Authors: Jeffery Deaver
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Crime
"I remember, Sonny," Rhyme said to him. "Call our friend from the tong—Cai. Tell him that we think the gang is of those minorities you mentioned, Sonny. Might help him narrow things down." Then he asked, "Ballistics?"
"The Ghost was still using his Model 51," Sachs said.
Li offered, "I'm saying, very solid-rock gun."
"I found some nine-millimeter casings
too."
She held the evidence bag up. "But no distinctive ejection marks. Probably a new Beretta, SIG Sauer, Smittie or Colt."
"And the dead guy's weapon?"
"I processed it," she explained. "His prints only. It was an old Walther PPK. Seven-point-six-five."
"Where is it?" Rhyme studied the evidence bag and saw no sign of the weapon.
A look passed between Sachs and Sonny Li—a look decidedly not for Detective Lon Sellitto. She said, "I think the feds have it."
"Ah."
Li looked away from Rhyme and he knew immediately that Sachs had slipped the Chinese cop the weapon after she was through processing it.
Well, good for him, the criminalist thought. If not for the Chinese detective, then Deng, Sachs and the Wus' daughter might've been killed tonight. Let him have some protection.
Sachs gave Cooper the serial number of the Walther and he ran it through the firearms database. "Zip," he said. "Made in the 1960s. Probably's been stolen a dozen times since then."
Sellitto called, "Just got through to a senior VP at Arnold Textile. Woke him up but he was pretty cooperative, considering. That particular carpeting is for commercial sale only—original developers and installers—and it's the top of their line. He gave me a list of twelve big developers in the area who buy directly from the manufacturer and twenty-six distributors who market to installers and subcontractors."
"Hell," Rhyme said. It would be a marathon of canvassing to find the addresses of buildings where Lustre-Rite had been installed. He said, "Get somebody on it."
Sellitto said, "I'll have 'em start waking people up. Fuck—I'm awake; why the hell shouldn't the rest of the world be?" He made a call to the Big Building to line up some detectives to help and faxed the list downtown to them.
Then Rhyme's private line rang and he answered it.
"Lincoln?" a woman's voice asked through the speakerphone.
He was thrilled to hear the caller's voice. "Dr. Weaver."
Rhyme's neurosurgeon, who'd be performing the operation next week.
"I know it's late. Am I interrupting anything? You busy?"
"Not a thing," Rhyme said and ignored Thorn's exaggerated glance at the whiteboard, which attested to the fact that he was somewhat occupied at the moment.
"I've got the details for the surgery. Manhattan Hospital. Week from Friday at 10 A.M. Neurosurgery pre-op. Third floor."
"Excellent," he replied.
Thorn jotted the information down and Rhyme and the doctor said good night.
"You going to doctor, Loaban?"
"Yes," he said.
"About..." The Chinese cop couldn't seem to think of a way to summarize Rhyme's condition and he waved toward his body.
"That's right."
Sachs said nothing, just stared at the sheet of instructions that Dr. Weaver had dictated to Thorn. Rhyme knew that she would prefer he not have the operation. Most of the successes with the technique had occurred with patients whose injuries were far less severe than Rhymes, those with the damage much lower on the spinal cord, at the lumbar or thoracic level. The surgery, as she'd told him, would probably produce no discernible benefit and was risky—it might even make him worse. And, given his lung impairment, it was possible that he could die on the table. But Sachs understood how important it was to him and was going to support him.
"So," she finally said, a stoic smile on her face, "we'll make sure we nail the Ghost before next Friday."
Rhyme noticed that Thorn had been studying him closely.
"What?" the criminalist snapped.
The aide took Rhyme's blood pressure. "Too high. And you don't look good."
"Well, thank you very much," he snapped back, "but I don't think my appearance has anything to do—"
"It's quitting time," the aide said firmly. And he wasn't speaking to his boss.
Sellitto and Cooper also voted to call it a night.
"Mutiny," Rhyme muttered.
"No," Thorn retorted. "Common sense."
