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“You have our food?”

Wofford nodded weakly, knowing Biddle would slap his face if could see him now, demand that he show pride and strength as a servant of Christ. He couldn’t. He wasn’t made to face people with machine guns and the hearts of savages. “It’s in… it’s in the back of the car.”

Abu Sayeed turned back to the cottage, snapped his fingers, and said something in Arabic. A moment later a third man emerged, the one who had ridden in the container. He glanced at Wofford with eyes as roiled as thunderclouds, and then opened the SUV’s hatch and began to carry the boxes of food into the cottage.

Abu Sayeed continued to inspect Wofford, making no effort to hide his scorn. “I trust everything is still on schedule?” he asked after several long seconds.

Wofford could not bring himself to meet the man’s eyes. “Yes,” he said, directing his unfocused stare toward the cottage roof.

“Of course you would tell me if anything had changed,” Abu Sayeed said.

“Yes.” Wofford looked at his car. The stocky man was back already, getting the last carton of food. There were still two cases of Coke and Mountain Dew waiting to be unloaded. He prayed for the man to hurry.

“Do you think of us as merely your servants who will bloody our hands whenever you order it?”

Wofford forced himself to meet the icy stare. He wanted to say it was the Arab’s fault, that things had started going wrong when his man failed to kill Lucas, but his courage failed. “Of course not, but it had to be done,” he said in a faltering voice.

Abu Sayeed’s lip curled. “Why don’t you do your own killing?”

Wofford looked at the ground and pictured the three charred corpses. He swallowed as bile edged into the back of his throat. He was no soldier, especially no general like Biddle… and the thought of what he’d done. “We had a problem,” he managed after several seconds. “We needed to take care of it.”

You did nothing!” Abu Sayeed said, his voice soft but full of acid. “We took care of it.”

Wofford felt small and helpless. “The man was… our security cameras caught him snooping in our computers. He might have ruined everything… for all of us.” His cheeks burned. He had made the error by leaving that phone number in his computer’s trash file. The deaths were his fault.

“We are not murderers,” Abu Sayeed said, his voice like a lash. “As mujahideen, we kill for the glory of God, not the protection of blunderers. You have dishonored us.”

“I apologize,” Wofford said in a near whisper. He glanced at his SUV, flooded with relief as the stocky man unloaded the last two cases of soda from the back. “I have to go now,” he said.

Abu Sayeed eyed him with a derisive smile. “Of course.”

Wofford slammed the SUV’s rear hatch, climbed behind the wheel, and began to drive. He boiled with humiliation and rage and wanted to stop and shout that all infidels would die when God’s prophecy was fulfilled. However, he kept driving.

THIRTY-SIX

MORRISTOWN, NJ, JUNE 30

BY TEN THAT MORNING, SMYTHE still hadn’t answered his phone. Maggie, having decided to give Brent another reprieve, had gone to work. He dozed intermittently on the couch and dialed Smythe’s number each time he awoke. His last attempt had been seven minutes earlier. Smythe should have been at work for several hours already, so why the hell wasn’t he picking up?

Brent’s body screamed for sleep, but his concern kept him from anything more than catnaps. He tried to convince himself that Smythe had only snooped a phone number, but he couldn’t deny that whoever had murdered Dr. Faisal and stolen his money would kill to cover their tracks. He glanced at his watch. How much more time would Maggie give him?

Not much, he thought, and there were other loose ends to pursue. After a second, he gritted his teeth against the pain, rose, and hobbled slowly upstairs to the guest room. Earlier, he had called information and learned there was no Spencer McDonald in West Orange, either listed or not. Now, on a hunch, he logged onto Maggie’s computer and searched real estate listings in West Orange. He estimated that “Spencer McDonald’s” house had six or more bedrooms and would probably cost at least two million dollars. Seven listings met his criteria, and his breath caught when the third one showed a picture of the house.

He called the realty company, and an agent told him the house was available but couldn’t be shown because a movie company had rented it for several weeks. He could see it as soon as the lease expired, the agent said, but not before. In the meantime she could show him a number of other listings. He thanked her, promised to call back, and hung up.

This discovery only deepened his anxiety because it reinforced the idea that people had gone to a great deal of trouble to set him up. It also sharpened his fear for Smythe. He went down to the den and dialed yet again, letting the number ring until voice mail picked up. He ended the call, as he had all the others, without leaving a message.

He dozed for a short time, but the phone woke him. He let it ring, waiting for the answering machine in the kitchen to play its message. Once he heard Maggie’s voice on the other end he grabbed the receiver.

“Have you seen it?” she asked.

“What?” Something in her tone made his stomach turn to ice.

“Owen Smythe died in a house fire last night along with his wife and child.”

For several seconds he couldn’t breathe. He threw an arm across his eyes. This was his fault! He might as well have struck the match! Instantly, no matter how he tried to turn it off, his mind began to replay the terrible scene from his childhood—burning embers falling into a room where the walls had turned to solid flame—only this time it wasn’t Brent and Harry in the room but Owen Smythe and his family. “They killed them,” he whispered.

“We don’t know for sure,” Maggie said, her words sounding hollow.

“This is no coincidence!” Brent snapped.

Maggie’s reply was soft but firm. “It’s not your fault. You asked for a favor.”

Suddenly he felt a new fear. What if his pursuers learned about Maggie? They’d managed to find out everything else. Even if he went to jail, they might still come after her. He should get out now, immediately. He wouldn’t make it far in a stolen car, but maybe far enough to keep her safe.

“Brent,” Maggie said, as if she was reading his mind, “stay there. You can’t do this alone, and you have no place to go.”

He said nothing.

“I stopped by Fred’s this morning,” she continued. “Two plainclothes guys are watching the house.”

“How is he?”

“He needed to know you’re alive. I took him a loaf of olive bread and slipped a note inside the bag. I just handed it to him, gave him a kiss, and left. If I’d talked to him those guys could have heard every word. In the note I told him you’re okay, but he’s under surveillance and not to call my house or come by.”

Brent groaned. “Fred doesn’t listen to anybody.”

“Like somebody else I know. Anyway, he’ll listen this time,” Maggie said. “I told him it’s life and death.”

• • •

When he hung up, his mind was racing again. In addition to sorrow and guilt, a desire for vengeance burned in his guts. He wanted to find his enemy and smash his face to pulp. Only he didn’t even know who that person was, not for sure.

He went to the kitchen and rummaged furiously through the kitchen drawers for a legal pad, raging at the knowledge that even if he knew where Howard Turner lived, he was too weak to go after him. Worse, time was running out. Seven people were now dead, and he was the only common denominator. Even if Maggie continued to give him more rope, the police were already searching under every rock. Any hour they were liable to figure out that he and Maggie once dated, and then they’d tap her phones and watch her house. Before that happened he needed to figure out who had done these things.