Part One
LATE TO THE PARTY
Chapter 1
THE HARDEST MYSTERIES to solve are the ones you come to near the
end, because there isn’t enough evidence, not enough to unravel,
unless somehow you can go all the way back to the beginning —
rewind and replay everything. I was riding in the lap of comfort
and civility, my Mercedes R350.
I was thinking about how odd it was to be going to a murder scene
now. And then I was there, leaving my vehicle, and feeling
conflicted about going over to the dark side again.
Was I getting too soft for this? I wondered for an instant,
then let it go. I wasn’t soft. If anything, I was still too hard,
too unyielding, too uncompromising.
Then I was thinking that there was something particularly
terrifying about random, senseless murder, and that’s what this
appeared to be, that’s what everyone thought anyway. It’s what I
was told when the call came to the house.4
“It’s rough in there, Dr. Cross. Five vics. It’s an entire
family.”
“Yeah, I know it is. That’s what they said.”
One of the first responders, a young officer I know named Michael
Fescoe, met me on the sidewalk at the murder scene in Georgetown,
not far from the university where I’d gone as an undergrad and
which I remembered fondly for all sorts of reasons, but mostly
because Georgetown had taken a chance on me.
The patrolman was visibly shaken. No surprise there. Metro didn’t
call me in special at eleven o’clock on a Sunday night for run- of-
the- mill homicides.
“What have we got so far?” I said to Fescoe and flashed my badge at
a patrolman seemingly guarding an oak tree. Then I ducked under the
bright yellow tape in front of the house. Beautiful house, a three-
story Colonial on Cambridge Place, a well-heeled single block just
south of Montrose Park.
Neighbors and looky-loos crowded the sidewalk — but they stayed at
a safe distance in their pajamas and robes, keeping up their
white-collar reserve.
“Family of five, all of them dead,” Fescoe repeated himself. “The
name’s Cox. Father, Reeve. Mother, Eleanor. Son, James. All on the
first floor. Daughters, Nicole and Clara, on the third. There’s
blood everywhere. Looks like they were shot first. Then cut up
pretty bad and piled into groupings.”
Piled. I sure didn’t like the sound of that. Not inside this
lovely home. Not anywhere.
“Senior officers on site? Who caught it?” I asked.
“Detective Stone is upstairs. She’s the one asked me to page you.
ME’s still on the way. Probably a couple of them. Christ, what a
night.”
“You’ve got that right.”
Bree Stone was a bright star with the Violent Crimes branch, and
one of the few detectives I went out of my way to partner with, pun
intended, since she and I were a couple and had been for more than
a year now.
“Let Detective Stone know that I’m here,” I said. “I’m going to
start downstairs and work my way up to where she is.”
“Will do, sir. I’m on it.”
Fescoe stuck with me up the porch steps and past an ALS tech
working on the demolished front door and threshold.
“Forced entry, of course,” Fescoe went on. He blushed, probably
because he’d stated the obvious. “Plus, there’s a hatch open to the
roof on the third floor. Looks like they might have left that
way.”
“They?”
“I’d say so — based on the amount of damage, whatever the hell
happened in there. Never seen anything like it, sir. Listen, if
there’s anything else you need —”
“I’ll let you know. Thank you. It’s better if I do this alone. I
concentrate better.”
My reputation seems to attract hungry cops on big cases, which can
have its advantages. Right now, though, I wanted to take in this
scene for myself. Given the grim, steely- eyed look on the face of
every tech I’d seen coming from the back of the house, I knew this
was going to get harder in a hurry.
Turns out I didn’t know the half of it. The murder of this family
was much worse than I’d thought.
Much, much worse.7
Chapter 2
THEY WANTED TO scare somebody, I was thinking as I entered a
brightly lit, warmly decorated alcove. But who? Not these dead
people. Not this poor family that had been slaughtered for God only
knew what reason.
The first floor told a grim and foreboding story that delineated
the murder. Nearly every piece of furniture in the living and
dining rooms had been either turned over or destroyed — or both.
There were gaping holes punched in the walls, along with dozens of
smaller ones. An antique glass chandelier lay scattered in
splinters and shards all over a brightly colored Oriental rug.
The crime scene made no sense and, worse, had no direct precedent
in my experience as a homicide detective.