Sellitto made a call to check on the Wus and John Sung. The family was now in the NYPD safehouse in the Murray Hill section of New York. John Sung had declined Sachs's invitation to join them, afraid that it would remind him too much of the many Chinese security bureau facilities he'd been detained in as a dissident. Instead, Sellitto added another cop to the team guarding him. All of the protective officers reported that the immigrants were safe.
Rhyme said to Sachs, "You taking those herbs with you? I hope you are. They stink."
"I was going to leave them • as air freshener but if you don't like them ..." She leaned close. "How
are
you feeling? You look pale."
"Just tired," he said. Which was the truth. Oddly tired. He supposed he should be concerned about it but he believed his exhaustion was nothing more than the demands of the case, which had been consuming him for days. But the fatigue was something that he knew he should pay attention to—did it indicate anything more serious? One of the major problems plaguing SCI patients, of course, isn't just paralysis. There are related problems because the nerves aren't responding—lung impairment and resulting infections—but perhaps the worst problem is the absence of pain. You have no early warning system of pain from cancer, say, which Rhymes own father had died of—as had Sachs's. He remembered that his dad had first learned of the disease after he'd gone to the doctor complaining about stomach pain.
"Good night," Mel Cooper called.
"Wan an,"
Li called.
"Whatever," Sellitto grumbled and walked into the corridor.
"Sonny," Rhyme said. "You'll stay here tonight."
"Not got other place to go, Loaban. Sure."
"Thom'll make up a room. I'll be upstairs, taking care of a few things. Come up and visit if you feel like it. Give me twenty minutes."
Li nodded then turned back to the whiteboard.
"I'll take you up," Sachs said. Rhyme wheeled into the tiny elevator that ran between the first and second floors, formerly a closet. She joined him and closed the door. Rhyme glanced at her face. It was thoughtful but in a way that didn't have to do with the case, he sensed.
"Anything you want to talk about, Sachs?"
Without answering, she closed the elevator door and pressed the UP button.
GHOSTKILL
Easton, Long Island, Crime Scene
• Two immigrants killed on beach; shot in back.
• One immigrant wounded—Dr. John Sung.
• "Bangshou" (assistant) on board; identity unknown.
• Assistant confirmed as drowned body found near site where
Dragon
sank.
• Ten immigrants escape: seven adults (one elderly, one injured woman), two children, one infant. Steal church van.
• Blood samples sent to lab for typing.
• Injured woman is AB negative. Requesting more information about her blood.
• Vehicle awaiting Ghost on beach left without him. One shot believed fired by Ghost at vehicle. Request for vehicle make and model sent out, based on tread marks and wheelbase.
• Vehicle is a BMW X5.
• Driver—Jerry Tang. • No vehicles to pick up immigrants located.
• Cell phone, presumably Ghost's, sent for analysis to FBI.
• Untraceable satellite secure phone. Hacked Chinese gov't system to use it.
• Ghost's weapon is 7.62mm pistol. Unusual casing.
• Model 51 Chinese automatic pistol.
• Ghost is reported to have gov't people on payroll.
• Ghost stole red Honda sedan to escape. Vehicle locator request sent out.
• No trace of Honda found.
• Three bodies recovered at sea—two shot, one drowned. Photos and prints to Rhyme and Chinese police.
• Drowned individual identified as Victor Au, the Ghost's
bangshou.
•
Fingerprints
sent to AFIS.
• No matches on any prints but unusual markings on Sam Chang's fingers and thumbs (injury, rope burn?).
• Profile of immigrants: Sam Chang and Wu Qichen and their families, John Sung, baby of woman who drowned, unidentified man and woman (killed on beach).
Stolen Van, Chinatown
• Camouflaged by immigrants with "The Home Store" logo.
• Blood spatter suggests injured woman has hand, arm or shoulder injury.
• Blood samples sent to lab for typing.
• Injured woman is AB negative. Requesting more information about her blood.
• Fingerprints sent to AFIS.
• No matches.
Jerry Tang Murder Crime Scene
• Four men kicked door in and tortured him and shot him.
• Two shell casings—match Model 51. Tang shot twice in head.
• Extensive vandalism.
• Some fingerprints.
• No matches except Tang's.
• Three accomplices have smaller shoe size than Ghost, presumably smaller stature.
