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“On it.”

“Can we get inside? I’d like to see what the stained-glass windows depict. Is the caretaker here?”

“Yup. He’s in the church.”

We let the crew with the body bag get to work and retraced our way to the narrow corridor through which we had entered.

Manny took us into the main chapel, which was dark and cool, much grander than it appeared to be from the street. It indeed had the feel of a large, old cathedral interior.

I couldn’t see anyone at first, but I was surprised by the beauty of the huge white marble altar that spanned the entire western wall, and by the stunning collection of carved gold-leaf reredos, the ornate religious statuary that surrounded it.

Only when I glanced around did I see the caretaker, on his knees in the very first pew, bent over the railing as he wept.

We stayed in place, giving him a few minutes alone. When he got to his feet, Manny asked him to turn on the lights, and Mike started along the wall to look at the windows, which displayed themselves far more vividly from within the church.

I planted myself below a striking image of Madonna and child, straining my neck to look up at it, wondering whether that feminine portrait had anything to do with the position of the corpse in the graveyard.

“Can’t you count, Coop? Wrong one.” Mike was twenty feet away from me. He stepped up onto the seat of one of the pews for a closer examination of the center window, and I walked directly in front of him.

Below the figure of a solemn, gray-bearded man, pen in hand, apparently writing his gospel, was a name, the lettering made of deep-brown stained glass, barely visible with such low lighting.

“Matthew the apostle,” Mike said. “Matthew the Evangelist.”

“What does that say to you about your killer?”

He leaned a hand on my shoulder and got down. “I’m not sure yet. But if Mount Neboh wasn’t a random dropping-off point, then neither is this place. I got things to do, kid. You get the tombstone map and start reading your Gospels, and we’ll talk later.”

Again I followed Mike, this time from the chapel through the corridor and out onto the street. As we emerged from the church, I could see Mercer approaching from behind the parked RMPs.

“Bad way to start the day. Slow down, Mr. Wallace,” Mike said. “You haven’t missed much.”

“I got waylaid. Something else to stir the pot.”

“What’s that?” I asked.

“Port Authority cops cut short my sleep. Daniel Gersh was quick to board that bus to Chicago last night. Get himself out of our hair. Problem is, the first stop was Philadelphia.”

“Don’t tell me—”

“He got off there and crossed town to the Thirtieth Street Station. Used his credit card to buy a ticket on the last train back to New York.”

“So he was here?…” I wasn’t able to finish the sentence. In time to do this, was what I was thinking.

“By midnight. It’s no wonder he didn’t fly. Daniel Gersh had no mind of leaving town, no matter what his stepfather told him to do.”

NINETEEN

WE found a dive a few blocks away for coffee and eggs. Our plans for the day hadn’t changed. The forensics work on the new case would be under way, and the investigative piece would pick up steam as detectives tried to make an identification.

Mike left for the morgue at seven thirty, while Mercer and I made the short trip to my office.

“I’ve just got a few things to clear on my desk. I’d really like to get out of here before Battaglia shows up. Just leave a message with Rose that we’re on top of this.”

“I got calls to make. Do what you got to do.” Mercer made himself comfortable in Laura’s cubicle and I turned on the lights in my office.

There was a note on top of the center pile of manila case folders. Barry Donner was going to sum up today in the case of Denys Koslawski. The judge was giving signs that he was going to reserve decision, so there might not be a verdict in the case for a couple of weeks. I’d expected better of Lyle Keets, but I guess he didn’t want to embarrass Bishop Deegan and rule so quickly on the heels of his testimony.

I dialed Luc’s number at Le Relais, his restaurant at Mougins, and held until the hostess got him on the phone. As I waited, I took the Xerox I’d made of the letters Mike had found in Daniel Gersh’s apartment and placed the pieces in front of me, trying to move them around to form parts of words. When Luc said his faint “Oui?” I swiveled my chair around, my back to the door.

Ça va, darling? Is everything all right?”

It was unusual for me to try to find him in the middle of a working day.

“I’m okay. It’s — well, another young woman was killed a few hours ago. Her throat was slit, and we’re sure it’s the same perp.”

“That’s so awful — I don’t really know what to say. Are you taking care of yourself? Do you want me to come immediately?”

“No, no. I’m fine. I just wanted you to hear it from me and not some Internet news report. I know I haven’t been easy to find, but I adore coming home to your messages.”

Luc laughed. “Less of a nuisance than coming home to me, with all this going on.”

“Probably so. Mercer’s here at the office with me now.”

“So, you can’t talk?”

“You mean tell you I love you? Of course I can.”

“I hope that’s why you called.”

“I needed to hear what you have to say. To get me through the day.”

Je t’aime, Alexandra. I’ll say it as many times as you’d like and loud enough so everyone in Mougins can hear.”

Mercer whistled to get my attention, and I spun the chair around. “I hate to break this up, Alex, but you’ve got your first customer.”

“How fast can you talk, Luc? I’ve got a new case. Have to run.”

“Three days, darling. Hold tight. Tell Mercer and Mike to keep you safe.”

“That’s not their job, Luc. I take care of that myself. Talk to you later.”

“That’s Ms. Cooper,” Mercer was saying to the young uniformed cop.

“Good morning. I’m Terence Seckler. Nineteenth Precinct.”

“What have you got?” I reached for his arrest report and paperwork.

“Unlawful surveillance. Second degree. They told me to bring it up to your unit — Special Victims.”

“Thanks. I’ll look it over and we’ll assign it to someone as soon as my secretary gets in. Looks like it’s got a twist.”

“Yes, ma’am. Different angle. Technology is amazing.”

“Inside Bloomingdale’s?”

“Riding the escalators up and down all day.”

For ages, up-skirting had been a sport of many perverts. Sitting on the sidewalk or on the steps of institutions like our great museums or on crowded subway cars, these men found ways to position themselves to be able to see — and sometimes photograph — the more intimate zones of a woman’s body. The actions had never been criminal until, with the proliferation of pocket-size cameras, the conduct got so out of control that the legislators went back to work on it. Now it was a crime — section 250.45 of the Penal Law.

“He strapped a camera to his shoe?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“And you recovered that too?” The jury might have to see the contraption to believe it.

“It’s vouchered. The captain told me to bring the camera on down to you, so you could view the images. It’s got crotch shots — excuse me, I don’t know what else to call them — of about three hundred girls — teenagers, mostly.”

“You find any of the victims?”