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In Death 27 - Salvation in Death

In Death 27 - Salvation in Death

Titel: In Death 27 - Salvation in Death Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
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quickly, concisely. “These factors indicate this individual would have been in the system at some point. As a gang member, it’s hard to believe he wasn’t brought in at some time, that his prints and/or DNA aren’t on record. But we took both from the body, and we haven’t hit a match.”
    Whitney puffed out a breath. “Any minors who were members, and who were not convicted of any crime that entailed sentencing, had their records expunged. Clemency Order, 2045. An order that was overturned in 2046.”
    “Even so, sir, the records should still show prints and DNA, even if the record was cleared.”
    “Not cleared, Lieutenant. Wiped. There is no record for minors who didn’t do time. Those who did, those records are sealed, that would be flagged. I’d say your vic was a minor w C war mho benefited from the Clemency Order. If he dodged the system after that, you won’t find his prints or DNA through our records, or IRCCA.”
     
     
    Well, that was a pisser, Eve thought as she stalked her way back to Homicide. Some bleeding hearts worry about the city’s street rats, and their solution is to pat all the good little murdering, illegals-pushing, gang-raping gangsters on the head and say, “Go sin no more?”
    Now she had to dig through reams of possibly relevant data to find information that should have been at her fingertips.
    Lino had a name, and she was damn sure his killer knew it. Until she did, he’d be John Doeing it at the morgue.
    Then there was the real Miguel Flores. She had to ID the vic to have any real hope of finding Flores, dead or alive. He was dead, of course, every instinct told her. That didn’t mean he didn’t matter.
    The more she found out about the victim, the more Miguel Flores mattered.
    She stopped at a vending machine, scowled at it. “Give me grief, I dare you.” She jammed in her code. “Tube of Pepsi, and stuff your damn contents and nutrition value.”
    It coughed out the tube, then a tinkle of music. She continued to stalk away as the machine sang out the current Pepsi jingle.
    “It’s enough to make you go thirsty,” she muttered, and turning, nearly ran over Father López. “Sorry.”
    “My fault. I wasn’t sure where I was going, so wasn’t watching where I was going. I’ve never been here. It’s . . . big.”
    “And loud and full of very bad people. What can I do for you?”
    “I have the records you asked for.”
    “Oh. Thanks. I could’ve come up to get them.” Or you could have e’d them, she thought.
    “I . . . Actually, I wanted to get out for a bit. Do you have a few moments?”
    “Sure. My office is around the corner. Ah, do you want something?” She held up the tube and nearly prayed he’d say no. She didn’t want to risk the machine again.
    “I wouldn’t mind some coffee. I’ll just—”
    “I have some in my office,” she told him as he stepped toward a machine.
    She led him down the hall, into the bullpen where Jenkinson snarled into a ’link, “Look, you fucking shit-weasel asshole, I get the intel, you get paid. Do I look like some fuckhead sitting here jerking off? You don’t fucking want me coming down there, cocksucker.”
    “Ah,” Eve said. “Office. Sorry.”
    López’s face remained serene. “You neglected to add ‘colorful’ to your ‘loud and full of very bad people.’ ”
    “I guess. How do you take the coffee?”
    “Just black’s fine. Lieutenant . . . I brought the baptismal records.”
    “So you said.”
    “And I intend to give them to you before I go.”
    Eve nodded. “That would make sense.”
    “I’m doing so without authorization. My superiors,” he continued when she turned with the coffee, “while wishing to cooperate with the investigation, of course, are also cautious about the . . . backlash. And the publicity. They informed me they’d take the request under advisement. Advisement often means . . .”
    “Just this side of never?”
    “Close. I accessed the records myself.”
    She handed him the mug. “That makes you a weasel. Coffee payment enough?”
    He managed a soft laugh. “Yes, thank you. I liked—Lino. Very much. I respected his work, and his energy. He was my responsibility. I feel I can’t understand this, or know what to do until I know who he was, and why he did what he did. I have to counsel my parishioners. Answer them when they come to me upset and worried. Are we married? Has my baby been baptized? Have my sins been forgiven? All because this man pretended to be

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