The Burning Wire
doing?”
“Well, I’ll tell you,” Dellray offered. “One thing I’m doing is looking at an NYPD undercover cop who, for some fucked-up reason, is trying to blend by sweeping cobblestones in a ’hood where they stopped sweeping cobblestones, oh, about a hundred and thirty years ago.” Dellray displayed his ID.
“Dellray? I heard of you.” Then defensively the cop said, “I’m just doing what they told me. It’s a stakeout.”
“Stakeout? Why? What is this place?”
“You don’t know?”
Dellray rolled his eyes.
When the cop told him, Dellray froze. But only momentarily. A few seconds later he was ripping away his smelly undercover costume and dumping it in a waste bin. As he started sprinting for the subway, he noted the cop’s startled reaction, and supposed it could have come from one of two things: the striptease act itself, or the fact that underneath the disgusting outfit he was wearing a kelly green velour tracksuit. He supposed it was a little of both.
Chapter 67
“RODOLFO, TELL ME.”
“We may have good news soon, Lincoln. Arturo Diaz’s men have followed Mr. Watchmaker into GustavoMadero. It’s a delegación in the north of the city—you would say borough, like your Bronx. Much of it is not so nice and Arturo believes that’s where the associates helping him are.”
“But do you know where he is?”
“They think so. They’ve found the car he escaped in—they were no more than three or four minutes behind but could not get through the traffic to stop his car. He’s been spotted in a large apartment building near the center of the delegación . It’s being sealed off. We will do a complete search. I will call back with more information soon.”
Rhyme disconnected the call, and struggled to keep his impatience and concern at bay. He would believe that the Watchmaker had actually been arrested when he saw the man arraigned in a New York court.
He wasn’t encouraged when he called Kathryn Dance to tell her the latest and she replied, “Gustavo Madero? It’s a lousy neighborhood, Lincoln,” she said. “I was down in Mexico City for an extradition. We drove through the area. I was really glad the car didn’t break down, even with two armed federal officers next to me. It’s a rabbit warren. Easy to hide in. But the good news is that the residents absolutely won’t want the police there. If Luna moves a busload of riot cops in, the locals’ll give up an American pretty fast.”
He said he’d keep her posted and disconnected. The fatigue and fogginess from the dysreflexia attack ebbed in once more and he rested his head on the back of the Storm Arrow.
Come on, stay sharp! he commanded, refusing to accept anything less than 110 percent from himself, just as he did from everybody else. But he wasn’t feeling that measure, not at all.
Then he glanced up to see Ron Pulaski at the evidence table and thoughts of the Watchmaker faded. The young officer was moving pretty slowly. Rhyme regarded him with concern. The jolt of the Taser had been pretty powerful, apparently.
But that concern was accompanied by another emotion, one he’d been feeling for the past hour: guilt. It had been exclusively Rhyme’s fault that Pulaski—and Sachs too—had come as close as they had to being electrocuted by Galt’s trap at the school. Sachs had downplayed the incident. Pulaski too. Laughing, he’d said, “She Tased me, bro,” which apparently was some kind of joke, drawing a smile from Mel Cooper, but Rhyme didn’t get it. Nor was he in a mood that was at all humorous. He was confused and disoriented . . . and not just from the medical emergency. He was having trouble shaking his sense of failure from letting down Sachs and the rookie.
He forced himself to focus on the evidence that’d been collected from the school. Some bags of trace, some electronics. And most important, the generator. Lincoln Rhyme loved big, bulky pieces of equipment. To move them took a lot of physical contact and that meant such objects picked up significant prints, fibers, hair, sweat and skin cells, as well as other trace. The generator was attached to a wheeled cart, but it would still have taken some grappling to get it into place.
Ron Pulaski got a phone call. He glanced at Rhyme and then headed into the corner of the room to take it. Despite his groggy demeanor, his face began to brighten. He disconnected and stood for a moment, looking out the window. Though he didn’t know the substance
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