the blinds open in the only window to Archie’s, and hoped the man was looking out and knew that someone watched him, that someone would never forget.
Chapter 10
Michael Redman was peering out the glass door of the rented townhouse, watching for the delivery truck that would fill the newspaper racks across the street. It was seven in the morning and he’d timed the stubby-looking guy who pulled up in the step van around sunup and stuffed the day’s news into the honor boxes and collected the quarters. Redman could have watched the television news last night and seen their coverage of the shooting, but he had no use for that. There was only one story he wanted to see, only one journalist who would tell the truth.
When the silver-sided van rolled into view, Redman took a step back from the door. No sense being more obvious than he needed to be. He’d taken this place back from the main roads and near a corner where a canal split the flat land and separated two equally boring housing developments. He’d signed a year lease with a fictitious name knowing he’d skip out on it in a month at the most. He was surprised, though, that his old stomping grounds had felt so comfortable. He didn’t have to map out the routes and time out the distances to the interstates and account for bridge openings and all the other exigencies that might hamper his movement or possibly his escape. Redman had worked these streets as a sheriff’s road deputy for several years. When he moved onto the department’s SWAT team the surveillances and the detailed mapping of troubled neighborhoods only intensified. That knowledge and training aided him now. Just like when he used to do undercover INTEL gathering, he would have to be careful out in public. Some of the criminal lowlifes he’d dealt with then were still out here. And now he also had to stay cognizant of the law enforcement personnel who might remember him. So he tended to move only at night. Shopped for food at three AM in the twenty-four-hour grocery, pumped his own gas after midnight, had the local phone company install a DSL line while he was out and made sure all of his lethal equipment was locked in a storage garage signed for under yet another alias. During the day he stayed in, doing research and setting up his next target. The Daily News archives had made that so much easier for him. He could even do a search that would highlight all of Nick Mullins’s bylines. The man had a gift for writing about the evil assholes in the world that deserved to die.
Redman stood at the door waiting anxiously for a full five minutes after the deliveryman had pulled away before slipping on his dark windbreaker and then walking out to the honor box with a handful of coins in his fist.
By Nick Mullins, Staff Writer
On his way to try to overturn his death sentence, a convicted child murderer and molester instead walked into his execution yesterday as he entered the Broward County Jail in downtown Fort Lauderdale.
In a blatant morning shooting as commuters drove by on Andrews Avenue, Steven Ferris, convicted three years ago for the murder and rapes of a 6-year-old girl and her 8-year-old sister, was killed by a single bullet fired from somewhere outside the fenced compound just before 8 AM, said Broward Sheriff’s Office spokesman Joel Cameron.
“One man was fatally wounded as the detainees were being brought through the main jail’s secured north entrance. The location of the shooting is not accessible to the public and no member of the public was in any way endangered,” Cameron said.
Police authorities would not confirm the identity of the dead man, but the sister-in-law of Steven Ferris, Charlene Ferris, said that the Sheriff’s Office had called to inform her husband, David, of his brother’s killing. David Ferris, who attended each day of his brother’s jury trial in 2001, was unavailable for comment.
“David still loved his brother,” Charlene Ferris said. “And now we have a funeral to plan.”
On Thursday sheriff’s officials would not speculate on the motive for the shooting but said they had not yet ruled out a random drive-by or that a shot meant for one of the other inmates had simply struck Ferris by chance. But other sources described Ferris’s wound as being precisely placed to kill instantly. The ammunition used, a .308-caliber round, is commonly used in high-powered