Thanks to Rionaâs powers of persuasion, and a little pressure from Callum, the cops agree to let me in the hotel room they think the sniper used.
He was long gone by the time they arrivedâwith plenty of time to pack up his equipment. But âvacatedâ doesnât mean âempty.â Nobody can sit in a room without leaving a trace.
For instance, he didnât bother to move the hotel-room table that he slid over closer to the window. I can see the marks on the carpet where the table was originally situated. Now itâs exactly in front of the east-facing window he must have used for his shot.
I assume he picked this hotel because itâs old and the windows actually open. He left the sash up. I can see the square hole he cut in the screen, and the piece of discarded mesh laying on the ground next to the radiator.
I can barely see Hutchinson Field from here, not with the naked eye. Iâve got better than twenty-twenty vision, but I canât make out anything besides the stage itself. Not the flags, the flowers, or the chairs still sitting on the stage, some of them tipped over when everyone scattered.
The sniper would have seen it all clearly through his scope, however.
According to the cops, he checked into the room using the hotelâs app. The miracles of modern technologyâhe didnât even need to visit the front desk for a key. He could open the door automatically using his phone.
Of course the name he registered under is fake. So is the credit card he used to pay. The Royal Arms will be out the $229 for the room.
âDid anybody see him going in or out?â I ask one of the cops. âMaybe one of the maids?â
âNobody that we talked to,â the cop says. âThe maids only work in the morning. He checked into the room at 1:20 p.m. Or at least, thatâs what their computer says.â
The cop is giving me the information, but not cheerfully. Heâs annoyed that Iâm looking over his shoulder. That has to be particularly galling, since this cop, like most cops in Chicago, knows exactly who I am. Thereâs no love lost between the Gallos and the Chicago PD.
Riona has a slightly better relationship with them, though not by much. Sheâs friends with a couple of the DAs. But she also keeps bad guys like me out of jail.
Right now, sheâs looking around the room with almost as much curiosity as Iâm feeling.
âNothing in the trash,â she says, peering into the bin.
I can see marks on top of the table. Thatâs where the sniper had his rifle set up. I canât tell what type of rifle it wasânot from a couple scratches. But I assume he had the latest and greatestâsomething like the McMillan Tac-50, or the Barrett M82A1.
Iâm leaning toward the Tac-50. The bullet I found looked like a .50 caliber. Tac-50s are made right in the good old US of A, in Phoenix. I saw plenty of them in Iraq. Used one myself, after my L115A3 got fucked up by a makeshift grenade.
Itâs also the gun that set the most recent long-distance records. It has the most confirmed kills over 1367 yards.
âAre you sure it was just one guy?â Riona says to the cops. âDonât snipers usually work in teams?â
She directs the second part of that question at me.
She knows I had a partner in IraqâRaylan Boone, a kid from Kentucky.
âSometimes they do. Sometimes not,â I say. âUsed to be you needed somebody to take measurements and do calculations. Now youâve got rangefinders, ballistic calculators, hand-held meteorological equipment, ballistic-prediction software . . .â
Still, thereâs nothing quite like another person keeping an eye out. All those endless hours crouching in bombed-out buildings and tumbled-down towers . . . talking, waiting, keeping each other from catching a bullet to the back of the head. Raylanâs a brother to me now, just about as much as my actual brothers.
I get the feeling this guy was alone, though.
Thereâs no reason for it, no evidence. Itâs just the emptiness of the room, the precision with which he removed every trace of himself. This guy is a perfectionist. And perfectionists donât tolerate other people very well.
I look down his line of sight again. I can see the way the flags are lined up, and other markers he set along the wayâa white cloth tied to a power line. A string on the edge of a tree branch.
Wind direction and speed can vary dramatically along the path of the bullet. He was careful to set up markers along the way. Gauges too, maybe. And the way the flags lined up on the stage . . . that was no coincidence. He must have been down there. Or had somebody on the inside.
We might have passed right by each other. I try to remember the faces of the set-up crew and the security teamsâthinking back if there was anybody who behaved strangely or seemed out of place.
If there was, I didnât notice it at the time.
I look down at the table. I can see the tiniest residue of gunpowder, much finer than sand. I see the sparkle of graphite, and white grains of aconite. I put my nose right down on top of it and inhale. It definitely smells like nitrocellulose.
âItâs not cocaine, you know,â one of the cops sneers. âIt wonât give you a buzz.â
âNo, no, let the bloodhound work,â his partner laughs.
I can tell Riona wants to lip them off, but I give her a shake of my head to show her that I donât care what those fuckheads think.
âAnything else, Inspector Clouseau?â one of the cops says sarcastically.
âNo,â I say. âNothing else.â
The cops keep dusting the room for printsâuseless in a hotelâand combing the carpets and drapes for evidence. Riona and I head back down to ground level.
âSo?â she says in an expectant tone.
âWasnât much to see in the room.â I shrug.
âNoâIâm wondering if youâre planning to go to the cocktail reception.â
âWhy would I?â I frown.
She lets out a snort.
âYouâre going to pretend you donât care in the slightest? I saw your face when you saw her crossing that stage.â
âDid you know she was going to be here?â I demand, rounding on Riona.
âNo,â she says calmly. âBut Iâm not sorry that she is. You two have unfinished business.â
âNo, we donât,â I say, in the tone of voice that would usually scare the other person off of saying anything else. But Riona argues for a living. Nothing short of complete removal of her vocal cords is going to stop her talking.
âRight,â she says. âThatâs why youâre so cheerful and optimistic. Because youâre emotionally healthy in every way.â
âYouâre not my psychiatrist,â I snap at her.
We had to see a shrink sometimes in the army. I fucking hated it.
âI am your friend, though,â Riona says, looking at me with her steady gaze. âI think you should go.â
âShe left me nine years ago because her family thought I wasnât good enough for her. I doubt they changed their minds.â
âWhy not?â Riona says. âYouâre a decorated veteran. A successful real estate developer. Plus, you just saved her dadâs life for fuckâs sake.â
âIâm still a Gallo,â I say.
I didnât stop blowing peopleâs heads off just because I came home from Iraq. Iâm still the same gangster I was nine years ago. Worse, actually. The fact that our legitimate business has grown along with our criminal organization . . . I doubt thatâs going to impress Yafeu Solomon. Not that I give a fuck what he thinks.
âI think you should go,â Riona repeats. âNot to start anything up again. Just to get closure.â
âNobody gets closure by opening the door again.â
âThey donât get it by sulking either,â Riona snaps.
Her patience has run outâsheâs done being nice to me.
âIâm heading over there in an hour,â she says. âAnd Iâm picking you up on the way.â
âDonât bother.â
âPut a suit on. A nice one.â
âI donât own a suit,â I lie.
âCome naked, then.â Riona grins. âIf that doesnât impress her, nothing will.â