Born to Run js-7

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Born to Run js-7 Page 5

by James Grippando


  “I’m very sorry for your loss,” said Detective Edwards, “but I can’t let you come inside just yet.”

  “I promise not to touch anything.”

  He was sympathetic, but firm. “Ms. Sparks, how many years do you think I’ve been working homicides in this city?”

  She could have guessed “too many.” A long career was written all over his face-the jaded look in his eyes, the worry lines that seemed chiseled in stone. It spoke of too many crimes unsolved, too little satisfaction in the occasional service of justice.

  “Twenty?” she said.

  “More. So I totally understand when loved ones want to help. But it’s best to let the professionals do their job. Even though this isn’t where the crime took place, I’ve seen crucial evidence turn up at a victim’s home. Sadly, I’ve also seen crucial evidence contaminated by the victim’s family.”

  “Okay, I’ll wait,” she said, but it was hardly her nature to stand aside. She remained in the doorway, watching.

  Chloe’s efficiency apartment was tiny even by LaDroit Park neighborhood standards. A Murphy bed and loveseat on one wall. A table, two chairs, and a small television on the other. There was a small stove right next to her closet, and a small alcove in the back apparently doubled as the dressing and cooking area. In the very back was the bathroom. The only window was in the corner, and it looked directly at the alley. Paint was peeling from the ceiling. Several brown stains and a distinct musty odor told of leaky pipes from the apartment above. An investigator was on hands and knees, searching the old sculptured green carpet with a flashlight. It struck Paulette that he could easily have found something buried in those fibers from two or even three decades removed.

  Paulette said, “What are you hoping to find?”

  “Luck,” said Detective Edwards.

  He was drifting across the room like an art lover in the Louvre, slowly and methodically observing and absorbing everything. He stopped at the back wall in front of a framed photograph. There were no other paintings or photographs on any of the walls, but Paulette was too far away to see who was in it.

  Detective Edwards said, “Your sister knew the vice president?”

  “Is that who’s in the photo?”

  “Yup,” said Edwards. “Looks to be in his office. Signed, too: For Chloe, warm regards, Phillip Grayson.”

  “Chloe was a White House intern. They assigned her to the vice president.”

  He glanced around the shabby apartment. “What happened?”

  “Chloe did something very stupid. Went out one night and partied till dawn, showed up at work the next morning still stinking of vodka and with a joint in her purse. Fired on the spot.”

  “Drugs,” he said, as he jotted down his thought on a notepad. “Might explain what she was doing on the street alone last night. Might also explain why she got shot.”

  Paulette didn’t argue. “May I see the photo?”

  Edwards took it off the wall and brought it to her. Seeing Chloe in the proudest moment of her life brought on an unexpected wave of emotions-sadness, anger, a terrible sense of waste. There was guilt, as well. Not that she felt responsible for Chloe’s death. Her feelings stemmed from the simple fact that she and Chloe had been born seven years apart to different mothers and had never lived in the same house together. It was classic half-sister guilt-the knowledge that their father had always wanted “the girls” to be closer, the awkward feeling that she should have felt sadder than she did about the death of her father’s other daughter.

  “Were you two close?” said Edwards.

  The question only added to Paulette’s pain-and confusion. “I tried reaching out to her so many times. Chloe wanted help from no one. Her decision to work for the Inquiring Star made it clear that she especially didn’t want help from me.”

  “When was the last time you two saw each other?”

  “We hadn’t spoken in months. Until she called last night.”

  “What was that about?”

  “Hard to say, exactly. It was totally unexpected. And she was very scattered. I feared she was on drugs again.”

  “The toxicology report will answer that for us. What did the two of you talk about?”

  “It was very bizarre. As best I can tell, Chloe was calling to tell me that she was working on a big story. To brag, I guess.”

  “Brag?”

