knockout. But for Rhyme that thought didn’t occur to him. What did register was the look in her eyes.
Not the surprise—obviously, nobody’d warned he was a crip—but something else. An expression he’d never seen before. It was as if his condition was putting her at ease. The exact opposite of how most people reacted. As she walked into the room she was relaxing.
“Officer Sachs?” Rhyme asked.
“Yessir,” she said, catching herself just as she was about to extend a hand. “Detective Rhyme.”
Sellitto introduced her to Polling and Haumann. She’d know about the latter two, by reputation if nothing else, and now her eyes grew cautious once more.
She took in the room, the dust, the gloominess. Glanced at one of the art posters. It was partially unrolled, lying under a table. Nighthawks, by Edward Hopper. The lonely people in a diner late at night. That one had been the last to come down.
Rhyme briefly explained about the 3:00 p.m. deadline. Sachs nodded calmly but Rhyme could see the flicker of what?—fear? disgust?—in her eyes.
Jerry Banks, fingers encumbered by a class ring but not a wedding band, was attracted immediately by the lamp of her beauty and offered her a particular smile. But Sachs’s single glance in response made clear that no matches were being made here. And probably never would be.
Polling said, “Maybe it’s a trap. We find the place he’s leading us to, walk in and there’s a bomb.”
“I doubt it,” Sellitto said, shrugging, “why go to all this trouble? If you want to kill cops all you gotta do is find one and fucking shoot him.”
Awkward silence for a moment as Polling looked quickly from Sellitto to Rhyme. The collective thought registered that it was on the Shepherd case that Rhyme had been injured.
But faux pas meant nothing to Lincoln Rhyme. He continued, “I agree with Lon. But I’d tell any Searchand Surveillance or HRT teams to keep an eye out for ambush. Our boy seems to be writing his own rules.”
Sachs looked again at the poster of the Hopper painting. Rhyme followed her gaze. Maybe the people in the diner really weren’t lonely, he reflected. Come to think of it, they all looked pretty damn content.
“We’ve got two types of physical evidence here,” Rhyme continued. “Standard PE. What the unsub didn’t mean to leave behind. Hair, fibers, fingerprints, maybe blood, shoeprints. If we can find enough of it—and if we’re lucky—that’ll lead us to the primary crime scene. That’s where he lives.”
“Or his hidey-hole,” Sellitto offered. “Something temporary.”
“A safe house?” Rhyme mused, nodding. “Bet you’re right, Lon. He needs someplace to operate out of.” He continued, “Then there’s the planted evidence. Apart from the scraps of paper—which tell us the time and date—we’ve got the bolt, the wad of asbestos and the sand.”
“A fucking scavenger hunt,” Haumann growled and ran a hand through his slick buzz cut. He looked just like the drill sergeant Rhyme recalled he’d been.
“So I can tell the brass there’s a chance of getting the vic in time?” Polling asked.
“I think so, yes.”
The captain made a call and wandered to the corner of the room as he talked. When he hung up he grunted, “The mayor. The chief’s with ’im. There’s gonna be a press conference in an hour and I gotta be there to make sure their dicks’re in their pants and their flies’re zipped. Anything more I can tell the big boys?”
Sellitto glanced at Rhyme, who shook his head.
“Not yet,” the detective said.
Polling gave Sellitto his cellular phone number and left, literally jogging out the door.
A moment later a skinny, balding man in his thirties ambled up the stairs. Mel Cooper was as goofy-looking as ever, the nerdy neighbor in a sitcom. He was followed by two younger cops carrying a steamer trunk and twosuitcases that seemed to weigh a thousand pounds each. The officers deposited their heavy loads and
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