DENNY WATCHED THE STREET while Mitch broke down. A steady rain had started to fall, but that didn’t stop hundreds of people in very nice evening wear from scattering like cockroaches up and down the block.
“What’s going on, Denny?” Mitch had already packed the scope, stock, and magazine away.
Denny motioned Mitch over. “Come here. You should see this. It’s amazing what you’ve done.”
Mitch seemed torn, but when Denny waved him over again, he set down his gear and duckwalked back to the ledge. Then he peered at his work.
The Harman looked like some kind of glass-fronted insane asylum. Police flashers were already rolling in the street, and the only people not moving down there were the two bodies laid out on the sidewalk.
“You know what that’s called?” Denny said. “That’s mission accomplished. Couldn’t have gone better.”
Mitch shook his head. “I messed up, Denny. That second shot —”
“Don’t mean nothing now. You just soak this shit up for a minute and enjoy it. I’ll get us ready to go.”
Denny stepped back and started securing the clasps on Mitch’s pack while Mitch watched, transfixed.
“Not bad for a night’s work, right, Mitchie?”
“Yeah,” Mitch said, only half out loud, more to himself than anything. “Kind of awesome, actually.”
>
“And who’s the hero of the story, bro?”
“We are, Denny.”
“That’s right. Real live American heroes. Nobody can ever take that away from you, no matter what. Understand?”
Mitch didn’t even answer this time, except to nod. It was as if, once he’d gotten a glimpse, he couldn’t tear his eyes from the scene.
A second later, Mitch was dead — with a bullet in his head.
The poor guy probably didn’t even hear Denny’s muzzled Walther go off, it happened that fast. Just as well. It was a goddamn awful business sometimes; the least Denny could do for him was make it quick and professional.
“Sorry, Mitchie. Couldn’t be helped,” he said.
Then he picked up Mitch’s pack, left everything else, and headed for the stairs without looking back at the evening’s third homicide.
Chapter 98
I’D BEEN WORKING at the Daly Building when the first terrible report came in, and this time I was on the scene within minutes of the gunfire. I tried hard to ignore the chaos in the street, tried not to think about the victims — not yet — and focused on the one thing I needed to know most.
Where did the shots come from? Was it possible they’d made a mistake this time?
An MPD sergeant on the sidewalk had an initial report that Cornelia Summers had gone down first, and that she’d been on George Ponti’s left as they headed into the Harman. Two Supreme Court justices — even now, it seemed unbelievable!
I looked to the left, down F Street. The Jackson Graham Building was a possibility, but if I’d been the gunman, I would have gone for the National Building Museum. It was a couple of blocks up, well clear of the scene, and had a flat roof with plenty of cover.
“Get me three more uniforms,” I told the sergeant. “Right away. I’m going to that building — the National.”
Within minutes, we were down the street and pounding on the museum’s front doors. One very alarmed-looking security guard came running to let us in. The Federal Protective Service had jurisdiction here, but I’d been told it would be a good half hour before they could get a team on-site.
“We need to get to the roof,” I told the guard. His tag said DAVID HALE. “What’s the fastest way up there?”
I left one patrol officer behind to radio in for a full lockdown of the building, and the rest of us followed Hale through the museum’s central hall. It was a huge, open space with Corinthian columns all the way to the ceiling, which was several stories overhead. That’s where we needed to go.
Hale brought us to an emergency exit at the far corner. “Straight up,” he said.