  Paulette breathed a heavy sigh. “Chloe and I had a complicated relationship. I’m sure she knew that I was at the White House press party last night. It’s sad, but with everything that happened to her since the internship, the thought of me at the White House probably made her a little crazy. My guess is that she had something to drink-or worse-and then picked up the phone to tell me that while I was wasting my time drinking eggnog at some big-shot party, she was out getting the biggest story of the year.”

  “Did she say what the story was about?”

  “No. Honestly, I doubt there was even a story.”

  He drifted in the direction of Chloe’s computer. It was on the loveseat next to an open bag of popcorn. The LCD screen was black, but when he moved the mouse, Paulette could see it brighten. For Paulette, it was an odd feeling-to think that the detective was now viewing the very same thing-possibly the last thing-that Chloe had looked at before going out and getting shot.

  The photographer announced that he was finished, and Paulette stepped aside to let him out the door.

  “Can I come in now?” she asked Edwards.

  The detective was fixated on Chloe’s computer.

  “Detective?” said Paulette.

  He looked up. The crime scene investigators had finished with the carpet and had moved to the kitchen area.

  “Come on over here,” said Edwards. “Take a look at this.”

  Paulette ducked beneath the tape and crossed the room. Displayed on Chloe’s computer screen was the inbox to her e-mail, the typical collection of information: sender, date received, subject.

  Edwards said, “Do you recognize any of these senders?”

  Paulette took a closer look. There was the usual smattering of obvious spam-collectively, important messages for men with erectile dysfunction who needed to lose weight and borrow money fast. Paulette was only halfway down the list when another visitor knocked on the door frame.

  “FBI,” the woman said with authority. “Step away from the computer.”

  “What?” said Detective Edwards.

  “Supervisory Special Agent Lloyd,” she said, as she stepped beneath the police tape and flashed a badge. Then he showed Edwards her papers. “We’re here to exercise a search warrant.”

  “Since when does the FBI investigate homicides?” said Edwards.

  “Could you step aside, please? I need the computer.”

  Paulette watched the two law enforcement officers square their shoulders and stiffen their jaws, a sure sign of an ensuing state/federal jurisdictional squabble. The computer was obviously a significant piece of a larger puzzle that she hadn’t even begun to understand. Paulette studied the screen, but she couldn’t possibly commit Chloe’s inbox to memory. She snatched her iPhone from her purse and quickly snapped a photograph of the screen.

  “What are you doing?” Agent Lloyd said sharply.

  “Nothing,” said Paulette.

  “Did you just take a photograph?”

  “Gotta go. See ya.”

  Paulette was under the tape and out the door faster than the FBI agent could say J. Edgar Hoover. She didn’t slow down until she was beyond the courtyard gate and outside on the sidewalk. A gust of cold wind nearly slammed her against her car, but it didn’t faze her. She stopped and pulled up the photograph on her iPhone. It was a little blurry, but the zoom made it legible.

  More spam. A few messages looked legitimate, but nothing of moment-until she spotted the third one from the bottom. It had been delivered yesterday afternoon. The sender was unrecognizable, an apparently random selection of numbers and letters rather than a coherent screen name. The su
bject line was what caught her attention. It read more like the opening lines of a full message than a “re” line. In fact, it was too long to fit in the allocated space, so Chloe’s inbox had cut it off with an ellipsis:

  I can bring down Keyes. No bullshit. Meet me at…

  Paulette felt chills, and it had nothing to do with the December cold front. Even ten minutes earlier, the message would not have hit her with this impact, but the FBI’s sudden interest in Chloe’s computer changed the picture entirely. Last night’s unexpected phone call-Chloe’s last words to Paulette, perhaps her last words ever spoken to anyone-had just taken a quantum leap in credibility.

  It looked like Chloe had a meeting with a source.

  She really was on to a story.

  A big one.

  Chapter 11

  Jack exited the subway at Smithsonian Station and started walking along the National Mall toward the Capitol. He was following the instructions contained in his anonymous e-mail exactly. More important, he was doing it all under FBI surveillance.

