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Abuse of Power - Michael Savage [74]

By Root 450 0

Nothing.

The bedroom was at the far end of the hall. As he worked his way toward it, he stopped at a door that hung ajar about halfway there. He carefully pushed the door open and checked inside. It was too dark to see much, so he fumbled for a light switch and flicked it on.

It was a walk-in closet but there was nothing hanging inside. No shelves or storage boxes. The closet was completely empty except for a compass and a mat on the floor. Set in a round brass frame about the size of a pocket watch, the compass was a qibla indicator, pointing the user toward Mecca. It lay in a corner of the closet, with a prayer mat carefully placed in proper alignment behind it. The order displayed impressed Jack. He could see how the simplicity and order of the Islamic faith appealed to so many.

This was al-Fida’s prayer room. A small, clean space free of distraction that he undoubtedly used several times a day.

The compass was compact enough to be used for travel, and its presence here led Jack to believe that al-Fida hadn’t left London. Which meant if he wasn’t dead, he might walk through his front door at any moment.

Flicking off the light, Jack continued down the hall to the bedroom. There was another window back here that opened onto an alleyway with very little light coming in. He didn’t want to turn on the overhead for fear someone might take notice, but he could hear the hum of a computer and was able to make out the edges of a monitor sitting atop what looked like a small desk in the corner of the room.

Stepping past the neatly made bed, he moved over to the desk, nudged the mouse with his finger, and an iMac screen came to life. He was hoping to do a thorough search of al-Fida’s desk drawers and hard drive, but what he saw on the screen stopped him cold.

It was open to a word processing application. And typed at the very top of the page were two simple words:

Forgive me

Jack’s jaw tensed.

This looked suspiciously like a suicide note.

His heart racing, he spun around, looking past a closet slider to a closed door that was now illuminated by the light from the computer screen.

A bathroom, no doubt.

And then he saw it—a tiny sliver of light coming from the crack beneath the door.

Someone was in there. And he doubted they were using the facilities.

Grabbing a lamp as a weapon and moving away from the desk, Jack hurried to the bathroom and yanked open the door, freezing in motion at the horrific sight inside.

The tub was full, and Abdal al-Fida lay chest-deep in the bloodied water, his eyes staring blankly at the ceiling—eyes that reminded Jack of his old friend Riley after their Humvee was ambushed. His dark skin had a pale cast. Both arms were concealed in the murky red water and there was no visible wound that Jack could see.

Jack took in a sharp breath but didn’t rush forward to check his neck for a pulse. There was no point. Al-Fida was dead.

There was nothing to be done for him now. Jack also knew that he needed to get out of here but there was something he wanted to check first. He was about to go back to the desk when he heard a sound from the living room—the rattle of keys and the front door being pushed open.

“Abdal?” a voice said. “Abdal, are you home?”

It was a woman. She sounded concerned.

Then a moment later she was inside and moving down the hall.

21

“Abdal?” she said again.

British accent, but not quite. Something else in there.

By the time she stepped into the bedroom, Jack was already cramped inside al-Fida’s slider, nestled amid the hangers full of clothes, the door open just a sliver so he could see what he was dealing with.

She flicked the light switch, saying, “Abdal? I’ve been calling all night! Why didn’t you answer your—”

She halted, leaving the question unfinished when she saw that the bed was empty and neatly made.

She glanced around the room. “Abdal?”

Like many Muslim women, she wore a hijab on her head, a scarf that covered her hair, ears, and neck and shoulders. She had a regal look about her, with flawless skin, an angular, almost perfectly sculpted face, and large

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