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In an effort to manage the frustration, Jed had written off such details as irrelevant in the short term. The whole department had. All that mattered was the boy’s capture. They’d all rationalized that whatever motivation Nathan might have had for killing the supervisor was between him, the prosecutor and the jury.

Jed silently berated himself and his colleagues as he realized that this collective myopia had nearly cost a young boy his life. The very police force that was supposed to protect him had in fact eased the burden on his killer. That thought—and the thought of those poor cops in New York—sickened him. Soon, though, they’d set it all straight.

The first thing Jed noticed about Mark Bailey’s untidy little house was the drawn curtains. They gave the structure a haunting, abandoned look.

“I wonder if anybody’s home,” he thought aloud.

Things didn’t look right. A Ford Bronco sat in the driveway, its image shimmering in the heat rising from the driveway. Nothing moved this day but the thermometer. It was barely noon, and the temperature had already topped ninety-eight degrees. The weatherman on the radio said to expect a new record at 104. Jed longed for the fall.

“That’s his car:’ Harry offered. “In the same spot as yesterday.” “Does the place look odd to you?” Jed asked.

Harry studied the front of the house for a moment. “No,” he said. “Looks like a house. What are you thinking?”

“I don’t know,” Jed mused. “Looks odd to me for some reason. Like nobody’s home. All the blinds are shut.”

“Well, his car’s still in the driveway,” Harry reminded him. “My guess is he’s just trying to keep the place cool.”

Jed said nothing else. He opened the car door and walked silently up the sloping front yard toward the porch. Harry followed, three steps behind. The younger man was startled when Jed withdrew his big nine-millimeter Glock from the high-hip holster under his sportcoat.

“What’s up?” Harry asked as he drew his own weapon.

“Don’t know,” Jed replied, whispering now. “Just doesn’t feel right.”

Standing off to the hinge side of the door, out of harm’s way in case someone blasted bullets through the door, Jed knocked loudly enough to draw a look from the neighbor across the street. There was no response. Harry took a mirror position to Jed, on the knob side. Seeing the guns, the neighbor moved quickly inside, gathering her five-year-old daughter in her arms.

Jed knocked louder. “Mark Bailey!” he shouted. “This is the police. Open the door!” In the humid air of the still neighborhood, his voice echoed off the houses. Despite the noise, nothing moved from within Mark Bailey’s house.

Jed eyed the doorknob, then nodded to Harry, who reached down and tried to turn it. When it didn’t budge, he returned his eyes to Jed and shook his head.

Jed swung away from his defensive position and took a shooter’s stance, two-handing his aim at the door, while Harry swung around to jam the sole of his boot into the door just adjacent to and a little above the knob. As though blasted open with dynamite, the steel door exploded inward with a crash and rebounded closed, just as Harry dove sideways to catch the door with his shoulder. From his awkward position on his left side, Harry could cover the front hallway to the right. In three quick steps, Jed darted into position to cover the left.

“Mark Bailey!” Jed yelled again. “Police officers!” Harry scrambled to his feet, staying crouched down low, ready for action. Still, nothing moved.

“Check out this leveclass="underline" ’ Jed instructed. “I’ll go upstairs.”

They split up, and even as they parted, Jed knew what they would find. There is a smell to death, a thick sweet odor. Over the years, he’d learned to detect even the faintest traces of the stench. Mark Bailey’s house reeked of it. Jed had just reached the top of the stairs when Harry called out from the living room.

“Oh, shit!” shouted Harry, clearly unnerved. “Oh, Christ, Sergeant, I found him! He’s in the living room! He’s dead.”

I knew it, Jed thought as he headed back downstairs.

Harry was finishing a frantic primary search of the first floor while Jed entered the living room, holstering his weapon. “Bad guy gone?” he asked, inwardly amused by the fear on the young cop’s face.

Harry nodded. “Yeah,” he said, “the place is clean. Look at him, though. That’s disgusting:’

“Yeah,” Jed agreed as he surveyed the body, instinctively reaching for his little notebook. “He sure as hell pissed somebody off.”

Mark Bailey’s body was tied rigidly into a dining room chair, his head cast backwards over the chair back. His mouth was open wide, a yawning cavern rimmed with crimson smears. His graying blond hair dangled heavily, matted and violet. In the middle of it all, a long finger of extruded brain tissue extended like a ponytail from a ragged hole in the crown of his skull. Both arms dangled limply at his sides. Harry was the first to notice that the cast had been removed from Mark’s right arm, and that his purple, swollen fingers were twisted at horrifying angles.

Using a handkerchief to hold the receiver and a pencil eraser to push the buttons, Jed used the phone on the end table next to the sofa to call for the criminal investigative unit and the coroner. While he waited on the line to pass along the critical information, he surveyed the interior of the tiny house, taking particular interest in the broken television set with the empty booze bottle resting where the picture tube should have been. Three days’ worth of newspapers had been stacked next to the sofa, each issue opened to a story about Nathan. Jed remembered his briefing on the details that had sent Nathan to the Juvenile Detention Center, and he wondered what the boy’s Uncle Mark had thought about the events of the past three days. Was he remorseful? Titillated? Amused?

“C’mon,” Jed urged impatiently, waiting for somebody in the coroner’s office to pick up the phone. He shifted the receiver from his hand to his shoulder, where he held it in place with a sustained shrug. His eyes wandered to a sheaf of papers; legal documents, he recognized from the numbered lines and exaggerated indentions. There it was, on the front: The Last Will and Testament of somebody named William Steven Bailey. Having nothing better to do, he casually thumbed through the stapled pages.

Something underlined on page fourteen of the will caught his attention, and his mind shifted from scanning mode to reading mode. Halfway through the second paragraph, his backbone straightened and he sat down on the edge of the sofa cushion.

“I’ll be damned,” he said aloud.

“What have you got?” Harry asked, taking advantage of the opportunity to examine something other than the body.

“Our motive,” Jed said sharply.

“Medical Examiner’s office, this is Julie,” a voice said in his ear. Jed told her to hold on for a minute.

Chapter 36

So let me get this straight,” Sheriff Murphy summarized after listening to Warren’s presentation. “You want me to go before the voters of this county and tell them that on the advice of a police detective from Virginia, I should ignore all the physical evidence gathered thus far—not the least of which is an admission of guilt from the kid himself—and shift our efforts to find a phantom hit man. Is that what you’re telling me, Lieutenant Michaels?”

Warren scanned the faces of the sheriff and Petrelli, who sat perched like a parrot next to his fellow politician. A deep, abiding belief in the criminal justice system was the only thing that kept Warren from popping them both. This was a useless exercise, he realized. To these two, police work was about votes. Nothing more.

When Warren didn’t answer, Petrelli filled the silence. “Warren, I’m worried about you,” he said, shaking his head, his voice dripping with condescension. “We all know how hard the loss of your son was on you last year. I think maybe you’ve lost perspective on this case. Perhaps you should volunteer to step down from it. That way, I don’t have to ask Chief Sherwood to remove you from it.”