“You too, Captain,” I said.
Abrahamsen got into his van, waved, and pulled out into the street.
“He’s a really nice guy,” Ali said.
“Seems like it,” I said, lifting his bike up.
“Do you think I could be in the cavalry someday?” Ali said.
“In a tank or on a bike?”
“Bike.”
I paused and then said, “You can have anything your heart desires if you work for it.”
Chapter 8
For three days, I ignored the media’s reports about Edgerton’s execution and the accusations from his family that Katrina Nixon’s murder was proof of Mikey’s innocence. On Tuesday morning, I checked into the federal detention center on Mill Street in Alexandria, Virginia, not far from the Courthouse.
The sheriff’s deputy returned my ID, said, “Dirty Marty know you’re coming?”
“Mr. Forbes made the request for counseling himself,” I said.
The deputy, a stout woman named Estella Maines, sniffed and said, “We’ll bring him out to you, Dr. Cross, but I don’t know why you bother.”
“The hopeless idealist in me, Deputy.”
Maines almost smiled as she buzzed me through.
I went to the booth, reminding myself that these kinds of visits were important for me. Despite the fact that I had a busy life as a contract consultant to DC Metro and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, I found deeper fulfillment in my role as a therapist.
Martin Forbes shuffled out a steel door and took a seat on the other side of a bulletproof-glass divider. In his mid-forties, balding, Forbes was an unremarkable-looking man except for a squiggly white line that ran underneath his jaw. That scar was the only reason I’d agreed to see him.
Once upon a time, I’d worked with Forbes at the FBI when he was briefly assigned to the Behavioral Analysis Unit. He was a junior agent then and as eager to catch bad guys as I was.
That eagerness had almost gotten Forbes killed, but it had saved the life of Ned Mahoney, my former partner at the Bureau. We’d all been investigating several violent murders in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas that had smelled of a serial killer but turned out to be a crime syndicate covering its tracks.
Mahoney had gotten too close to a cell of the Sinaloa drug cartel and was snatched off the street one night in Tucson. Forbes witnessed the grab, followed, and fought successfully to free Ned. Before he managed that, a cartel thug tried to slit his throat.
Forbes picked up the phone on his side of the glass. “I appreciate you coming, Alex.”
“It’s the least I could do.”
“I’m innocent.”
“I saw that you pleaded not guilty.”
“I did,” he said. “This is no legal bullshit move, Alex. I’ve been framed.”
I sighed. “You said you wanted counseling, Marty. It’s why I came.”
“I knew you wouldn’t come otherwise. I did not do this.”
“You’ve got history, Marty. Your rep caught up with you.”
Forbes flushed, but he calmed himself. “I was cleared on those shoots. Didn’t you tell me that if you want to put out the fire, you’ve got to get close enough to burn?”
“That was Mahoney.”
“Well, I am no vigilante. I don’t know who pulled the trigger on those scum on the yacht, but as much as they deserved it, I sure as hell wasn’t the one who did it.”
I didn’t reply for several moments, letting my mind tick back through the case as laid out in the news articles that had dubbed the former FBI agent Dirty Marty, a riff on Dirty Harry, a cop gone rogue, taking justice into his own hands.
Though Forbes had been cleared in those shooting incidents, the Bureau was concerned enough to rein him in; he’d been transferred from a senior investigatory position in Chicago to a desk job in crime analysis at Quantico. At the time, Forbes had been leading a probe into a sexual-slavery ring, a group of people who brought women and young girls and boys from underdeveloped countries into the United States through Canada or Mexico.
The twenty-four-month probe had penetrated the ring at low levels, enough to free more than fifty women enslaved as prostitutes traveling the country, guarded by violent pimps. Those freed women had identified two men and a woman as the likely masterminds of the ring.
Carlos Octavio, a Panamanian national fluent in eight languages, was said to work in tandem with Ji Su Rhee, a Korean woman who spoke nine languages. Octavio and Rhee bought girls, boys, and young women in lawless, impoverished countries. Gor Bedrossian, an Armenian with ties to U.S. and Russian crime syndicates, was believed to be the one who put the smuggling and distribution system together and enforced it all with an iron fist.
The problem for Forbes had been twofold. First, there had been no concrete evidence tying any of the three alleged masterminds to the enslaved women who’d been freed in various raids around the country. And second, the trio rarely, if ever, stepped foot on U.S. soil.
Before his transfer out of the field, Forbes had followed money trails, attempting, unsuccessfully, to trace them back to the ringleaders. A year after his transfer, Forbes took a two-month leave of absence to write a book about sexual slavery in the twenty-first century.
