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‘Me neither.’ Halloran took another drag, pitched his cigarette, then stood up. ‘The thing is, they had every entrance to this house locked up tighter than a drum, and then the back door, they just leave wide open.’

‘Where the shotgun was set up.’

‘Yeah. They were expecting someone.’

‘Oh, man, this one is going to be a pip.’ Bonar shook his big head, grunted his way to his feet, looked over at his old friend. ‘You look like shit.’

Halloran’s eyes were fixed on the empty gurney waiting outside the back door, Danny Peltier’s last ride. ‘I forgot the keys, Bonar.’

‘I know, buddy.’ Bonar’s sigh sounded like the corn.

6

Mitchell Cross arrived at the warehouse shortly before noon, parked his black Mercedes in the downstairs garage, and rode the freight elevator up to the loft. The morning had been a disaster.

He’d spent half an hour waiting for Diane in the virtual parking lot at airport arrivals, dodging parking police who were ticketing every car that idled at the curb for longer than two seconds. Then Bob Greenberg caught him on the cellular on the way back, snippy and self-righteous about the SKUD thing, almost threatening outright to pull the Schoolhouse Games account. Only the Lowry Tunnel had saved him, cutting the transmission just before Mitch lost his temper.

They spent fifteen minutes in that black wormhole, blocked by God knew what on the other side. Volume congestion, they called it. Mitch called it too many goddamned people with too many goddamned cars.

Diane’s fretting turned to whining after the first five minutes, and then in the middle of a diatribe about carbon monoxide poisoning, she had actually stuck her head out the window and screamed at a pickup truck full of blaze-orange hunters to shut their motor off. Jesus. Sometimes he thought the woman had a death wish.

He’d been so angry he hadn’t even gotten out of the car at the house, just dropped her off and pulled away. He’d caught a glimpse of her in the rearview mirror, just standing there in the driveway with her hands full of luggage, looking wounded and small.

The elevator workings clunked above him and the cage jerked to a stop. He looked at the loft through the latticework of wood and released a long breath, thinking, Home.

‘Hey, Mitch!’

Annie saw him first, but only because she was over by the coffeemakers, away from her computer. The rest of them were huddled around Roadrunner’s monitor like bad witches making a poison brew, utterly oblivious.

‘Come on out of there, honey. You look like caged Armani.’

‘Hi, Annie.’ He joined her at a wall counter that held four coffeemakers and the large white bakery box.

‘Damn, you look good.’ Fat Annie tucked all her chins and gave him one of those slow, seductive smiles that made most men forget she was carrying an extra hundred pounds. ‘Half-expected you to stay home and celebrate today. Diane’s got to be floating.’

Mitch shrugged. ‘More tired than anything. Maybe we’ll crack some champagne tonight. What’s everybody working on?’ He lifted the lid of the white box and peered inside, hoping for something not quite lethal, like a bagel.

‘Mitch, you scruffy sack of shit, get over here! We’re killing the last son of a bitch, is what we’re doing,’ Harley bellowed. ‘Securing an Ivy League education for your kids.’

‘I don’t have any kids.’

‘I know that, but I’m an eternal optimist. I keep thinking that one of these days you might get it up. Jesus. Did you pay money for that tie?’

Grace felt Mitch’s hand on her shoulder and glanced up at the little white clouds on a field of blue. ‘That’s a Hermès tie and I gave it to him last Christmas.’

‘You gave him a Hermès tie and I got a goddamned keychain?’

‘She gave you an Italian stiletto, you dumbshit,’ Annie said.

Harley thought a minute. ‘Oh yeah. So what cheap prick gave me a keychain?’

Roadrunner leaned back in his chair, exasperated. ‘Do you kids want to go play somewhere else so I can get this done?’

‘Is it really the last one?’ Mitch asked.

Grace nodded. ‘The big two-oh. And we’ve had over three hundred hits on the test site so far. Over half of them preordered the game.’

‘We’re going to need more than that to replace the Schoolhouse account. Greenberg called this morning.’

‘What’s his problem this time?’ Harley asked.

‘Oddly enough, he doesn’t think the company that designs his software for children should be producing a CD-ROM game about serial killers.’

‘It is not a game about serial killers,’ Grace reminded him. ‘It’s a game about catching serial killers.’

‘Grace, the damn thing is called Serial Killer.

Serial Killer Detective,’ a chorus of four corrected him.

‘Apparently the distinction is lost on him. And me, frankly.’

Harley grabbed Mitch by the arm. ‘You and Greenberg have both been pushing paper too long. Come on, partner. I’m going to show you this thing, it’s friggin’ brilliant.’ He rolled an extra chair in front of a desk that looked like it had been sacked by vandals. ‘Sit down, buddy.’ He shoved aside stacks of file folders, printouts, and biker magazines, exposing four purring hard drives and a 21-inch monitor.

Mitch balked, but in the end, when Harley wanted you in a chair, you sat. ‘I’ve seen this –’

‘You saw the text files, not the game,’ Annie said. ‘For Christ’s sake you own twenty percent of this thing and you’ve never even played it.’

‘I don’t want to play it. I was the dissenting vote, remember? As far as I’m concerned, the whole concept is sick.’

‘That’s because you don’t get it,’ Grace snapped. ‘You never got it.’

The comment stung, but Mitch kept his mouth shut.

‘Well, he’s going to get it now.’ Harley’s large fingers started dancing over the keys with surprising agility. The monitor went black for a moment, then snapped back to life. Huge, shadowed block letters began to materialize, then seemed to jump off the screen:

MONKEEWRENCH SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT

Throw a MONKEEWRENCH into the works

‘Okay, okay!’ Harley was almost quivering with excitement as the screen went black again. ‘Check this out!’

Thousands of sparkling red pixels started to materialize on the screen, bonding together into giant, red, scrawled letters.

WANT TO PLAY A GAME?

‘You like the font on that or what? I did it – I call it my serial killer font.’

Mitch shuddered. ‘Oh, good Christ.’

‘Okay, here comes the good part. We’re entering the game now. First thing that comes up is a digital photo of the murder scene.’

Mitch watched in horror as a picture of a dead jogger appeared on the screen. ‘Jesus Christ! Did you have to use real people? I thought this was going to be animated!’

‘Nah, this is better. Much more realistic. Looks just like a police photo, doesn’t it? Except this is art.’ Harley stabbed a thick finger toward the screen. ‘Check out how I used the shadows from that tree to enhance the negative space. Really pulls your eye toward the subject, doesn’t it?’

‘But . . . aw . . . aw, God.’ Mitch grimaced at Roadrunner. ‘It’s you?’

Roadrunner leaned back in his chair far enough to see Harley’s monitor. ‘God, I’m good.’ He grinned. ‘I look so dead. Hey, Harley, skip to murder two.’ He winked at Mitch. ‘That’s my best performance.’

‘Performance my ass,’ Harley snorted. ‘Everyone knows the real genius here is the photographer.’ He was working his magic with the mouse now, nodding enthusiastically at Mitch. ‘Roadrunner’s right, though. Number two’s a great one. Probably the best, although I can’t take credit for the creativity, much as I’d like to. This one was Grace’s idea.’ Harley punched a few keys and a new photo appeared.