• Trace suggests Ghost's safehouse is probably downtown, in Battery Park City area.
• Suspected accomplices from Chinese ethnic minority. Presently pursuing whereabouts.
Canal Street Shooting Crime Scene
• Additional trace suggesting safehouse is in Battery Park City area.
• Stolen Chevrolet Blazer, untraceable.
• No match on prints.
• Safehouse carpet: Arnold company's Lustre-Rite, installed in past six months; calling contractors to get list of installations.
• Fresh gardening mulch found.
• Body of Ghost's accomplice: ethnic minority from west or northwest China. Negative on prints. Weapon was Walther PPK.
• Details on immigrants:
• The Changs: Sam, Mei-Mei, William and Ronald; Sam's father, Chang Jiechi, and infant, Po-Yee. Sam has job arranged but employer and location unknown. Driving blue van, no make, no tag number. Changs' apartment is in Queens.
• The Wus: Qichen, Yong-Ping, Chin-Mei and Lang.
In Chinese many words are combinations of their opposites. For instance, "advance-retreat" means "to move."
One of these is the word for "doing business," which is literally translated as "buy-sell."
And this was what the four men sitting in the smoky storefront office of the East Broadway Workers' Association were now engaged in, late on this stormy August night: buying and selling.
That the object of the negotiations was human life—selling the Ghost the location of Sam Changs family—didn't appear to give these men any pause at all.
There were, of course, many legitimate tongs in Chinatown and they provided important services for their members—resolving conflicts among competing businesses, protecting schoolchildren from gangs, running centers for senior citizen and child day care, discouraging inroads by the restaurant and garment workers unions and serving as a liaison to the "Other Government," that is, city hall and the NYPD.
But this particular tong did none of these. It had one specialty only and that was to serve as a base of snakehead operations in the New York area.
Now, nearly midnight, the three leaders of the workers' association—all in their forties or fifties—sat on one side of the table, across from a man whom none of them knew. But he was a man who could be very valuable—since he knew where the Changs were hiding.
"How do you know these people?" the director of the association asked the man, who'd given only his family name, Tan, presumably so that the Ghost couldn't track him down and torture him to find the Changs' location.
"Chang is a friend of my brother's in China. I got them an apartment and Chang and his boy a job."
"Where is the apartment?" the director of the tong asked casually.
Tan, gesturing abruptly, said, "That's what I'm here to sell. If the Ghost wants it he has to pay for it."
"You can tell us," an associate said, smiling. "We'll keep it to ourselves."
"I deal only with the Ghost."
Of course the tong bosses knew this. But it was always worth a try. There were many stupid people in this world.
"You have to understand," one of the associates offered, "the Ghost is hard to find."
"Ah," Tan scoffed, "you're not the only ones I can deal with, you know."
"Then why are you here?" the other associate asked quickly.
Tan paused. "Because I'm told you are the most informed."
"It's dangerous," the director said to Tan. "The police are after the Ghost. If they find out that we've contacted him ... well, they could disrupt our organization."
Tan shrugged. "You have ways to get in touch with him that are secure, don't you?"
"Let's get to the money. What will you pay us to put you in touch with the Ghost?"
"Ten percent of whatever he pays me."
The director waved his arm. "This meeting is over. Go find your other sources."
Laughing in ridicule at the director's comment, Tan said, "And how much did
you
want?"
"Half."
"You are making a poor joke."
The battle lines being drawn, they got down to business. The buy-sell continued for nearly a half hour. Finally, they agreed on thirty percent, provided it was U.S. dollars.
The director pulled out a cell phone and placed a call. The Ghost came on the line and the director identified himself.
"Yes?" the snakehead asked.
"I have someone here who rented an apartment to some of the survivors of the
Dragon,
the Changs. He wants to sell you that information."
The Ghost was silent for a moment. He asked, "Tell him to prove it."
The director relayed this request to Tan, who replied, "The fathers western name is Sam. There is an old man too, Chang's father. And two boys. Oh, a wife. Mei-Mei. And they have a baby. She isn't theirs. She was on the ship. Her mother drowned."