The Deliveryman (Lincoln Rhyme 11.50)
Page 22
"It's a video game," Rhyme reminded.
"Thumbs require agility too."
Javier returned to the match. "You gotta come watch!"
"All right." He saved his document and wheeled into the den, where, in concession for being a spectator, he was given a slug of single-malt by Thom, before returning to the game.
Rhyme sipped, Rhyme watched.
The boy would be staying here tonight. Child and Family Services had finally tracked down the aunt, in Chicago. She would be arriving to take him to her suburban home tomorrow. She was married, Sachs had reported, and had two children of her own.
Rhyme actually cheered the boy on, drawing a scowl from Thom.
Twenty minutes later Sachs arrived and he wheeled from the digital stadium and joined her in the parlor lab.
She'd been interviewing the suspects in the case--Morales and his wife kept mum but Ortiz and Stan Coelho were happy to talk, though some of the latter's willingness to spill may have been due to happy drugs.
"None of them can think of who might've killed him." She nodded at the evidence table, meaning Rinaldo. Morales, his wife and the other two minders, of course, weren't prime suspects; the success of their arms importing scheme depended on a living deliveryman.
"Somebody within the 128s? A rival crew? A contractor who just happened to hear about the guns and wanted to steal the shipment?"
She shrugged. And even as he'd asked the question he'd decided such perps were unlikely. No, his and Sachs's first conclusion somehow smelled right: that Rinaldo's was a random death, unrelated to the arms scheme.
Wrong time, wrong place.
These were, he knew, the hardest homicides to close.
"Well, we've still got the evidence. A mountain's worth of it." He glanced at the tables. "The answer's there someplace."
"I'll call Mel in and we'll get to it."
At that moment Rhyme's computer sounded with an incoming email. He glanced up and read the message. It was from the assistant district attorney he'd worked with from time to time--the one, in fact, who'd run the Baxter case, which had concluded in a guilty verdict against the scam artist, just a few days ago, Rhyme's first foray into white collar crime.
A second email arrive a moment later. From the office of the chief of detectives.
Curious.
He was aware of Sachs looking his way, her head cocking.
"Is something wrong?"
"The ADA and some NYPD brass. They want to meet with me. Today. Something about the Baxter case."
"What do you think it's about, Lincoln?" she asked.
Then her voice braked to a stop. He looked her way. She'd just broken their unspoken but immutable rule. That it was the worst kind of bad luck to use first names when addressing each other. Rhyme had no more use for superstition than he had for sentiment and reverence, but it was a jarring moment.
Still, he smiled. "No clue what's up. Maybe I'm getting a good citizen award." He turned to summon Thom to bring the disabled-accessible van around but he heard young Javier Rinaldo's laugh and Thom mournful cry of "No way, not again!"
Rhyme wheeled toward the den.
City hall could wait.
An emergency at a busy department store leaves its victim horribly injured.
Was it a freak accident--or the work of an unseen criminal?
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