“Of what?”
“Like you said at lunch, people are dying, Melvin. Hawkins. Susan Richards. That woman from the police department.”
“I know, Rachel. It is scary.”
“And someone murdered my husband. And... everything from the past just seems to be coming back. It’s like I’m being haunted by ghosts I thought were long buried.” She put a hand to her face and wiped at her suddenly teary eyes.
He put an arm around her shoulders. “Let me tell you something. Not that long ago, I was in a world of trouble. I mean bad, bad stuff. Then Decker came along. And he got to the truth and the man changed my life. After twenty years of people believing that a lie was the truth. But not him. Not Decker. He just keeps digging. Dude never stops.”
Katz shivered a bit. “He sounds like a man to be reckoned with.”
“Oh, he is. And people have tried. And he just keeps rolling.”
“Does... does he understand that there can be different shades of truth?”
He drew a bit away from her, watching the woman closely. “Such as?”
“I mean, there are times when you can tell the truth, but people may not see it as the truth, not the same way that the person telling it does. And... and sometimes people feel they have to do things for, you know, reasons that might seem...”
“Seem what?”
“Wrong, I guess. But not to the person having to do the things. They might think it’s the only thing they can do.”
Mars looked confused by all this. “You’ve lost me.”
“I... look, never mind. I know I’m not making much sense.”
“Take your time. I’ve got nowhere to go.”
She changed the subject. “So, Decker really believes that Hawkins was innocent?”
Mars looked at her for a long moment, clearly disappointed in the change in direction of the conversation. “Let’s put it this way. Hawkins didn’t try to kill Decker twice, because the man was already dead when those events occurred.”
“You mean someone doesn’t want the truth to come out? They’re trying to stop Decker. And they silenced Hawkins because he might know something?”
“That’s the way we see it, yeah.” He paused. “So, do you know something that could help us?”
“If I did, I would’ve told you. I would’ve told people thirteen years ago.”
“But there are shades of truth, that’s what you just said.”
She moved slightly away from him, as though symbolically distancing herself from this conversation. “It’s amazing what a few drinks will do to loosen someone up,” she said, tacking on a brief smile.
“I’m just trying to get to the truth, Rachel. That’s all.”
“But sometimes the truth doesn’t set us free, does it? Sometimes it traps us.”
“Is the truth trapping you?”
“No, of course not. I was just... speculating. Talking off the top of my head.”
He took her hand. “I want to help you, Rachel.”
“But you work with Decker.”
“That shouldn’t matter. I already told you I don’t think you killed anybody.”
“But...” she said quickly, and then stopped.
“But what?”
She abruptly rose. “I’m really tired all of a sudden. I think I’m going to call it a night.”
Mars stared up at her, and then his expression changed. He leapt up and tackled her as one of the large glass windows shattered. They both fell heavily to the floor, as the shot fired through the window hit its intended target.
Chapter 52
“Son of a bitch!” cried out Decker.
He and Lancaster leapt out of his car, which was parked down the street and across from Katz’s building. They drew their guns and hunkered down next to the vehicle.
“There,” said Lancaster, pointing to the opposite building. “The shot came from there. I saw the muzzle flash.”
“Call in reinforcements,” bellowed Decker as he punched in Mars’s number.
It rang and rang, with no answer.
“Shit.”
“Do you think the shooter’s still there?” said Lancaster, putting away her phone after making the call. “If we go to check on Mars and Katz?”
“Right, he’ll pick us off.” He glanced at Lancaster. “It could be the same guy who killed Brimmer. You wait here for the cops to show. Keep trying to call Melvin.” He texted the number to her phone.
“What are you going to do?”
“I’m going after the shooter.”
“Amos—”
But he was already running down the street, keeping right next to the building where the shot came from, to make it difficult for whoever was in there to draw a bead on him.
He reached the front entrance of the building and looked it over. Plywood on the lower windows. The place looked abandoned. But it had a perfect sightline into Katz’s apartment from the upper floors.
He raced up the steps to the front entrance and noted that the large double doors were chained shut. He heaved his bulk against them, but not even his size and strength could budge them.
He hustled on down the street, turned left at the next intersection, and raced down it. He was listening at the same time for a car starting up or footsteps running away. The night air was brisk and the sky clear for once.
He could hear nothing except his own breathing.
He reached the next corner and peered down it.
Nothing. No one and no car waiting to take the shooter away.
He forced himself not to think about Mars’s fate. He had said a simple prayer that his friend was okay. And if he wasn’t, Decker was going to risk his life to avenge him.
He raced over to the rear entrance, and that was where his luck turned. The door was open. And Decker well knew why.
The shooter had entered this way.
He eased the door open and stepped through. He knew he was a big target, and he squatted down to make himself less of one.
He took stock of the situation. The shooter might have already fled, out the door, and either driven off or used his own two feet to get away.
Only Decker had heard nothing that would indicate either had happened. And he doubted enough time had elapsed for the shooter to make his exit.
That would leave the person still inside an empty building, probably with a long-range, high-powered rifle, while Decker only had his new pistol, which he had never once fired, and would not be that accurate over any meaningful distance. The shooter could nail him from a lot farther away than Decker could the shooter.
He saw a bank of elevators but knew there probably was no power turned on in the building. That left the stairs. He used his Maglite to show the way and reached the door to the stairwell.
Like Lancaster, he’d seen the muzzle flash and downloaded the image in his head, counting up the floors.
Sixth.
He cautiously opened the door and made his way up, slowly. He might meet the shooter coming down. Or the person could be up there waiting for him.
He counted the floors until he reached number six, understanding that the shooter could have gone to a lower floor, let him pass by, and then made his escape out the rear.
A moment later, he heard the sirens. Okay, the good guys were on their way. And an ambulance too, depending on what had happened in Katz’s apartment.
He opened the door to the sixth floor and peered inside.
He hesitated to use his Maglite because it would just make him a target. There was enough light from the windows to allow his eyes to adjust rapidly. The floor plan was open, which was good and bad. It cut down on the places Decker would have to look, but it also allowed him no cover while he did so.
He closed the door quietly behind him and skittered over to behind an old metal desk.
Take your time, focus, and listen.