by Mason Cross
“I said whoever it was wasn’t helping him; they were using him.”
“And?”
“And that did the job, really threw him off his stride. He’s so arrogant, it was probably the first time it had even occurred to him. And he looked pissed.”
“So what does that all mean?”
“I think it means he’ll go for another specific target this time. A high-value target. To prove he’s his own man. To prove he can do whatever he likes.”
“He pretty much did that tonight,” Banner said grimly, thinking about the carnage back at the lake house.
“But he only got Hatcher because ‘Agent Edgar’ set it up. Castle would have gotten him out otherwise. That’s going to eat away at him; trust me. He’ll go for someone important. He’s going to take this personally.” Blake stopped and looked ahead through the windshield. A dull red neon glow emanated from a building a mile down the road: the motel. “Earlier, you asked me who and where. I can’t get specific on who yet, but I think I know where.”
“Have you ever thought about getting straight to the point?”
Blake put his hands up in apology. “Sorry. I tend to talk in circles when I’m thinking. Chicago. I think he’s headed back to Chicago.”
52
2:11 a.m.
Banner stared back at Blake. Just when she’d thought she had a handle on him, he’d pulled a complete one eighty. He was agreeing with the profilers now?
“What makes you think that?” she asked. “What changed your mind?”
Blake shook his head. “I haven’t changed my mind. I always thought he’d aim to end up there. It’s home turf, and he’ll want to reassert himself. Especially if he’s leading up to his big finish. I’m betting being hurt and the fact somebody’s muscling in on his show might make him accelerate his timetable.”
Banner looked away and cursed. Her first reaction was as a mother: The monster was coming home. Living in Chicago during Wardell’s first spree, she’d felt the same anxiety as everyone else. But it was different now: Annie was no longer a baby, no longer safe and secure in her bassinette.
With an effort of will, she forced herself to snap into professional mode, running through the logistics in her head. “He can’t make Chicago tomorrow. It’ll take well over a day by road. At least.”
“Two days from now will be Tuesday. Tuesday is . . .”
“Election day,” Banner said, finishing the thought.
“That certainly suggests some interesting targets, doesn’t it?”
Banner put the car into drive and pulled out on the highway again, running through this new scenario, trying to figure out what Castle would have done and what Edwards would now do.
“Like I said,” Blake continued, “I was just talking, trying to get under his skin. But . . .”
“What?”
“I think I might have been right. I think somebody’s using him. It’s the only explanation.”
“For what?”
“For why somebody would help him out without him knowing about it.”
“But that makes no kind of sense at all.”
Blake just raised his eyebrows, as if to say, But there it is.
Banner pulled up in front of the motel and parked.
“I booked us two rooms,” Banner said, and then immediately delivered herself a mental kick. Why the hell had she said that? She felt herself flush.
Blake smiled slowly. “That’s for the best. We’re both going to need the sleep. We need to be on the road early tomorrow.”
She opened her mouth to respond—to explain that she hadn’t meant anything by that, or to make a joke about it, or maybe to ask just what the hell he meant by “that’s for the best.”
Instead, she composed herself and said, “Tomorrow? Where are we going tomorrow?”
“New York City.”
She fought the abrupt urge to slap Blake. She counted to five and spoke slowly, unable to mask the annoyance in her tone. “You said Wardell was going to Chicago.”
“I think he is, but I want to talk to somebody in New York.”
“Blake—”
“Sorry, but it’s better I’m vague about this one for the time being. You might call the gentleman ‘high value.’”
53
3:11 a.m.
Wardell was hurting.
The shot fired by the FBI bitch had grazed him high up on his left leg. He’d been lucky that it hadn’t been a direct hit, but it had carved a wicked trench three inches long across the outside of his thigh. He’d lost some blood, but not too much. Despite being slapped on in a hurry, the four-by-four-inch gauze bandage with tie straps from the blowout kit had held. If nothing else, the night had confirmed two more names for his list: Elaine Banner and Carter Blake.
His pack and the rest of his equipment were still where he’d stashed them the previous afternoon: under a camouflage tarpaulin three miles from Hatcher’s lake house. It had felt like three hundred miles in the dark, with the leg wound, but the distance had been a necessary precaution, to keep things well out of reach of his pursuers.
He’d stopped hearing the sounds of people searching for him on the ground about a mile from the house, although every so often one of the helos swung overhead, casting its beam over the treetops. That was no sweat. He could always hear them coming a good minute before they appeared, ample time to make himself invisible. He reached camp around three in the morning, allowed himself forty minutes of rest after he’d redressed his wound, then changed out of the soaking BDUs and into a dry pair of blue jeans and a plaid shirt. He’d purchased both from a factory outlet store in Rapid City before he’d gone to the diner.
