The line was dead. He stood holding the phone to his ear, Muzak in the background, the scuff and squeal of dress shoes on the floor, the faint odor of disinfectant from the bathroom, his family held hostage by monsters.
You decided a long time ago that you’d lie down in traffic for your children. Every parent does. Time to pay that piper.
He dropped the phone and started for the exit. Felt relief, honestly. He was tired, so bloody, stoop-shouldered tired, and he’d been on his own too long. Die for his children? No problem. One dead twist, coming right up.
Do you really believe Peters will let them go?
Why not? It’s me he wants. Me and his precious insurance, whatever it is. What harm can an environmental lawyer and two children do him?
He froze. What harm indeed?
Cooper turned and walked back to the men’s room. Pushed open the door. A janitor was leaning against a mop.
“Get out.”
“Say what?”
“Now.”
The janitor took another look, then rolled his cart out, muttering something about crazy-ass people, he had a job same as anybody else. Cooper opened the middle stall and shut and locked it behind him. From one pocket he took his datapad, from the other the drive, still encased in duct tape. He peeled that off, dropped it on the floor. The chip he’d found on the back of Teddy Eaton’s casket was a standard stamp drive, a terabyte storage, the kind you could buy in any drugstore. He slotted it, then sat down on the toilet.
The screen brightened, then started playing automatically.
The video showed two men talking in a bland room. One of the men was Drew Peters. The other he’d never met, but knew. Everybody did.
Cooper watched the video all the way through.
And when it was done, he hung his head, pressed his fingers into his eyes hard enough that black-and-white patterns danced. But not hard enough to erase what he had just seen.
He’d thought things were bad before. Bad last night, in Wyoming. Bad this afternoon, in the cemetery. Bad half an hour ago, on the phone with Roger Dickinson.
It turned out he’d had no idea what bad was.
There was no chance, none at all, that Peters would let his family live.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
He might have cried, sitting in that smelly toilet stall in the shitty mall in the heart of DC. He might have. He couldn’t really say.
There seemed to be a few moments missing from his personal history. And he was having a hard time wanting them back.
What he did know was that at some point, he’d stood up, opened the stall door, and walked to the sink. Held his hands under the faucet until it finally came on, then splashed lukewarm water on his face. Again, and again. Paper-toweled dry.
Stared in the mirror. At a dead man, most likely, the father of murdered children.
But not a man who would go quietly.
Cooper tossed the towels in the trash, walked back to the payphone, inserted his last coins, and dialed another number.
Forty-five minutes later he walked into a pub called McLaren’s. Oak and worn stools, coasters with the Guinness logo. A smallish crowd of post-work drinkers, mostly men, mostly watching the game. He’d been there once before, years ago, some work party of Natalie’s. Cooper walked to the bar, signaled the man behind it.
“What can I getcha?”
“You guys have a back room, right?”
“Yeah. Not open now, but if you want to rent it for an event, I can get you the manager’s—”
“I’ll give you…” He opened his wallet and took out a handful of bills. “Three hundred and forty bucks to let me use it for an hour.”
The man looked left, then right. Shrugged, folded his hand around the bills. “Right this way.”
He followed the guy around the end of the bar. The bartender jangled out a ring of keys, found one, and turned the lock. “You want anything?”
“Just privacy.”
“Don’t mess it up, okay? I’m the one who cleans.”