Born to Run (6 page)

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Authors: James Grippando

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General

BOOK: Born to Run
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"I already told you too much," he said. "I know better than to trust a reporter. You aren't going to pay. Period."

"Let's be reasonable adults here."

He didn't answer.

"Hello?" she said, but the line was silent.

Her source was gone--and so was her story of the century.

Chloe closed her flip phone and held her head in her hands, staring down at the sidewalk--until she noticed a car pull up to the bus stop.

The night was suddenly a blur, and everything seemed to happen at once. Instinct took over, warning her that the same car had passed by the bus stop just a few minutes earlier, that someone had been circling the Plexiglas fishbowl, that the driver's side window was open despite the cold night air, that the silhouette behind the wheel was the face of her informant, that she was staring into a marksman's tunnel of death. She braced herself for the flash of gunpowder in the darkness, the crack of a pistol, the sound of her own scream--but there was none of that. Or perhaps she'd simply blinked and missed that final split second of her young life.

Chloe felt the hot explosion between her eyes--and nothing more--as the car pulled away. Her body slumped forward and dropped, face-first, onto the sidewalk.

Chapter
9

Jack and Andie went straight from the White House Christmas party to the FBI Headquarters.

Initially, Jack had agreed with Andie's gut reaction: the message was from some wacko who'd gotten hold of Jack's cell number. That all changed when Andie forwarded it to Stan White, the assistant special agent in charge (ASAC) of the Washington field office. White immediately summoned Jack for a debriefing, and Andie came along. Something about that message made the FBI treat it as a serious and credible threat.

Jack and Andie were seated on one side of the conference table. Around the table with them were the ASAC, two supervisory special agents from the FBI, a criminal profiler from the FBI Academy in Quantico, and two special agents from the Secret Service presidential protection detail. Each had a printed copy of the message: "Congratulations to your old man. How would he like to be president? I can make it happen, guaranteed. Meet me. Monday. Two P
. M
. Wait outside the mall-side entrance to the National Museum of Natural History. Alone."

"Clearly he's talking about assassination," said White. "How else could someone 'guarantee' that a vice presidential nominee will become president?"

White was in his fifth year as the Washington ASAC, bumping right up against the FBI's mandatory retirement age of fifty
-
five. He struck Jack as the anti-G-man. Had they allowed smoking in the building, he probably would have lit up. If neckties were optional for a man of his position, he wouldn't have owned one.

White glanced toward the profiler, inviting her comments.

"Very similar to the previous message," she said.

"Previous message?" said Jack. "I didn't get a previous message."

"No, you didn't," said White. "Someone else did."

"Who?"

"That's a detail the FBI can't share with you."

"Do you have a suspect?" said Jack.

"We've constructed a profile," said the ASAC. He glanced again at the profiler, as if to say "Give him a little
."

"In general terms," she said, "a self-deluded loner who fancies himself an assassin who works for hire."

Jack said, "Why would he contact me instead of my father directly?"

Another agent jumped in. "Between a lawyer and a politician, maybe he thought the lawyer was more open to murder for hire."

That brought a few smiles from law enforcement--even Andie.

"Traitor," Jack said beneath his breath.

"Sorry," said Andie.

White said, "More likely, he fears that every communication to Harry is being screened by law enforcement. You're a criminal defense lawyer with privileged communications. Surely someone like you isn't going to allow law enforcement to monitor his incoming e-mails."

"He had to know I'd run to the FBI. He's probably just a nut who gets off by broadcasting his intentions. I saw plenty of that doing death penalty work."

"I don t think he's broadcasting anything," said the profiler. "He's negotiating."

"Let me get this straight," said Jack. "You truly think that this guy wants to meet with me tomorrow morning outside the Smithsonian and talk about killing the president for money?"

"We did say 4self-deluded loner,' " said White.

Jack said, "So if I show up at two P
. M
. tomorrow, he'll be there?"

The ASAC shrugged. "One way to find out."

"Wait a minute," said Andie. "I've been quiet because of my relationship with Jack, but this is starting to sound dangerous."

"What Andie's trying to say is that I'm a great catch but I make lousy bait."

"Cut the cornball, Jack, or I'll switch sides."

The ASAC raised a hand, as if to step between prizefighters. "Let's break this down. One, we have a threat against the president. Two, we believe it's credible."

"For reasons you won't share with me," said Jack.

"Three," said the ASAC, "we know where he'll be and when he's going to be there. The Washington Mall, especially around the Smithsonian, is a very public place at two o'clock in the afternoon. All we need is Jack to hang out in the crowd and wait for him."

"No," said Andie.

"I suppose you're right," said White. "It takes a pretty courageous civilian to step up and help the FBI apprehend a would-be presidential assassin."

"I'm courageous," said Jack.

"No you're not," said Andie.

"I date you."

The ASAC raised a hand again. "We're not going to take chances here, Jack. You'll wear a Kevlar overcoat. Undercover agents will be posted all around. You'll be linked to the command center by surveillance electronics."

"I'll do it," he said. "What?" said Andie.

"But I want Andie talking me through it. Appearances notwithstanding, she's probably the least likely to get me killed." "You sure about this?" said Andie.

"You mean about doing this, or the part about you not getting me killed?" "Both." "I'm sure."

"Good man," said White. "It's a go."

Chapter
10

It was Paulette's first visit to her sister's apartment.

The phone call had come Sunday at 3:12 A
. M
. AS a White House correspondent, Paulette was accustomed to breaking news and ringing telephones at all hours of the night. The detective's tone of voice, however, made it immediately clear that this call had nothing to do with world peace, a terrorist bombing, or the latest Washington scandal. She drove straight from her Georgetown town house to the medical examiner's office, and in a split second, she knew: "That's Chloe," she'd told the assistant ME.

Seven hours later, Paulette still felt numb.

The sun had yet to poke through the gray morning sky, and last night's nip had yet to burn off. The apartment door was open, but Paulette watched from the outside, behind a taut line of yellow police tape. Inside, a photographer captured the efficiency apartment exactly the way Chloe had left it, from the notebook computer on the loveseat to the can of diet soda on the table. Investigators searched for drops of blood, evidence of a struggle, indicators of a violent boyfriend, or any other details that might tell Chloe's story.

"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.

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