He kept rubbing the outside of the dressing on his leg compulsively, wincing at the sharp pain each time. To distract himself from the compulsion, he unfurled the tarp again and laid his remaining weapons and clips on top of it in perfectly squared rows. He’d kept the AK and the SIG and the Rem, as well as the Glock 23 he’d taken from one of the feds in the big truck. He arranged each gun in a separate row, with its spare magazines to the left. The rifles at the top, then the SIG, and finally the Glock. The order calmed him, soothed the niggling pain in his leg.
As he worked, he thought about the night. It had not been an unqualified success. He’d killed his stated target, sure, but if what Blake had said was the truth, maybe he’d had inside help.
You’re being used.
But used for what? Wardell acted according to his own agenda, killing whomever he pleased, whenever he pleased. How could someone be using him to kill people if he was choosing the targets? An unfamiliar, unpleasant feeling was stirring in his gut. It was like the feeling after he’d missed the outright kill on the deliveryman. Could it be that someone was actually predicting his actions? Somebody who knew how Wardell would act before he himself did? Was it possible that he was that predictable?
He shook his head and felt a new experience: self-doubt. The answer was no; it wasn’t possible. Edward Nolan? Sure, he could see how that could have been foreseen. John Hatcher he’d actually gone ahead with because it could be foreseen through the combination of shared history and proximity. He’d figured they’d predict him as a target and had even called that reporter about it to make sure they didn’t vanish on some wild-goose chase this time. Because he’d wanted the challenge, because he’d wanted another shot at Blake.
But who would gain from the deaths of Hatcher and Nolan? They had nothing to do with each other, beyond their tenuous connections to Wardell. Neither held any real power or influence. And the others, the truly random kills in Cairo and Fort Dodge and Rapid City—who benefited from those deaths? Nobody, that was who.
But somebody had set up the red van as a decoy. Somebody in the know had tipped off the media that he’d escaped.
You’re being used.
Wardell grabbed his pack an
d started jamming spare magazines and supplies into it, trying to banish the doubts with activity. They’d want him to have doubts, would want him to be distracted from his mission. Well, that was too bad. Whoever was helping him or using him could keep on trying. Wardell would do his own thing. He put the SIG in his side holster, tucked the Glock into the back of his belt, and slipped the rifles inside the long bag. He was ready for the hike.
54
6:00 a.m.
I awoke to the sound of the alarm on my phone and hauled myself out of bed with a Herculean effort. It felt as though somebody had borrowed my body during the night and stuffed it into a tumble dryer on maximum spin. I stepped into the shower and turned on the water as hot as I could stand it.
I emerged five minutes later and toweled myself down, surveying my new outfit. Despite being officially removed from the action, Banner still had people loyal to her, and they were continuing to provide assistance below the radar. I dressed in the clothes one of them had conjured up for me: black jeans, black T-shirt, polo shirt—navy blue of course. It wasn’t emblazoned with the FBI logo at least, and everything fit me. I knocked on Banner’s door at 6:25 and she answered immediately, looking pressed and groomed and like she’d just stepped out of wardrobe.
“Good morning,” I said.
“Is it?” Her voice was sharp, like she didn’t like mornings a whole lot. “Plane leaves in two hours. Let’s go.”
55
8:22 a.m.
I drove this time. Things would have been a lot easier had we still had access to the full resources of the Bureau, but Banner’s removal from active duty meant we’d have to start making some compromises on convenience. First example: commercial flights instead of the Lear, which meant separate flights and making connections. It also meant passing through regular airport security.
We made the airport in good time and hopped on a short flight to Minneapolis. Banner’s FBI badge allowed us to take our weapons, although they had to be stowed with baggage. A thirty-minute layover, and then the flight to NYC would take a little less than three hours. Banner worked most of it on her phone, talking to the people she could trust, getting updates on progress, and keeping tabs on how Edwards was running the task force. She spoke to somebody named Paxon a number of times.
I used the time to do some of my own work: think about the case, let things percolate a little in my brain. The confirmation that there was more at work here than just one madman had thrown up a whole lot of complications that I could have done without. It cast new light on many of the events of the past four days—my attempted mugging in Cairo, for one. I had a few ideas about what might be happening, but so far the only motive I could come up with felt wrong.
At the midway point of the flight, we were served an in-flight breakfast that tasted like all in-flight breakfasts—as though it had been stored for a month inside an old suitcase and then microwaved, still inside the suitcase. The coffee, at least, was okay. I drank three cups in quick succession, sharpening myself up for the hours ahead.
When Banner took a break to drink her own coffee, sensibly forgoing the breakfast, I told her who we were going to see and why we had to go alone. She wasn’t exactly happy about it, or convinced about the use of our time.
“What if Wardell hits somewhere else while we’re in New York?”
“It’s a possibility,” I agreed. “But it’s the same problem we’ve faced all along. If we don’t know where he’s going to strike, how can we do anything about it? Hell, we didn’t stop him when we did know where.”
She thought about it for a long minute, finally nodding. “You’re right, unfortunately. All we can do is identify danger zones and try to cover them as best we can.”