A bullet- riddled Chesterfield couch and settee had been pushed up
against the wall to make room in front of the fireplace. This was
where the first three bodies were piled.
While it’s safe to say that I’ve seen some horrendous shit in the
line of duty, this scene, the monstrosity of it, stopped me
instantly.
As promised, the stacked victims were the father, mother, and son
on top, all lying faceup. There were blood streaks and stains on
the nearby walls, furniture, and ceiling, and a pool had formed
around the bodies. These poor people had been attacked with sharp
cutting instruments of some sort, and there had been
amputations.
“Jesus, Jesus,” I muttered under my breath. It was a prayer, or a
curse on the killers, or more likely both.
One of the printing techs answered under his breath, “Amen.”
Neither of us was looking at the other, though. This was the kind
of homicide scene you just gutted your way through, trying to get
out of the house with a minute piece of your sanity intact.
The blood patterns around the room suggested the family members had
been attacked separately, then dragged together in the middle.
Something had fueled whatever savage rage brought these killers to
this and I agreed with Fescoe that there had been several killers.
But what exactly had happened? What was the cause of the massacre?
Drugs? Ritual? Psychosis?
Group psychosis?
I stashed the random thoughts to consider at another time. Methods
first, motive later.
I slowly circled the bodies and parts, picking my way around the
pools of blood, stepping on dry parquet where I could. There didn’t
seem to be any cohesion to the cutting, or the killing for that
matter.
The son’s throat was slit; the father had a bullet wound to the
forehead; and the mother’s head was turned away at an unnatural
angle, as if her neck had been broken.
I went full circle to see the mother’s face. The angle was such
that she seemed to be looking right up at me, almost hopeful, as if
I could still save her.
I leaned in for a closer look at her and all of a sudden felt
dizzy. My legs went weak. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing.
Oh no! Oh my God, no!
I stepped back blindly, my foot hit a slick spot, and I fell. As I
went down, I reached to break my fall. My gloved hand smeared deep
red across the floor.
Ellie Randall’s blood. Not Cox — Randall!
I knew her — at least I once had.
Long, long ago, Ellie had been my girlfriend when we’d been
students at Georgetown. She had probably been my first love.
And now Ellie had been murdered, along with her family.
Chapter 3
ONE OF THE printing techs moved to help me, but I got myself up
quickly. I wondered if maybe I was in shock about Ellie. “No harm.
I’m fine. What’s the name here again?” I asked the tech.
“Cox, sir. Reeve, Eleanor, and James are the victims in the living
room.”
Eleanor Cox. That was right; I remembered now. I stared down at
Ellie, my heart racing out of control, tears starting at the
corners of my eyes. She had been Ellie Randall when I met
her, a smart, attractive history major looking for antiapartheid
signatures from Georgetown University students. Definitely not
someone whose story would end like this.
“Need anything?” Fescoe was back and he was hovering.
“Just . . . get me a garbage bag or something,” I told him.
“Please. Thank you.”
I peeled off my Windbreaker and tried to wipe myself with it, then
stuck the coat in the bag Fescoe brought me. I needed to keep
moving and to get out of this room, at least for now.
I headed toward the stairs and found Bree just coming down.
“Alex? Jesus, what happened to you?” she asked.
I knew if I started to explain, I wouldn’t be able to finish.
“We’ll talk about it later, okay?” I said. “What’s going on
upstairs?”
She looked at me strangely but didn’t push it. “More of the same.
Bad stuff. Third floor, Alex. Two more kids. I think they were
trying to hide from the killers, but it didn’t work.”
A photo flash ghosted the stairwell as we climbed. Everything
seemed hallucinogenic and unreal to me. I was outside the scene,
watching myself stumble through it. Ellie had been murdered.
I tried again but couldn’t process the thought.
“No blood on the stairs, or in the hall,” I noticed, trying to
focus on evidence, trying to do the job. It was freezing cold, with
a hatch door open overhead. November third, and the forecast was
for single- digit temperatures overnight. Even the weather had gone
a little crazy.
“Alex?”
Bree was waiting up ahead, standing at the doorway to a room on the
third floor. She didn’t move as I approached. “You sure you’re okay
to be here?” she asked, speaking low so the others wouldn’t
hear.
I nodded and peered into the room.
Behind Bree, the two little girls’ bodies were crisscrossed on an
oval rag rug. A white canopy bed was broken into pieces, collapsed
in on itself as if someone had jumped too hard on it.
