He could tell, even though she was trying to be cool, that she was hoping he had something. He could also tell she was freaking a little, looking at the EMTs and the ambulance. He had to reel her in, convince her he had the goods. Even though he wasn’t quite sure it was true. But he’d gotten pictures, action shots, of something, and more than she had, for sure.
“I was right here when it happened.” That was true. “And I was shooting.” Also true.
“Terrific. Great. Listen, can you do me a huge favor? Can you stand by a second, Mr. Land?” She reached out, as if to touch him, but didn’t actually do it. “I’ve got to get shots of them putting the victim into the ambulance. You know the deal for TV. If it doesn’t happen on video, it didn’t happen, right?”
She smiled at him again, like she understood they were colleagues, like she understood he knew about getting video, and what was important, and what pictures could make or break someone’s career. Or life.
“Sure, go for it,” he said.
She lifted her camera, pointed it at the EMTs. They hoisted the guy onto the wheeled stretcher thing, then yanked up the yellow tubing of the metal legs even higher, bringing it to waist level. Everyone went silent, so silent he could hear the creak of the metal as the stretcher clicked into place.
He knew they couldn’t talk while she was shooting, their voices would be recorded by the Quik-Shot’s sensitive microphone. He put a finger to his lips, signaling to her that he knew how this shit worked. But she wasn’t looking at him. That was okay. He could wait. He’d told her he had pictures. TV people lived for pictures.
He had her.
9
Tenley clicked the mouse to highlight the red Record arrow on the upper right of her screen. In a fraction of a second, it flashed to green, then a series of numbers appeared beside it. First the date stamp-month, day, and year-and then, in bigger numbers, a flashing countdown. Well, more like a count-up. The computers were programmed to retrieve and preserve the last twenty seconds of video, so the system was now in the process of recording digitized pictures, starting with what occurred twenty seconds ago. Pulling back the past. As if Tenley had the power to stop time, then start it again.
She couldn’t help but wish she had that power with Lanna. She watched the clock tick off the time of the video cache. It recovered three seconds of the past, four seconds. If she could retrieve the past, knowing what she knew now, would she have told on her sister? Would she have broken that trust? But knowing what she knew now didn’t matter. The past was over. Nine, ten…
“Miss Siskel?” Of course it was Ward Dahlstrom, hovering over her like a cloud of imminent criticism, but she guessed this was his job. They’d all been instructed to avoid “the twenty,” since whatever was digitized and downloaded existed. No longer a fleeting unrecorded moment in time but a legally obtainable piece of reality. “Might there be something you’d like to tell me? I saw you hit the twenty. Is there something I should know?”
Tenley knew if you pushed Cancel before the counter hit twenty, the entire recording would disappear. Thirteen, fourteen…
The twenty-second cache was the compromise the city’s big shots made with the civil liberties people, her mother had explained to her, after they got all pissed off, claiming the city’s surveillance system was an invasion of privacy. As a result, though, every time a twenty was recorded, it had to be reported, entered into a video log, and never erased. Before the compromise, the city had digitized and stored everything, easy enough to do, but soon the lawyers for every driver who’d been accused of running a red light demanded the video as some kind of proof of their clients’ innocence. She remembered her parents discussing it-“an evidentiary can of worms,” her mother complained.
Fifteen. “Well, see that ambulance?” Tenley said. “And I think those are EMTs, see? I was thinking that if something happened down there, it might help someone if we-”
Sixteen.
“Help the police?” Dahlstrom did not look happy. “Why?”
Fine, she was only a peon and she was trying to help and Dr. Maddux had encouraged her to be more responsible. Assertive. Not afraid of people. So here she’d done that, done exactly that, and now her boss was frowning.
“In case…” she began, watching the count-up, knowing that in a few seconds, the past would be captured. This time, at least. There were no do-overs in life, her father always tried to tell her, as if she didn’t know that. But. Maybe he was wrong. Maybe this was her moment to make it happen.
Dahlstrom reached out his right hand and clicked her mouse. She saw his hand had a bruise on the top of it, right in the center. She’d Purell the mouse, Purell everything, after he left. She wished she could Purell the air. He clicked on the green light just as it reached nineteen. The light went red. White letters popped up.
Cache TERMINATED.
“Can of worms,” he said.
“You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say may be…” Jake aimed his Miranda warning at the poor schlub on the paramedics’ portable gurney. Had he even heard it? They’d hoisted the guy-passive, drooling, and shuddering for breath-onto the thin flat mattress, then cuffed his left leg to the manacle bracket welded to the foot of the cot. The EMTs pulled three black straps across his trembling body and fastened the shoulder-to-waist webbing on each side.
Jake finished the rights as one paramedic checked the plastic strap couplings. The patient-victim?-wore running shoes, cheap, the soles worn and blackened. Both knees of his jeans were ripped, showing lacerations and scratches on his legs, scratches that would certainly correlate to the crumbling bricks of the walk beside the Curley statue.
“How is he?” Jake began. “You see his ID? I didn’t want to look too hard.”
“Good call. Possible internal injuries. Could have hurt.” The older one hung the stethoscope back around his neck, shaking his head. “Heartbeat weak, pulse ox iffy. He’s unconscious, and more than banged up, Jake. We’ll get him to Mass General, check it out. Call you if we find ID. Okay, gang, let’s get him inside.”
They flapped open the rear doors of the orange-striped ambulance. The driver had pulled his vehicle nose-first into the alley’s entrance. He’d have to make a tough U-ey to get out.
Jake and D had holstered their weapons, and D stood watch near Calvin Hewlitt, still cuffed, now silently watching.
“Sir?” Jake took a step closer to the gurney, smelled beer and sweat and fear. The patient-suspect?-had his eyes closed. Jake saw an ugly red welt on the right side of his neck. “Sir?”
Nothing. The guy’s skin was pale, splotched with red. Could be drugs, or alcohol, or poverty, or panic. Why did people do what they did? But Jake didn’t need a motive to convict this man. With any luck there’d also be bystander photos and surveillance videos of him in the act. So talk or not, buddy, Jake thought. We got you.
Jake stood, signaled to the paramedic. Take him. “Let’s get him outta here.”
The guy was going nowhere but the hospital, where he might recover, at least, and where, under armed guard, he’d get a doctor’s attention. They’d find ID. With a clean bill of health, or cleanish, at least, his next stop would be the Suffolk County lockup. Match the fingerprints on the knife-if there were any-with this guy’s? One and done. Shortest perp apprehension time ever. Even the hottest-shot defense attorney would have a tough time with that one. Case closed.
“Officers?” Calvin Hewlitt, still cuffed, had watched the whole thing, silent. “Might I remind you I exist?”