Walking up onto the terrace and seeing the bodies was a bizarre experience. Judging from the way they were clustered and from their various positions, the victims seemed to have been shot down unawares.
There was a bar at one end of the terrace stocked with top-tier booze; a beefy bartender sprawled behind it. Another man had fallen near the piano. The others died in two small clusters, as if they’d been chatting when the bullets found their marks.
The lights were blazing inside. We went through open French doors into an opulently decorated home that clashed with the antebellum exterior-lots of marble, chrome, gilt, and mirrors.
“Looks like a Moscow disco, for Christ’s sake,” Mahoney said.
There was a long table to our left loaded with food, and four more dead people around it. To our right there was a large entertaining area and a kitchen.
Nine died in there, though at least four appeared to have died fighting. There were pistols and spent casings on the floor near them.
“I think I know this guy,” Sampson said, crouching by a man in a suit with perfectly coiffed silver hair. He was in his fifties and looked vaguely familiar to me despite the wound to his throat.
“I think I do too, but I can’t place him,” I said.
Sampson carefully reached into the victim’s breast pocket, got out his wallet.
He opened it and whistled. “Here’s your first corrupt politician. That’s Congressman Rory McMann.”
“Shit,” Mahoney said. “Justice has spent years trying to get that guy.”
Rep. McMann of Virginia Beach, Virginia, had been investigated several times, but no prosecutor had ever made charges stick. He was a good ol’ boy who chased skirts and liked to drink. Those vices had almost gotten him censured by the House of Representatives, but he’d managed to wriggle free of that as well. Now here he was, the victim of vigilantes.
“It’s going to take us days to process this place and identify everyone,” I said, bewildered by the carnage.
“I can tell you who they are,” a woman said loudly in a thick Russian accent. We started and looked around.
But there was no one alive in the room but us.
76
“I WILL TELL you everything, but I… I want witness protection,” she said, and we realized she was talking to us through Bluetooth speakers mounted high in the corners of the room.
“Who are you?” Mahoney asked. “Where are you?”
“My name is Elena Guryev,” she said. “I am in the panic room.”
“How do we find you?” Sampson asked.
“I tell you when I have witness protection.”
I looked at Mahoney and said, “With this many victims, I can’t see that being a hard sell.”
“I can’t give you the papers at the moment, Ms. Guryev,” Mahoney said. “But I give you my word.”
Several seconds of silence followed. “For my son too.”
Mahoney sighed. “For your son too. Where is he?”
“Here, with me. He’s sleeping.”
“Your husband?”
The silence was longer this time. “Dead.”
“Let us get you and your son out of here,” Mahoney said.
“Go to wine cellar in the basement. It has door, like from a barn. Go inside. There’s a camera there. Show me your badges and identifications.”
The house was sprawling and we took a wrong turn or two before finding a staircase into the basement. The wine-cellar door was rough-sawn barn wood. We opened it and stepped into a brick-floored room with thousands of bottles of wine in racks along the walls.
We each held up our badge and ID to a tiny camera on the ceiling.
A moment later, we heard large metal bars disengage and slide back. A section of the wine cellar’s rear wall swung open hydraulically, revealing Elena Guryev studying us from a space about the size of two prison cells.
She was tall, willowy, and in her late thirties, with sandy-blond hair and the kind of bone structure and lips that magazine editors swoon over. Black cocktail dress. Black hose and heels. Hefty diamonds at her ears, wrists, and throat.
Her hazel eyes were puffy and bloodshot, but she acted in no way distraught. Indeed, she seemed to exude a steely will as she stood with her arms crossed in front of a bunk bed. On the lower bunk, a boy of about ten slept, curled up under a blanket, his head wrapped in gauze bandages.
Across from the bed, six small screens showed six different views of the house and grounds.
“Mrs. Guryev,” Mahoney began softly.
“Dimitri cannot hear us,” she said. “He is stone-deaf and on pain drugs. He had a cochlear implant operation two days ago at Johns Hopkins.”
I said, “Do you want a doctor to see him?”
“I am physician,” she said. “He’s fine and better sleeping.”
“Are you okay?” I asked.
“No,” she said, her fingers traveling to her lips, her eyes gazing at the floor as if contemplating horror. “I don’t know what I’ll tell him about his father.”
A moment later, she raised her head and that toughness was back. “What do you want to know?”
Sampson gestured at the screens. “You saw what happened?”
“Some of it,” she said.
“Is the feed recorded?” Mahoney asked.
“It is,” she said. “But they knew where the big hard drive was stored and took it with them.”
“Got away clean again,” Sampson grumbled.
“They only think they got away clean,” Mrs. Guryev said, reaching down to the bed. “But I make sure they will pay.”
She held an iPhone in her hand like a pistol. “I videoed them, two without their hoods.”
77
ON A SCREEN in Bree’s office a few hours later, we watched a precision military force massacre the victims we’d found in the house, including Antonin Guryev, who begged for his life and offered the killers millions before he was shot to death in his bedroom.
The iPhone camera went haywire at that point and you heard Elena Guryev gasp and then cry out in Russian. The camera showed her shoes as she wept for several minutes and then returned to the feed from her bedroom.
“Here it comes,” I said.
The gunman who killed Guryev had gotten down on his knees by the bed. He reached under it and yanked out the hard drive that recorded all security feeds on the grounds. He tucked it under one arm, tore off his hood, and wiped at his sweaty brow before he walked out of sight.
I backed the recording up and froze it at the moment the hood was off, showing a face I’d seen before, the one that was a fusion of Asia and Africa.
“Say hello to Lester Hobbes,” Sampson said.
Bree sat forward, said, “No kidding.”
“Wait,” I said. “The second one’s coming up.”
The iPhone camera swung shakily to another feed in the panic room, and then it focused, showing the six hooded gunmen cleaning their way out of the entertainment area of the house, picking up their brass and even vacuuming around the bodies. When they reached the French doors that opened onto the terrace, one of them unzipped the back of the vacuum, removed the dust bag, and turned to leave while tugging off the hood.
You caught a flash of her, a woman with blond hair. It took a few tries at the computer to freeze her with her face in near profile.
“Who is she?” Bree asked
“No idea yet,” Sampson said.
“Who were the victims besides the congressman?” Bree asked.
“Russian mobsters, representatives from the Sinaloa drug cartel, two bankers from New York and their wives, and someone we didn’t expect.”
“Who?”
“We’ll get to him in a second,” I said.
We explained that, according to Elena Guryev, the party had actually been a kind of emergency board meeting of a loose alliance of criminals who trafficked in everything from narcotics to humans.
“What was the meeting about?” Bree asked.
“Ironically enough, the vigilantes,” Sampson said. “Every target they hit-the meth factories and the convoy-were part of the alliance’s business.”