But that didn’t happen. The van kept going. And so did Puller.
The two vehicles reached a main road.
Puller snatched his camera and fired a few shots at the rear of the van.
They turned onto another road.
It was nearly five in the morning now and early-rising commuters were out in full force. This was a military community and those folks worked varying shifts, but the one coming up now was one of the biggest.
The van sped up and got on the entry ramp for Interstate 64 heading east.
Puller had to fall back because of the volume of traffic. It was still dark and now all he could see in front of him were winking red brake lights. He counted ahead to where he thought the van was located.
Soon he went through the Hampton Roads tunnel. It was lighted inside and he thought he could see the van far ahead.
By the time he came out of the tunnel and the overhead lights vanished, all he could see were taillights. And there was a white van right in front of him and one next to him. Neither was the van, because they both had stenciling on the sides and rear. One was a plumber, the other an electrician.
Puller looked up ahead. There were exits and the van could take any one of them, or none at all and keep going.
He decided to stay on the road.
He had driven many more miles, and traffic had gotten heavier as more and more cars piled onto the interstate. Finally, he gave it up and exited. He reversed course and headed west. He drove back to the hotel where he had stayed before and got a room.
He got out his camera and checked the pictures. He zoomed in on the shots of the van. He could just make out a license plate.
He wrote it down. It was a West Virginia plate. If he’d still been with CID, running the plate would have been no problem.
Had he just blown an incredible opportunity? Had the guy in the van been the killer thirty years ago, checking out his dumpsites at the very same time Puller had decided to do that too?
He was thinking what to do when his phone buzzed. He checked his watch.
Early call.
Puller didn’t like calls this early. They usually portended bad news, and he’d already had enough of that lately.
“Yes?”
It was his lawyer friend, Shireen Kirk.
“Puller. I’m afraid I’ve got some bad news.”
“About what?”
“No, about who.”
“Then who?” he barked, his nerves frayed near their breaking point.
“Your father.”
Chapter
36
FOR A MOMENT Puller thought that his heart had stopped.
Instantly appearing in his mind’s eye was the image of his father in a coffin dressed in his blues and stars, he and his brother in full dress uniform standing off to the side while folks came to view their dad for the very last time.
“He’s…dead?”
She said quickly, “No, I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have said it that way.”
“What the hell is going on, Shireen?” he shouted into the phone.
“Okay, just calm down. I can tell you’re already having a bad day, though it’s still morning.”
“Is my father okay?” Puller snapped.
“Yes. And no.”
Puller closed his eyes and with a massive effort willed himself to remain calm. “Just tell me.”
“Your father got a phone call. I don’t know how it got to his room or why it wasn’t screened out. I mean, the personnel at the hospital know his condition.”
“Who was the call from?’
“Lynda Demirjian.”
“What!” barked Puller. “Did my dad answer the phone? How could he?”
It was then that he noticed the piece of paper on the floor. It was over by the door. He automatically pulled his M11 and skittered across the room, keeping low, halfway expecting the door to be kicked in at any moment. He slowly reached down and picked up the paper.
The note was handwritten.
Meet me outside in ten. VK
This could be a trap. His first instinct was to climb out the window, make his way down, bypass the parking lot where an armored Humvee might be waiting, and hoof it on foot for a few miles. But then he looked at the note again.
That’s when he saw there was faint writing at the bottom.