“Where are you going?” Romy said.
“Down to the street. I’ll only be a minute.”
He took the stairs and beat the Manassas attorneys to the lobby. He waited until they were outside, then trailed them to the limo. When they opened the door he caught up and leaned between them.
“You folks forgot to take my card, so I brought one down for each of you.” He peered into the dim backseat and looked into the startled blue eyes of a balding man, easily in his seventies, sporting a dapper pencil-line mustache. “Hello,” Patrick said. “Have we met? I’m—”
“Get in!” the man said to the two attorneys. He turned his head away from Patrick and spoke to the driver. “Go! We’re through here!”
The doors slammed and the limo moved off.
Who’s the old guy? Patrick wondered as he took the stairs back up. He’d half-expected to see Mercer Sinclair or perhaps that Portero fellow, but he’d never seen this guy before. Whoever he was he hadn’t seemed at all happy that Patrick had got a look at him.
When he reached the office Romy was just finishing a call. She snapped the PCA closed and turned to him.
“That was our mutual friend. I told him about the meeting and he’s a little upset that we didn’t clear your idea with him first.”
“I’m not used to having a nanny,” Patrick replied. “Besides, we’re just stirring up the bottom of the pond to see what floats to the surface.”
“He’s worried that mentioning the Manassas-Idaho truck connection at this point might give them time to cover their tracks. Or worse, precipitate a rash response.”
“You mean like running my car off the road again? I don’t think so.”
Patrick didn’t think whoever was behind Manassas would risk hurting him or Romy. That would raise too many questions; might even prompt a Grand Jury investigation.
“Still, he suggested that you invest in a remote starter for your car. Just in case.”
Patrick stared at her, his mouth dry.
Romy smiled. “Joking.”
Patrick was about to tell her where Zero could store his remote starter when her PCA chirped again. He watched her face, expecting the usual lightup he’d noticed whenever she spoke to Zero, but instead her brow furrowed as she frowned.
“Have you got a car available?” she asked as she ended the call.
“I can get to it in about five minutes. Why?”
“Road trip.” Her expression remained troubled.
“Something wrong?”
“One of my NYPD contacts. He gave me the address of a house in Brooklyn. Said they’d found something there that would interest me.”
“He didn’t say what?”
“No. He said I had to see it to believe it.”
15
NEWARK, NJ
Meerm here some day now. Little happy here.
Still tired-sick and hurt-belly-sick, sometime cold-sick and hot-sick. No more cold-hungry. Have place live, have food. Lonely in day when all sim go work. Meerm try help by clean and make bed. Must be quiet. Not let man downstair, man call Benny, know Meerm here.
Shhh! Benny come now. Benny come upstair ever day.
Meerm rush closet. Hide. Peek through door crack. See Benny walk round and open window. Come once ever morning. Always talk self.
“Damn monkeys!” Benny say. “Bad enough I gotta play nursemaid to ’em all night, but why they have to stink so bad?”
Benny open all window, then close all. Ver cold while window open, even in closet. Meerm shiver.
Benny leave and warm start come again. Meerm stay closet and wait. Better when sim come. Sim laugh, talk, bring Meerm food, not tell Benny. Meerm lonely till then. Wait Beece.
Beece friend. Try make better when Meerm hurt. Beece say Meerm need doctor. No doctor! Not for Meerm! Doctor hurt Meerm. No doctor! Beece say okay but not like. Meerm can tell.
Meerm little happy here. Meerm stay.
16
EAST NEW YORK, NY
“One thing I’ve got to say about hanging with you,” Patrick said as he drove them past peeling houses behind yards littered with old tires and charred mattresses. “I get to see all the city’s ritziest neighborhoods. Say, you live in Brooklyn, don’t you?”
Yes, Romy thought as she stared straight ahead through the windshield. She thought of the neat little shops and bistros along Court Street, just around the corner from her apartment in Cobble Hill. That was Brooklyn too, but a world away from this place. East New York was the far frontier of the borough. The economic boom of the nineties had run out of gas before it reached here, and the boom of the oughts had kept its distance as well. The faces were black, the cars along the trash-choked curbs old and battered, the mood grim.
“Hello?” Patrick said. “Are you still with me?”
She nodded and looked down at the map unfolded on her lap. She knew she hadn’t been good company on the slow, frustrating drive across the Manhattan Bridge and through the myriad neighborhoods of the borough, but the nearer they moved to their destination, the tighter the icy clamp around her stomach.
Lieutenant Milancewich’s call nagged at her. Her sim-abuse tips had helped him make a few busts over the years and in return he occasionally gave her a heads-up on investigations he thought might interest her. But he wasn’t a friend, merely a contact, and she knew he considered her a little wacko. Maybe a lot wacko. He had no use for sims and thought her overzealous in her one-woman war, but a bust was a bust and he was glad to have them credited to his record.
Today, though, she’d heard something strange in his voice; she couldn’t identify it, but knew she’d never heard it before. She’d pressed him about what it was he wanted her to see but he wouldn’t say anything beyond,Iain’t been there myself, so I don’t want to pass on any secondhand reports, but if what I hear is true, you should be there.
Is it bad? she’d asked.
It wasn’t good.
And that was what bothered her. The strange note in his voice when he’d said,It ain’t good.
“I hope we’re almost there,” Patrick said. “I don’t think I want to get lost out here, especially with sundown on the way.”
She focused on the map. “Make a left up here onto—there!” She pointed to a pair of blue-and-white units just around the corner. “See the lights?”
“Got ’em.”
Patrick pulled into the curb and they both stepped out. She let him lead the way as they headed toward the yellow crime scene tape. Once they were past that, Romy took the lead. Three of the four cops at the scene were either in their units or leaning against them as they talked on two-ways. Romy approached the fourth, a patrolman sipping a cup of coffee outside the front door of a shabby, sagging Cape Cod. He looked to be in his late twenties, fair-skinned, with a reddish-blond mustache.
After showing him her ID and going through the what-is-OPRR? and what’s-OPRR-got-to-do-with-this? explanations, and making sure to smile a lot, she got him to open up.
“Got a call about a bad smell coming from the place.” He cocked his head toward the house as he spoke in an accent that left no doubt he was a native. “So we investigated. Had to kick in the front door and that’s when it really hit us. Ain’t the first time I smelled that.”
“Somebody dead?”
“That’s what we figured, only we had it wrong. Notsome body—manybodies. And they ain’t human.”
Romy closed her eyes and took a deep breath. She was afraid to ask. “How many?”
“Looks like a dozen.”
She heard Patrick’s sharp intake of breath close behind her.
“How many sims were taken from the globulin farm?” he asked.
“Thirteen,” she said without turning. “At least they think it housed thirteen.” That was the count the police had painstakingly gleaned from one of the computer chips plucked from the ashes.
“Hey, you think these might be the missing sims from that Bronx fire a couple weeks back?” The cop shook his head. “Don’t that beat all. I thought that job was pulled by a bunch of sim lovers.”