A man.
Who stopped, turned, and aimed his gun.
Antrim dove to the floor.
But no bullet came his way.
He sprang to his feet and saw the shooter flee out the exit doors.
He rushed ahead and pushed the bronze portal open.
Darkness had rolled in.
Rain continued to wash down.
He caught sight of the man, beyond the steps that led from the church, trotting away toward Fleet Street.
Six
Gary Malone had been wrestled from the bridge and forced back into the Mercedes. His hands had been tied behind his back, his head covered with a wool mask.
He was afraid. Who wouldn’t be? But he was even more concerned about his dad and what may have happened in that garage. He never should have run, but he’d followed his father’s order. He should have ignored Ian and stayed close by. Instead, Ian leaped off that bridge. Sure, he’d been told to jump, too. But what sane person would have done that? Norse tried and failed, the man, in his wet clothes, cursing all the way during the drive in the car.
Ian Dunne had guts, that he’d give him.
But so did he.
Yesterday he was home packing, his mind in turmoil. Two weeks ago his mother told him that the man he’d called dad all of his life was not his natural father. She’d explained what happened before he was born — an affair, a pregnancy — confessing to her mistake and apologizing. At first he’d accepted it and decided, what did it matter? His father was his father. But he quickly began to question that decision.
It
Who
He had no idea.
But he wanted to know.
He didn’t have to return to school for another ten days, and was looking forward to a Thanksgiving holiday in Copenhagen, thousands of miles from Georgia. He had to get away.
At least for a while.
A swarm of bitter feelings had settled inside him that he was finding increasingly hard to control. He’d always been respectful, obeying his mother, not making any trouble, but her lies were weighing on him. She told him all the time to tell the truth.
So why hadn’t she?