Authors: Jeffery Deaver
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Crime
Thorn wrote this at the top of the whiteboard and turned back to the law enforcers.
Rhyme said, "We've got two scenes: the beach in Easton and the van. The beach first."
As Thorn was writing the heading Dellray's phone rang and he took the call. After a brief conversation he hung up and told the team what he'd just learned: "No other survivors so far," he said. "And the Coast Guard hasn't found the ship. But they did recover some bodies out to sea. Two shot, one drowned. ID on one of them had merchant papers. Nothing on the other two. They're sending prints and pictures to us and copies to China."
"He even killed the
crew?"
Eddie Deng asked in disbelief.
"What do you expect?" Coe responded. "You know him by now. You think he'd leave a single witness alive?" A grim laugh. "Besides, with the crew dead he won't have to pay the balance due for chartering the boat. And back in China he'll probably claim that the Coast Guard fired on them and sank the
Dragon."
But Rhyme had no time for anger at the Ghost or for dismay at the cruel potential of the human heart. "Okay, Sachs," he said curtly. "The beach. Tell us what happened."
She leaned against a lab table and consulted her notes. "Fourteen people came ashore in a life raft about a half mile east of Easton, on the road to Orient Point." She walked to the wall and touched a spot on the Long Island map. "Near the Horton Point lighthouse. As they got closer to shore the raft hit some rocks and started to deflate. Four of the immigrants were thrown into the water and were washed down the beach. The other ten stayed together. They stole the church van and got away."
"Photos of the footprints?" Rhyme asked.
"Here you go," Sachs said, handing Thorn an envelope. He taped up Polaroids. "I found them under a shelter near the raft. It was too wet to use electrostatic," she explained to the team. "I had to take pictures."
"And fine artwork they are too," Rhyme said, wheeling back and forth in front of them.
"I'm counting nine," Dellray said. "Why you sayin' ten, Amelia?"
"Because," Rhyme said, "there's a baby, right?"
Sachs nodded. "Right. Under the shelter I found some patterns in the sand I couldn't identify, looked like something had been dragged but there were no footprints in front of it—only behind. I figured it was a crawling child."
"Okay," Rhyme said, studying the sizes of the shoes, "looks like we've got seven adults and/or older teens, two young children and one infant. One of the adults could be elderly—he's shuffling. I say 'he' because of the shoe size. And somebody's injured—probably a woman, to judge from the size
other
shoes. The man next to her is helping her."
Sachs added, "There were bloodstains on the beach and in the van."
"Samples of the blood?" Cooper asked.
"There wasn't much on the raft or the beach—the rain had washed most of it away. I got three samples from the sand. And plenty in the van, still wet." She found a plastic bag containing some vials. Handed it to him.
The tech prepared samples for typing and filled out a form. He called in an expedited request for typing and gendering into the serology lab at the Medical Examiner's office and arranged for a uniformed officer to take the samples downtown.
Sachs continued her scenario. "Now, the Ghost—in a second launch—landed about two hundred yards east of where the immigrants did."
Her fingers disappeared into her abundant red hair and worried the flesh of her scalp. Sachs would often injure herself in minor ways like this. A beautiful woman, a former fashion model, she often had stubby, sometimes bloody fingernails. Rhyme had given up trying to figure out where this painful compulsion came from but, oddly, he envied her. The same cryptic tensions drove him as well. The difference was that he didn't have her safety valve of fidgety motion to bleed off the stress.
He silently sent out a plea to Dr. Weaver, his neurosurgeon: Do
something
for me. Release me just a little from this terrible confinement. Please ... Then he slammed the door on these personal thoughts, angry with himself, and turned his attention back to Sachs.
"Then," she continued with a splinter of emotion in her voice, "then he started tracking down the immigrants and killing them. He found two who'd fallen off the raft and killed them. Shot them in the back. He wounded one. The fourth immigrant's still missing."
"Where's the wounded one?" Coe asked.
"They were taking him to a trauma center then to the INS Manhattan detention facility. He said he doesn't know where the Ghost or the immigrants might've been going once they got here." Sachs again consulted her soggy handwritten notes. "Now there was a vehicle on the road near the beach but it left—fast, spun the wheels and skidded to make a turn. I think the Ghost took a shot at it. So we may have a witness, if we can track down the make and model. I got dimensions of the wheelbase and—"
"Wait," Rhyme interrupted. "What was it near? The car?"