Prosecutors believed the real reason he took the leave of absence was to murder the suspects.
Six weeks after Forbes left to write his book, the U.S. Coast Guard boarded an adrift yacht called the Harén — Spanish for “harem” — off the coast of Florida. The bloated, headless bodies of six people, including Bedrossian, Octavio, and Rhee, were found aboard, all of them shot dead.
In compartments belowdecks, Coast Guard officers found sixteen teenage girls from Brazil, Cambodia, and India. They were all starving and dehydrated.
The girls later said the shootings had occurred four nights before. They’d heard a boat come alongside the yacht, which was not an uncommon occurrence. Usually that meant there was a buyer or a seller coming aboard.
Then the shooting started, at first slow and methodical, then more frenzied. They heard the other boat leave, and then there was nothing but silence for days. Because the yacht had been found adrift close to international waters, the FBI had been called in. The condition of the bodies had hampered the investigation but not thwarted it.
Each of the six victims had been shot at point-blank range from behind, right between the shoulder blades. Their heads had been removed with surgical precision.
The bullets were later matched to a gun Forbes had used when he’d been a field agent. The .40-caliber pistol was found in a closet at the West Virginia cabin where he’d gone to write his book. The FBI also found DNA evidence putting Forbes on the yacht.
“Alex?” Forbes said now, pressing his hand against the bulletproof window. “Please, you’ve got to listen to me. I didn’t do this. I was framed.”
“By who?”
He hesitated. “I... don’t know... I can’t say for sure. He calls himself M.”
Chapter 9
At three that afternoon, I climbed up into the grandstands above the track at Coolidge High School, still feeling like I’d entered some kind of twilight zone during my discussion with Martin Forbes.
M?
Again?
How is that even possible?
But those six bodies were...just like...
“Alex?”
I glanced over to see Nana Mama waving at me. My grandmother wore a wool hat and jacket and had a heavy blanket across her lap. The drizzle had stopped, but the air was still chill and dank. Ali, next to her, was engrossed with something on his phone.
“How’s our girl looking?” I said, sitting down next to them.
“Haven’t seen her yet,” Ali said without raising his head.
“Really?” I said, gazing at the track and field where athletes from three different high schools were warming up. “That’s not like her.”
“You notice she’s been dragging?” Nana said. “She’s not getting enough sleep.”
“She’s a seventeen-year-old girl. It’s impossible for her to get enough sleep.”
“Dad,” Ali said, “can I borrow your phone? Mine died.”
“To play a game?”
He looked insulted. “No, to read a book.”
I handed it to him, said, “What are you reading?”
His thumbs flew over the screen of my phone as he said, “Criminal Investigation: An Introduction to Principles and Practice, by Peter Stelfox.”
“Where’d you find that?” I asked.
“Online.”
“You should be reading books that are more age-appropriate,” Nana said.
“Age-appropriate things bore me,” Ali said as he stared at my phone’s screen.
My grandmother looked at me sharply, apparently waiting for me to say something. “I could use a little backup at times,” she said.
Before I could reply, Jannie came out and started jogging around the track; she wore sweatpants and a hoodie, which was up. Normally, my daughter ran with a noticeable springiness in her gait, a bounce every time her foot hit the ground. It was almost like she was bounding. That natural stride had attracted the serious attention of several NCAA Division I coaches, all of them waving scholarships.
But as Jannie increased the pace of her warm-up run, I could see she was not striking the ground with the balls of her feet but farther back, toward her heels. It made her look awkward, and that was one thing Jannie never was on a track.
“She injure her foot again?” Nana Mama asked, concerned.
“I sure hope not,” I said, standing and raising my binoculars to get a better look.
Jannie had gone through a difficult year after breaking one of the sesamoid bones in her foot. She’d had an operation, and it was touch and go for a time whether she’d recover fully. But she had, and she’d run some very impressive times during the indoor-track season.
Now, however, something was definitely off, though I didn’t think it was her foot. Her shoulders were level, and her face showed no evidence of pain on the footfall.
But there just wasn’t the spark you normally saw in her.
“She mention anything bothering her in school?” I asked Nana Mama after Jannie slowed to a walk, hands on her hips, head down.
“Straight As so far.”
“Boys?”
Ali sniggered. “Jannie scares them away.”
Bree arrived and sat down. “Did I miss her?”
“No,” I said, watching my daughter again through the binoculars. She seemed distracted, almost listless, as she crossed the field toward her team.
I lowered the glasses and gave Bree a hug and a kiss. “Glad you made it.”
“Me too,” she said, and she smiled. “You texted that you had something bizarre to tell me?”