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Nash glanced at him a moment as if he’d aged some, then turned back to the canvas.

Teddy could hear Vega and Ellwood in the next room, directing a small army of crime scene techs. Glancing over his shoulder, he saw the medical examiner bagging up Edward Trisco’s remains. Trisco’s eyes were still open and he held the gas mask in his hand. But there was something odd about his face Teddy couldn’t put his finger on it. Maybe it was the lighting, but Trisco reminded him of a caricature of a human being and didn’t appear real. Like a broken toy lying on the floor without batteries.

The medic asked Teddy to face forward and he did. The wound didn’t hurt. The bullet had grazed his shoulder. Although he’d lost enough blood to weaken him, he’d been more than lucky. Vega had emptied the clip in Andrews’s gun. The rounds were hollow points. If the bullet had been another inch lower, it would have ripped out his chest.

Teddy glanced over at the district attorney. He was sitting on the floor with his wrists cuffed behind his back. The buckshot peppered through his backside wasn’t deemed serious by the medics, and could wait until later. But his eyes were still dulled from the concussion. Underneath his blank face, Teddy could tell that the man was seething.

Andrews maintained it had been a case of suicide. He’d heard the shot, followed the sound into the room and found Trisco on the floor. He spotted the gun right away and picked it up because Edward wasn’t dead and still appeared dangerous. That’s when Teddy entered the room with the shotgun, Andrews said. Teddy wouldn’t lower the gun. Fearing for his life, Andrews fired a shot in self-defense and fled. The serial numbers had been filed off the gun, so there was no way to determine who owned it. Andrews’s story had a certain ring to it until Ellwood walked outside and searched the district attorney’s car. A box of ammunition was found in the glove compartment. Hollow points. After that, Andrews requested an attorney and quieted down.

The basement windows lit up. Teddy guessed that they were camera lights and the press had arrived. Andrews must have noticed as well because he was staring outside and suddenly looked frightened.

After a few minutes, Vega and Ellwood entered the room, trading glances. Teddy realized they’d been waiting for the press to arrive before taking Andrews outside to their car. They wanted it on videotape. They wanted the image on the TV news. Andrews would be ruined in a single, decisive blow. He would be humiliated in public for all to see. Teddy had no doubt that the video clip would be played over and over again for months.

“You can’t do this,” Andrews shouted as they approached him.

“Sure we can,” Vega said. “Let’s go.”

“But they’re out there with their cameras.”

Ellwood smiled. “Yeah,” he said. “You’re gonna be a movie star.”

Andrews yelped as they grabbed him by the shoulders. His faced reddened and he began sputtering out words and making grunting noises. He was fighting them off as best he could, shrinking away from them with his hands bound. When he refused to walk or even stand, neither one of the detectives had much patience. Instead, they muscled him up off the floor and led him away. Once they reached the stairs, Andrews began whining.

Teddy wondered if the prosecutor who took his father away ever faced the music. He needed to see this, he decided. Pulling the medic’s hand away from his shoulder, he eased himself off the gurney and followed the detectives upstairs. Then he crossed the living room to the window and gazed outside.

It was more than a local party-the number of cameras waiting for the district attorney too many to count. A black-and-white idled directly before the house with its lights flashing. The car looked as if it had just been washed and waxed for the occasion. Teddy noticed the crime scene tape had been brought in so no one would miss the shot.

Ellwood opened the front door and glanced at his partner. As they started outside, the video cameras zoomed in for their close-ups and the strobe lights started flashing. The barrage of light was so fast and heavy, everything fixed to the ground appeared to be shaking. Andrews tried to lower his head, but it didn’t work. Vega and Ellwood had him by the shoulders and it looked as if his neck was stuck.

When they reached the car, the detectives hesitated before opening the rear door and turning their suspect over to a stern-looking man with a mustache dressed in plainclothes. A new wave a fear exploded over Andrews’s face. Vega pulled a card from his pocket. Microphones popped out of the crowd. They were reading him his rights in front of everyone, Teddy realized. Slowly, and in a voice loud enough that everyone could hear. As Andrews listened, his eyes went dead and bottomed out like an empty sky after a shooting star. He’d been made. Snuffed out as he crashed into the atmosphere. All burned up like a small rock that didn’t have enough stuff to reach the ground.

SEVENTY

Teddy gazed at the IV bag slung over a stand on wheels, noting the amber color of the morphine. His eyes drifted with the tube down to the needle in his arm. The pain in his shoulder must have been caught in traffic, he figured. It never made it to Trisco’s house. Instead, the pain was waiting for him when he reached the hospital and his adrenaline ran out. It struck with a vengeance, enveloping his arm and shooting through his chest and back in waves. When the doctor ordered morphine, Teddy had mixed feelings about it until the needle pierced his skin and the drug eventually chased the agony away.

He didn’t mind the hospital room that much. He found the din of city street noise filtering through the window somehow reassuring. Even soothing. Outside his room he could see a cop sitting in a chair reading a magazine. It wasn’t really necessary. The cop was here to run interference. But no one really thought a reporter could get past the team of cops downstairs.

Detectives Vega and Ellwood had stopped by a few hours ago and taken his statement with a small tape recorder laid on the bed. Teddy went through what he’d said to them, hoping he hadn’t left anything out. He’d told them about finding the bodies in the lake, and how he figured out where Eddie lived. He said he couldn’t wait for them to show up because of Rosemary. He had the gun, knew how to use it, and made the decision to go in. Both detectives agreed that while it was crazy and he could have been killed, in an emergency the situation defines the rules and they would’ve probably done the same thing. As they were leaving, Teddy asked them what they were going to do with Alan Andrews. Ellwood’s face lit up. Vega just smiled.

Teddy glanced at the clock on the wall and fought back a yawn. It was after midnight, and he was having difficulty staying awake. Fearing that he might close his eyes, he cast his legs over the side of the bed. The images he’d confronted over the last week were still so vivid. Darlene Lewis’s body stretched out on a dining room table. The faces staring out at him from the houses at the bottom of the lake. Trisco’s skin painting.

As he lowered his bare feet to the chilly linoleum floor, he realized there had been a scent to the painting. The same one he’d noticed at the morgue. It was the smell of death, leeching through the shellac. He could smell it now. See it as clearly as if he was still standing in the maniac’s studio. He didn’t want to dream about it. Didn’t want to be alone with it in the dark.

Nash walked into the room.

“I need to get out of here,” Teddy said.

“Then let’s go.”

Teddy tightened his robe. Grabbing the IV rack, he rolled it through the doorway into the hall. The cop looked up from his magazine.