CAUSE OF DEATH. Patricia Cornwell

Climbing stairs, I walked into the cafeteria where flags for every state in the union were hung on the walls. I met Wesley in a corner beneath Rhode Island.

“I just saw Loren McComb,” I said, setting down my tray.

He glanced at his watch. “She’ll be interviewed most of today.”

“Do you think she’ll be able to tell us anything that might help?”

He slid salt and pepper closer. “No. It’s too late,” he simply said.

I ate scrambled egg whites and dry toast, and drank my coffee black as I watched new agents and cops in the National Academy fix omelets and waffles. Some made sandwiches with bacon and sausage, and I thought how boring it was to get old.

“We should go.” I picked up my tray, because sometimes eating wasn’t worth it.

“I’m not finished eating, Chief.” He played with his spoon.

“You’re eating granola and it’s all gone.”

“I might get more.”

“No, you won’t,” I said.

“I’m thinking.”

“Okay.” I looked at him, interested to hear what he had to say.

“Just how important is this Book of Hand?”

“Very. Part of the problem started when Danny basically took one and probably gave it to Eddings.”

“Why do you think it’s so important?”

“You’re a profiler. You should know. It tells us how they will behave. The Book makes them predictable.”

“A terrifying thought,” he said.

At nine A.M. we walked past firing ranges to a half acre of grass near the tire house HRT used in the very maneuvers they would need now. This morning, they were nowhere to he seen, all of them at Old Point except our pilot, Whit. He was typically silent and fit in a black flight suit, standing by a blue and white Bell 222, a corporate twin engine helicopter also owned by CP&L.

“Whit.” Wesley nodded at him.

“Good morning,” I said as we boarded.

Inside were four seats in what looked like the cabin of a small plane, and a copilot was busy studying a map.

Senator Lord was completely engrossed in whatever he was reading, the attorney general across from him and preoccupied with paperwork, too. They had been picked up first in Washington and did not look like they had slept much, either, the last few nights.

“How are you, Kay?” The senator did not look up.

He was dressed in a dark suit and a white shirt with stiff collar. His tie was deep red, and he wore Senate cuff links.

Marcia Gradecki, in contrast, wore a simple pale blue skirt and jacket, and pearls. She was a formidable woman with a face that was attractive in a strong, dynamic way. Although she had gotten her start in Virginia, before this moment we had never met.

Wesley made certain we knew each other as we lifted into a sky that was perfectly blue. We flew over bright yellow school buses that were empty this time of day, then buildings quickly gave way to swamps with duck blinds and vast acres of woods. Sunlight painted paths through the tops of trees. and as we began to follow the James, our reflection silently flew after us along the water.

“In a minute here, we’re going to fly over Governor’s Landing,” said Wesley, and we did not need headphones to speak to one another, only to the pilots. “It’s the realestate arm of CP&L, and where Brett West lives. He’s the vice president in charge of operations and lives in a ninehundred-thousand-dollar house down there.” He paused as everybody looked down. “You can just about see it. There.

The big brick one with the pool and basketball court in back.”

The development had many huge homes with pools and painfully young vegetation. There was also a golf course and a yacht club where we were told West kept a boat that right now was not there.

“And where is this Mr. West?” the attorney general asked as our pilots turned north where the Chickahorniny met the James.

“At the moment we don’t know.” Wesley continued looking out the window.

“I’m assuming you believe he’s involved,” the senator said.

“Without question. In fact, when CP&L decided to open a district office in Suffolk, they built it on land they bought from a farmer named Joshua Hayes.”

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