There was no breeze.
Most of his time was spent simply waiting. He never rested, never shut his eyes. Now and then he shifted his position, easing the strain on his muscles. He tried standing and squatting, then sitting on a rough work table he'd dragged close to the window. Reluctant to leave his post even for a minute, he had ignored hunger and thirst and the need to urinate. After a while these bodily urges had faded. Now it was eight o'clock on Saturday night, and he felt nothing. He was numb.
The only thing that still worried him was a flare-up of his nerves. He would have to hold the rifle steady, and he wondered if his body would betray him at the critical moment. He didn't think so. He had failed to kill Abby once. By a miracle he had been offered a second chance.
He did not intend to squander it.
Abby checked the area north of Wilshire. There were more parked cars here. Many, belonging to UCLA students, were older models. Several times she thought she spotted one of the wanted vehicles, but always the license plate proved her wrong.
Passing a house with dark windows and a for sale sign on the lawn, she noticed a car in the carport. The car might be a Chevy Impala; at a distance it was hard to be sure. She parked down the street and returned on foot, carrying her purse with the gun inside. At the foot of the driveway she studied the car. It was parked facing out, which meant the driver had backed into the carport, an awkward procedure. And the front license plate frame was empty. California drivers were issued two plates and usually mounted both.
She switched her attention to the house, which looked empty. She made a show of studying the for sale sign, her performance for the benefit of anyone watching from a neighboring residence. Having established her bona fides as a prospective buyer, she approached the front door.
The short, curved walkway allowed her to pass close to the bay window.
The curtains were open, and although the living room was dark, she could see well enough in the glow of the streetlights to know that the furniture was gone. Whoever was selling the place had already moved out. So why was there a car in the carport?
She rang the doorbell. No answer. She rang again without result, then entered the carport, her purse open, her index finger on the trigger of her Smith amp; Wesson.
These precautions were unnecessary. The carport was empty.
She checked out the car. It was indeed a Chevrolet Impala of the right age and color, and the rear license plate matched the number on the BOLO sheet. Hickle had parked here, off the street, and had removed the front plate to reduce the risk of the car's discovery.
The possibility that Hickle had stolen one of the other cars on the list, and that this one had been ditched by some other thief, wasn't worth considering.
She had learned not to think in terms of coincidences where her safety was concerned. The Lincoln had made its way from Sylmar to a carport within a few blocks of her home. That meant Hickle had left it here.
He knew where she lived, and he had come for her.
Abby went around to the side and rear of the house, inspecting every door and window. She found no sign of entry. Hickle must have used the house only to ditch the car. He, was hiding somewhere else. In her condo, maybe, or in the condo building's garage. Security at the Wilshire Royal was tight, but the same could be said of Malibu Reserve.
Hickle had penetrated that compound. He could get inside the condominium building if he wanted to. He might have been there since early this morning, lying in ambush for more than twenty hours by now.
It seemed just plain rude to keep him waiting any longer.
Headlights.
They splashed into the ramp that fed into the Royal's underground garage. A small white car paused at the gate, and an arm extended out the driver's side to feed a pass card into the slot.
Hickle leaned close to the window. The car was a white subcompact, not new. It looked out of place in this neighborhood. He peered through the rifle's scope and glimpsed dark hair, a pale forearm. It could be Abby. He wasn't sure. Her car had not been parked near his at the Gainford Arms, and he'd never seen it.
The gate lifted. The white subcompact rolled down the ramp into the garage.
He had a funny feeling it was Abby. The car was too beat-up to belong to the typical resident of the Wilshire Royal. It could have been a maid's car, but why would a maid be arriving for work at 8 p.m. on Saturday? And the driver's dark hair had looked familiar.
It had to be Abby. Just had to be.
"She's home," Hickle whispered.
Abby guided the Dodge up to the access gate to the Wilshire Royal's underground garage. She knew there was a fair chance Hickle was lying in wait nearby, ready to open fire with the shotgun when she stopped to use her pass card Though she could try to return fire, she would be in a vulnerable position-and her Dodge, unlike Travis's staff car, wasn't armored.
She fed the pass card into the slot with her left hand, while her right hand gripped the.38 Smith. She almost wanted him to try something.
The gate opened without incident. She steered the Dodge inside, heading down the ramp to the condominium building's underground garage.
The garage was the next possible location for an ambush.
Hickle might have concealed himself behind one of the reinforced-concrete pylons or in somebody's vehicle.
He might be waiting for her to emerge into the glow of the overhead fluorescent lights.
She parked in her reserved space, then slung her purse over her shoulder; holding the Smith down at her side, and got out of the car quickly. She let a moment pass after she shut the car door, listening to its echoing thud. Slowly she came out into the open, her eyes big, her gaze ticking from shadow to shadow.
No shadows moved. No gunshots sounded.
She remained alert as she crossed yards of concrete to the elevator and pressed the call button. The elevator carried her to the tenth floor.
She put the gun in her purse but kept her finger on the trigger.
The elevator doors hissed open. She scanned the hallway before proceeding to her apartment. The likeliest place for Hickle to hide was her own living room.
She kept her head low, away from the peephole, and cautiously tested her doorknob. Still locked-a fact that proved nothing, but if the door had been unlocked, it would have proven a great deal. She looked closely at the knob and detected no sign of tampering.
In her search of Hickle's apartment she'd found no locksmith tools or books on picking locks. She had no reason to assign him any expertise in that area.
Nonetheless, she tensed herself for violence as she found her key and unlocked her door. She removed the Smith from her purse and held it in front of her. If one of her neighbors stepped into the hall in the next few seconds, she would have some explaining to do.
The most dangerous part was what came next.
Going in, she would be most vulnerable. She had no idea what sort of greeting she might expect inside.
Hickle aligned the rifle's muzzle with the hole in the glass, keeping the barrel inside to muffle the shot.
Carefully he sighted the balcony, the glass door, the curtains.
He would wait for her to open those curtains. It shouldn't take long.
When she stood in plain view, large in the scope, he would depress the trigger-gently, gently-and one-twentieth of a second later, there would be no more Abby in the world.
Abby went in fast, throwing open the door and pivoting inside, then ducking into a crouch so any shots aimed at her head would go high.
No shots. She closed the door but didn't touch the wall switch near the frame. Her living room was in darkness; trusting the Royal's security, she never bothered with putting her lights on timers. She was glad it was dark. If Hickle was hiding and she was exposed, light was her enemy.