And now he was thinking of Elias Daoud again, resolutions tossed to the wind.
The ginger-haired Christian Arab from Bethlehem had been his best homicide detective, playing a major role in the Butcher investigation, never letting the divided-loyalties thing get in the way though it hadn't been easy- no one but Daniel had trusted him.
The closing of the Butcher file got everyone on the team promotions, but Daoud's had taken a bit more prodding of the pencil pushers.
Daniel had been obdurate and finally Daoud ended up a mefakeah, Southern Division's first Arab inspector. The raise in pay for a guy with seven kids had made it more than just another ribbon.
Daoud was kept on Daniel's squad and Daniel assigned him to the few nonpolitical homicide cases that came up: Old City gang stuff, the drug and watermelon rackets, nothing with any security overtones. For Daoud's protection as well as for the brass. Daniel didn't want him branded a collaborator.
Then the intifada heated up. More rhetoric, more audacity, more violence- the wall of fear broken down, vermin scurrying through the rubble.
Religious militancy found new life, too, and Christians in Bethlehem, and Nazareth, and everywhere else Christian, remembered Beirut and grew less vocal, many of them bribing their way across the border to Jordan and onward to families in Europe and the States.
One morning, in the midst of a serious investigation into the Ramai gang's role in the hashish trade, with Daoud scheduled to give a progress report, everyone waiting in a restaurant on King George Street, the guy didn't show.
Right away Daniel knew something was wrong. The man was a walking wristwatch.
He dismissed the griping detectives, called Daoud's house, got a disconnected line.
The usual twenty-minute drive to Bethlehem took him less than fifteen. Before he got to the city outskirts he saw the military jeeps and the police Ford Escorts, blue lights flashing, people milling around, the simmering feel of an impending riot.
He showed his badge and made his way past grim faces to Daoud's house. Police tape had been wrapped around the little limestone cube and chickens circled the muddy ditch that passed for a yard. No more olive-wood crucifix in Daoud's window- when had that changed?
It had been a long time since Daniel had been there. Now, he realized what a sorry place it was, objectively. Not much better than the hovel in Yemen where Daniel's father had been born. But the promotion had allowed Daoud to finish payments on it, the guy had been so proud.
The uniform at the door warned him not to go in for his own sake, but he did anyway, thinking of Daoud, the young, fat wife Daoud loved madly and plied with chocolates, seven little kids…
The kids gone, no one knew where. Months later, Daniel found out they'd somehow showed up with relatives in Amman, but that was as far as the information went.
Daoud and the fat wife, still here.
Slaughtered like sheep for the market.
Sliced, trussed, dismembered, tongues severed. The wife a leaking bag of yellow adipose, eyes rolled back. Daoud castrated, his penis hacked off, the organ stuffed in his mouth.
Hatchets, the medical examiner said. And long knives, probably six or seven attackers, a midnight blitz.
Flies, so many flies.
Arabic scrawl on the wall in blood:
GOD IS GREAT! DEATH TO COLLABORATORS!
He drove back to French Hill, kept his feelings to himself.
Always, constantly, completely.
Like the Dead Sea, flat and bitter, yielding nothing organic.
Wanting to be dispassionate when he asked to run the investigation into the slaughter, so his superiors would consider it.
Of course, they refused, saying it was an Arab issue, he could never get close enough, no one would talk to him.
He kept asking, demanding, got the same answer, over and over. Refusing to give up, knowing he was being an idiot, he drove home each day with an inflamed belly and a raging headache, the strain of smiling at Laura and the kids just short of unbearable.
A case number was assigned to the Daoud murders but no one seemed to be actually investigating.
He lost interest in his gang cases; the Ramais could sell dope for another few months, big deal. And if they shot each other, no great loss.
He wrote memo after memo, received no answer.
Finally, in Laufer's office, after yet another dismissal, he exploded at the commander.
Is this what it's come to? He was an Arab so it's not worth the time and effort? Different values for different lives? What are we, Nazi Germany?
Laufer had looked him up and down, chain-smoking, sleepy eyes full of contempt, but he hadn't said a word. Daniel's solving the Butcher had gotten him kicked up from deputy commander. Who knew what other value the Yemenite might have for him?
After that, a few suspects were hauled in for questioning, but it led nowhere, the file was never closed, never would be.
Daniel thought from time to time of the savages who'd done it. Dispatched from Syria or Lebanon? Or locals, still living in Bethlehem, passing that house, now demolished, and really believing they'd shown God to be great?
And what of the seven kids? Who was raising them? What had they been told?
That the Jews had done it?
Daddy and Mommy, martyrs to Palestine?
The Arabs loved martyrs. After the intifada ended, there'd been a martyr shortage, young guys with scraped feet or the flu claiming they'd gotten hurt fighting the Zionists.
The virtue of suffering.
We, their Jewish cousins, aren't much different, are we? he thought. Though we're a little more subtle about it.
Democracy…
And now these American killings.
Three homicides of children in three separate police districts- Delaware had a point about that. Spread out over a vast, shapeless thing that calls itself a city.
Retarded kids, how could you get any crueler?
Gene said they called them something else nowadays… developmentally challenged.
“Nowadays, everyone's challenged, Danny Boy. Short people are vertically challenged, drunks are sobriety-challenged, criminal scumbags are socially challenged.”
“Socially challenged sounds more like someone shy, Gene.”
“That's the point, my friend. It's not supposed to make sense. A con game, like that book, 1984. Change the names to confuse the good guys.”
Socially challenged.
So what does that make me on this case? And Sturgis and Delaware.
Solution-challenged?
No, just stuck.
32
Seven-thirty a.m. I was at the doors to the Biomed library when they opened, barely awake, showered but unshaven, still tasting gulped coffee.
I worked for two hours, finding only one reference to the group called Meta. But it was enough.
Wire-service piece, three years old, carried locally by the Daily News.
GENIUS GROUP EDITORIAL
CAUSES CONTROVERSY
NEW YORK- Opinions supporting selective breeding to improve genetic stock as well as mercy killing of the retarded, published by an organization of self-described geniuses, have raised controversy among members of social-advocacy organizations and put the group under an unaccustomed spotlight.
Meta, a little-known Manhattan-based club founded ten years ago to provide information about creativity and giftedness, now finds itself accused of fascism.
The article under fire was written by Meta director and attorney Farley Sanger in The Pathfinder, the group's quarterly newsletter. In it, Sanger calls for a “new utopia” based upon “objectively measured intellectual ability” and questions the value of providing special education and other services, including medical care, to the developmentally disabled, whom he labels meat without mentation.