Выбрать главу

Davis weighed giving Delacorte the condensed version of what they’d discovered so far, but decided it wasn’t his place. On balance, the investigation was fast becoming a sinking ship, and the control of information was one of the last buckets Marquez had to bail with.

Delacorte said, “I did hear something about you, Monsieur Davis. Is it true your daughter was on board this flight?”

“She was listed as a passenger, but two bodies are still unaccounted for and Jen is one of them.”

“Let us hope for the best, then,” said the Frenchman, more with faith than conviction.

Davis nodded appreciatively. “Yeah, thanks.”

Delacorte excused himself, explaining that he had to arrange for credentials. Davis turned to a computer and began scanning last night’s logs. The system Marquez had adopted was a good one. Field teams, lab techs, and interviewers all transferred their raw reports into a central database, which was then correlated by staff and organized into a preset framework. Davis searched for anything relating to the interviews that were supposed to have taken place yesterday: one set to determine whether the body in the cockpit was Reyna, and the other to compile a background profile on their hijacking suspect, Umbriz. It took ten minutes to recognize defeat. There were no updates on either man.

He refilled his coffee cup from an industrial-sized pot — no crash could be solved without one — and was settling down again at the keyboard when Marquez and Echevarria walked in.

Marquez spotted Davis and beckoned him with a finger, and not a word was said as the two Colombians disappeared into the main conference room. Davis took a deep breath and followed.

“We have not found your daughter yet,” said Marquez as soon as Davis walked in.

“That’s good,” said a hesitant Davis. “At least, I hope it is.”

Echevarria said, “Good morning, Mr. Davis.”

“Buenos días.”

A weary-looking Marquez unloaded papers from a satchel and began the meeting. “Major Echevarria and I attacked things using independent methods, and yesterday we both tried to resolve the questions surrounding Captain Reyna, and also our chef from Cartagena.” Marquez stiffened as he looked Davis in the eye. “You were correct about the body in the cockpit — it was not Blas Reyna. This has been confirmed by family members, as well as the chief pilot at TAC-Air.”

“Any idea who it is?”

“No,” chimed in Echevarria. “My department is best suited to identifying unknown persons, but so far we have had no success. No fingerprints in our records match those of the man in the morgue, and we found nothing on his body or clothing to suggest an identity. We have good facial recognition software, but it will not help here due to the condition of the body. Dental records might be useful in time… but as of this moment, he remains a mystery.”

“Any idea where the real Captain Reyna is?”

This, apparently, was Marquez’ ground. “We interviewed eight family members and the last three first officers he flew with. He kept a small apartment in the Germania district, an address that was not on record with TAC-Air. We performed a thorough search but found nothing to shed light on his disappearance. Reyna was last seen there by a neighbor the night before the crash.”

Davis rubbed his chin, and said, “Have you gotten TAC-Air involved?”

“In what way?” Marquez asked.

“It’s a slim chance, but you have to rule out that the body we recovered is that of another TAC-Air captain. There might have been a last-minute change from crew scheduling that slipped past on the paperwork, or even two captains who swapped flight assignments without telling anybody. If Reyna got somebody to take his flight, he could be sleeping in right now at his girlfriend’s apartment. Things like that happen.”

The two officers exchanged a look. Marquez said, “I will make inquiries, but it seems too easy a way out.”

Davis thought, If I was you, that’s exactly what I’d be looking for. He said, “Okay, so we have a first officer who’s been executed, and an unidentified captain who was also shot in the head. Any ballistics yet?” This was directed at Echevarria.

“No,” he said. “If we include the passenger who was shot twice, we should expect to find four rounds, and probably the casings. Unfortunately, none have been recovered.”

“Doesn’t that strike you as odd?” Davis said. “I mean, I know this is a crash, and that strange things happen when metal meets the earth. But wouldn’t you think at least one of these spent rounds would turn up lodged in a piece of insulation?”

Neither man answered.

“What about the weapon?” Davis looked at the two men in turn, but saw only blank stares. He addressed Marquez, his voice rising in frustration. “You know what, Colonel — I haven’t been sleeping well lately. And when I don’t sleep well I get difficult. No, that’s not a strong enough word. I get irritable, which I think is the same word in Spanish. So let’s take this apart. Your theory is that our methodical hijacker shot a passenger twice, then broke through the cockpit door, shot both pilots, and finally rebolted the damaged door before a mob could organize. Do I have this right?”

The colonel’s face was set in stone. Echevarria regarded Marquez’ discomfort with unveiled pleasure.

Davis went on, “If this scenario is valid, then I’d say there has to be a gun in that cockpit. Why haven’t we found it by now?”

“The weapon could have been ejected in the crash,” Marquez argued.

“Ejected?”

“The L-1 window failed on impact.”

“You’re saying this gun sailed on a perfect trajectory to the only place where the cockpit was breached and was thrown clear?” Davis paused and shook his head. “Putting aside that slim possibility, a handgun is a very dense piece of metal. With the detection equipment you’ve been using, scouring the jungle inch by inch — I’m sure you’d have found it by now.”

Marquez said nothing, his flimsy theory wobbling under the tempest of Davis’ words.

Echevarria broke the silence. “The medical examiner believes the same caliber gun was used in all three shootings. Dr. Guzman’s best guess is that we are looking for a nine millimeter. If the slugs are recovered, my ballistics people can tell us with certainty.”

The marginalized Marquez had gone still, a statue on his castered office chair. He was completely at sea, out of ideas, and drowned by facts. Davis had seen it before, investigators watching their neatly cobbled theories get shredded before their eyes. Yet there was something different here. Marquez’ storyline had been riddled with holes from the outset, to the point that his very competence could be called in question. There had to be something else.

Offering no quarter, Davis looked squarely at the colonel. “Tell us what you’ve learned about your hijacker.”

When Marquez didn’t answer, Echevarria piled on. “It is a dead end. Over a dozen people who knew Umbriz have been interviewed, and each claims the idea of him being a hijacker is ridiculous. He was sixty-two years old and married for thirty years. Four children, six grandchildren, and he recently began caring for his aging mother. He’s lived in the same house since 1980, and there is no evidence of fringe politics or financial difficulties — at least nothing he hasn’t been dealing with his entire life. The man was a chef who made flan and pasteles — nothing more.”

Davis almost felt sorry for Marquez, and having made his point, he decided to ratchet down. “Okay, maybe we should all go back to square one.”

“I agree,” Marquez responded, “a new approach is necessary. Each of us should spend the day going over the facts as we know them. If we independently develop theories, perhaps we can find new ground.”