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I shook my head. “You’ll send in more cops, and Luther will kill anyone that goes after him. Anyone except me.”

Herb shook his head right back at me. “Jack—”

“We have a chance to end this, Herb. To be free of this son of a bitch, once and for all. He’s not going to try to kill me. But I’m sure as hell going to try to kill him.”

Everyone stared at me, no one speaking.

Once upon a time I had commanded people, and they listened to me. Not only because I had authority. But because they trusted my orders, my judgment. I studied each of their faces in turn, trying to show them I was still the same woman. Being a target and being pregnant didn’t mean I was unfit to lead.

“I’m in,” Tom said, drawing his Glock from his shoulder holster.

Roy followed suit. “Hell, yeah.”

Phin and McGlade also pulled their weapons.

“We can take this punk,” Harry said.

“I’d follow you to hell, Jack,” Phin said. “You know that.”

I looked at Phin. “Are you serious?”

“Absolutely. You were right.”

“About what?”

“Me trying to control you. I love you, and while I hate the idea of you going in there, you actually doing it is exactly what makes you the woman I love. Fearless. All I want is to protect you.”

I could feel the emotion coming, but I pushed it back. “I know, Phin.”

“You know I respect you, right?” he said.

I did, but damn it felt good to hear him say it. I nodded.

“And you know I’d die for you?”

I nodded again, swallowing the lump in my throat. If he’d proposed to me saying that, I probably would have said yes right away.

I wanted to hug him. I wanted to kiss him. I wanted to apologize for being the Master of the Bitchiverse.

But I wasn’t sure how, and I didn’t have the time to figure it out. Later, after we were done.

“Are all of you insane?” Herb asked. “I just lost God knows how many men out there, to God knows what.”

“Maybe it was mustard gas,” McGlade said. “You like mustard, as evidenced by the stains on your shirt.”

“Just tell me where he is, Jack.” Herb’s eyes drilled into mine, his face imploring.

I turned to Groundskeeper Willie, who’d wandered back over and had been watching all of this like a child watches a slasher film, wide-eyed and horrified. “Luther asked if he had my ear. Bobby Franks was killed by Leopold and Loeb. Ear. Lobe. Are either of the killers buried here?”

Willie gave me something midway between a nod and a head shake. “No…no they’re not…but their families are. Samuel and Babbette Leopold. Allan, Anna, Albert, and Earnest Loeb.”

“Do you know where those graves are?”

“Yeah. They’re hard to spot. I can take you.”

“Let’s end this, Herb,” I said. “You’ve been so gung-ho about protecting me that you’ve forgotten all the times I saved your ass. I’m not some fragile porcelain doll about to break. I’m still the same woman I’ve always been, Goddamn it, and if we were still partners I’d be marching in there right now and you know it.”

Herb stared at me. “Do you even have a gun?” he finally asked.

Phin dug into the diaper bag, slapping my Colt into my hand.

“Okay,” Herb said. “Let’s end this.”

We all boarded Willie’s golf cart, and without even asking, the groundskeeper got behind the wheel and put the pedal to the metal, catapulting all seven of us through the entry arch of Rosehill Cemetery.

April 2, 3:14 A.M.

He pinches the bridge of his nose and allows himself a small, private smile.

This is perfect.

Even better than perfect.

April 2, 3:15 A.M.

Though Luther had alluded to Loeb by mentioning the ear, he could have easily been at the Leopold grave. That’s where Willie dropped off Tom and Roy, Herb giving them strict orders to maintain radio contact and treat any threat as deadly.

We rode over to the Loeb tombstone, passing through acres and acres of white monuments that gave off a pale, ghostly glow between the trees. We had just begun to slow down when I saw it, parked on the pathway: a semi-truck with the unmistakable logo of the Chicago Police Department—a black-and-white five-pointed star.

“Did we buy a semi-trailer since I retired?” I asked.

“I never got that memo,” Herb said.

He got on his mike, asking if anyone had parked a truck in this section of the cemetery. Then he turned to Harry. “You, bonehead, come with me. Phin, stay with Jack.”

“We’re covering you,” I insisted.

“No, you’re not.”

“Your ability to tell me what to do ended when you armed me,” I said. “I’m the best shot here. We’ll cover you.”

Herb looked ready to deck me, but he managed a curt nod.

We climbed off the golf cart and crept across the lawn toward the semi. It was dark, cold, and quiet except for the occasional scream from the Franks mausoleum, acres away. Sounded almost like birds from this distance.

While I was tempted to focus on the truck, I knew it could very well be a decoy Luther had planted to command our attention. So instead, I surveyed the trees, the headstones, the road that snaked through the cemetery.

There wasn’t a single streetlight for hundreds of yards in any direction, and I couldn’t see a damn thing.

I also realized I’d been unconsciously patting my belly again.

“Rear cargo door is open,” McGlade said as we drew within fifteen feet of the trailer. “And there’s something in back. Something big under a sheet. I see wheels. It’s a truck or a van.”

“Luther’s van?” I whispered to Herb.

“I’ll check it out,” Herb said. “You all stay here.”

“How you planning to get in there, tubs?” McGlade said. “There a crane nearby?”

“Give me a boost.”

“And get a quadruple hernia? No thanks. How about Phin goes in?”

“I’m not leaving Jack’s side,” Phin said. “Why don’t you go, McGlade?”

“Because I’m not as stupid as fatso here. You’d have to have the IQ of a potato to willingly go into that—”

“Oh, God, help me! Please help me! JESUS CHRIST, SOMEONE HELP!”

For a half second, we all froze.

The cry emanated from the vehicle under the sheet.

Someone, hard to identify if they were a man or woman, in unimaginable pain.

Herb charged forward, hauled himself with great effort up into the trailer, and flopped into the cargo bay. Despite his size, he managed to scramble to his feet in seconds, rushing in to help.

As I opened my mouth to yell, “Careful!” he fell to his knees and rolled over onto his side.

“Herb!”

In hindsight, it was perfect. Some traps were baited with cheese or meat.

This one was baited with good will.

Seeing my ex-partner and best friend lying on the floor of the trailer flipped an automatic action switch inside me, and I climbed up into the trailer without a second thought, twisting out of Phin’s grip. Once inside, I struggled up off my bruised knees and tore ass to Herb, intent on dragging him out of there. I held my breath with my free hand over my nose and mouth so I didn’t inhale whatever gas had incapacitated him.

Already, Phin and Harry were clambering into the truck behind me, screaming for me to get back, their hands clutching my arms, but I was fighting them off, still reaching for my partner.

“Oh, God, help me! Please help me! JESUS CHRIST, SOMEONE HELP!”

The screaming voice repeated.

Verbatim.

No change in intonation or speed.

That wasn’t a live person—that was a recording—and it hit me flush in the chest, a sickening realization spreading through me like a flash of blinding heat as I stared at Herb, unconscious on the floor.