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“God, I didn't know…”

“What was your relationship with Ruben Wright?”

“We were f-friends.”

“I thought you were more than friends — lovers, perhaps.”

“W-were … Our relationship had changed.” She took a deep breath and shuddered.

“Was he aware of that change?” I asked.

McDonough nodded.

“Do you think Ruben was suicidal?” I asked.

“I don't know.”

She didn't appear to know a lot.

“How long have you been seeing Chris Butler?”

She looked at me like I'd just stepped on her foot.

“What did Butler say when you told him you were pregnant?”

“He said, ‘Get the little bugger cut out.'“ Her face crumpled as she began to sob. I gave her a moment. I remembered the night down at Laguna Beach, her and Butler across the bar, watching them drink a cocktail of anger, regret, and sadness — the way couples do when they're in a spiral dive with no hope of re covery.

“Did you know Ruben may have been trying to have you removed as a beneficiary of his will?”

“No,” she said, regaining a little composure.

“But you knew you were a beneficiary?”

She grabbed a couple of tissues from the box and loudly blew her nose. “We talked about it. Years ago.”

“So you knew how much Ruben was worth?”

“No.”

“When he told you that you were to be his chief beneficiary, he didn't tell you how much would be coming your way if he died?”

“He tried to. I didn't want to know — like it was bad luck or something. I didn't want to jinx him, us.”

Ironic, I thought, given what had happened to “him, us.” I had to hand it to McDonough; if she was lying, she was a pro.

“Have you had a conversation with Ruben's lawyer about the will yet?”

More shakes of the head. “Never spoken to him, you know, not one on one. But I received a letter from him. There's a reading next week.”

I was just getting into my stride on this Q & A when I heard, “Your ten minutes are up.” It was the minor-impersonating-a-doctor. He pulled the chart at the base of the bed and examined it as a nurse entered the room and began to fuss, herding the patient back under the covers. The sheets billowed as she pulled them over McDonough's legs. The nurse then turned her attention to the curtain beside the bed. She gave it an aggressive tug and it raced around the overhead rail, cutting me off from McDonough. End of interview.

* * *

I drove back to Hurlburt Field, putting it together in my head. There were big holes. Butler told me he wasn't having an affair with McDonough, but McDonough hadn't backed him up. She'd just aborted his child. When the issue of paternity could have been settled with a test, it had to be Butler who was lying.

Butler had also said he didn't know where McDonough lived or worked. Was that an attempt to stall me from talking to Amy long enough for her to have the pregnancy terminated? Had he hoped I wouldn't find out about her condition before he went back to England?

As for the pregnancy itself, Amy had apparently learned of it seven weeks ago. Around the time that Ruben made the call to his lawyer to — it was still an assumption — have his will changed. Was the timing of the two events significant? Had to be.

And what about Ruben's MS medications? Where were they? If he'd destroyed them before the fatal jump, what would that say about his death? That he intended to commit suicide? Maybe, but if he was intent on taking his own life, why bother hiding them at all? If Butler took him by surprise that night, wouldn't his drugs have been reasonably easy to find? Hmm… perhaps, perhaps not. I reminded myself the MS was a condition Ruben was intent on keeping a secret from the Air Force. According to Dr. Mooney, he required a cocktail of drugs taken at regular intervals during the day, and that meant having ready access to them. I found myself back at the start: Where did Ruben keep his stash? And, given their relationship, was it really possible McDonough didn't know about his MS?

The weather had changed. The Gulf had become a sheet of blue glass beyond the Pensacola Bay Bridge, rippled here and there by puffs of wind. It was the kind of day that caused me to think hurricanes were a figment of the collective imagination. But I knew that was not the case. The seeds of destruction were buried somewhere out in the Gulf, just waiting for the right conditions to germinate.

As the SUV chewed through the miles, the same thoughts kept going round in my head: Sergeant Ruben Wright, my old CCTs buddy, was not the kind of guy who'd take his own life, but he was most definitely the type who'd take the enemy with him, especially if he thought there was no way out. How would he face up to the challenge of knowing his mind and body were deteriorating and, with it, his career and the relationship to the woman he loved?

Enter Butler — young, fit, and virile, three realities his girlfriend was experiencing firsthand behind his back, and on hers. Learning that Amy was pregnant and Butler was the father would have been hard for Ruben to take. And when he found out, would that have been catalyst enough to change his will? I knew his condition was deteriorating rapidly. What about his mental state? Was that crumbling, too?

It could have gone down exactly as Butler said it did. Ruben was depressed, jealous, and angry. When the SAS unit came out of the C-130 all messed up, it wasn't just one of those things. Ruben made sure it happened that way by stumbling into the other guys and breaking up the formation. He'd then slammed into Butler in midair with the full intention of causing him some significant damage. Then he cut his own thigh strap with his knife and pulled his rip cord. Gravity and Newton's Laws of Motion did the rest, separating him from the chute. The unlikely method of his suicide, coupled with the significant bruising Butler would have suffered in the collision, the smashed flashlight… What investigation wouldn't put those things together in a light that would make Butler look bad? Ruben Wright's sweet revenge. The last desperate act of a desperate man.

Before I was aware of it, I'd driven fifty miles and the sign for Hurlburt Field appeared. I turned into the base, showed the security detail my shield, and drove to OSI. I slotted the Explorer between another SUV and a late-model Harley-Davidson.

My cell rang. I pulled it from my pocket as I passed Agent Lyne. Lyne glanced up from his desk and called, “Vin, there's a—”

With Lyne spinning in my wake, I walked into the room I'd been using as both an office and a warehouse for Ruben Wright's effects. A staff sergeant I didn't know, dressed in immaculate Class As, was standing among the trestle tables. Under one arm was his cap. In the other was an envelope, all official. “Special Agent Vin Cooper?” he asked.

I nodded as I pressed the cell's green button.

“Orders for you, sir.”

In my ear, I heard a familiar voice. “Vin? Arlen.”

I accepted the envelope from the sergeant. “Hey, Arlen. What's—”

He cut me off. “You know that little vacation you've been having down there at Uncle Sugar's expense?”

“What?”

“It's over.”

TWENTY-NINE

Vacation?” I asked. I glared at the handset then put it back to my ear.

“Trust me,” Arlen said. “Having your toenails pulled one by one would be a vacation compared to D.C. right at the moment. How's the case going?”

“Fine. Why do you ask?” I said.

“It's not me asking.”

“Who is?”

“I'm channeling for the boss.”

“What does he want to know?”

“Whether the Butler did it.”

“I've already used that one, Arlen.”

There was a sigh. “Jesus, you make it difficult sometimes.”

“I'll take that as a compliment,” I said.

“What I'm trying to ascertain here is whether you think the Limey's guilty.”