The Cold Moon
detectives walked into the low-lit entryway.
“Inquisitor. That’s what they call Flaherty?” Sachs asked.
“Yup. Not that she isn’t good.”
“I know. I checked her out.”
“Uhm.” The big detective sipped coffee and finished a Danish. “Look, I’m up to my ass in psycho clockmakers so I don’t know what’s up with this St. James thing. But if you got cops maybe’re on the take, how come it’s you and not Internal Affairs running the case?”
“Flaherty didn’t want to bring them in yet. Wallace agreed.”
“Wallace?”
“Robert Wallace. The deputy mayor.”
“Yeah, I know him. Stand-up guy. And it’s the right call, bringing in IAD. Why didn’t she want to?”
“She wanted to give it to somebody in her command. She said the One One Eight’s too close to the Big Building. Somebody’d find out Internal Affairs was involved and they’d cut and run.”
Sellitto jutted his lower lip out in concession. “That could be.” Then his voice lowered even further. “And you didn’t argue too much ’cause you wanted the case.”
She looked him in the eye. “That’s right.”
“So you asked and you got.” He gave a cool laugh.
“What?”
“Now you’re walking point.”
“What’s wrong with that?”
“Just, you gotta know the score. Now, anything goes bad, anything at all—good people get burned, bad guys get away—the fuckup’s on your shoulders, even if you do everything right. Flaherty’s protected and IAD’s smelling like roses. On the other hand, you get righteous collars, they take over and suddenly everybody forgets your name.”
“You’re saying I got set up?” Sachs shook her head. “But Flaherty didn’t want me to take the case. She was going to hand it off.”
“Amelia, come on. End of a date, a guy says, ‘Hey, had a great time but it’s probably better if I don’t ask you upstairs.’ What’s the first thing the girl says?”
“ ‘Let’s go upstairs.’ What he had in mind all along. You’re saying Flaherty was playing me?”
“All I’m saying is she didn’t take the case away from you, right? Which she could’ve done in, like, five seconds.”
Sachs’s nail dug absently into her scalp. Her gut twisted at the idea of department politics at this high level—largely uncharted territory for her.
“Now, my point is, I wish you weren’t lead on a case like this, not now in your career. But you are. So you have to remember—keep your head down. I mean stay fucking invisible.”
“I—”
“Lemme finish. Invisible for two reasons. One, people find out you’re after bad cops, rumors’re going start—about this shield taking cash or that shield losing evidence, whatever. Fact they’re not doesn’t mean shit. Rumors’re like the flu. You can’t wish ’em away. They run their course and they take people’s careers with ’em.”
She nodded. “What’s the second reason?”
“Just because you got a shield, don’t think you’re immune. A bad uniform in the One One Eight, yeah, he’s not going to clip you. That doesn’t happen. But the civilians he’s dealing with won’t want to hear his opinion. They won’t think twice about tossing your body into the trunk of a car at JFK long-term parking. . . . God bless you, kid. Go get ’em. But be careful. I don’t want to have to go breaking any bad news to Lincoln. He’d never forgive me.”
Ron Pulaski returned to Rhyme’s, and Sachs met him in the front hallway, as she stood, looking into the kitchen, and thinking about what Sellitto had told her.
She briefed him about the latest in the Watchmaker case then asked, “What’s the Sarkowski situation?”
He flipped through his notes. “I located his spouse and proceeded to interview her. Now, the decedent was a fifty-seven-year-old white male who owned a business in Manhattan. He had no criminal record. He was murdered on November four of this year and was survived by said wife and two teenage children, one male, one female. Death occurred by gunshot. He—”
“Ron?” she asked in a certain tone.
He winced. “Oh, sorry. Streamline, sure.”
His copspeak was a habit Sachs was determined to break.
Relaxing, the rookie continued. “He was the owner of a building on the West Side, Manhattan. Lived there too. He also owned a company that did maintenance and trash disposal work for big companies and utilities around the city.” His business had a clean record—federal, city and state. No organizedcrime
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