“You don’t sound like somebody who’s off duty.”
She smiled. “We have good people on this. With any luck, Edwards won’t get in their way too much.”
“How’s it going, anyway?”
“For a change, it looks like everyone agrees with you: He’s headed back to Chicago. We’re prioritizing towns en route and covering as many other bases as we can, of course. We’re making it really general, telling people anywhere in the area to be cautious, make only essential journeys.” She stopped and looked out of the window for a moment, and for a second it looked like she was about to throw up.
“Are you okay?”
She looked pained. “Air sickness. I’ll be fine. Christ, it’s not like we need to tell people to be cautious. People are scared, Blake. It feels like we’re admitting defeat every time we issue one of those warnings, like he’s beating us.”
I said nothing.
“Why go see this guy now?” she asked, turning the conversation back to our rendezvous in New York. “Why not before?”
“I didn’t think he could tell us anything important before.”
“Why not?”
I reconsidered. “Maybe important is the wrong word. What I mean is, it didn’t seem like I could learn anything urgent. As in urgent to the main task, which is stopping Wardell. If the building’s on fire, you ought to spend all your time putting the fire out. You worry about figuring out who started the fire later.”
“Appropriate analogy, Blake.”
“Sorry.”
“All right, so what changed your mind? Why has it become urgent?”
“Because I have a hunch that the person who started this fire is more significant than we thought. And if we’re lucky, it might even give us Wardell.”
56
2:07 p.m.
We landed at Newark a little after lunchtime. No Bureau car was waiting for us, of course, but in any case we needed to leave as little trail as possible. We took an airport taxi into the city. It dropped us on the corner of Worth and West Broadway. Looking south, it was impossible to miss the brand new World Trade Center towering above its neighbors. It made me think about that Springsteen record again, one line in particular. The line about how everything that dies comes back.
We took a yellow cab north to SoHo, got out on Broome Street and walked a couple of blocks to a tall office building at the corner of Lafayette.
Banner looked up at the glass frontage, reflecting a gunmetal gray sky in the November daylight.
“Here?” She sounded doubtful.
“Here,” I confirmed. I took a step forward, activating the sensor for the big revolving door, which began circling demurely. I held my arm out—after you—and Banner stepped into the revolving door. It brought us out in an anonymous reception area, the width of the building but only thirty feet deep. The gray of the carpet was not far from the color of the sky outside. A long, high reception desk ran the length of the space at the other side, looking a lot like an airport check-in. A pair of potted ferns provided a splash of verdant color to relieve the austerity. There were two female receptionists at the desk, one young, one in middle age. The middle-aged one was on the phone. The younger one smiled politely as we entered.
I could see Banner reach unconsciously for her FBI identification and touched her forearm to stop her. I didn’t blame her. It probably gets to be as reflexive and as reliable as putting your hand out to open a door.
“Good afternoon,” I said. “We’re looking for Kane Holdings?”
The brunette reciprocated the good afternoon and consulted something on her desk, below the upper shelf visible to visitors.
She repeated the name to herself. “I’m not sure . . . Oh, here it is. They’re on fourteen. Looks like they just moved in. Can I ask you to sign in?”
I thanked her and signed us in as John and Jane Smith. The receptionist indicated the elevators, and we stepped in and hit the button. When the doors had closed, Banner spoke for the first time.
“You never told me how the hell—”
I shot her a pointed sidelong glance.
“Good at finding people,” she said wryly, shaking her head
.
“Let me do the talking.”
The red LCD counter crept up to fourteen; the elevator pinged and the doors slid open, revealing more gray carpet and a long corridor with a door every thirty feet or so. Some of the doors were unmarked; some had the remains of nameplates that had been peeled off. There was no door marked as Kane Holdings. We heard a click as one of the doors at the far end of the corridor opened inward, and a guy the size and shape of a WWE wrestler stepped out.
He said nothing, just occupied the corridor like a rhino in a supermarket aisle. It was an apt comparison in other ways too: His skin looked gray and dry and tough. We approached him. When we were within a dozen paces, he spoke. He addressed me, not even looking at Banner.
“Mr. Blake.” It was an acknowledgment, not a question. The Russian accent was pronounced, the three syllables spaced out and carefully separated.
“Yes.”
“Mr. Korakovski is able to give you fifteen minutes.”
57
3:04 p.m.
The Black Hills National Park stretched out for sixty miles to the west of John Hatcher’s wood and glass monument to his own vanity. As soon as Wardell had discovered that, he’d known the target really was ideal—because it allowed a million perfect escape routes. Unless you were wearing a hi-vis hunting vest and waving at the sky, nobody was going to be able to find you once you got more than a hundred yards into those woods. There were a few small Forest Service roads within easy distance of Wardell’s camp and some unmapped logging trails. Wardell ignored these in favor of an eighteen-mile hike cross-country to the point where Highway 85 cut through the woods.