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The Coffin Dancer (Lincoln Rhyme 2)

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. . . Chapter Fifteen

Hour 8 of 45

"Ron. It's Percey. How is everyone?"

"Shook up," he answered. "I sent Sally home. She couldn't--"

"How is she?"

"Just couldn't deal with it. Carol too. And Lauren. Lauren was out of control. I've never seen anybody that upset. How're you and Brit?"

"Brit's mad. I'm mad. What a mess this is. Oh, Ron . . . "

"And that detective, the cop who got shot?"

"I don't think they know yet. How's Foxtrot Bravo?"

"It's not as bad as it could be. I've already replaced the cockpit window. No breaches in the fuselage. Number two engine . . . that's a problem. We've got to replace a lot of the skin. We're trying to find a new fire extinguisher cartridge. I don't think it'll be a problem . . . "

"But?"

"But the annular has to be replaced."

"The combustor? Replace it? Oh, Jesus."

"I've already called the Garrett distributor in Connecticut. They agreed to deliver one tomorrow, even though it's Sunday. I can have it installed in a couple, three hours."

"Hell," she muttered, "I should be there . . . I told them I'd stay put but, damn it, I should be there."

"Where are you, Percey?"

And Stephen Kall, listening to this conversation as he sat in Sheila Horowitz's dim apartment, was ready to write. He pressed the receiver closer to his ear.

But the Wife said only, "In Manhattan. About a thousand cops around us. I feel like the pope or the president."

Stephen had heard on his police scanner reports of some curious activity around the Twentieth Precinct, which was on the Upper West Side. The station house was being closed and suspects were being relocated. He wondered if that was where the Wife was right now--at the precinct house.

Ron asked, "Are they going to stop this guy? Do they have any leads?"

Yes, do they? Stephen wondered.

"I don't know," she said.

"Those gunshots," Ron said. "Jesus, they were scary. Reminded me of the service. You know, that sound of the guns."

Stephen wondered again about this Ron fellow. Could he be useful?

Infiltrate, evaluate . . . interrogate.

Stephen considered tracking him down and torturing him to get him to call Percey back and ask where the safe house was . . .

But although he probably could get through the airport security again it would be a risk. And it would take too much time.

As he listened to their conversation Stephen gazed at the laptop computer in front of him. A message saying Please wait kept flashing. The remote tap was connected to a Bell Atlantic relay box near the airport and had been transmitting their conversations to Stephen's tape recorder for the past week. He was surprised the police hadn't found it yet.

A cat--Esmeralda, Essie, the worm sack--climbed onto the table and arched her back. Stephen could hear the irritating purring.

He began to feel cringey.



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