"Near?" she asked. "Nothing. It was just parked by the roadside."
The criminalist frowned. "Why would somebody park there on a stormy day before dawn?"
"Drivin' by and saw the rafts?" Dellray suggested.
"No," Rhyme said. "In that case he would've gone for help or called. And there weren't any nine-one-ones reporting anything. No, I think the driver was there to pick up the Ghost but when it turned out the snake-head wasn't in any hurry to leave, he took off."
"So he got abandoned," Sellitto observed.
Rhyme nodded.
Sachs handed a sheet of paper to Mel Cooper. "Dimensions of the wheelbase. And here are pictures of the tread marks."
The tech scanned the marks into the computer and then sent the image, along with the dimensions, to the NYPD's VI—Vehicle Identifier—database. "Shouldn't be long," Cooper's calm voice reported.
Young detective Eddie Deng asked, "What about the other trucks?"
"What other trucks?" Sachs asked.
Coe filled in. "The terms of a smuggling contract include land transport too. There should've been some trucks to take the immigrants back to the city."
Sachs shook her head. "I didn't see any sign of them. But when he sank the ship the Ghost probably called the driver and had them go back to the city." She looked over the evidence bags again. "I found this..." She held up a bag containing a cell phone.
"Excellent!" Rhyme said. He'd dubbed clues like this "NASDAQ evidence," after the high-tech-heavy stock market. Computers, cell phones, personal electronic organizers. A whole new breed of evidence, these telltale devices could provide huge amounts of information about perps and the people they'd been in contact with. "Fred, let's get your people to look it over."
"Gotcha."
The bureau had recently added a computer and electronics team to the New York office. Dellray made a call and arranged for an agent to pick up the cell phone and take it to the federal forensics lab downtown for analysis.
Rhyme said, musing, "Okay, he's hunting them down, shooting the immigrants, shooting
at
the driver who abandoned him. He's doing it by himself, right, Sachs? No sign of the mysterious assistant?"
She nodded at the footprint Polaroids. "No, I'm sure the Ghost was the only one in the second raft and the only one shooting."
Rhyme frowned. "I don't like unidentified perps out there someplace when we're running crime scenes.
Nothing
on who this
bangshou
is?"
Sellitto muttered, "Nope. Not a clue. The Ghost's got dozens of them around the world."
"And no sign of the fourth immigrant? The other one who fell out of the raft?"
"No."
The criminalist then asked Sachs, "What about ballistics?"
Sachs held up a plastic bag containing shell casings for Rhyme to examine.
"Seven-point-six-two millimeter," he said, "but the brass's an odd length. And it's uneven. Cheap." Though he had a body that couldn't move, his eyes were as sharp as those of the peregrine falcons that lived on the windowsill outside his bedroom upstairs. "Check out the casings online, Mel."
When Rhyme had been head of NYPD forensics he'd spent months putting together databases of evidence standards—samples of substances and materials along with the sources they came from, like motor oil, thread, fibers, dirt and so on—to facilitate tracing evidence found at crime scenes. One of the largest, and most often used, databases was the compilation of bullet shell casings and slugs information. The combined FBI and NYPD collection had samples and digitized images of nearly every projectile that had ever been fired from a weapon in the past hundred years.
Cooper opened the plastic bag and then reached in with chopsticks—appropriately, considering the case they were now working on. This was the tool that Rhyme had found was the least damaging to evidence and he'd ordered all his techs to learn to use the sticks, preferring them to tweezers or forceps, which could too easily crush delicate samples.
"Back to your captivating narrative about the beach, Sachs."
She continued. "Things were heating up by now. The Ghost had been on land for a while. He knew the Coast Guard had a rough idea of his location. He found the third immigrant in the water, John Sung, shot him, then stole the Honda and left." She glanced at Rhyme. "Any word about it?"
