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The two walked along the upstairs hallway shoulder to shoulder, while Millikan spoke in a low voice. “The family owned the building under the name of the family’s corporation, and charged themselves rent.”

“What about these companies?” He pointed at Crestview Wholesale, and swept his hand toward the row of other doors, all with different names on them.

“All of them—the travel agency, the salon and manicure place, the credit lender—were dba’s: the mother or one of the sons ‘doing business as.’ Half of them connect with the others through doors inside, like hotel suites. You’ll see.”

He opened the door of the wholesale office, stepped around the desk in front, and pointed down at the floor. “It’s a shame you didn’t get to see this before they took the bodies out, but there will be pictures. This is where he did the mother. I think she was sitting in this chair when he came in the door. She swiveled around and took a step to get away, and he was on her. It was sort of like a big cat taking down an antelope—kind of flings his weight onto her back so she just runs into the ground. He grabbed her by the hair with the left hand and sliced the throat with the right, then shoved the face back down into the rug. He’s not hurt as bad as we’d hoped.”

Millikan stepped carefully across the carpet to a door that led off to another room. “Next he goes this way. It’s the travel agency, according to the sign on the door. I don’t know if he made noise doing Mom, or if he knew this one was going to be armed, or what. But as he’s walking, he’s getting out his gun.”

Prescott nodded and waited. Millikan pushed open the door and stood to the side so Prescott could stand where he had been. In the wall at the other side of the room there were three bullet holes with wooden dowels stuck in them. The holes were all spattered with bright spots of blood where they had passed through a body into the wall. Millikan said nothing, only watched Prescott sidestep, bend his knees slightly, and raise his right arm to line up with the three dowels so they pointed up the arm toward his right eye. Prescott held his position for a few seconds, then looked around him to study the room.

The next step came to Prescott immediately, and Millikan could see it happening. He kept his right arm pointed at the three spots on the wall, took three steps diagonally forward, bent over to look at the outline of the body, came to the space at the left side of the door, and crouched.

He glanced at Millikan, and Millikan nodded in agreement. “I think so. I think that’s where he waited for the second son to come to him. He stayed low, and put the shot through the spine just under the jaw.”

Prescott stepped around the wall into the next room, then hesitated. “Was that it? Two sons?”

“Nope. There’s a third body he got in the hallway. It seems he’s a son too.”

Prescott went out the door and stared. The blood was on the end of the hall farthest from the stairs. Prescott said, “Did the cops do all the searching in the big office, or was that him?”

“He did it,” said Millikan.

Prescott stepped along the hall back into the wholesale office, where the first body had been found. The vault at the end of the room was open. Desk drawers were open, papers were thrown on the floor, left that way, apparently, because something the forensics team planned to do had not yet been accomplished. Prescott could see money, too. A few hundred-dollar bills looked as though they had been spilled from a larger pile. “Any idea how much money was in the safe?”

Millikan shook his head. “I don’t even know if that’s where it came from. If you think it was him, though, it must have been a lot. He’s not the kind who would spill eight hundred on the floor and leave it, unless there was so much that carrying it was a problem.”

“It was him,” said Prescott.

“Agreed. He doesn’t panic, so it had to be the bulk of it. He didn’t take anything but cash. There was jewelry and stuff, but he didn’t touch it.”

“Still here?”

“No,” said Millikan. “They took it downtown to lock it up.”

Prescott walked closer to the desk and knelt beside the pile of papers on the floor. “Did the cops find any kind of customer list?”

“Like a hooker’s trick book?”

“They sent couriers all over, picking up stolen jewelry and stuff, then handing it off to other people. There were sales, consignment deals, trades, It’s kind of complicated to carry in your head.”

Millikan shrugged. “They haven’t found anything like that yet.” He let his eyes settle on the bloodstained carpet near the front desk. “Maybe that’s what the old lady did—bookkeeping.”

“I suppose,” said Prescott absently. He was staring closely at the pile of papers on the floor, craning his neck and leaning over them to read without touching them. He got to his feet and walked to a filing cabinet that had been opened, the contents of one drawer dumped on the floor. He looked closely at the pile, then used a handkerchief to open the other three file drawers, glanced inside, and closed them.

Millikan said, “What is it?”

Prescott was frowning. “This guy comes to this file cabinet. He opens a drawer, goes through it. He dumps papers on the floor. The other three drawers are untouched. What does that say?”

“He found what he wanted. Otherwise, he would have done the same to the others. It was probably the money, or part of it. I have a feeling this wasn’t the kind of operation where the cash is all neatly stacked in the vault. They’ll probably find it squirreled away all over the building.”

Prescott shook his head. “He found what he wanted, but I don’t think it was money. See? The spilled money all fell near that desk. None of it came from over here.” He stared at Millikan thoughtfully. Then he began to search through the papers that had been thrown from the filing cabinet drawer.

“What was in it?”

“Old bills. Power, water, janitorial service, gardening, telephone.”

“What do you suppose he thought he’d find in there?”

“Me. He’s looking for me.”

“And what are you looking for?”

“The most recent telephone bill. There should have been one within the last week or two, and I don’t see it.”

Millikan stepped closer. “Is there any way he could use that?”

Prescott said, “The number of the guy I used as a middleman to hire him is on the older bills, but so are a whole bunch of others. It’s a complicated operation, with a lot of couriers visiting businesses all over the map.” He stopped and squinted at the wall for a moment. “I set the whole thing up almost a month ago. My guy—Dick Hobart—called here and talked to somebody—say it was the mother—and she said she would have to talk to the shooter. A few days later she called Hobart back to say he had agreed.”

“I’m not following this,” said Millikan.

“I set this up so everything would be anonymous. I made Hobart insist that all communication be done on pay telephones. I pretended that was so there would be no record of the calls, and that would protect everybody if something went wrong. It was really to convince the shooter that the job was safe, and to keep him from trying to find out more about the client.”

“So what’s the problem? Didn’t they do it?”

“Yeah, they did it. Otherwise, he would have pulled out.”

“Then what is he going to use to figure out which number on a phone bill belongs to your middleman?”

Prescott said, “He can’t know when Dick Hobart called, and he wouldn’t have any way of getting that number. But he knows what day it was when Mom—or whoever it was—asked him if he wanted to go up to Minnesota and kill somebody. He said yes, and she called Dick Hobart back. Even if he wasn’t here listening, the killer knows when that was, probably to the minute.”