‘If you allow M to work with us on this — and I think you should, Malcolm — you can control the flow of information, the extent to which she’s involved. Or you can work this privately and report back to me. Your choice.’
Fletcher didn’t need to think it over; he had already made up his mind. He indicated his intentions by motioning to the airport building, curious as to what made the mysterious M so special — and how the young woman had penetrated Karim’s ironclad, wounded heart.
Fletcher preferred reading to be a tactile experience. He didn’t want to read the scanned order forms from Sacred Ashes on his netbook computer screen. When he boarded the plane, he headed to the back and plugged the scanner’s micro-SD card into Karim’s high-speed laser printer. M, seated in the rear of the plane and hunkered over a MacBook Pro laptop, paid him no attention.
That changed when he stepped beside her. She stared intently at him over the top of her MacBook, her body rigid. He noticed her hands gripping the edges of her seat.
Fletcher placed the portable hard drive on the table. She listened attentively as he explained the data he’d collected from the company laptop, what information she should focus on and the tasks he needed her to perform. She punctuated each of his requests with a nod. She didn’t speak. When he finished, she didn’t have any questions for him.
Inside the bathroom Fletcher took off his sunglasses. He put in his contacts and washed his face and hands. When he returned, he removed a thick stack of papers from the printer tray. There
were two copies. He handed one to Karim, who was seated across the aisle from M.
The table where Karim sat held a cheese tray and a pair of long-stemmed glasses set around an opened 1998 bottle of Chateau Latour a Pomerol. Fletcher offered M a glass. She politely declined without looking up from her MacBook.
Fletcher settled himself in the spacious leather seat across from Karim. As the plane taxied to the runway, Fletcher started reading, slowly, studying the information printed on each sheet. When he reached the last page, he returned to the beginning of the stack. He didn’t look up until he had finished his third and final review.
Fletcher grabbed a fresh sheet of paper. He wrote down his instructions and, reaching across the aisle, slid the sheet on to M’s table. She glanced at it, nodded once, and then switched her gaze back to her MacBook.
Fletcher glanced at the cockpit door. It was closed.
‘It’s safe to talk,’ Karim said.
‘Notice anything?’ Fletcher asked, tapping the stack of order forms resting on his lap.
‘All the orders were placed by men,’ Karim said.
‘And none from Colorado.’
‘So not only does our lady shooter live in another state, she took steps to conceal her identity.’
Fletcher nodded. ‘I noticed one other thing,’ he said.
‘Just one?’ Karim grinned. ‘Where?’
‘The page containing the agreement order and the liability waiver.’ Fletcher removed three earmarked pages from his stack and, pushing the cheese tray aside, placed them on the table. ‘These three men from Virginia. Barry Johnson, from Purcellville. Jon Riley, from Leesburg. And Jessie Foster, from Ashburn. Take a look at the signatures. The slope of the writing and the connecting lines used between the letters are similar. The letter “J” is the most telling example. It’s identical in each case — and see how the writer connects it to the adjoining letter?’ Fletcher pointed for Karim’s benefit.
‘Bloody hell,’ Karim said. ‘You’re right.’
‘All three men placed orders for 9-mm rounds. Johnson placed the first order in November of last year, followed by Riley in December and then Foster last month.’
Karim’s brow furrowed. ‘So this person used three different names to create three separate orders using, what, three different sets of human ashes?’
‘It’s a possibility. The name of the deceased is different on each death certificate. I wouldn’t put too much stock in the names. Death certificates can easily be doctored using templates readily available on the Internet, and Sacred Ashes only requires a copy of the death certificate. They wouldn’t be checking its validity.
‘The weight of cremated remains depends on the weight of the individual,’ Fletcher continued. ‘A 200-pound man, for example, would yield six pounds of human ash. When I entered the house, I saw opened boxes containing roughly a cup of human ashes — about eight ounces. So you would have plenty of leftover remains to use for additional orders.’
Fletcher returned to his stack. Out of the corner of his eye he could see M watching him intently.
‘Are you aware of Virginia’s gun laws?’ he asked Karim.
‘I’m not, but I’m assuming they’re fairly liberal.’
Fletcher nodded. ‘Take a look at this,’ he said, and placed three new pages on the table. ‘Here are the shipping instructions provided by Johnson, Riley and Foster. They all ordered the same 9-mm rounds, and in each case Sacred Ashes mailed the ammunition to a local firearms dealer for pickup. This would make sense in a state that has restrictions on the type and/or amount of ammunition that can be delivered to a person’s home. Virginia, however, has no such restrictions.
‘If you took out a map, you’d see these three Virginia towns are close to the Maryland border. And Maryland does have strict ammunition guidelines. If our shooter lives there, all she would have to do is drive to the Virginia dealers and pay their out-of-state FFL-transfer fees.’
‘If we contact the dealers and ask to see their records, we may tip off our shooter.’
‘You’re assuming they keep strict records. Some ask for a licence while others ask for nothing at all. And if our shooter hid her identity from Sacred Ashes, I think it’s safe to assume she would have taken similar precautions when picking up her ammunition. Exploring that avenue is a waste of time.’
‘What would you suggest?’
Fletcher turned to M, saw that she was already looking at him, waiting, her hands folded on the table.
‘The three names I wrote down for you, were you able to find their emails?’
She nodded, her emerald eyes glowing in the MacBook screen’s light.
‘I traced the ISP for each email,’ she said. Her tone was neutral, her expression almost phlegmatic. ‘All three emails originated from the same place.’
Karim swung round in his chair. ‘Where?’
‘A house in Maryland,’ she said.
26
Jimmy Weeks’s eyes fluttered opened to darkness. It swam around him, as impenetrable as a wall. While he couldn’t see anything, he could feel things, minor sensations that seemed to be calling to him from a great distance, like an orbiting space satellite thousands of miles away relaying vital information to an earth base. He knew he was lying on his left side, on something cold and hard and flat. His knees were tucked against his chest. Something had happened to his back; he felt pain between his shoulder blades, and it seemed to be trying to draw his attention, urging him to investigate.
Had he been in some sort of accident? Was he in a hospital and being given drugs? Or was he drunk? He did feel drunk, and a little sick to his stomach. It reminded him of that party at Tim Doherty’s house when he’d chugged an entire six-pack of Milwaukee’s Best within an hour. Huge mistake. He had got so shitfaced that he could barely stand. After he threw up, Tim had brought him to the basement and put him on a sofa. Jimmy remembered how he’d forced himself to sit up, everything spinning around him. Then, mercifully, he’d passed out.
He didn’t feel like he was going to puke. More than anything, he felt tired. He shut his eyes, thinking about the cold trapped in this darkness. Yeah, it was weird, and yes, these tingling sensations crawling all over his body were disturbing, but his brain… it was like it had gone on holiday, leaving a fog in its place. A moment later he drifted off into a restless sleep plagued with fevered dreams.