Sachs knew that prints were rated A, B and C, the lower category being unacceptable to most law enforcement agencies. But whatever pride she felt in her evidence-gathering skills was crushed by their collective dismay that she hadn’t mentioned it before this.
Then everything started to happen at once. Dellray handed off to an agent who jogged to an elaborate computer in the corner of the office and rested the Polaroid on a large, curved bed of something called an Opti-Scan. Another agent turned on the computer and started typing in commands as Dellray snatched up the phone. He tapped his foot impatiently and then lowered his head as, somewhere, the call was answered.
“Ginnie, s’Dellray. This’s gonna be a true-blue pain but I needya to shut down all AFIS Northeast Region requests and give the one I’m sending priority… I got Perkins here. He’ll okay it and if that ain’t enough I’ll call the man in Washington himself… It’s the UN thing.”
Sachs knew the Bureau’s Automated Fingerprint Identification System was used by police departments throughout the country. That’s what Dellray would be braking to a halt at the moment.
The agent at the computer said, “It’s scanned. We’re transmitting now.”
“How long’s it gonna take?”
“Ten, fifteen minutes.”
Dellray pressed his dusty fingers together. “Please, please, please.”
All around her was a cyclone of activity. Sachs heard voices talking about weapons, helicopters, vehicles, anti-terror negotiators. Phone calls, clattering keyboards, maps unrolling, pistols being checked.
Perkins was on the phone, talking to the hostage-rescue people, or the director, or the mayor. Maybe the president. Who knew? Sachs said to Dellray, “I didn’t know the print was that big a deal.”
“S’always a big deal. Least, with AFIS now it is. Used to be you dusted for prints mostly for show. Let the vics and the press know you were doing something.”
“You’re kidding.”
“Naw, not a bit. Take New York City. You do a cold search – that’s when you don’t have any suspects – you do a cold search manually, it’d take a tech fifty years to go through all the print cards. No foolin’. An automated search? Fifteen minutes. Used to be you’d ID a suspect maybe two, three percent of the time. Now we’re running close to twenty, twenty-two percent. Oh, yup, prints’re golden. Dincha tell Rhyme about it?”
“He knew, sure.”
“And he didn’t get all hands on board? My oh my, the man’s slipping.”
“Say, officer,” SAC Perkins called, holding his hand over the phone, “I’ll ask you to complete those chain-of-custody cards now. I want to get the PE off to PERT.”
The Physical Evidence Response Team. Sachs remembered that Lincoln Rhyme had been the one the feds hired to help put it together.
“I’ll do that. Sure.”
“Mallory, Kemple, take that PE to an office and get our guest some COC cards. You have a pen, officer?”
“Yes, I do.”
She followed the two men into a small office, clicking her ballpoint nervously while they hunted down and returned with a pack of federal-issue chain-of-custody cards. She sat down and broke the package open.
The voice behind her was the hip Dellray, the persona that seemed the eagerest to break out. In the car on the way here someone had referred to him as the Chameleon and she was beginning to see why.
“We call Perkins the Big Dict. Nyup – not ‘dick’ like you’re thinking. ‘Dict’ like dictionary. But don’ worry over him. He’s smarter’n an agent sandwich. And better’n that he’s pulled strings all the way to D.C., which is where strings gotta be pulled in cases like this.” Dellray ran his cigarette beneath his nose as if it were a fine cigar. “You know, officer, you’re foxy smart doing whatch’re doing.”
“Which is?”
“Getting out of Major Crimes. You don’t want it.” The lean black face, glossy and wrinkled only about the eyes, seemed sincere for the first time since she’d met him. “Best thing you ever did, going into Public Affairs. You’ll do some good there and it won’t turn you to dust. That’s what happens, you bet. This job turns you to dust.”
One of the last victims of James Schneider’s mad compulsion, a young man named Ortega, had come to Manhattan from Mexico City, where political unrest (the much-heralded populist uprising, which had begun the year before) had made commerce difficult at best. Yet the ambitious entrepreneur had been in the city no more than one week when he vanished from sight. It was learned that he was last seen in front of a West Side tavern and authorities immediately suspected that he was yet another victim of Schneider’s. Sadly, this was discovered to be the case.
The bone collector cruised the streets for fifteen minutes around NYU, Washington Square. Plenty of people hanging out. But kids mostly. Students in summer school. Skateboarders. It was festive, weird. Singers, jugglers, acrobats. It reminded him of the “museums,” down on the Bowery, popular in the 1800s. They weren’t museums at all of course but arcades, teeming with burlesque shows, exhibits of freaks and daredevils, and vendors selling everything from French postcards to splinters of the True Cross.
He slowed once or twice but nobody wanted a cab, or could afford one. He turned south.
Schneider tied bricks to Señor Ortega’s feet and rolled him under a pier into the Hudson River so the foul water and the fish might reduce his body to mere bone. The corpse was found two weeks after he had vanished and so it was never known whether or not the unfortunate victim was alive or had full use of his senses when he was thrown into the drink. Yet it is suspected that this was so. For Schneider cruelly shortened the rope so that Señor Ortega’s face was inches below the surface of Davy Jones’s locker; – his hands undoubtedly thrashed madly about as he gazed upward at the air that would have been his salvation.
The bone collector saw a sickly young man standing by the curb. AIDS, he thought. But your bones are healthy – and so prominent. Your bones’ll last forever… The man didn’t want a cab and the taxi cruised past, the bone collector hungrily gazing at his thin frame in the rearview mirror.
He looked back to the street just in time to swerve around an elderly man who’d stepped off the curb, his thin arm raised to flag down the cab. The man leapt back, as best he could, and the cab skidded to a stop just past him.
The man opened the back door and leaned inside. “You should look where you’re going.” He said this instructionally. Not with anger.
“Sorry,” the bone collector muttered contritely.
The elderly man hesitated for a moment, looked up the street but saw no other taxis. He climbed in.
The door slammed shut.
Thinking: Old and thin. The skin would ride on his bones like silk.
“So, where to?” he called.
“East Side.”
“You got it,” he said as he pulled on the ski mask and spun the wheel sharply right. The cab sped west.
III . THE PORTABLE’S DAUGHTER
Overturn, overturn, overturn! is the maxim of New
York… The very bones of our ancestors are not
permitted to lie quiet a quarter of a century, and
one generation of men seem studious to remove all
relics of those which preceded them.
– PHILIP HONE,
MAYOR OF NEW YORK, DIARY, 1845
EIGHTEEN
Saturday, 10:15 p.m., to Sunday, 5:30 a.m.
“HIT ME AGAIN, LON.”
Rhyme drank through a straw, Sellitto from a glass. Both took the smoky liquor neat. The detective sank down in the squeaky rattan chair and Rhyme decided he looked a little like Peter Lorre in Casablanca.