Watching.
Waiting for the Dupont Circle Rapist.
âFourteenâs a little young to be getting married.â Jack glanced at his partner. âWhoâs the lucky kid?â
âI donât know, man. I donât even let her date, yet. Shook me up good.â
âWhat does Mei think?â
âSheâs laughing at me. Says she was planning to marry Michael Jackson when she was that age. She doubts Sabrinaâs even met the guy, but I donât know. I donât like my little girl talking about getting married. Itâs not right.â
Henryâs despondency made Jack smile. He clapped his friend on the back. âDonât sweat it, Hank. Sabrinaâs a smart kid. When the day comes, sheâll pick a great guy.â
âIâll still hate him.â
Jack chuckled. âYeah, so will I.â
Henry grinned. âThatâs one of the things I like about you, man. If anything ever happens to me, I know youâll watch over my family. You love my kids near as much as I do.â
âYour kids are great, Hank. The best.â
For once he didnât feel the usual pang of melancholy that being âUncleâ Jack brought him. Always before, heâd thought this was the closest heâd ever come to being a father. Heâd always known he could never have kids of his own. But now he wasnât so sure. A fragment of hope lodged in his chest the day he met Larsen. The day he realized she could stop the voices.
A flash of white caught his attention inside the restaurant. As he peered closer, he realized he was staring at the same stark white hair, the same odd clothes as on that news report last night. His blood went cold.
âHeâs in there.â
Henry pulled his gun. âWhere? I donât see him.â
Jack yanked out his phone and called Griff and Duke who were inside the restaurant posing as patrons. He could see Griffâs red hair, knew he was facing the Pied Piper. Why hadnât he called for backup?
âGriff, heâs there. Do you have him?â
âWhere? I donât seeâ¦â
A sudden crash reverberated through the phone, the sound of breaking glass and shattering plates, followed by an eerie silence.
âGriff? Griff!â In the background he could hear someone⦠singing. The hair rose at the nape of his neck.
âCome on.â Jack snapped his phone shut and dodged through traffic, Henry racing behind him.
Jack pulled his gun and burst into the restaurant, aiming the weapon at the whitest man heâd ever seen. The man wasnât merely blond, but a true albino, skin without color.
âPolice! Hands in the air!â
The man turned to face him, still singing the odd, tuneless melody Jack had heard through the phone. A movement in the booth beside him caught Jackâs attention.
A man was strangling a woman.
Jack fired at the ceiling. No one seemed to notice, no one reacted at all. Their expressions, to a man, woman and child, were blank. As if every one of them was completely stoned.
He ran and lunged for the strangler, hauling him off his victim. The woman gasped, coughed, then screamed when the man reached for her again.
âStop!â Jack lifted his gun to shoot him.
âNo!â the woman cried as she scrambled out of her assailantâs reach. âItâs him.â She pointed at the albino. âItâs his singing.â
Jack aimed his gun at the pale man. âQuiet!â When the man ignored him, Jack shot him in the leg. The song stumbled, but never ceased, and the Pied Piperâs expression never changed.
Jack stared at the uninjured leg. Had he missed? A second shot rang out and a bullet ruffled his hair. He dove for cover as another hit the table beside him. Were they trying to turn this into a shoot-out? Jack lifted his gun in the direction of the shots, and froze.
The only one aiming for him was Henry.
âHank!â
But his partnerâs eyes had
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