Kill Alex Cross (Alex Cross 18)
My pulse ticked up a notch, anticipating what I was about to see.
A light of some kind came on, wobbly, like a handheld flashlight.
I saw the folds of a dark blue blanket. The camera kept moving, and a hand came into the frame.
Then Zoe’s face.
She seemed to be sleeping. Probably under heavy sedation, I thought, given what Molly Johnson had told me. The shot was too close up to show Zoe’s surroundings — but could this be the basement Molly had described? The one that smelled like dirt? Where the hell was it?
“The date stamp on the video file is for two days ago,” Lindley said. “Not that you can’t fake something like that, but it’s the best sign we’ve had so far that they’re alive.”
In fact it was the only sign we’d had, but I didn’t say anything.
The camera stayed on Zoe for another ten seconds or so. Then there was a blur of movement, and Ethan was there. His face was just as filthy as Zoe’s, and just as gaunt. At least there was no blood or scars, nothing to suggest they’d been beaten.
“The son of a bitch is starving them,” I said. My eyes welled up. I couldn’t help it.
Finally, I had to look away from the video.
Lindley cleared his throat. “There’s twenty-three seconds in all,” he said. “And then … this.”
The screen went dark. This time, it looked like the camera had been turned off.
When it came on again, we were looking at a plain white piece of paper with something printed there, in a small, plain font.
As the image slowly zoomed in, the words on the page became clear.
“Believe what you want, Mr. President.”
“It’s more of the same,” I said. “He’s turning up the torture. He wants Coyle to watch his kids waste away, just like Rodney Glass had to watch his own son die.”
Lindley nodded sedately. He took back the computer case and shut it up tight.
“I’m inclined to agree,” he said. “That’s why we think it’s time to put everything on the table.”
I wasn’t sure I liked the sound of that. “What does that mean?”
“It means if we’re lucky, we’ve got one last chance to save Ethan and Zoe. We’re pulling Glass in for further questioning.”
“What?”
“I know it’s a risk,” he said. “But all we have is circumstantial evidence — at best. We need him to think he’s cornered. A confession’s our only shot.”
“Hang on. Did we just see the same video?” I said. “What do you think happens to Ethan and Zoe if you take him out of commission?”
Lindley didn’t like to have his authority questioned. I could see it in the way he set his jaw when he looked at me.
“What are you suggesting, Cross? We do nothing about this? We wait him out?”
“I’m saying let’s consider all our options while we still can.” I got up and started moving, trying to think clearly. After weeks of walking through molasses on this, it was all happening too fast. “Maybe we create a false story. We say we have his print on the videotape. Something to let Glass think he’s got no room to maneuver.”
But Lindley wasn’t even listening anymore. His phone had just buzzed. He looked down to check whatever message had come in.
“Too late,” he told me. “Glass is already here.”
RODNEY GLASS WAS a damn good actor. He seemed genuinely perplexed about why he’d been pulled in for another interview. But he didn’t fool me for a second. He’d been to medical school. Of course he was bright.
“How many times do I have to say this?” he asked, less than a minute into the interview. “I was treating Ryan Townsend for a bloody nose just after Ethan and Zoe went missing. I’ve got Ryan himself, not to mention at least one Secret Service agent, to back me up on this. So can someone please explain what I’m doing here?”