Along Came a Spider - James Patterson [142]
The Metro underground ran a block from our house on 5th Street. The tunnel was still being built, but a few neighborhood kids went down there to walk the four blocks over to Capitol Hill… underground.
I hobbled, and half ran, to the subway entrance. I was hurting, but I didn’t care. He’d come inside my house. He’d gone after my children.
I went downstairs into the tunnel. I drew my revolver from the shoulder holster I’d slung over my shirt.
Every step I took put a ragged stitch in my side. Painfully, I began to walk the length of the tunnel in a low shooter’s crouch.
He could be watching me. Had he expected me to come here? I walked forward in the tunnel. It could be a trap. There were plenty of places for him to hide.
I made it all the way to the end. There was no sign of blood, anywhere. Soneji/Murphy wasn’t in the underground. He’d escaped some other way. He’d gotten away again.
As the adrenaline rush slowed, I felt weak and weary and disoriented. I climbed the stone stairs out of the underground.
Night people were coming and going from the Metro paper store and from Fox’s all-night diner. I must have been a sorry sight. Blood was spattered all over me. No one stopped, though. Not a single person. They had all seen too much of this ghoulish stuff in the nation’s capital.
I finally stepped in front of a truck driver dropping off a bundle of Washington Posts. I told him I was a police officer. I was feeling a little high with the loss of blood. Slightly giddy now.
“I didn’t do nothin’ wrong,” he said to me.
“You didn’t shoot me, motherfucker?”
“No, sir. What’re you, crazy? You really a cop?”
I made him take me home in his paper-delivery truck. For the whole six-block ride, the man swore he’d sue the city.
“Sue Mayor Monroe,” I told him. “Sue Monroe’s ass bad.”
“You really a cop?” he asked me again. “You ain’t a cop.”
“Yeah, I’m a cop.”
Squad cars and EMS ambulances were already gathered at my house. This was my recurring nightmare—this very scene. Never before had the police and medics actually come to my house.
Sampson was already there. He had a black leather jacket over a ratty old Baltimore Orioles sweatshirt. He wore a cap from the Hoodoo Gurus tour.
He looked at me as if I were crazy. Crimson and blue emergency lights twirled behind him. “Wuz up? You don’t look so good. You all right, man?”
“Been stabbed twice with a hunting knife. Not as bad as the time we got shot over in Garfield.”
“Uh huh. Must look worse than it is. I want you to lie down here on the lawn. Lie down now, Alex.”
I nodded, and walked away from Sampson. I had to finish this. Somehow, it had to be over with.
The EMS people were trying to get me down on the lawn. Our tiny lawn. Or get me on their stretcher.
I had another idea. The front door had been left wide open. He’d left the door to the house open. Why had he done that?
“Be right with you,” I said to the medics as I walked past them. “Hold that stretcher, though.”
People were yelling at me, but I pushed forward, anyway.
I moved silently and purposefully through the living room and into the kitchen. I opened the door that’s catty-cornered to our back door, and hurried downstairs.
I didn’t see anything in the basement. No movement. Nothing out of order. The cellar was my last good idea.
I walked over to a bin near the furnace where Nana dumps all the dirty laundry for the next washload. It’s the farthest corner of the basement from the stairs. No Soneji/Murphy in the dark basement.
Sampson came running down the cellar stairs. “He’s not here! Someone saw him downtown. He’s down around Dupont Circle.”
“He wants to make one more big play,” I muttered. “Son-of-a-bitch.” Son of Lindbergh.
Sampson didn’t try to stop me from going with him. He could see in my eyes that he couldn’t, anyway. The two of us hurried to his car. I figured I was all right. I’d drop if I wasn’t.
A young punk from the neighborhood looked at the sticky blood down the front