The Coffin Dancer (Lincoln Rhyme 2)
Page 154
In, out, in, out.
He looked through the reticles, centered them on Lincoln the Worm's ear as he stared at the computer screen.
The pressure on the trigger began to build.
Breathe. Like sex, like coming, like touching firm skin . . .
Harder.
Harder . . .
Then Stephen saw it.
Very faint--a slight unevenness on Lincoln the Worm's sleeve. But not a wrinkle. It was a distortion.
He relaxed his trigger finger and studied the image through the telescope for a moment. Stephen clicked to a higher resolution on the Redfield telescope. He looked at the type on the computer screen. The letters were backwards.
A mirror! He was sighting on a mirror.
It was another trap!
Stephen closed his eyes. He'd almost given his position away. Cringey now. Smothering in worms, choking on worms. He looked around him. He knew there must be a dozen search-and-surveillance troopers in the park with Big Ears microphones just waiting to pinpoint the gunshot. They'd sight on him with M-16s mounted with Starlight scopes and nail him in a cross fire.
Green-lighted to kill. No surrender pitch.
Quickly but in absolute silence he removed the telescope with shaking hands and replaced it and the gun in the guitar case. Fighting down the nausea, the cringe.
Soldier . . .
Sir, go away, sir.
Soldier, what are you--
Sir, fuck you, sir!
Stephen slipped through the trees to a path and walked casually around the meadow, heading east.
Oh, yes, he was now even more certain than before that he had to kill Lincoln. A new plan. He needed an hour or two, to think, to consider what he was going to do.
He turned suddenly off the path, paused in the bushes for a long moment, listening, looking around him. They'd been worried he'd be suspicious if he noticed that the park was deserted, so they hadn't closed the entrances.
That was their mistake.
Stephen saw a group of men about his age--yuppies, from the look of them, dressed in sweats or jogging outfits. They were carrying racquetball cases and backpacks and headed for the Upper East Side, talking loudly as they walked. Their hair glistened from the showers they'd just had at a nearby athletic club.
Stephen waited until they were just past, then fell in behind them, as if he were a part of the group. Offered one of them a big smile. Walking briskly, swinging the guitar case jauntily, he followed them toward the tunnel that led to the East Side.
. . . Chapter Thirty-two
Hour 34 of 45
Dusk surrounded them.
Percey Clay, once again in the left-hand seat of the Learjet, saw the cusp of light that was Chicago in front of them.
Chicago Center cleared them down to twelve thousand feet.
"Starting descent," she announced, easing back on