Выбрать главу

MacNally stepped into the confining, five-by-nine foot chamber. “Diagram? Of what?”

“Your cell. Everything’s got a place. Towel, jacket, toilet paper, books, calendar, soap. Shows you where everything’s got to go.”

“You’re joking, right?”

Taylor’s face thinned, his jaw muscles flexing. “No. I’m not.” He turned to his colleague and yelled to the far end of the cell block. “Rack ’em!”

More clicks…a solid metallic crunch…and then the door slid closed in front of MacNally. A lonely, bone-jarring slam echoed through the cellhouse.

Taylor’s shoes crunched quietly on the polished cement floor as he walked away. MacNally watched the officer’s shadow disappear, a chill shuddering through his body.

Despite its reputation among cons, MacNally could not imagine how Alcatraz could be worse than Leavenworth. But he had a feeling he was going to soon find out.

53

Vail handed the note to Price, then pulled out her BlackBerry. “That text-who was it from? The one that said he’s tied up.”

Burden looked at his phone. “Robert. Why am I not understanding what’s going on-”

“I’m calling Friedberg,” Vail said. I have a feeling I know exactly what’s going on, and it ain’t good. “Call your department, get every fucking cop mobilized in the city looking for his car. And see if they can get a fix on his cell signal.”

Seconds later, Vail gave up. “Went right to voicemail.”

Burden hung up, then began pacing. “All right, let’s clear our heads. Think this through. He was stopping at Verizon on the way in, to see about those text messages Scheer got.” He looked over at the reporter, who was standing a few paces from Allman, beyond the crime scene tape.

“We know what’s going on,” Vail said. “Our UNSUB’s got Friedberg.”

“Let me get this straight,” Carondolet said. “The killer’s got an SFPD Inspector?”

“You got it,” Dixon said. To Burden: “Call Verizon and see if he made it there, and if he did, what time he left.”

Burden pulled out his phone and made the call.

A text hit Vail’s BlackBerry. She still had the device in her palm when it began vibrating. She rotated her hand and read the message. “Son of a bitch.”

“What?” Dixon asked.

Vail showed her the display.

lotsa bodies werent motivation enuf

need one of ur own on the line

want to know what this is all about

pay attention u have ten mins

think history

ur answers in the place where

violence and sleep come under watchful eyes

Burden ended his call abruptly and joined the huddle. His brow hardened. “What the hell does it mean?”

“You’re the puzzle guy.”

“Sudoku,” Burden said. “Numbers. Not goddamn riddles.”

Dixon stepped to the left and cupped her hands around her mouth. “Clay! Bring your colleague over here. Now.”

“What are you doing?” Vail asked.

“We’ve got two guys fifty feet away who ply their trade using words,” Dixon said. “And they also happen to know the city inside and out. Got nothing to lose by using their brain power. Friedberg’s life’s on the line-do we really care what the press knows?”

“Worry about it later,” Burden said.

“Exactly.”

“You’re bringing two reporters into the crime scene?” Carondolet said. “Are you crazy?”

Allman and Scheer slipped under the tape and ran through the parking lot.

“What’s going on?” Allman asked as he approached.

“Let’s also see if we can get a fix on those texts,” Vail said. “One was from Friedberg’s but the other was from a different handset. I’ll send you the number. See what they can do with it. Every carrier’s different, but even if they can’t localize it better than a few miles, we’ll at least know if he’s in the city.”

“Got it,” Burden said. He started to make the call.

“So here’s the deal,” Vail said to Allman and Scheer as she played with her BlackBerry keypad to send the phone number to Burden. “Killer’s got Inspector Friedberg. He just used Friedberg’s phone-and then what I’m guessing is a disposable-to send us messages.”

Scheer and Allman both reached for their pads.

“Fuck the story,” Burden said, rotating the phone away from his mouth. “We need your help. He sent us a riddle.”

“Is this on or off the record?” Scheer asked.

Carondolet shook his head “I can’t believe you’re involving these guys.”

“Don’t make us sorry we brought you over here,” Dixon said to Scheer. “Put that shit away. And don’t ask again.”

Both journalists reluctantly shoved their pads and pens into their jackets.

“How can we help?” Allman asked.

Vail stole a look at her BlackBerry, “The text says, ‘Think history. Your answer’s in the place where violence and sleep come under watchful eyes.”

“Isn’t Friedberg the historian?” Scheer asked.

Vail’s gaze flicked over to Father Finelli, then back to Scheer. “That’s right, dipshit. And he’s not here. So what does it mean? Any thoughts?”

No one answered, as all stared off in various directions, working it through.

“What kind of place comes under watchful eyes?” Vail asked.

“A police department,” Burden said.

“Surveillance would qualify as watchful eyes,” Allman said.

Dixon snapped her fingers. “So that’d bring us back to law enforcement. A stakeout. Violence, sleep.”

“Hopefully little of each,” Burden said. “But what do we do with that? Too general.”

Scheer looked up. “Wait a minute. I wrote something like that once. In one of my features, years ago. Something about violence and sleep and watchful eyes.”

Vail stepped forward. “Are you saying this text is a quote from your article?”

Scheer bit his lip, his eyes moving left, right, up and down as he thought. “I can’t remember. Something like that.”

Burden combed through his hair with his fingers. “C’mon, man. We’ve only got eight minutes. Think.”

“I am thinking,” Scheer said slowly, emphasizing each word. “I just-it was a long time ago. It seems like it’s… Yeah, that’s what I wrote. Close.”

“We know the UNSUB’s from around here,” Dixon said. “And if this is the guy who’s killed repeatedly in the Bay Area, as Clay thinks, then he’s likely followed all the newspaper articles on murders and violent crime in the city. Maybe he saw Scheer’s article.”