When the chief finally got there, in an old black Dodge Polaris, I was all over him. I started talking before he had even climbed out of his car.
“Chief, your men are holding important evidence. We need to see it,” I said, not raising my voice at the sixtyish, potbellied man but making sure he got the point. “This is a federal investigation now. I’m here representing both the FBI and Homeland Security. We’ve lost valuable time because of your men.”
To his credit, the police chief himself was exasperated. He began yelling at his officers. “Bring the evidence over here, you morons. What the hell are you two trying to pull? What were you thinking? Do you think? Bring the evidence.”
His men came running, and the taller of the two, who I later lear
ned was the chief’s son-in-law, handed over the camera. It was a Canon PowerShot and I knew how to get at the pictures.
So what do we have here? The first shots were well-composed nature photos. No people in any of them. Close-ups and wide-angle shots.
Then came pictures of the actual evacuation. Unbelievable.
Then I finally got my first look at the man who had filmed the explosion.
His back was to the camera. At first he was standing, but in the next few shots he was down on one knee. Probably to get a better angle.
I don’t know what had prompted the rock climber to take the initial few shots, but his instincts were pretty good. The mystery man was videotaping the deserted town—then suddenly it went up in flames that rose several hundred feet high. It seemed pretty clear that he had known about the attack before it happened.
The next photograph showed the man turning in the direction of the climbers. He actually began to walk toward them, or so it appeared on film. I wondered if he’d spotted one of them taking his picture. He seemed to be looking their way.
That was when I saw his face, and I couldn’t believe what I was looking at. I recognized him. And why not? I’d been chasing him for years. He was wanted for more than a dozen murders here and in Europe. He was a vicious psychopath, one of the worst of his kind still on the loose anywhere in the world.
His name was Geoffrey Shafer, but I knew him better as the Weasel.
What was he doing here?
Chapter 11
THERE WERE A COUPLE more crystal-clear shots as the hateful Weasel got closer to the photographer.
Just the sight of him sent my brain reeling, and I felt a little sick. My mouth was dry, and I kept licking my lips. What is Shafer doing here? What connection does he have to the bomb that leveled this small town? It was crazy, felt like a dream, completely unreal.
I’d first come across Colonel Geoffrey Shafer in Washington three years ago. He’d murdered more than a dozen people there, though we could never prove it. He would pose as a cabdriver, usually in Southeast, where I lived. The prey was easy to grab, and he knew D.C. police investigations weren’t as thorough when the victims were poor and black. Shafer also had a day job—he was an army colonel working inside the British embassy. On the face of it, he couldn’t have been more respectable. And yet he was a horrible murderer, one of the worst pattern killers I’d ever come across.
A local agent named Fred Wade joined me near the helicopter I’d come in on. I was still studying the climber’s photos. Wade told me he wanted to know what was going on, and I couldn’t blame him. So did I.
“The man who videotaped the explosion is named Geoffrey Shafer,” I told Wade. “I know him. He committed several murders in D.C. when I was a homicide detective there. The last we heard of him, he’d fled to London. He murdered his wife in front of their children in a London market. Then he disappeared. Well, I guess he’s back. I have no idea why, but it makes my head hurt just to think about it.”
I took out my cell phone and put in a call to Washington. As I described what I’d discovered, I was reviewing the last few photographs taken of Colonel Shafer. In one of the photos he was climbing into a red Ford Bronco.
The next was a rear shot of the Bronco as it rode away. Jesus. The license plate was visible.
And that was the strangest thing of all so far: the Weasel had made a mistake.
The Weasel I’d known didn’t make them.
So maybe it wasn’t a mistake after all.
Maybe it was part of a plan.
Chapter 12
THE WOLF WAS STILL in Los Angeles, but reports were coming in from the Nevada desert on a regular basis. Police arriving near Sunrise Valley . . . then helicopters . . . the U.S. Army . . . finally the FBI.
His old friend Alex Cross was out there now, too. Good for Alex Cross. What a good soldier.
Nobody understanding a goddamn thing, of course.