Cross Fire (Alex Cross 17)
Mrs. Talley’s face eased into a smile. “You don’t have to tell me that,” she said, and ran a hand over Mitch’s broad shoulder as she passed from fridge to counter with a bag of onions.
/> Denny could see that, under the table, Mitch’s knee was just starting to bounce up a storm.
Chapter 74
EVEN WITHOUT ADVANCE NOTICE, Bernice Talley managed to pull together a fast New England–style clam chowder, some good bread, a salad, and a couple of microwaved potatoes with everything on them, from butter to sour cream to Canadian bacon. It was the best dinner Denny had eaten since he’d started this whole mess, living in the shelters and that godforsaken Suburban, which he was glad to be rid of now. He contentedly filled himself while Mrs. Talley chattered on about people he’d never heard of. Mitch mostly listened.
Finally, after seconds of Edy’s French Vanilla with gobs of chocolate sauce, Denny pushed back and stretched his arms and legs.
“Ma’am, that was spectacular,” he said.
Mrs. Talley beamed. “Wait until you try my waffles,” she told him.
“We ain’t staying the night, Mom,” Mitch said, more into his ice-cream bowl than to her.
Right away, the woman’s face fell. “What do you mean? Where are you going to go at nine thirty at night?”
“We’re just coming back from a conference in New York,” Denny put in quickly. “Mitch thought it would be nice to drop by, but we’ve got to be back in Cleveland tomorrow morning. We’ll be driving all night just to get there for work.”
“I see,” she said quietly, but the heartbreak in her voice was hard to miss.
“Tell you what” — Denny got up and started clearing dishes — “why don’t you two go talk in the living room for a while? I’ll clean up in here.”
“No, no,” she started in, but he eventually wheedled her out of the room.
When she was gone, he put on the woman’s yellow Playtex gloves and washed all the dishes by hand. He wiped down the sink, the counter, the table, the fridge, and the two bottles of beer he’d drunk. Then he pocketed the gloves.
Half an hour later, he and Mitch were on their way down the front walk.
“Nice lady, sweet lady, great cook,” Denny said. “Sorry we couldn’t stay any longer.”
“That’s okay,” Mitch told him. “We got things to do back in DC.”
Denny gave him a fist bump on that one. It seemed maybe Mitch was getting focused again, back to his old self.
Once they reached the curb, Denny stopped short and snapped his fingers. “Hang on. I left my wallet on the counter. I’ll be right back.”
“I’ll get it,” Mitch said, but Denny put a hand out to stop him.
“Bad idea, Mitchie. You saw your mom’s face just now. Don’t want to make her cry all over again, do you?”
“I guess not,” Mitch said.
“Of course you don’t. Now just sit tight in the car, and don’t come inside. I’ll be back before you know it.”
Chapter 75
I WAS SPENDING as many hours at the house as I could, including all of my desk time. Between Kyle Craig, the Patriot snipers, and these new homicides with the numbers, my attic office was as stuffed with case materials as it had ever been. That meant a lot of crime-scene photos, so I told the kids that Dad’s office was off-limits for the time being, which explained the phone call I got from Jannie that afternoon.
“Hello, Alex, this is Janelle the Banished, calling from the faraway land of the second floor.”
My daughter’s always been one to put the “smart” in smart aleck. I just try to keep up. “Hail thee well, Janelle. How goes it in the nether regions?”
“You have a visitor, Daddy,” she said, back to business. “There’s a man named Mr. Siegel at the front door. He’s an FBI agent.”
At first I thought I’d heard wrong. What could Max Siegel be doing at my house? The last time we’d tangled had been the worst so far.
“Daddy?”