was in his early forties and a couple years away from a quadruple bypass.
"And I suppose he ran away?" Ramos said.
"God, I hope not. I'm tired of chasing after him." I am the best liar. Sometimes I amaze even myself.
Hannibal opened the door to the fence and gave the bike path a cursory glance. "Bad news. I don't see a cat."
I looked over Hannibal's shoulder. "Here, kitty, kitty," I called. I was feeling pretty stupid now, but there was no place to go with this but forward.
"You know what I think?" Hannibal said. "I think there's no cat. I think you were in that tree spying on me."
I gave him a look of total incredulity. Like . . . oh, duh? "Listen," I said, scooting around him to the door. "I've got to go. I need to find my cat."
"What color is it?"
"Black."
"Good luck."
I looked under a couple bushes en route to the bike path. "Here kitty, kitty."
"Maybe you should give me your name and phone number in case I find him," Hannibal said.
Our eyes locked for a couple beats, and my heart stumbled in my chest.
"No," I told him. "I don't think I want to do that." And then I left, walking in the opposite direction I came.
I exited the bike path and circled the block to get to my car. I crossed the street and stood in the shadows for a few minutes, looking at Hannibal's house, wondering about the man. If I'd seen him on the street I'd have pegged him as an insurance salesman. Or maybe middle management in corporate America. That he was the crown prince of black market arms wouldn't occur to me.
A light blinked on in an upstairs window. The crown prince was probably changing into something more comfortable. Too early for bed, and the lights were still on downstairs. I was about to leave when a car cruised down the street and turned into Hannibal's driveway.
Woman at the wheel. Couldn't see her face. The driver's door opened and a long, stocking-clad leg swung out, followed by a killer body in a dark suit. Short blond hair. Briefcase under her arm.
I copied the license number on the pad I kept in my shoulder bag, got my mini-binoculars out of the glove compartment, and scuttled around to the back of Hannibal's house. Again. Everything was quiet. Hannibal probably felt confident that he'd scared me off. I mean, what idiot would be crazy enough to try to snoop on him twice in one night?
This idiot, that's who.
I went up the tree as quietly as possible. Easier this time. I knew where I was going. I found my perch and got the binoculars out. Unfortunately, there wasn't much to see. Hannibal and his caller were in the front room. I could see a slice of Hannibal's back, but the woman was out of view. After a few minutes there was the distant sound of Hannibal's front door closing and of a car driving off.
Hannibal walked into the kitchen, got a knife from a drawer, and used it to open an envelope. He took a letter out and read it. Had no reaction. He carefully returned the letter to the envelope and put the envelope on his kitchen counter.
He looked at the kitchen window, seemingly lost in thought. Then he moved to the patio door, slid it open and stared out at the tree. I froze in place, not daring to breathe. He can't see me, I thought. It's dark in the tree. Don't move and he'll go back inside. Wrong, wrong, wrong. His hand came up from his side, a flashlight snapped on, and I was caught.
"Here kitty, kitty," I said, shielding my eyes with my hand to see past the light.
He raised his other arm, and I saw the gun.
"Get down," he said, walking toward me. "Slowly."
Yeah, right. I flew from the tree, breaking branches on the way, landing with my feet already running.
Zing. The unmistakable sound of a bullet being fired through a silencer.
I don't ordinarily think of myself as fast, but I moved down that path at the speed of light. I went straight to the car, jumped inside, and roared off.
I checked the mirror several times to make sure I wasn't being followed. Closer to my apartment I drove down Makefield, turned at the corner, cut my lights, and waited. No car in sight. I popped the lights back on and noticed my hands had almost stopped shaking. I decided that was