normal personâs stomach. Theyâd been very lucky this time, but what could a snitch know about some head case killing high school math teachers? They werenât talking low-life drug dealers here. On the other hand, most cases were solved by informants of one sort or another, and that was a fact.
He tried to imagine again why this person felt his mission was to commit cold-blooded murder of math teachers. Randomly shooting company CEOsâthat was a maybe. Judgesâsometimes. Politiciansâgood idea. Lawyersâhands down, a top-notch idea. But math teachers? Even the profilers were amused about how off-the-wall crazy bizarre it was, something that no one could ever remember happening before.
He was inside his brain once more when she spoke again. He nearly fell off the treadmill at her words. âIs it true that Congress, way back when, was responsible for shutting off any communication between the FBI and the CIA? And thatâs why no one shared any information before nine-eleven?â
âIâve heard thatâ was all he said.
She leaned close and he smelled her perfume, mixed with a light coating of sweat. He didnât like Valerie Rapper looking at him like she wanted to pull his gym shorts off.
She asked, âHow often do you work out?â
He had only seven minutes to go on the treadmill. He decided to cut it to thirty seconds. He was warmed up enough, loose, and a little winded. âI try to come three or four times a week,â he said, and pressed the cool-down pad. He knew he was being a jerk. Just because he was anxious about this killer, just because a woman was interested in him, it didnât mean he should be rude.
And so he asked, âHow often do you come here?â
She shrugged. âJust like youâthree or four times a week.â
Without thinking, he said, âIt shows.â Stupid thing to say, really stupid. Now she was smiling, telling him so clearly how pleased she was that he liked her body.
He was an idiot. When he got home heâd tell Sherlock how heâd managed to stick his foot all the way down his throat and kick his tonsils.
He pressed the stop pad and stepped off the treadmill. âSee you,â he said, and pointedly walked to the weights on the other side of the room.
He worked out hard for the next forty-five minutes, pushing himself, but aware that she was always near him, sometimes standing not two feet away, watching him while she worked her triceps with ten-pound weights.
Sherlock, much smaller, her once skinny little arms now sleek with muscle, had worked up to twelve-pound weights.
Thirty minutes later he forgot all about the math teacher killer and Valerie Rapper as he opened the front door of his house to hear his son yell âPapa! Here comes an airplane!â and got it right in the chest.
Two evenings later at the gym, while Sherlock was showering in the womenâs locker room after a hard workout, and Savich was stretching his tired muscles in a corner, henearly tripped on a free weight when Valerie Rapper said, not six inches from his ear, âHello, Dillon. I heard that you saved a math teacher from a crazy man a couple of days ago. Congratulations.â
He straightened so fast he nearly hit her with his elbow. âYeah,â he said, âit happens like that sometimes.â
âThe media is making it sound like the FBI messed up, what with that old man getting his head blown off.â
Savich shrugged, as if to say what else is new? He said again, âThat happens, too.â
âMaybe youâd like to have a cup of coffee after youâve finished working out?â
He smiled at her and said, âNo, thank you. Iâm waiting for my wife. Our little boy is waiting for us at home. Heâs learning how to make paper airplanes.â
âHow delightful.â
âSee you.â
Valerie Rapper watched him as he made his way through the crowded gym to the
Christine Zolendz, Frankie Sutton, Okaycreations