  “We see you,” said Andie, her voice transmitting through Jack’s tiny earpiece. “Move to the far left of the walkway if you can hear me clearly.”

  Jack drifted left, comforted to know that he wasn’t going it alone.

  It was an overcast Monday afternoon, the gray-white skies as cool and washed out as the surrounding sea of stone buildings and marble monuments. Jack stopped at the foot of the museum steps, his back to Madison Drive and the mall. He wasn’t looking to be a hero-especially a dead one. The National Mall was a busy place in the middle of the afternoon. Jack was fairly certain, however, that he was the only visitor wearing an FBI-issued Kevlar overcoat and FBI surveillance electronics.

  “I’m here,” he said for Andie’s benefit.

  “Don’t talk unless you have to,” she said, her voice in his earpiece. “If he sees your lips moving, he’ll know you’re wired.”

  Jack stood and waited, glancing about nervously at strangers coming and going from the museum. The block-long, granite-faced building was a classic design, and the fact that Jack actually recognized it as Beaux-Arts style was yet another disturbing sign that he was indeed forty. His last visit to the Smithsonian had been as a teenager, one of several bonding trips that Harry Swyteck had arranged in hopes of dealing with the rough spots in their relationship the same way he had always dealt with them: by pretending they didn’t exist. The trip was nonetheless memorable, not because the Hope Diamond had turned out to be much smaller than Jack had expected, but because the burning question of the day was whether to commit suicide or homicide before his old man could drag him to every last one of the museum’s 126 million specimens.

  Jack’s cell rang, and the display flashed “Out of Area,” no incoming number. Jack answered it, and the instructions came quickly:

  “Go inside to the rotunda. Walk around the stuffed elephant and come back outside.”

  The call ended before Jack could respond. It seemed like a pointless exercise, until Jack realized that the museums probably had metal detectors. It was a clever way for his caller to find out if he was armed. He wasn’t-but he did worry that his wire would be detected, screwing up everything.

  Andie’s voice was suddenly in his ear, as if she could read his mind. “Don’t worry about the metal detectors. The museum only has enough staff to turn them on at random intervals. Your caller obviously doesn’t know that.”

  Jack was only partially assuaged. It somehow seemed way too predictable that the terrorist with a bazooka would get through security, but the good citizen trying to thwart a possible presidential assassination would be stopped.

  Jack climbed the granite stairs and entered through the revolving door. The rotunda was as impressive as he’d remembered it, though some things had changed. The simulated habitat around the eight-ton African bull elephant in the center appeared more natural. And in the post-9/11 world, there were of course metal detectors. As Andie had predicted, however, Jack breezed right past them without setting off alarms. The security guards didn’t pick up his FBI-issued surveillance equipment or Kevlar overcoat either. He paused to check out the elephant-he suddenly wondered if his caller was a Republican-and then he circled around and exited to the mall side of the museum.

  Jack stopped at the top of the stairs, expecting the phone to ring at any moment. He heard only traffic noises from Madison Drive and the whistle of the wind through barren tree branches on the mall. A young mother pushed a stroller along the walkway. A man on the bench had his nose buried in the newspaper. At the base of the stairs, a docent was giving a brief history lesson to a group of tourists. Jack wondered if his caller had lost his nerve. It was starting to feel like a hoax, until he heard the voice from behind.

  “This is for you.”

  Before Jack could speak-before he could even turn around and see what the guy had in his hand-an entire team of undercover FBI agents sprang into action. The man reading the newspaper, the mother pushing the stroller, the docent and his tourists-every single one of them rushed forward, guns drawn.

  “Drop your weapon!”

  “I don’t have no weapon!”

  “Drop it!”

  The man shrieked and jumped on Jack, causing them both to tumble down the granite steps. Jack braced himself for a gunshot from the attacker or even a barrage of firepower from the FBI. Rather than pummeling Jack or trying to hurt him, however, the man was clutching him out of sheer terror. Andie’s voice was in Jack’s ear, but she was drowned out by his attacker’s panicky screams and a chorus of commands from undercover agents. One agent finally managed to pry Jack away from the wrestling match. It took three or four agents to bring the man under control.

