Cross Country (Alex Cross 14)
Page 86
“I understand. You still haven’t heard from whoever abducted your family?” Snyder asked. “No communication?”
Before I could answer him, the door to the conference room swung wide open. A tall, dark-haired man in his early forties, wearing a gray suit and silver-and-red-striped tie, entered. He carried himself like someone important, which he probably was.
And right behind him came . . . Ian Flaherty.
Chapter 134
THE MAN EVERYONE had been waiting for introduced himself as Steven Millard. He said he was with National Clandestine Service but gave no rank. I remembered now that Al Tunney had mentioned his name before I went to Africa. Millard was the group chief, who’d been involved from the start.
All Flaherty said was, “Dr. Cross.”
“Has there been any word about your family?” Millard wanted to know right off.
Snyder cut in. “No word so far. They haven’t contacted him.”
“There are cops from Metro at my house now,” I told them. “They’ll answer my phone and call me.”
“That’s good. About all you can do,” said Millard. I couldn’t figure out what to make of him. I was sure he knew about my meeting with Eric Dana before I’d left for Africa, but how much more did Millard know?
“I need whatever help you can give me,” I finally said. “I really need some help.”
“You can count on it,” said Millard. “But I have a couple of questions you might be able to help us out with first. Detective Cross, why did you go to Africa in the first place?”
“A friend of mine and her entire family were killed. I had a lead that the killer fled to Lagos. It was my homicide case.”
Millard nodded and seemed to understand. “Tell me this, then, what did you learn in Africa? Something useful, I assume? Otherwise, why would this professional killer want to come after you and your family in Washington?”
“I was hoping maybe you could help me out with that. What’s going on in Nigeria and here in Washington too? Can you tell me?”
Millard clasped, then unclasped, his hands. “Did you see anything unusual or unsettling in Nigeria? We need to figure out why this killer would want to come after you here. You’re a well-known police officer. This Tiger, or whoever it is, wouldn’t want to take the risk unless he had to. I can’t imagine that he would. Unless you really pissed him off.”
“You know it’s him, then?”
“No, no, I don’t know for sure. It just makes sense. Ian agrees. So what do you know, Dr. Cross?”
I looked at Flaherty, then back at Millard. “You’re not going to help me find my family, are you? You just want to pump me for information again?”
Millard sighed, took a beat and then said, “Dr. Cross, regretfully, we think your family is dead.”
I stood up much too quickly from my chair, almost tipping it over.
“How can you say that? What do you know? What aren’t you telling me? Why would they call me all night if my family’s dead?”
Millard stared into my eyes, then rose from his seat too. “You were advised not to get involved in this. I’m sorry for your loss. We’ll help if we possibly can.”
Then he felt compelled to add, “We’re not the bad guys here, Detective. There is no big conspiracy at work.”
If that was true, why did everybody have to keep saying it?
Chapter 135
THOSE CIA BASTARDS! Even though they had been a little more human this time, I knew they were hiding something.
Maybe that’s why I didn’t tell them what Adanne had revealed after the slaughter of her family. The meeting had been typical of my experience with them over the years.
And Flaherty? After the meeting, he had gone to Langley for a “previously scheduled series of meetings.” No way that was the whole truth, or anything close to it. At least I didn’t think so.
That night, I went home to an empty house. I’d told Bree that it might be better if I was in the house alone. I was so desperate, I was ready to try anything now.