“I’ll be fine,” I said. “I need to see what happened here. I need
to begin to understand what it all means. Like who the hell was
jumping on that bed?
Chapter 4
BUT I DIDN’T even begin to understand the horrible murders
of five family members. Not that night, anyway. I was as baffled as
everybody else about the possible motivation of the killers.
What made the mystery even deeper was something that happened about
an hour after I got to the crime scene. Two officers from the CIA
showed up. They looked around, then left. What was the CIA doing
there?
It was a little after three thirty in the morning when Bree and I
finally got back home to Fifth Street. In the stillness of my
house, I could hear Ali’s little- boy snores wafting down from
upstairs. Reassuring and comforting sounds, to be sure.
Nana Mama had left the hood light on over the stove, and she’d
Saran Wrapped a plate of the last four hermit cookies from dessert.
We took them upstairs, along with glasses and a half- full bottle
of wine.
Two hours later I was still awake and still messed up in the head.
Bree finally sat up and turned on the light. She found me sitting
on the edge of the bed. I could feel the warmth of her body against
my back, her breath on my neck.
“You sleep at all?” she asked.
That wasn’t really what she wanted to know.
“I knew the mother, Bree. We went to Georgetown together. This
couldn’t have happened to her. Shouldn’t have, anyway.”
She breathed in sharply at my revelation. “I’m so sorry, Alex. Why
didn’t you say so?”
I shrugged, then sighed. “I’m not even sure if I can talk about it
now,” I said.
She hugged me. “It’s okay. No need to talk. Unless you want to,
Alex. I’m here.”
“We were best friends, Bree. We were a couple for a year. I know it
was a long time ago, but . . .” I trailed off. But what? But
— it hadn’t just been kid stuff, either. “I loved her for a while,
Bree. I’m blown away right now.”
“You want to get off the case?”
“No.” I’d already asked myself the same question, and the answer
had come just as quickly.
“I can get Sampson or somebody else from Violent Crimes to cover.
We’ll keep you up to the second —”
“Bree, I can’t let go of this one.”
“This one?” She ran a hand softly up and down my arm. “As compared
to . . . what, Alex?”
I took a deep breath. I knew where Bree was going with this. “It’s
not about Maria, if that’s what you mean.” My wife, Maria, had been
gunned down when our kids were small. I’d managed to close the case
only recently. There had been years of torture and guilt before
that. But Maria had been my wife, the love of my life at the time.
Ellie was something else. I wasn’t confusing the two. I didn’t
think so anyway.
“Okay,” she said, stroking my back, soothing me. “Tell me what I
can do.”
I folded us both under the covers. “Just lie here with me,” I said.
“That’s all I need for now.”
“You got it.”
And soon, wrapped in Bree’s arms, I went off to sleep — for a whole
two hours.
Chapter 5
“I SPY, WITH my little eye, a pink newspaper,” said
Bree.
“Over there!” Ali was quick to spot it. “I see it! It is
pink. What kind of crazy newspaper is that?”
To my family’s surprise and delight, I hadn’t left for work at some
obscene hour the morning after I found Ellie and her family dead in
their home. Today, I wanted to walk the kids to school. Actually, I
wanted to do it most every day, but sometimes I couldn’t, and
sometimes I didn’t. But today needed lots of fresh air in my life.
And smiles. And Ali’s giggles.
Jannie was in her last year at Sojourner Truth, all ready for high
school, while Ali was just starting out in the school world. It
seemed very circle- of- life to me that morning, with Ellie’s
family gone in a blink, and my own kids coming up strong.
I put on my best cheerful dad face and tried to set aside the
gruesome images of last night. “Who’s next?”
“I’ve got one,” Jannie said. She turned a canary- eating grin on
Bree and me. “I spy, with my little eye, a POSSLQ.”
“What’s a possel- cue?” Ali wanted to know. He was already
looking around, moving his head like a bobblehead doll’s, trying to
spot it, whatever it was.
Jannie practically sang out the answer. “P, O, S, S, L, Q. Person
of the opposite sex, sharing living quarters.” She whispered the
word sex in our direction, presumably to safeguard her little
brother’s innocence. No matter, I could feel myself blushing
slightly.
Bree tagged Jannie’s shoulder. “Where exactly did you pick that one
up?”