  “Don’t move!” they told him.

  “I didn’t do nothing!” the man shouted back, and he started rattling off something in Spanish.

  Another agent helped Jack to the bench, and it took him another moment to realize that it was Andie. She’d rushed over from the hidden command center on the mall.

  “Are you all right?” she asked.

  “Yeah, fine.”

  “You did great.”

  “If you say so.”

  Jack watched the team of agents lift the man to his feet. He was wearing an old navy peacoat, tattered blue jeans, and tennis shoes that didn’t match. His hair was bundled up in a lumpy, matted mess beneath a knit cap. It was hard to tell when he’d last shaved and bathed, but it wasn’t in the last week or probably even in the last month. His hands were cuffed behind his back, and he was no longer fighting back, but he wouldn’t shut up.

  “Muggles! Harry, I’m surrounded by muggles!”

  He was talking to Harry Potter, Jack realized, not Harry Swyteck. The rant continued as the FBI took him away.

  Jack looked at Andie, and she back at him. For a moment, it seemed like a standoff to see who would speak first. Finally, she broke the silence.

  “Strange world out there, isn’t it?”

  “Stranger than it appears, muggle.”

  “What do you mean?”

  Jack glanced toward the base of the stairs, where a pair of agents was struggling to stuff their suspect into the back of an FBI sedan.

  “That accent,” said Jack. “He’s obviously Hispanic. The guy who spoke to me on the telephone had some kind of accent, but it was totally different.”

  “You’re saying they’re different people?”

  Jack took another look. One of the agents was cursing and wiping his hands on the grass. The guy had apparently soiled his pants to make the job of law enforcement that much more unpleasant.

  “I’d bet my life on it,” said Jack.

  A crime-scene photographer approached. A team of specialists had already cordoned off the entrance to the museum with police tape and was collecting evidence.

  “Agent Henning,” the photographer said. “Thought you might want to see this.”

  “What is it?” said Andie.

  “We bagged and tagged the original ev
idence. This is a photo of what was inside the envelope he was carrying.”

  Jack didn’t ask for permission to see it. He peered over Andie’s shoulder and checked out the image on the digital camera’s LCD display.

  It was a photograph of a handwritten message.

  I told you to come alone, it read.

  Before Jack could say anything, Andie turned and ran down the steps. Jack followed. They caught up with the sedan just before it pulled away. She flung open the door.

  “Who gave you this?”

  The man’s eyes were like saucers. “That’s what I been trying to tell you! Some old man paid me fifty bucks, told me to walk up to the guy at the top of the steps and say, ‘This is for you.’”

  “What did he look like?”

  “A muggle! He looked like a muggle!”

  Andie told the driver, “Take him to headquarters. Set up for questioning.”

  The driver nodded. Andie closed the door, and the car pulled away.

  “You believe him?” said Jack.

  “I do,” she said, as her gaze drifted toward the mall, as if she sensed that they were still being watched. “We just caught ourselves a decoy.”

  Chapter 12

  It was almost midnight when Jack and Andie finally sat down for dinner with Harry Swyteck. The hotel’s main dining room was closed, so they took a table in the bar, where the bartender and two lonely businessmen were watching the news on television. It was one of those dark, cherry-paneled rooms with coffered ceilings and red velvet draperies that made Jack think of nineteenth-century robber barons feasting on caviar and smoking cigars while trying to decide which congressman to buy next. As they settled into leather wing chairs, Harry seemed glad to be away from the constant hound of the media, and Jack was equally pleased to see Secret Service agents at a nearby table. Protection had kicked in with the nomination, but after a day like today, not even Andie-an FBI agent-could hazard a guess as to how many agents were assigned to the nominee.

 

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