2nd Chance - James Patterson [7]
He was a champion at this. Great hand-eye coordination. No one could touch him.
His finger twitched on the trigger. Ghouls, sand mites, towel-heads. Come at me, baby…. Phffft, phffft… Up through the dark corridors… He smashed through an iron door, came upon a whole nest of them, sucking on tabbouleh, playing cards. His weapon spit a steady orange death. Blessed are the peacemakers. He smirked.
He squinted one more time through the sight, replaying the scene at the church in his mind, imagining her face. That little Jemima, with her braided hair, the rainbow-colored knapsack on her back.
Phfft, phfft. An onscreen figure’s chest exploded. This next kill was for the record. Got it! His eye flashed toward the score. Two hundred seventy-six enemy dead.
He took a tug on his Corona and grinned. A new personal record. This score was worth keeping. He punched in his initials: F.C.
He stood at the machine in the Playtime arcade in West Oakland, flicking the trigger long after the game had ended. He was the only white guy in the room. The only one. In fact, that was why he chose to be here.
Suddenly, the four large television sets overhead were blaring the same face. It sent a chill down his back and made him furious.
It was Mercer, the pompous ass who ran the San Francisco cops. He was acting like he had everything figured out.
“We believe this was the act of a single gunman…,” he was saying. “An isolated crime…”
If you only knew. He laughed.
Wait until tomorrow…. You’ll see. Just you wait, Chief Asshole.
“What I want to stress,” the chief of police declared, “is that under no circumstance will we permit this city to be terrorized by racial attack….”
This city. He spat. What do you know about this city? You don’t belong here.
He clutched at a C-1 grenade in his jacket pocket. If he wanted to, he could blow everything open right here. Right now.
But there was work to do.
Tomorrow.
He was going for another personal record.
Chapter 9
THE NEXT MORNING Jacobi and I were back examining the grounds of the La Salle Heights Church.
All night long, I had fretted over what Cindy had told me about a case that had come across her desk. It involved an elderly black woman who lived alone in the Gustave White projects in West Oakland. Three days ago, the Oakland police had found her hanging from a pipe in the basement laundry room, an electrical cord tightly wound around her neck.
At first, the police assumed it was a suicide. No abrasions or defensive wounds were found on her body. But the next day, during the autopsy, a flaky residue was found packed under her nails. It turned out to be human skin with microscopic specks of dried blood. The poor woman had been desperately digging in to someone.
She hadn’t hung herself after all, Cindy said.
The woman had been lynched.
As I went back over the crime scene at the church, I felt uneasy. Cindy could be right. This might not be the first, but the second in an onset of racially driven murders.
Jacobi walked up. He was holding a curled-up Chronicle. “You see this, boss?”
The front page rocked with the blaring headline, “POLICE STUMPED AS GIRL, 11, IS KILLED IN CHURCH ASSAULT.”
The article was written by Tom Stone and Suzie Fitzpatrick, whose careers had been nudged aside by Cindy’s work on the bride and groom case. With the newspapers stoking the fire, and the activists Gray and Jones railing on the air, soon the public would be accusing us of sitting on our hands while the terror suspect was running free.
“Your buddies…” Jacobi huffed. “They always make it about us.”
“Uh-uh, Warren.” I shook my head. “My buddies don’t take cheap shots.”
Behind us in the woods, Charlie Clapper’s Crime Scene Unit team was going over the ground around the sniper’s position. They’d turned up a couple of foot imprints, but nothing identifiable. They would fingerprint the shell casings, grid-search the ground, pick up every