“Cherise J. She says her mom says you two are, you know, living in
sin.”
I exchanged a look with Bree over the top of Jannie’s head. I
guessed this was bound to come up in some way or another sooner or
later. Bree and I had been together for more than a year now, and
she spent a good amount of time at the house on Fifth Street. Part
of the reason was that the kids loved having her around. Part was
that I did.
“I think maybe you and Cherise J. need to find something else to
talk about,” I told her.
“You think?”
“Oh, it’s okay, Daddy. I told Cherise her mom needs to get over
herself. I mean, even Nana Mama’s down with it, and her picture’s
in the dictionary under ‘old- fashioned,’ right?”
“You wouldn’t have any idea what’s in a dictionary,” I said.
But Bree and I had stopped trying to be politically correct with
Jannie, and we just let ourselves laugh. Jannie had that
“crossroads” thing going on these days; she was right at the
intersection of girl and woman.
“What’s so funny?” Ali asked. “Somebody tell me. What is it?”
I scooped him up off the sidewalk and onto my shoulders for the
last half block of our walk to school. “I’ll tell you in about five
years.”
“I know anyway,” he said. “You and Bree love each other. Everybody
knows. No big deal. It’s a good thing.”
“Yes it is,” I said and kissed his cheek.
We dropped him at the school’s east entrance, where the rest of his
class of minicuties were lining up outside. Jannie called to him
through the fence. “See you later, alligator! Love you.”
“In a while, crocodile! Love you back.”
With their older brother, Damon, off at prep school in
Massachusetts, these two had grown closer than ever lately. On
weekend nights, Ali often slept on an air mattress at the foot of
his sister’s bed, in what he called his “nest.”
We left Jannie at the opposite side of the school building, where
all the older kids were streaming in. She gave us both hugs good-
bye, and I held on a little longer than usual. “I love you,
sweetie. There’s nothing more special to me than you and your
brothers.”
Jannie couldn’t help but look around to make sure no one had heard.
“Me too, Daddy,” she said. Then, almost in the same breath,
“Cherise! Wait up!”
As soon as Jannie was gone, Bree took my arm in hers. “So what was
that?” she said. “‘Everybody knows you and Bree love each other’?
”
I shrugged and smiled. “What do I know? That’s the big rumor going
around, anyway.”
I gave her a kiss.
And because that worked out so well, I gave her another.
Chapter 6
BY NINE A.M. I was all kissed out and getting ready to enter a most
unpleasant multiple- homicide briefing at the Daly Building. It was
being held in the large conference room right across from my
office. Handy, anyway. Every available D-1 and D-2, and a
contingent from Second District, which covered most of Georgetown,
would be there.
I still couldn’t get it in my head that Ellie was the victim.
One of the victims.
The ME’s Office had sent over a representative in the person of Dr.
Paula Cook, a bright investigator who had the personality of
tapioca pudding. The corners of Dr. Cook’s mouth actually twitched
when we shook hands. I think it was an attempted smile, so I smiled
back. “Thanks for coming, Paula. We need you on this one.”
“Worst I’ve seen,” she said, “in fourteen years. All those kids,
the parents. Turns my stomach. Senseless.”
We had picked up a stack of crime scene photos on the way in, and
now Paula and I pinned some of them up in the situation room. I
made sure they were all 11 × 14s. I wanted everyone to feel some of
what had happened last night in Georgetown, the way I still
did.
“This might be an isolated incident,” I stood in front and told the
assembled group a few minutes later. “But I’m not going to assume
it is. The more we understand, the more prepared we’ll be if this
happens again. It might not be an isolated incident.” I figured
some of the more jaded homicide detectives wouldn’t agree; they’d
be thinking I’d worked one too many serial cases. I didn’t much
care what they thought at that point.
For the first fifteen minutes or so, I ran through the primary
facts of the case for those who hadn’t been there the night before.
Then I turned it over to Paula. She bounced up and talked us
through the photos on the wall.
“The cutting styles indicate a variety of weapons, strength, and
ability,” she said, using a red laser pointer to highlight the
slashes, punctures, and severing that had been done to the Cox
family.
“At least one blade had a serrated edge. One was unusually large —
possibly a machete. The amputations, wherever they occurred, were
never done cleanly. Rather, they were the result of repetitive
trauma.”
