Cross Fire
curtains, and then I was just… on the floor. I don’t even know what happened after that. Or right before.”
In fact, she’d been the one to drag a phone off a side table and call for help. The incident would probably come back to her in pieces, but I didn’t push it for now.
“Was this the first time you’d met up with Mr. Downey?” I asked.
“No. He was kind of a regular.”
“Always at the Mayflower?”
She nodded. “He liked that suite. We always went to the same room.”
A nurse in pink scrubs came into the cubicle. “Rebecca, hon? They’re ready for you upstairs, okay?”
The curtain around us slid open, and several other people were there now. One of the residents started unlocking the wheels on her gurney.
“Just one more question,” I said. “How long were you in the room tonight before this happened?”
Rebecca closed her eyes and thought for a second. “Five minutes, maybe? We just got there. Detective…
I’m in college. My parents
…”
“You won’t be charged with anything, but your name will probably get out. You should call your parents, Rebecca.”
I walked with her as she was rolled out into the hall and toward the elevators. There didn’t seem to be any family or friends around, and it broke my heart a little that she had to go through this alone.
“Listen,” I said. “I’ve been where you are. I’ve had a bullet in my shoulder, and I know how scary this is. You’re going to be fine, Rebecca.”
“Okay,” she said, but I don’t think she believed me. She still looked terrified.
“I’ll check on you later,” I said, just before the elevator doors slid shut between us.
Chapter 36
I HOOFED it back to the car and started scribbling notes against the steering wheel, trying to capture all the different threads running through my head.
Rebecca said she and Downey had been in the room for only a short time. That meant the snipers were set up and ready for them. The killers knew exactly when and where they needed to be, just like they knew when Vinton and Pilkey would be outside the restaurant, and just like they knew Mel Dlouhy’s neighbors were out of town when they came by to murder him.
Whoever was behind this had a firm handle on the victims’ habits, the movements of the people around them, and even the most private details of their otherwise public lives. It struck me that this kind of intelligence gathering took time, manpower, and know-how, and quite possibly money.
I thought about what Siegel had said to me on the roof of the Moore Building tonight.
These guys are guns for hire.
I hadn’t ruled it out then, and I was a step closer to ruling it in now. I just didn’t like thinking that Siegel had beaten me to it. Usually I’m not like that, but he just rubbed me the wrong way.
There was obviously some kind of specific and disciplined agenda behind these killings. If a shooter as skilled as this one had wanted Rebecca taken out, she would have been dead for sure. But she didn’t fit the profile; her only crime had been to land in the wrong place at the wrong time. Not so for the others. By the apparent rules of this game, Rebecca didn’t deserve to die, but Skip Downey and the other Washington “bad guys” did.
So whose game was it? Who was writing the rules? And where was it all heading?
I still couldn’t dismiss the possibility that our gunmen were operating on their own. But I also was just paranoid enough by now — or maybe experienced enough — that a list of scarier alternatives was taking shape in my mind.
Could this somehow be government backed? Some domestic agency? An international one?
Or was the Mob behind it somehow? The military? Maybe even just a very well-connected individual, with deep pockets and a serious ax to grind?
In any case, the most important questions were still left hanging: Who did they have their eye on next? And how the hell were we supposed to protect every high-profile scumbag in Washington? It just couldn’t be done.
Unless we got very, very lucky, someone else was going to die before this was over. And it was most likely somebody who many people wouldn’t mind seeing dead. That was the beauty of this terrifying game.
Chapter 37
THE NEXT DAY was a benchmark for Nana and me. Things had been chilly between us since I’d brought in the security at the house, but when I came down and found her cooking breakfast for Rakeem and his guys, I knew we were at least partway over the hump.
“Oh,
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher