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“I know,” said Isaac.

Fleischer studied him and Isaac could see cold, hard appraisal in the old guy’s eyes. Once a detective…

“Anything I can do for you, son?”

“No, thanks,” said Isaac. “I thought I’d do some paperwork. On my research.”

“Oh,” said Fleischer. He turned his music up louder, resumed whatever he’d been doing.

Isaac took out his laptop, booted up, called up a page of numbers, pretended to be concentrating. Instead, he flashed back to the agony of self-doubt.

Step back, be objective.

Six victims, nothing in common but the date. His calculations said it had to be meaningful, but could he be trusted to think straight?

No, no, however dorky his motives, this was real. He’d run the numbers too many times for it to be anything but real.

June 28. Today was the eighteenth.

If he was right, someone, some unsuspecting, innocent, random person would step out into a night full of expectations only to experience the crushing pain of a cranium pulverized to pulp.

Then nothing.

Suddenly, he wanted to be wrong. That had never happened before.

CHAPTER 28

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1:20 A.M., TERMINAL 4, LAX

The flight’s arrival had been delayed for two hours and the baggage claim area stank of uncertainty.

All those weary loved ones sitting, pacing, peering at the board, shaking their heads, sometimes cursing, as the numbers got worse.

Petra spent the time sitting and rereading a copy of People magazine.

The bath she’d taken three hours ago had been okay, but she’d been too hyped up to enjoy it.

Jumping out, toweling off, spending a lot of time on her makeup and clothes, finally selecting a tight black top over gray linen slacks. The smooth, black Wonderbra gave her a lift nature hadn’t.

She drove quickly to the airport, found parking after two go-rounds and still arrived early.

Then she waited.

When the arrival time was finally announced- an hour away- she left the terminal to take a walk along the dim, mostly deserted walkways of the airport’s lower level.

A woman walking alone. Her gun was in her purse. No metal detectors anywhere near the baggage claim. A clear lapse of security that she welcomed tonight.

When she got back, passengers from a Mexico City flight had clogged the area. When they finally cleared, the “Landed” sign was flashing for Eric’s flight and she stationed herself near the swinging doors that bottomed the arrival ramp, and peered through the glass.

Sparse flight, just a trickle of zombies bumping down the ramp. Eric was among the last passengers to appear and she spotted him well before he got to the doors.

Dark blue sweatshirt, faded jeans, sneakers, his little olive-green, Swiss mountain-climber’s backpack slung over one shoulder.

Light wood cane in his left hand.

A limp.

When he saw her he straightened and waved the cane as if it were superfluous.

He came through the doors, she rushed him, hugged him, felt bones and sinew and tension. The cane bumped against her leg.

“Excuse me!” Annoyed female voice.

They were blocking the exit. Stepping aside, Petra caught a murderous glance from an all-in-black harridan who tried to engage her in extended ocular warfare. She smiled and hugged Eric again.

He said, “One suitcase.” They walked toward the carousel. Petra reached for his backpack.

He held on to it. “I’m fine.” Handing her the cane, to prove it.

They stood there, silent, as bags bumped through the chute.

Boy, this is romantic.

She got between him and the revolving luggage, kissed him hard.

On the ride home, he said, “Thanks for picking me up.”

“It was a tough decision.”

He touched her knee, withdrew.

“It’s good to see you,” she said.

“Good to see you.”

“How’s your leg? Really.”

“It’s okay. Really.”

“How long do you have to use that thing?”

“I could probably ditch it now.”

She took Century to the 405 North. Not much traffic on the freeway. Good time to challenge the speed limits.

“Your place?” she said. Thinking she really didn’t want to drive to Studio City.

“We could go to your place.”

“We could.”

When they arrived, he pronounced himself “rancid,” and took a shower. She ran the water and as it warmed, fixed him coffee. When he slipped off his sweatshirt, she saw white flesh and bones, the thin sheath of muscle that rescued him from downright scrawny. A bandage on his shoulder.

He saw her eyeing it. “A fragment nicked me. It’s nothing.” He stepped out of his jeans and removed his jockeys. His left calf was encased in thick bandages.

She said, “You can get it wet?”

“There’s inflammation but no infection. In a couple of days I’ll find a doctor and have the dressings changed.”

He headed for the bathroom and Petra followed at a distance. Stood in the door as he hobbled into the shower, got a hard spray going, water bulleting the pebbled glass door.

Petra watched his fuzzy reflection.

To heck with this.

She stripped down and joined him.

Cruel and inconsiderate, the positions she got him into. A wounded man, no less. He cried out in gratitude and when they were done and lying naked and moist on her bed, he said, “I missed you.”

Touching her breast. Her nipple sprang erect.

“Missed you, too.”

They kissed and he got hard again. Had he really craved her? Or was it just this he’d desired?

Was there a difference?

She broke a long clinch. “Hungry?”

He thought about that. “Maybe I’ll scrounge in your fridge.”

She placed a hand on his flat, warm chest. “Don’t move. I’ll fix you something.”

He made his way through the turkey sandwich, potato chips, and hastily assembled, almost-fresh salad she prepared. Eating the usual Eric way: silent, deliberate. Chewing slowly, the politely closed mouth. Not a single errant crumb, nary a grease stain on his lips.

She studied the turn of his wrists. Thin, for a man. Long, delicate fingers. He should’ve played an instrument. She realized she’d never heard him hum, or sing or express any interest in music.

The shower had loosened his shoulder bandage and he’d redressed the wound with ointment from his backpack, then popped an antibiotic. Petra thought the three-inch gash a lot more than “nothing.” Ragged and puffy, surrounded by puckered, reddened flesh. Horrible. What would his leg look like?

She said, “Why’d you cut the trip short?”

“To see you.”

“I wish.”

“It’s true,” he said.

“Maybe partially true. Tell me the whole thing.”

It had gone down this way: Eric, an Israeli security officer, and three other foreign cops- an Englishman, an Australian, and a Belgian- sitting at the café on Hayarkon Street with iced coffees and soft drinks and, in the Englishman’s case, lots of beer. Ninety degrees in Tel Aviv, with equivalent humidity. You showered, dried off, were drenched moments later.

The five of them had been training all day, watching footage, reviewing Interpol data, scanning partially declassified documents. The other cops were miserable, hated Tel Aviv.

Eric didn’t mind the city. He’d been there twice before, a few years ago, running errands for the American embassy. Courier service from Riyadh to Israel via Amman, Jordan. Tight little packages, no idea what they were, but he got through Customs everywhere with no explanation. Later, he’d explored this very street, taking in the cheap beach hotels, the bars and clubs and restaurants, Thai and Romanian hookers doing the stroll.

Lots of embassies nearby. Prostitutes and diplomats, there was a match for you.

When the Israeli went off to fetch more drinks, the other policemen started in again about how much they despised the entire damn country. Too noisy, too humid, the food was too spicy, Israelis were rude.