"So there's at least one other guy," Virgil said. "The guy who killed Jill MacBride. That's some outsider DNA, right?"
"If it doesn't belong to the doc." Lucas thought about it for a minute, then said, "But it won't belong to the doc, because the guy who killed Jill MacBride is the guy who tortured Lyle Mack. Same cold killer. Same…"
He stopped and turned away from Virgil and said, "Oh, Jesus."
"What?"
"How did the guy who killed Jill MacBride get to the airport? And how did Joe get out? MacBride's car was still there… Somebody picked him up, and killed MacBride, right? The killer picked up Joe Mack. Joe either called him, or Lyle Mack called him and sent him over to pick up Joe. We know Joe Mack talked to Lyle, after he ran."
"They could have taken the train in and out," Virgil said. "But it's about nine hundred and ninety-nine to one that they drove."
Lucas stood up, suddenly excited: "You know what? You know what? The day Joe Mack ran, he was signing his van over to a skinhead. He signed the paper, but the guy never gave Joe any money. No check, nothing. Nothing we saw. I suppose the skinhead could have given Joe a wad of cash ahead of time, but that usually doesn't get done, you know, until the papers are signed. They were either friends, or Joe Mack owed him big. And this was a hard-looking guy."
Virgil's eyebrows went up. "The skinhead-what does he look like?"
"You know, a skinhead," Lucas said. "Probably twenty-five, wind-burned face, skinny, muscles in his face…"
Virgil leaned forward, intent. "Man, I've seen that guy, wandering around by the twins' team, doing nothing," Virgil said. "An orderly, or a whatever, a nurse. He's wearing a hospital uniform. I've seen him a couple times. I'm always catching his eyes-"
Lucas snapped his fingers: dug out his cell phone, called the duty officer: "I need the tag numbers of a van owned by a Joe Mack, M-A-C-K, sold in the last few days… I can wait."
They waited, no more than a minute, and the duty officer came back. "We've got a Joe Mack as the owner of a 2006 Dodge Grand Caravan cargo van, white in color, but there's no transfer come through."
"You got the tags?"
"Yeah. You want them?"
"No. Get onto the airport cops, find out if those tags came into the airport…"
Lucas gave him time and date and said he'd wait again. The duty officer came back after two minutes and said that it'd be another two minutes; and came back and said, "Well, you got it. The van came in at ten forty-two and was out at eleven-oheight."
"Thank you. Get all the numbers, tell the airport cops to be careful with the data, see if they've got a face in their van photo. Get back to me."
He clicked off and said to Virgiclass="underline" "Got him. It's our skinhead. Goddamnit, we should have scanned all the tags coming in and out around the time of the MacBride murder. It would have kicked out Joe Mack's van. I mean, I saw the guy."
"And if it's the same guy I saw…"
"Where's Weather right now?" Lucas asked.
"Either operating or up in the observation room." They both stood up and Virgil said, "This way," and as they hurried back toward the elevators, they both reached down and touched their weapons.
Lucas said, "He's maybe got hand grenades."
"I was just thinking that," Virgil said. "Shoot first, ask questions later." WEATHER OPENED the operation as she did each day, moving fast now. Moving fast, she was in and out in ten minutes, laying bare the ring of bone that connected Ellen and Sara. Most of the bone had been taken out, and Hanson, at her elbow, was ready to take out all but about a centimeter of the rest of it.
"Anything I can do before I go?" Weather asked him.
"I could use a couple more sterile hands in close," he said.
She stayed, to help hold the babies' heads, six hands in close and tight. Maret asked, through the crowd, "Hearts?"
"Okay so far," somebody answered from the back.
The saw, in cutting through the bone, kicked up the stink of raw blood mixed with something else… almost a floral scent. Dead peonies, maybe.
Hanson was a half hour, against an estimate of forty minutes. His mask was dotted with sweat when he backed away. "We're good."
The neurosurgeons moved up.
Weather backed out, stripped off the operating gear, dumped it, washed, and walked down to talk to the Rayneses again.
Lucy, anxious, wide-eyed. "Is something wrong? You were gone so long…"
"I stayed to help with some bone removal. At this point, their hearts are stable, we've got everything but the last half-inch of bone out. Rick can take that out in one minute if he has to."
Larry: "So the neuro guys are working?"
"Yes. Still a way to go," Weather said.
They talked for a couple more minutes; the Rayneses said the overnight crew had reported that the twins had gotten their best sleep since the operation began.
A team nurse popped in, looked at Weather: "Gabe wants you in the OR."
"Something happened?" Larry Raynes asked.
"Looks like it's going okay to me," the nurse said. "I'm not a doctor, though." WEATHER STEPPED inside the OR and said, "Gabriel?"
Maret looked up from the operating table and said, "Ah, Weather, come around here."
She walked carefully around the edge of the working crew, and Maret pointed at the babies' skulls. "The seven vein," he said, and she nodded.
The seven vein had been difficult to image, but they didn't know why, exactly. It rose close to the edge of the defect, up out of Sara's brain, before apparently edging over to a trough where it dumped the blood.
"It doesn't do that. It actually curled around the edge of the defect and dumps into Ellen's side. So, we can ligate it and forget it. But there's another vein we didn't see-we're calling it fourteen-that comes up beside it. If we could splice seven into fourteen…"
"How big are they?" Weather asked.
"Not big. But not so small as the ones you did on the toe operation…"
"I was using the scope for that. If we drop the scope on them, you guys would have to get out of the way."
"I think they might be large enough for you to do with your loupes… I'm hoping."
"I'll scrub up," she said. SHE WAS BACK in ten minutes, robed in another five, operating glasses in place. Maret moved sideways, pushing one of the nurses away from the table, and Weather moved in close. The other neurosurgeon continued working on the other side of the babies' heads.
Maret said, "Here," and indicated the two veins with a tip of his scalpel.
Weather's operating glasses were equipped with an LED, and the light illuminated the patch of dura mater as though it were an illustration in a medical text. The veins were small, dark, wire-like-a bit smaller in diameter than the wire in a coat hanger.
Weather looked at them for a full fifteen seconds, until Maret asked, "What do you think?"
"How bad do you need it?"
"Well, it's impossible to know. But the babies are doing okay, so far, we are ahead of schedule, and better to do this now, if we can-we need to move as much blood as possible…"
"I can do it, but it'll take a while," she said finally. "Sandy might have to stop working every once in a while. I couldn't have the slightest bit of movement."
"How long?"
"Thirty, forty minutes. They're well exposed."
"Thirty minutes?"
"Thirty or forty."
"Thirty minutes. I believe you can do this." THE VEINS were not especially delicate, but they couldn't be yanked around, either. Weather tied off the smaller fourteen, and began the process of splicing it into the seven. The process was slow: she would be placing four square knots, each smaller than a poppy seed, around the edge of the splice. Ten minutes in, she had one knot; in seventeen minutes, she had two.
An anesthesiologist said, "We've got a gradient showing up."
"I'll be out in ten or fifteen," Weather said. The gradient was the blood pressure in Sara's brain.
"Let's stay with it," Maret said.