A detective named Monk Jeffries asked a pretty good question from
the front row. “You think they were practicing? Had never done this
before?”
“I couldn’t say,” Paula told him. “Wouldn’t surprise me.”
“Yeah,” I put in. “It’s like they were practicing, Monk.” I had my
own opinion about the murders. “There’s something very young
about this crime scene.”
N “As in inexperienced?” Jeffries asked.
“No. Just young. I’m talking about the cutting, the broken bed, the
vandalism in general. Also the fact that this was probably done by
a group of five or more. That’s a big group of intruders. When I
intersect all those factors, I get a few possibilities: gang, cult,
OC. In that order.”
“Gang?” another D- 1 asked from the back. “You ever see gang
violence like this massacre?”
“I’ve never seen violence like this, period,” I said.
“I’ve got twenty bucks on OC. Any takers?” It was Lou Copeland, a
competent but thoroughly obnoxious D- 1 with Major Case Squad. A
few of his cronies laughed.
Not me. I threw my clipboard across the room. It struck the wall
and fell onto the tile. That wasn’t like me, so it made an
impression.
The room was quiet. I walked over to pick up my notes. I saw Bree
and Sampson exchange a look I didn’t like. They weren’t sure that I
could handle this.
Bree took it from there, and she started handing out assignments.
We needed people recanvassing the Cambridge Place neighborhood,
riding the lab for fast turnaround, and calling in any chits we had
on the street for information about last night.
“We need your best work on this one,” Bree told the group. “And we
want some answers by the end of the day.”
“What about — ?”
“Dismissed! ”
Everyone looked around. It was Sampson who’d spoken.
“You all have any more questions, you can reach Stone or Cross on
their cells. Meanwhile, we’ve got a buttload of fieldwork to do.
This is a major case. So get started! Let’s hit it, and hit it
hard.”
Chapter 7
THE TIGER WAS the tallest and strongest of ten well-muscled black
men racing up and down a weathered asphalt basketball court at
Carter Park in Petway. He understood that he wasn’t a skillful
shooter or dribbler, but he rebounded like a pro and defended the
basket fiercely, and he hated to lose more than anything. In his
world, you lose, you die.
The player he guarded called himself “Buckwheat” and the Tiger had
heard that the nickname had something to do with an old TV series
in America that sometimes made fun of black kids.
Buckwheat either didn’t mind the name, or he’d gotten used to it.
He was fast on the basketball court and a steady shooter. He was
also a trash- talker, as were most of the young players in DC. The
Tiger had picked up the game in London instantly while he was at
university, but there wasn’t much trash- talking in England.
“You talk a good game, but you’re going to lose,” the Tiger finally
said as he and his opponent ran up the court, shoulder to shoulder.
Buckwheat turned off a screen and took a bounce pass in the left
corner. He proceeded to bury a long, perfectly arced jump shot even
though the Tiger bumped him hard after the release.
“Fuckin’ ape,” the other man yelled as the two of them ran back the
other way.
“You think so?”
“Oh hell, I know so. ’Nother minute, you be the big monkey watchin’
on the sideline!”
The Tiger laughed but said nothing more. He scored on a rebound,
and then Buckwheat’s team raced the ball up the court on a fast
break.
Buckwheat caught a pass in full stride and brought it hard to the
hoop. He had a step on the Tiger and called out, “Game!” even
before he went up for the winning dunk.
He was airborne, graceful and athletic, when the Tiger hit him with
all his force and weight. He took the six-foot-three man down,
drove him into the metal pole supporting the basket. The man lay
sprawled on the asphalt with blood streaming from his face.
“Game!” shouted the Tiger and raised both arms high over his
head. He loved to play basketball — what great fun it was to beat
these loudmouthed African Americans who didn’t know anything
about the real world.
On the sidelines, his boys cheered as if he were Michael Jordan and
Kobe Bryant rolled into one. He wasn’t any of that, he knew. He
didn’t want to be like Mike or Kobe. He was much better.
He decided life and death on a daily basis.
He walked off the court, and a man came up to him. This particular
man couldn’t have been more out of place, since he wore a gray suit
and he was white.
“Ghedi Ahmed,” said the white devil. “You know who he is?”
The Tiger nodded. “I know who he used to be.”
“Make an example of him.”
“And his family.”
“Of course,” said the white devil. “His family too.”