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The Twelfth Card (Lincoln Rhyme 6)

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"Winskinskie?" Rhyme asked.

"No. Listen. An answer to our mystery substance--the one that Amelia found in the unsub's Elizabeth Street safe house and near Geneva's aunt's. The liquid."

"Damn well about time. What the hell is it? Toxin?" Rhyme asked.

"Our bad boy's got dry eyes," Cooper said.

"What?"

"It's Murine."

"Eyedrops?"

"That's right. The composition's exactly the same."

"Okay. Add that to the chart," Rhyme ordered Thom. "Might just be temporary--because he'd been working with acid. In which case, won't help us. But it might be chronic. That'd be good."

Criminalists loved perps with physical maladies. Rhyme had a whole section in his book on tracing people through prescription or over-the-counter drugs, disposed hypodermic needles, prescription eyeglasses, unique shoe-tread wear from orthopedic problems, and so on.

It was then that Sachs's phone rang. She listened for a moment. "Okay. I'll be there in fifteen minutes." The policewoman disconnected, glanced at Rhyme. "Well, this's interesting."

Chapter Twenty-Eight

When Amelia Sachs walked into the Critical Care Unit at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital she saw two Pulaskis.

One was in bed, swathed in bandages and hooked up to creepy clear plastic tubes. His eyes were dull, his mouth slack.

The other sat at his bedside, awkward in the uncomfortable plastic chair. Just as blond, just as fresh-faced, in the same crisp blue NYPD uniform Ron Pulaski had been wearing when Sachs had recruited him in front of the African-American museum yesterday and told him to act concerned about a pile of garbage.

How many sugars? . . .

She blinked at the mirror image.

"I'm Tony. Ron's brother. Which you probably guessed."

"Hi, Detective," Ron managed breathlessly. His voice wasn't working right. It was slurred, sloppy.

"How you feeling?"

"How ish Geneva?"

"She's all right. I'm sure you heard--we stopped him at her aunt's place but he got away . . . . You hurting? Must be."

He nodded toward the IV drip. "Happy soup . . . Don't feel a thing."

"He'll be okay."

"I'll be okay," Ron echoed his brother's words. He took a few deep breaths, blinked.

"A month or so," Tony explained. "Some therapy. He'll be back on duty. Some fractures. Not much internal damage. Thick skull. Which Dad always said."

"Shkull." Ron grinned.

"You were at the academy together?" She pulled up a chair and sat.

"Right."

"What's your house?"



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