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The irony of his chosen vocation wasn’t lost on him.

Or maybe his motivations were simpler than that. Maybe he killed because he was good at it. Maybe he killed because he didn’t know how to do anything else.

It’s also possible that he kept at it because he figured one day somebody was going to turn the tables on him and put him in the ground.

God knows he deserved it.

7

A bead of sweat trickled down Charlie Thompson’s side as she paced the sidewalk in front of Miami Police Headquarters, her cell phone to her ear. Garfield was inside, enjoying the relative comfort of the building’s air-conditioned lobby. They’d arrived over an hour ago and had been waiting for their department contact to collect them ever since. In that time, Jess had called twice. It seemed yesterday’s manic episode led to boy problems with a tequila chaser, and somehow it was up to Charlie to set Jess’s world right again. She wasn’t wild about the idea of Garfield overhearing her family drama, so she took the calls outside.

The building she paced beside was a squat, imposing concrete structure accented with tile the color of rust and red desert sand. It sat to the east of the city center, just blocks from Biscayne Bay, two miles and change from where Cruz met his fate. Low concrete barriers lined the building on all sides, disguised halfheartedly as retaining walls or planters for exhaust-choked palm trees. But they were architectural flourishes in a building devoid of architectural flourishes, and they weren’t fooling anyone. They were battlements, intended to protect the building and the people within from a street-level assault, or from a vehicle on a collision course. In a town full of drug smugglers and gunrunners, terrorists and gangbangers, an attack on police headquarters wasn’t entirely out of the question.

“Look,” Thompson said into the phone, “I’m not saying he shouldn’t have mentioned they were back together, Jess. All I said was snooping through his phone probably wasn’t the best idea.”

Jess gave Thompson an earful in reply while she wilted in the morning’s rising heat. Her brow beaded with sweat. She dabbed at it with her sleeve as she paced.

“Well, if you can’t trust him,” Thompson said, “maybe you shouldn’t be sleeping with him.”

An old woman with a hooked nose and oversized sunglasses eyed Thompson with disdain as she walked by, her hair rinse silver tipping toward blue. The way she cocked her head, she looked to Thompson like a cartoon owl.

“No, you shouldn’t text her back and tell her off.” A pause while Jess, riled up, responded. “Because he’s the one who fucked up-not her. Damn it, Jess, I don’t care how pretty he is-you deserve better. Yes, you do.

It took a while, but eventually she talked Jess down. By the time she reentered the lobby, her patience was wearing thin. Garfield, for his part, looked unruffled: his suit was clean and crisp; his tie too flashy but well knotted; his collar buttoned and pressed. But then, that might’ve been because Garfield spent the hours after the Petrela collar catching some Zs, taking a shower, and changing his clothes, while Thompson had been perched atop her hotel room’s bed with her notebook computer on her lap, cranking through the necessary post-bust paperwork and poring over the file on the Cruz hit-which meant she hadn’t slept or showered in forty hours. Even as the night wore on, she’d been unable to stop her brain from cycling; she couldn’t force herself to sleep. Not when they were so close.

“Spill it,” Garfield had said, flipping through the file on his lap as Thompson piloted their rented Focus from the airport to police headquarters. “What’s this ‘ghost’ thing all about?”

Thompson smiled at the question as she weaved through Route 112’s dense morning traffic, though it was less a smile of amusement than vindication. The term had started as a joke. She’d been on this case since long before her fellow agents thought there was a case at all, and in the early days, they’d ribbed her mercilessly for it. Much as she loved her job, the FBI was still a good ol’ boys’ club at heart; the instincts of female agents were called into question far more often than those of their male counterparts. But she hadn’t cared what they thought-she’d known in her gut she was right. That there was a new player in the game. Someone talented. Dangerous. And one hundred percent off the Bureau’s radar.

Every time Thompson had added another kill to her whiteboard, another report to her file, her colleagues would tease her, saying, “Thompson’s ghost has struck again.” And whenever a case on her list was proven to be the work of some low-level thug-in the early days of her investigation, she’d yet to discern the pattern and had cast too wide a net-she’d never heard the end of it.

But then a pattern did emerge, and the killings escalated to the point that the Bureau brass could no longer ignore them. By the time the deputy director appointed Thompson, the resident expert, to head up the investigation, her colleagues had stopped laughing.

Garfield gripped the dash and inhaled sharply through clenched teeth as Thompson threaded their rental between a minivan and a delivery truck. Somewhere behind them, a horn blared.

“It’s not a what,” Thompson replied, “it’s a who. Some new hitter on the scene. Relatively new, at least. Bagged thirty-five kills we know of in the past two years alone, though I suspect his CV stretches farther back than that.”

“And you think this Cruz was number thirty-six?”

Thompson didn’t think Cruz was thirty-six-she knew it. “Has all the hallmarks.”

“What hallmarks?” Garfield asked. “He shot a guy. Seems to me anyone can pull a trigger.”

“You kidding me? I wouldn’t call popping a guy from four blocks away just pulling a trigger,” said Thompson. “But anyway, that wasn’t what I meant-he rarely kills the same way twice.”

Irritation flickered across Garfield’s face. “Okay then, what’re the hallmarks?”

“For one, his hits are flashy. Asphyxiation in the middle of a crowded convention center. An airport knifing. A precision shot on a busy city street. Hell, he once used a shaped charge to blow a theater chair-and the guy inside it-to pieces without injuring the patrons on either side. And for two, despite the fact that they’re so flashy, no one’s ever

managed to get eyes on him.”

“Not even traffic cams? Surveillance footage?”

Thompson shook her head. “Disabled or obscured.”

“Then I’m guessing he ain’t the sort to leave prints, either.”

“You’re guessing right. But I haven’t told you the best part yet.”

“And that is?”

“My ghost only hits other hitters.”

At eleven a.m., after nearly two hours’ wait, their contact finally arrived. A stocky, hirsute man in a cheap gray suit bounded across the atrium with a vigor that belied his heft. Both his suit and bald pate gleamed beneath the lobby’s fluorescent lights.

“Agent Thompson? Agent Garfield? I’m Detective De Silva.”

He extended a hairy-knuckled hand to each of them in turn.

Thompson shook it.

Garfield didn’t. “Special agent,” he corrected. Thompson winced. The Bureau doesn’t have a rank of agent- all investigators are titled special agent-but it was a common enough mistake, and one only a supercilious prick would bother to correct. Particularly when the person that supercilious prick was correcting was someone whose cooperation was far from guaranteed.

“Detective,” Thompson said, as De Silva let the hand he’d extended to Garfield drop, “thanks for agreeing to meet with us.”

“Of course,” he said, though the scowl on his face suggested he was thinking better of it now. He looked around the lobby, which teemed with uniformed cops and civilians. “How ’bout we step into my office, huh?”