An emergency vehicle locator notice had gone out to all nearby law enforcement agencies. As soon as the stolen red Honda was spotted anywhere in the New York metropolitan area, Sellitto or Dellray would get a call. But there'd been no word, the homicide detective told her. Then added, "The Ghost's been to New York before, though, plenty of times. He'd know the transit system. I'd guess he stuck to back roads west until he got close to the city then dumped the car and took the subway into town. He's got to be here by now."
Rhyme noticed a frown of concern on the FBI agent's face. "What is it, Fred?"
"I wish we'da found the prick 'fore he got over the city line."
"Why?"
"Reports my people're feeding me're that he's got a nice, tidy network in town. Tongs and street gangs in Chinatown, course. But it's way beyond that—even got people in the government on his 'roll."
"Government?" Sellitto asked, surprised.
"What I hear," Dellray said.
"I believe it," Deng said cynically. "If he's got dozens of officials in China in his pocket, why not here too?"
So, Rhyme reflected, we've got an unidentified, presumably armed assistant and a homicidal snakehead
and
now spies within our own ranks. It's never easy but really....
A glance at Sachs, which meant: keep going. "Friction ridges?" he asked. The technical name for finger-, palmand footprints.
She explained, "The beach was a mess—the rain and wind. I got a few partials from the outboard motor and the rubber sides of the rafts and the cell phone." She held up the cards of the prints she'd lifted. "The quality's pretty bad."
Rhyme called, "Scan 'em and get them into AFIS."
The Automated Fingerprint Identification System was a huge network of digitized federal and state fingerprint files. AFIS reduced the search time for matching prints from months to hours or even minutes in some cases.
"I also found this." She held up a metal pipe in a plastic bag. "One of them used it to break the window of the van. There were no visibles on this one so I thought we better raise the prints here."
"Go to work, Mel."
The thin man took the bag, pulled on cotton gloves and extracted the pipe, holding it only by the ends. "I'll use VMD."
Vacuum metal deposition is considered the Rolls-Royce of fingerprint-raising systems. It involves binding a microscopic coating of metal to the object to be printed and then radiating it. After a few minutes Cooper had a razor-sharp image of several latent prints. He shot pictures of them and ran the photos through the scanner then sent them off to AFIS. He handed the pictures to Thorn, who pinned them up.
"That's about it for the beach, Rhyme," Sachs said.
The criminalist glanced at the chart. The evidence told him little yet. But he wasn't discouraged; this was how criminalistics worked. It was like dumping a thousand jigsaw puzzle pieces out on the table—incomprehensible at first; only after trial and error and much analysis did patterns begin to appear. He said, "The van next."
Sachs pinned up pictures of the van on the whiteboard.
Recognizing the location in Chinatown from the Polaroid, Coe said, "It's crowded around that subway station. There must've been some witnesses."
"Nobody saw a thing," Sachs said wryly.
"Where've I heard
that
before," Sellitto added. It was astonishing, Rhyme knew, what kind of amnesia was induced by the mere act of flashing a gold shield in front of your average citizen.
"What about the plate?" Rhyme asked.
"Stolen off a truck in a parking lot in Suffolk County," the burly homicide cop said. "No wits there either."
"What'd you find in the van?" he asked Sachs.
"They'd dug up a bunch of plants and had them in the back."
"Plants?"
"To hide the others, I'm guessing, and make it look like they were a couple of employees making deliveries for that place, The Home Store. But I didn't get much else. Just the fingerprints, some rags and the blood—the spatter was on the window and door so I'm guessing the injury was above the waist. Arm or hand, probably."
Rhyme asked, "No paint cans? Brushes? From when they painted the logo on the side."
"Nope, they ditched it all." She shrugged. "That's it, aside from the friction ridges." She handed Cooper the cards and Polaroids of the fingerprints she'd lifted from the van and he scanned and ran them: digitized them and then fed them into the AFIS.
Rhyme's eyes were glued to the chart. He studied the items for a moment the way a sculptor sizes up a raw piece of stone before he begins carving. Then he turned away and said to Dellray and Sellitto, "How do you want to handle the case?"
Sellitto deferred to the FBI agent, who said, "We gotta split the effort. Don't see a single other way to handle it. One, we'll be going after the Ghost. Two, we gotta find those families 'fore he does." He glanced at Rhyme. "We'll do the command post thing from here, if that's okay?"