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The Cold Moon (Lincoln Rhyme 7)

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"Any of this going through IAD?" he asked Sachs.

"No. I've been running it myself."

"Who cleared that?"

"Flaherty."

"The inspector? Running Op Div?"

"Right."

He began asking questions and jotting notes. After doing so, in precise handwriting, for five minutes he paused. "Okay, we've got B and E, criminal trespass . . . but no burglary."

Burglary is breaking and entering for the purpose of committing a felony, like larceny or murder. Duncan had no purpose other than trespassing.

The prosecutor continued. "Theft of human remains--"

"Borrowing. I never intended to keep the corpse," Duncan reminded him.

"Well, it's up to Westchester to decide that one. But here we've also got obstruction of justice, interference with police procedures--"

Duncan frowned. "Though you could say that since there were no murders in the first place, the police procedures weren't necessary, so interference with them is moot."

Rhyme chuckled.

The assistant district attorney, however, ignored the comment. "Possession of a firearm--"

"Barrel was plugged," Duncan countered. "It was inoperable."

"What about the stolen motor vehicles? Where'd they come from?"

Duncan explained about Baker's theft from the police impound lot in Queens. He nodded to the pile of his personal effects, which included a set of car keys. "The Buick's parked up the street. On Thirty-first. Baker got it from the same place as the SUV."

"How'd you take delivery of the cars? Anybody else involved?"

"Baker and I went together to pick them up. They were parked in a restaurant lot. Baker knew some of the people there, he said."

&

nbsp; "You get their names?"

"No."

"What was the restaurant?"

"Some Greek diner. I don't remember the name. We took the four-ninety-five to get out there. I don't remember the exit but we were only on the freeway for about ten minutes after we got out of the Midtown Tunnel and turned left at the exit."

"North," Sellitto said. "We'll have somebody check it out. Maybe Baker's been dealing in confiscated wheels too."

The prosecutor shook his head. "I hope you understand the consequences of this. Not just the crimes--you'll have civil fines for the diversion of emergency vehicles and city employees. I'm talking tens, hundreds of thousands of dollars."

"I have no problem with that. I checked the laws and sentencing guidelines before I started this. I decided the risk of a prison sentence was worth exposing Baker. But I wouldn't have done this if there was any chance somebody innocent would get hurt."

"You still put people at risk," Sellitto muttered. "Pulaski was attacked in the parking garage where you left the SUV. He could've been killed."

Duncan laughed. "No, no, I'm the one who saved him. After we abandoned the Explorer and were running out of the garage I spotted that homeless guy. I didn't like the looks of him. He had a club or tire iron or something in his hand. After Vincent and I split up, I went back to the garage to make sure he didn't hurt anybody. When he started toward you"--Duncan glanced at Pulaski--"I found a wheel cover in the trash and pitched it into the wall so you'd turn around and see him coming."

The rookie nodded. "That's what happened. I thought the guy stumbled and made the noise himself. But whatever, I was ready for him when he came at me. And there was a wheel cover nearby."



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