Rhyme sipped some of the fragrant whiskey. “Good, no?”
“It is,” Laurel agreed.
Rhyme reread the letter about Moreno’s renunciation of his U.S. citizenship. He was as angry as Laurel that this technicality had derailed the case.
“He hated the country that much,” Pulaski asked, “that he’d give up his citizenship?”
“Apparently so,” Laurel said.
“Come on, boys and girls,” Rhyme chided, then sipped some more whiskey. “They won round one. Or the first inning. Whatever clichéd figure of speech and mixed metaphor you like. But we still have a perp, you know. Unsub Five Sixteen, responsible for an IED in a coffee shop and the Lydia Foster homicide. Those are Major Cases. Lon Sellitto’ll assign us to work them.”
“It won’t be my case, though,” Nance Laurel said. “I’ve been told to get back to my regular caseload.”
“This’s bullshit,” Ron Pulaski spat out, surprising Rhyme with his vehemence. “Moreno’s the same person he was when he got shot – an innocent victim. So what if he wasn’t a citizen?”
“Bullshit it is, Ron,” Laurel said, her voice more resigned than angry. “That’s exactly right.”
She finished her whiskey and walked over to Rhyme. She shook his hand. “It’s been a privilege working with you.”
“I’m sure we will again.”
A faint smile. But something about the exquisite sadness in the expression told him that she believed her life as a prosecutor was over.
Sachs said to her, “Hey, you want to have dinner sometime? We can dish on the government.” She added in a whisper that Rhyme could hear, “And dish on men too?”
“I’d like that. Yes.”
They exchanged phone numbers, Sachs having to check to find out what her new one was. She’d bought a half dozen prepaids in the past few days.
Then the ADA carefully assembled her files, using paper clips and Post it Notes to mark relevant categories. “I’ll have copies sent to you for the unsub case.”
The short woman hefted the briefcase in one hand, the litigation bag in the other and with one last look around the room – and no other words – walked out, her solid heels thudding on the wood, then the marble of the hallway. And she was gone.
CHAPTER 72
Jacob Swann decided, with some regret, that he couldn’t rape Nance Laurel before he killed her.
Well, he could . And part of him wanted to. But it wouldn’t be wise – that was what he meant. A sexual assault left far too much evidence. Minimizing the clues in any murder was hard enough – trying to make sure sweat, tears, saliva, hairs and those hundred thousand skin cells we slough off daily weren’t available to be picked up by some diligent crime scene tech.
Not to mention fingerprints inside the latex gloves or on skin.
He’d need another option.
Swann was presently in a restaurant on Henry Street across from the prosecutor’s apartment in Brooklyn, a four floor walk up. He was nursing a very bittersweet Cuban coffee.
Scanning Laurel’s abode. Not a doorman building, he noticed. Good.
Swann had decided that now he could use a cover crime for the murder: In addition to prosecuting patriotic Americans for taking out vile traitors, Laurel had sent plenty of rapists to jail. He’d looked up her conviction record – extremely impressive – and learned that among those she’d put away were dozens of serial rapists and molesters. One of these suspects could easily decide to get his revenge following his release. Or a relative of a prisoner might do just that.
Her own past would come back to get her.
Yes, he’d gotten word from headquarters that the investigation into Moreno’s death was over. But that didn’t mean it might not surface again. Laurel was the sort who might leave government service and start writing letters or articles in the papers or online about what had happened, about NIOS, about the STO assassination program.
Better if she just went away. And anyway, Swann had set off a bomb in Little Italy and stabbed an interpreter and limo driver to death. If nothing else, Laurel might be called on to help in the investigation of those crimes. He needed her dead and all her files destroyed.
He fantasized. Not about the sex but about faking the attack, which he was looking at like a recipe. Planning, preparation, execution. He’d break into her apartment, stun her with a blow to the head (not the throat; there couldn’t be a connection to Ms. Lydia Foster, of course), rip her clothes off, make sure her breasts and groin displayed severe striking hematoma (no biting, though he was tempted; that bothersome DNA). Then he’d beat her to death and penetrate her with a foreign object.
He didn’t have time to go to an adult bookstore with video booths or a porn theater and scoop up a bit of somebody’s DNA to swab on her. But he had stolen some stained and torn underwear, teenager’s size, from the trash behind a tenement not far away. Fibers from this garment he’d work under her fingernails and hope the teen had been masturbating at some point in the past few days. Likely.
This would be enough evidence.
He dipped his tongue into the coffee. Enjoyed the intense sensation throughout his mouth; it’s a myth that different tastes are experienced in different parts of the tongue: salt, sour, sweet, bitter. Another sip. Swann cooked with coffee sometimes – he’d made a Mexican mole type sauce for pork with 80 percent cacao and espresso. He’d been tempted to submit it for a contest then decided it wasn’t a good idea for him to be too public.
He was running through the plan for Nance Laurel again when he spotted her.
Across the street the ADA had appeared from around the corner. She was in a navy blue suit and white blouse. In her small pudgy hands were an old fashioned attaché case, brown and battered, and a large litigation bag. He wondered if either was a present from her father or mother, both of whom were attorneys too, Swann had learned. They were in the low rent district of the profession. Her mother, public defender. Her father, poverty law.
Doin’ good deeds, helping society, Swann reflected. Just like their stocky little girl.
Laurel was walking with eyes cast downward and laboring under the weight of the litigation bag. Though her face was a cryptic mask, she now gave off a slight hint of depression, the way Italian parsley in soup suggests but doesn’t state. Unlike bold cilantro.
The source of the somber mood was no doubt the foundering Moreno case. Swann nearly felt bad for her. The prosecution would have been the jewel in her crown but now she was back to a life of sending José, Shariq, Billy and Roy into the system for crack and rapes and guns.
Wasn’t me. No way. I don’t know, man, I don’t know where it came from, really…
Except, of course, she wouldn’t be handling any such cases.
Wouldn’t be doing anything at all after tonight. Would be cold and still as a slab of loin.
Nance Laurel found her keys and unlocked the front door, stepped inside.
Swann would give it ten, fifteen minutes. Time for her to let her guard down.
He lifted the small, thick cup to his nose, inhaled and slipped his tongue into the warm liquid once more.
CHAPTER 73
“What do we know about the last of our ten little Indians?” Lincoln Rhyme asked absently.
The setback about Moreno’s citizenship had defeated Nance Laurel but it had only stoked his hunt lust. “I don’t care what Albany wants, Sachs, I want our unsub. Five Sixteen’s too dangerous to stay free. What do we know?” He looked over the evidence whiteboards. “All right, we know Five Sixteen was in the Bahamas around the time of the shooting. We know that he killed the student prostitute Annette Bodel. We know that he set the bomb to eliminate leads to the whistleblower. We know he killed Lydia Foster. We know he was following our Sachs around town. What can we make of that?…Sachs!”
“What?”
“The other driver, the one that Moreno usually used? Did you ever get in touch with him?”