cash stuffed in his mouth and the word munafiq scrawled in his own blood on the wall of the building he was propped up against.”
“Hypocrite,” Kennedy translated the word aloud. “I don’t get it.”
“Coleman found out some interesting stuff last week. Not all of Khalil’s worshipers were happy with him. There was a growing dissent in the community over his call to jihad and his recruiting of young men to go overseas and fight. And there was one other thing. Something Muslims, among other people, find deplorable.”
“What’s that?”
“He was a porn freak.”
“What?”
Rapp pulled the memory stick Coleman had given him out of his pocket. “Scott snuck into his apartment and copied his hard drive. The thing was filled with porn. A lot of bondage, S&M, and some underage stuff that could have got him in major trouble.”
“You’re not serious?”
“Of course I am.” Rapp held out the stick. “Plug it in. Take a look at it.”
Kennedy closed her eyes. “I’ll take your word for it.”
“He also had magazines. A lot of really sick stuff.”
“And you think the police and the press will automatically rule us out because of some porn fetish?” She shook her head. “I don’t know, Mitchell, it sounds pretty thin to me.”
Rapp glanced at the floor and then looked out the window. “There’s one more thing.”
“What’s that?”
“His body was, uh …” Rapp let out a sigh, “hacked up a bit.”
Her hands moved to her hips and a deep frown covered her face. “Why?”
“I didn’t want it to look so professional.”
She shook her head.
“Irene, trust me. I know how cops think. This thing will be classified as a revenge crime. They’re gonna think that asshole defiled some guy’s daughter, which by the way he probably did. We stuffed the money in his mouth and left him there with multiple stab wounds. Details like that will eventually get leaked to the press, and no one in a million years is going to think we had anything to do with it.”
Kennedy turned and walked to the seating area at the far end of her office. A long couch and two armchairs were arranged around a rectangular glass-top coffee table. Rapp waited a bit and then followed.
She stood with her back to him looking out the window at the bright fall colors of the Potomac River Valley. After a long moment she shook her head and asked, “How was your meeting?”
Rapp, relieved that they were off the subject, said, “Unusual. Why didn’t you tell me what they wanted?”
“I wanted your honest reaction.”
“You wanted them to catch me off guard,” Rapp corrected.
“You could say that,” replied Kennedy. “You seem unusually calm. I half expected you to come marching in here and bite my head off.”
Rapp was looking out the window, staring off into space. The fact that he and Senator Hartsburg had agreed on a pivotal issue was enough for him to question his senses, but that was only the beginning. The proposal that the two men had floated his way was mind-boggling. It had been the last thing he’d expected.
“You don’t think they’re trying to set you up?” she asked.
“No.” Rapp kept staring out the window. “They might hate me, but I can’t imagine them going through all of this just to take me down.” He paused and then added, “Plus, they know I’d kill them before I’d ever let them string me up at some hearing.”
Kennedy wasn’t sure if he was kidding or not, which she supposed suited Rapp’s purposes perfectly. The urban lore regarding Rapp’s exploits had grown far beyond reality.
“I could maybe see Hartsburg being zealous enough to set me up, but not Walsh.”
“I agree.” She set her cup down on the coffee table. “I know what you’re going through. I went through the same thing last week when they came to me. You spend all of this time in an adversarial relationship with them and then when you end up on the same side of an issue, it causes you to stop and question
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