He won’t be talking to anyone anymore.”
She let out a long breath and stared down at the dead man. “They’re always one step ahead, it seems.”
“It seems,” said Robie.
“You were telling him to get down before the shot. How did you know?”
“They killed his wife, but he got away? I don’t think so. Same thing happened with Julie. They don’t let people just get away.”
“But what purpose did it serve letting Leo Broome live? He could have told us something.”
“They weren’t going to give him the chance, Vance.”
“So why let him come here at all? If they were following him they could have killed him at any point.”
“This seems to be a game to them.”
“A game! People are dying here, Robie. Some game.”
“Some game,” he replied.
CHAPTER
70
ROBIE SAT IN HIS apartment in the dark.
Vance and a quartet of FBI agents were keeping watch over Julie. He had told the teenager about the Broomes’ murders. She had taken it stoically, hadn’t cried, but apparently just accepted it as a fact of life. Maybe that was worse, thought Robie. It didn’t seem right that a fourteen-year-old should have her emotions so hardened that violent death didn’t shock anymore.
He had come back here because he needed somewhere to go that didn’t involve other people being around. And though he had a room at the extended-stay residence, he had come back here instead. He wasn’t concerned about killers coming for him, at least not yet.
They want me alive, for something. And then they’ll want me dead.
He had strained his mind going back over missions he’d performed in the recent past. It would seem that in his line of work there would be many people who would want revenge against him, too many to plausibly investigate. But he had never failed on a task, and that meant his target always had died. And he had exited successfully each time, which meant that his identity should have remained a secret. But his handler had been turned, which meant that Robie had been exposed to anyone with the ability to pay.
He rose and looked out the window. It was two a.m. There were few cars moving down the street, no people. But then he caught sight of someone and he moved closer to the window for a better look.
Annie Lambert brought her bike to a stop outside the apartment building, got off, and rolled it into the lobby.
When she got off on her floor Robie was waiting for her. She looked surprised to see him, but then apparently noted the pain in his features.
“You okay?” she asked anxiously.
“Had better days. Long one for you, obviously?”
She smiled and struggled with her bag. Robie took it from her, slung it over his shoulder.
“Thanks,” she said. “I messed up today,” she admitted. “Had to work overtime to repair things.”
“What happened?”
“Blew official protocols. I bypassed my direct supervisor to get a question answered because my direct supervisor wasn’t around. Got called on the carpet for it.”
“That doesn’t seem right. In fact it seems fairly petty.”
“Well, when you don’t get paid much to handle important issues, folks stand more firmly on titles and lines of authority than maybe they should.”
“I think you’re being overly generous.”
“Maybe I’m just tired,” she said wearily.
“Here, I’ll help you to your door and you can get some sleep.”
As they walked down the hall she said, “You don’t seem too good either.”
“Like you, a long day.”
“Petty rules too?”
“A little different.”
“Life can suck sometimes,” said Lambert.
“Yes, it can.”
They reached her door. She turned to him. “When I said I was tired, I didn’t mean I needed to go to sleep. Would you like to come in for drink?”
“You sure you’re up for it?”
“We both look like we could use one. Nothing fancy like your wine. I can only afford beer.”
“Okay.”
They went inside. She put her bike away and pointed Robie to the kitchen, where he got out two beers and came back into the living room. He felt guilty that he knew the layout of her apartment from looking at it through the telescope.
It fit the image of a young government worker whose salary was in no way commensurate with her brains or ability. Everything was on the cheap, but Robie noted one oil painting of a harbor scene and a couple pieces of good-quality furniture that had probably come from Lambert’s parents.
When she came back out of her bedroom she wore loose-fitting jeans and a long-sleeved T-shirt and her hair was pulled back in a ponytail. Her feet were