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“Every moment I can, baby.”

I ate quite a bit more, and washed it down with three full glasses of water.

“Not quite Nana Mama’s cooking,” I said.

“I’m sure there’ll be leftovers,” Bree said.

“You trying to get me fat?” I said.

“I like a little cushion.”

I didn’t know what to say to that, and we both burst out laughing. Then I looked over and saw Billie standing in the doorway, watching us with bitterness and longing in her expression. She turned and left.

“Should I go after her?” I asked.

“No,” Bree said. “I’ll talk to her tomorrow.”

“Home?”

“Home.”

We left the hospital and were crossing a triangular plaza to the Foggy Bottom Metro station when the first shot rang out.

I heard the flat crack of the muzzle blast. I felt the bullet rip past my left ear, grabbed Bree, and yanked her to the ground by two newspaper boxes. People were screaming and scattering.

“Where is he?” Bree said.

“I don’t know,” I said, before the second and third shots shattered the glass of one newspaper rack and pinged off another.

Then I heard squealing tires, and jumped up in time to see a white panel van roar north on 23rd Street, Northwest, heading toward Washington Circle, and a dozen different escape routes. As the van flashed past us, I caught a glimpse of the driver.

Gary Soneji was looking my way as if posing for a mental picture, grinning like a lunatic and holding his rig

ht-hand thumb up, index finger extended, like a gun he was aiming right at me.

I was so shocked that another instant passed before I started running across the plaza to 23rd, trying to get a look at his license plates. But his plate lights were dark, and the van soon disappeared into evening traffic, headed in the direction of whatever hellhole Gary Soneji was calling home these days.

“Did you see him?” I asked Bree, who was shaken, but calling in the shots to dispatch.

She shook her head after she’d finished. “You did?”

“It was him, Bree. Gary Soneji in the flesh. As if he hadn’t been blown up and burned, as if he hadn’t spent the past decade in a box under six feet of dirt.”

Chapter 15

The next morning, I called GW to check on Sampson. His vitals had destabilized again.

Part of me said, Go to the hospital, but instead I drove out to Quantico, Virginia, and the FBI Lab.

For almost seven years, I worked for the Bureau in the behavioral science department as a full-time consultant and left on good terms. I have many friends who still work at Quantico, including my old partner, Ned Mahoney.

I called ahead, and he met me at the gate, made sure I got the VIP treatment clearing security.

“What are friends in high places for?” Mahoney asked when I thanked him. “How’s John?”

I gave him a brief update on Sampson and my investigation.

“How could Soneji be alive?” Mahoney said. “I was there, remember? I saw him burning, too. It was him. ”


Tags: James Patterson Alex Cross Mystery