.
“I didn’t mean it as a bad thing,” Howe told her.
She put her car in gear and pulled away from the curb.
“Where are you going?”
“This isn’t your kind of house. You think it’s too fancy.”
“Yeah, but you like it.”
“You’re the one who’s buying. Or renting. Which one is it?”
“I can buy,” said Howe. “They made a ridiculous offer and I took the job yesterday.”
“You don’t think you deserve it, do you?”
“No, I don’t,” he said.
“Well, you do.”
“How do you know?”
“You just do.” She turned the car around the circle at the end of the cul-de-sac. As they started back up the hill, the people were coming out of the house.
“Let’s go take a look again,” said Howe. “What the hell? You like showing it, and I’m not doing anything.”
She didn’t smile, but the way she turned her head told him somehow she would stop.
Chapter 12
Fisher sat with the bomb squad people as they sent a small robot rover into the apartment to look for more bombs. The rover looked a bit like a Martian lander, and the photos it sent back to the laptop were every bit as sketchy. The herring-bone-pattern linoleum drove the automated video controls nuts, and the operators had a hard time making sure there were no more trip wires or similar devices in place. But at least the man at the laptop was free with his Camels.
The bomb squad moved in with full-gear even after the rover’s search came up empty. Fisher gave them a few minutes, then went inside.
“You shouldn’t be in here,” said one of the officers in a mattress suit near the door.
“If it hasn’t gone boom yet, it’s not going to,” said Fisher, squatting down to examine the doorway. At the bottom was a set of connectors similar to those used in a simple burglar alarm system. Opening the door had broken the connection and set off the bomb. Fisher followed the wire down the scarred hallway to where the bomb had exploded.
“How did you know there was a bomb in there?” asked the NYPD expert who was taking measurements with a laser ruler in the hall.
“I didn’t. I saw the connector thing and I jumped back,” said Fisher.
“You’re lucky the guy was an amateur: Somebody who knew what they were doing would have set it to explode closer to the door or even out in the lobby. Between the heavy door and the shape of the hall, most of the explosion was channeled away from you. Otherwise you would have been nailed.”
He meant that literally: 10d nails had been packed over the weapon as shrapnel.
“You see this kind of bomb before?” Fisher asked.
“Oh, sure. Amateurs. Or someone trying to convince us they’re amateurs.”
“Most people who are stupid are just stupid,” said Fisher.
“Can’t argue with that. Were they trying to kill you specifically, or just anyone?”
“Don’t know yet,” said Fisher. He squatted down to examine a large piece of the exploded bomb, which lay partly embedded in the wall. “Probably just anyone. How would you turn this off?”
“You mean disarm it? Probably some sort of bypass switch at the door.”
“There isn’t one,” said Fisher, rising.
“Remote control or something. It wouldn’t be hard.”
“Yeah, except that’s not part of a remote control unit, right?” Fisher pointed to the piece. “It’s just a metal piece where the explosives were.”
“Might’ve disintegrated. Crime scene guys will go over it pretty well.”
Fisher walked to the far end of the hallway. The window had been blown out, but the locks in the frame were still secure. The bathroom to the right had an open window, but it was too small for anyone but a thin child to climb through. He went into the room on the left. There was no furniture or clothes, no sign that the room had been occupied. The window had a simple lock at the top, but it was not engaged. Fisher checked the casement for another trip wire, then opened the window. The fire escape was to the right.
He leaned out, got his foot on it, then climbed over.
“Fisher, what the hell are you doing?” shouted Macklin, coming into the room just as he swung out.
The FBI agent leaned back over. “You wouldn’t want to do this every day, would you?” he said, climbing in. He scraped his shoe against the side of the building, but the height was a powerful incentive and he kept his momentum going forward. He got into the building.
“What the hell are you doing?” Macklin asked again.
“Trying to figure out how Faud got in and out. And whether he was planning on coming back.”
“He won’t be coming back now, that’s for sure,” said Macklin.
“Guy’s going to run out of places to stay eventually.” Fisher walked to the bathroom. There was soap and toilet paper but nothing else. Fisher leaned over and sniffed the soap. “Ivory,” he declared.
“Yeah?” asked Macklin.
“Same stuff he used at DeGarmo’s.”
“That’ll close the case.”
“Just what I’m thinking,” said Fisher.
“Want to dust it for prints?”
“You’re starting to get the hang of the sarcasm thing, Macklin. Keep it up and in a couple of years you’ll actually say something biting.”
Fisher decided that the bomb had been left for the same reason some people slid hairs in door cracks and dusted the floor with powder: It would clearly and emphatically demonstrate that the apartment had been discovered. That didn’t mean collateral damage wasn’t welcome, only that it wasn’t first on the priority list.
“I think he’d have some sort of vantage point to watch from, or be nearby when the bomb blew,” Macklin told Fisher. “What if we search every apartment the fire escape connects to?”
“That’s twenty-one apartments,” said Fisher.
“We should at least make sure he’s not living in another one here, and that this is just a decoy.”
The bomb had gotten NYPD somewhat more interested in what was going on, and Macklin now had the manpower to do the interviews. On the other hand, the explosion had alerted the other occupants of the building, and Fisher figured anyone dumb enough be a terrorist or hide one would be smart enough to lie about it or, smarter still, to have fled. Still, there was always the chance that someone might remember something about a cross- dressing neighbor with five o’clock shadow. Besides, they were still mired in the straw-grasping phase of the investigation, and so Fisher didn’t object — as long as he didn’t have to do any of the interviews.