Double Cross
camera along with everybody else.
The door across the street opened. Detectives Cross and Stone came out first, ahead of the body. They both looked like they’d been eating the same shit sandwich—and it looked good in telephoto.
Click! Nice little two-shot of the opposition. Beaten to a pulp but not quite defeated. Still standing, anyway.
Cross looked especially pissed off. His hands and shirt were covered in Kitzmiller’s blood.
Click!
Another classic shot.
The two of them joined the other cop—John Sampson, Cross’s friend—who was waiting on the sidewalk. Stone said something in the big lug’s ear—
click
!—and Sampson shook his head. He apparently couldn’t believe what he was hearing. Probably the news that it was Brian Kitzmiller up on the roof.
Click, click, click!
This shit was golden.
The little guy next to him kept talking while he worked, a real live chatterbox. “They say Cross over there is one of our best. Seems like he’s getting his ass kicked a little on this one.”
“Looks that way, huh?” Neil Stephens said, and kept snapping away, getting each of the three detectives’ faces close-up, as tight as he could go. Nothing too arty, but good stuff. Keeping it real.
Then he pulled back some and got all three of them in one master shot.
Click, click, click!
Then he stopped shooting and just watched their faces through the viewfinder for several heartbeats.
Is that how he’d take them out in the end? All three in one shot heard round the world? Or maybe do it nice and slow—one at a time
.
Stone.
Sampson.
Cross.
He hadn’t decided yet. There was no rush—better to enjoy the journey and get there when he got there. However it went down, the ending would be the same: dead, dead, and dead. And he would be a legend—right up there with the best.
“So you say you just got to town?” The little guy was still blabbing his ass off. “Guess that means you haven’t talked to any of them yet, huh?”
“Not yet,” Neil Stephens said.
Naht yet
. “But I’m definitely looking forward to it.”
Chapter 89
THERE IS A SAD LITTLE DEATH of hope and optimism that happens every time something tragic and unforeseen like this goes down. It was as if Kitz’s murder opened up a little more room for hatred in my heart.
Was that true
? All I could hope for now was that we would get the killer—or killers—and stop all this somehow.
So I did the one positive thing I could do: I kept working the case, harder than ever before. For starters, Bree, Sampson, and I stayed at the house on Nineteenth Street late into the night. We sucked every last drop of evidence out of the crime scene, but truthfully there wasn’t much to go on. The place was clean. It turned out that the homeowners were away for the month. None of the neighbors had seen anything unusual. No one had spotted DCAK before or after he murdered Brian Kitzmiller.
I got home around three thirty the next morning and grabbed a few hours of sleep, then pushed myself to get up and start all over again. There were patients to see first thing, but I used my early-morning run to the office to go over everything in my head one more time. Then again. And again.
What was I missing?
He was evolving—that much was clear. Just about every successful serial killer does; it’s only a matter of how. Certainly his methods were improving, and growing more complex. Everything about yesterday was a little bigger—the news coverage, the derring-do, and the amount of live-television time he’d gotten.
It was about control, wasn’t it?
That’s what was changing most dramatically here. It crystallized for me as I sprinted across the National Mall, my lungs starting to burn. With each murder, DCAK got a little more control, a little more of an edge on us. Which meant—ironically—that time
wasn’t
on our side.
I was still thinking of the killer as
he
, but that might not be true. A man and a woman were probably working together, leaving a trail of clues for us to follow.
Chapter 90
IN MANY WAYS, I felt like I was leading a double life—probably because I was. After Sandy Quinlan’s appointment that morning, I had Anthony Demao on deck, figuring I’d squeeze him in for as many sessions as possible following his meltdown. I still didn’t know how things stood between the two of them since the scene that I’d witnessed in my waiting room.
So I was relieved when they ignored each other on her way out that morning. Sandy looked
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