“What’s he trying to do?” Murphy wondered aloud, and finally the answer came to him. “Michaels, you son of a bitch!”
All of the news agencies monitored police frequencies, and reporters all over town plotted the same map that Murphy made. News vans joined the fleet of cop cars as they tried to close in on the fleeing boy. Overhead, news choppers from Buffalo and Syracuse TV stations followed the action from the air, the reporters and cameramen concentrating on the ground while the pilots concentrated on avoiding a midair collision.
The network affiliates had all been notified to stand by for a special report at any moment when the action got interesting. CNN was already showing live footage, even though there was nothing more to show than a lot of marauding police vehicles.
In Washington, D. C., a tiny television had been brought into The Bitch’s studio at NewsTalk 990 so that Denise could track the events as they unraveled. She was prepared to give a play-by-play rundown to her audience regarding what was going down in Pitcairn County. During a commercial break, she told Enrique to air only those callers who were on the boy’s side.
“We don’t need any more fuel on this fire,” she told him. Enrique assured her that the calls were running three-to-one in that direction anyway.
Once he’d reacquired his prey, Pointer moved through the crowd like a torpedo racing toward its target. He walked swiftly without running, steadily closing the distance between Nathan and himself. They were about fifty yards apart now, separated by just enough people that he couldn’t take a clean shot.
The kid moved smoothly, clearly wanting to avoid being recognized, and clearly unaware that Pointer was so close. The Hit Man had decided to play the takedown as an arrest rather than just popping him on the street. He’d cuff the kid and haul him into “custody?’ When they were alone, he’d do him where there were no witnesses.
The kid was fast, though. He’d have to wait until he was nearly on top of him to make his move. Pointer figured about three minutes more.
Then events took yet another unexpected turn.
Chapter 38
Nathan was getting close. He could see the obelisk in the distance now, rising above the heads of his fellow pedestrians. He walked among them as though he belonged, avoiding eye contact, and receiving none in return.
That guy behind the restaurant had unnerved him, shouting so loud. If the killer cop had been within a hundred yards, he would have heard that buttinsky shouting his name. Why couldn’t people just mind their own business?
Someone grabbed Nathan from behind in a crushing bear hug, pinning his arms to his sides and lifting him off his feet. “It’s all over now, kid! I gotcha!” All Nathan could see was a pair of beefy forearms across his chest. The pressure of the man’s grip drove Nathan’s elbow squarely into his bullet wound. The pressure and the pain made it impossible to take a whole breath.
“Let go of me!” Nathan yelled. “Help! Get this guy off of me!” He kicked wildly and wriggled in every direction. As the man’s grip weakened, Nathan started to slip through his grasp. The man grunted and staggered back as a flailing heel found his kneecap. When Nathan drove the back of his head into the man’s nose, he let go completely and staggered backwards. Nathan landed on his feet and coiled into a half-crouch, preparing to defend himself against the next attacker.
For a long moment, no one in the crowd moved as the realization hit them. Nathan heard his whispered name work its way through the crowd like The Wave at a baseball game.
“I didn’t kill those people,” he declared in a voice so soft that only the four or five people closest to him could hear it. “People are trying to kill me. Please let me be.”
The big man on the ground groaned loudly and cursed the boy. “Somebody grab him!” the man yelled.
“No!” Nathan yelled. “Please, no. I didn’t start this. He—”
“Just hold it right there, Mr. Bailey,” a voice said from behind.
The sound of Pointer’s voice made Nathan jump as though zapped with electricity. He whirled around, and there the killer was, still in his police uniform, his gun drawn and pointing directly at Nathan’s chest. Both of them knew that he couldn’t miss at this range.
The cameraman in the Action News helicopter was the first to notice the activity on the ground, about a block and a half frOm the square. It looked as if there were a fight in progress. When he zoomed in with his big telephoto lens for a better look, he saw that an arrest was being made.
“They’ve got him, Paul!” the cameraman shouted into the intercom. “They’ve got the kid! I’m getting the arrest on tape!”
Paul Petersen, the on-air reporter, darted to the monitor to confirm his cameraman’s report, then radioed the station.
“It’s going down right now!” Petersen exclaimed to the news desk. “Tell the network we’ve got a live feed of the arrest!”
A patrol car spotted Michaels at the base of the memorial.
Sheriff Murphy’s plan was simple enough. Find Warren Michaels, keep an eye on him, and sooner or later, they’d have Nathan Bailey in custody. From the way the lieutenant had been acting, it only made sense that he’d arrange a meeting. And after Petrelli had explained the business about Michaels’s son, the intense protective streak made sense as well. Clearly, the man had lost perspective.
Or such was the message delivered to Deputy Steadman. Now codenamed Sniper One, he’d been dispatched to commandeer a corner office belonging to an accountant on the third floor of the professional building across from the Lewis and Clark Memorial. From there, he would have a clear view of the area around the obelisk. For the last ten minutes, while Steadman had been on station, Michaels had done nothing but pace and check his watch. As Sniper One watched him through his ten-power scope, the detective seemed distraught. Steadman read that as proof that his party was running late.
Steadman had rehearsed this scene and dozens like it in his mind hundreds of times. After three years as a SWAT sniper, he’d been called out only once to prepare a shot, and that time the bad guy gave up without a struggle. Nonetheless, he knew he was ready, physically, psychologically and technically. He’d read everything he could find, and talked to many successful snipers, and shot thousands of rounds into all manner of targets-moving, stationary and partially concealed. He knew he’d be able to handle whatever came his way.
The thought of avenging his friends’ deaths made it all that much easier. Steadman had seen firsthand how the kid reacted when he was cornered. He’d seen the gun on the seat of the car and he’d seen the gaping holes blasted through his buddies’ heads.
Steadman wasn’t fooled by Nathan’s age. He knew what a criminal mind like that was capable of. The arrest was going down soon, and if the cop-killing bastard even thought about violence, Steadman was going to blast him straight into next month.
The sniper’s nest sat back about six feet from the open window. Two phone books and an accounting manual stacked on top of the expensive wooden desk served as the rest for his beanbag rifle support. Steadman sat comfortably on the edge of a high-backed leather chair that he’d wheeled around to the front of the desk. He double-checked to make sure the safety was on and took care to ensure that his finger stayed out of the trigger guard before bringing the crosshairs to bear on Michaels’s head.