The 6th Target - James Patterson [96]
I sucked in my breath and mentally crossed my fingers.
Claire and I crowded around the technician as she set each of the rounds on a stage under the microscope.
Petra was smiling when she stepped back and said, “Take a look for yourselves.”
It was clear even to me as I peered through the double eyepieces and compared the two slugs.
The striations, the lands and grooves on the fragment, were a match to the bullet just fired from Alfred Brinkley’s gun.
The fragment was from the sixth shot, which Alfred Brinkley had fired at Claire’s son Willie — and missed.
That same bullet was going to put Alfred Brinkley on trial again.
I turned to Claire but didn’t know whether to slap her a high five or hug her — so I did first one, then the other.
“Got him,” Claire said as we held each other.
Chapter 136
AN HOUR LATER, Rich Conklin and I stood in a gray room full of small tables and chairs at Atascadero. Brinkley entered, looking rosy-cheeked and well-fed.
I thought he might ask me to dance, he looked so glad to see me. “Do you miss me, Lindsay? Because I sure think about the last time I saw you!”
“Don’t bother to sit down, Fred,” I told him. “We’re here to arrest you. We’re charging you with homicide.”
“You’re joking. Kidding me, right?”
I gave him a smile I couldn’t contain due to the fireworks display that was exploding inside my head. I was that happy. “Your big day on the Del Norte?”
“What about it?”
“That last shot you fired missed Willie Washburn. But it found another target. We’re here to arrest you for killing Mr. Wei Fong, Fred-o. Charge of murder, second degree.”
“No way, Lindsay,” Brinkley said and shrugged indifferently. “You’re saying I shot someone I didn’t even see?”
“Yeah. You’re a hell of a great shot.”
“You’re dreaming, little lady. I’ve been cleared of the Del Norte shootings. I’m legally insane, remember? What you’re talking about is double jeopardy.”
“You weren’t charged for Mr. Fong’s death in your trial, Fred. This is a new case. New evidence. New jury. And I’m guessing that your mother is going to be a witness for the prosecution this time.”
Brinkley’s smile faded as I told him to turn around. I cuffed him, and Conklin read him his rights.
Rich and I marched Alfred Brinkley out to our car. As soon as we arranged him in the backseat behind the mesh screen, his face changed, took on a pained expression that made me think perhaps he’d gone back to an earlier time — when he was a boy and bad things started happening to him.
But Fred was singing by the time we got back to the freeway. “Ay, ay, ay, ay, canta y no llores / Porque cantando se allegran / Cielito lindo.”
“Your mother teach you that, Fred?” I asked him. I knew the words to the old song: “Sing, don’t cry. Because by singing, the sky lightens and becomes beautiful.”
I glanced into the rearview mirror and was startled to see that Brinkley was looking at the reflection of my eyes. He stopped singing and said in a loud stage whisper, “Hey, Lindsay, you really think you’ve got me?”
About the Authors
JAMES PATTERSON is one of the best-known and best-selling writers of all time. He is the author of the two top-selling new detective series of the past decade: the Alex Cross novels, including Cross; Mary, Mary; London Bridges; Kiss the Girls; and Along Came a Spider, and the Women’s Murder Club series, including 1st to Die; 2nd Chance; 3rd Degree; 4th of July; and The 5th Horseman. He has written many other #1 bestsellers, including Suzanne’s Diary for Nicholas, Lifeguard, Honey-moon, Beach Road, and Judge & Jury. He lives in Florida.
MAXINE PAETRO is a novelist and journalist. She lives with her husband in New York.