The Twelfth Card
Beauchamp in Amarillo reporting that nobody in the prison recognized the computer composite of Unsub 109.
The criminalist dictated a brief thank-you and logged off. Then he said to Thom, “Just one call, then I’ll go willingly.”
“I’ll straighten up some,” the aide said. “Meet you upstairs.”
Amelia Sachs had gone back to her place to spend the night, and to see her mother, who lived near her and had been sick lately—some cardiac problems. Sachs spent the night with Rhyme more often than not, but she’d kept her apartment in Brooklyn, where she had other family members and friends. (Jennifer Robinson—the patrolwoman who’d delivered the teenagers to Rhyme’s that morning—lived right up the street.) Besides, Sachs, like Rhyme, needed solitude from time to time, and this arrangement suited them both.
Rhyme called and talked briefly to her mother, wished her well. Sachs came on the line and he toldher about the latest developments—few though they were.
“You okay?” Sachs asked him. “You sound preoccupied.”
“Tired.”
“Ah.” She didn’t believe him. “Get some sleep.”
“You too. Sleep well.”
“Love you, Rhyme.”
“Love you.”
After he disconnected, he rolled toward the evidence chart.
He wasn’t, however, gazing at Thom’s precise entries about the case. He was looking at the printout of the tarot card, taped to a board, the twelfth card, The Hanged Man. He reread the block about the meaning of the card. He studied the man’s placid, inverted face. Then he turned and wheeled to the small elevator that connected the laboratory on the first floor to the bedroom on the second, instructed the elevator to ascend and then wheeled out.
He reflected on the tarot card. Just like Kara, their illusionist friend, Rhyme didn’t believe in spiritualism or the psychic. (They were both, in their own ways, scientists.) But he couldn’t help but be struck by the fact that a card showing a scaffold just happened to be a piece of evidence in a case in which the word “Gallows” figured prominently. The word “Hanged” too was a curious coincidence. Criminalists must know about all methods of death, of course, and Rhyme understood exactly how hanging worked. It snapped the neck high, just below the base of the skull. (The actual cause of death in execution-style hangings was suffocation, though not from squeezing the throat shut, but from cutting off the neuron messages to the lungs.) This is whathad nearly happened to Rhyme at the subway crime scene accident some years ago.
Gallows Heights . . . The Hanged Man . . .
The meaning of the tarot card, though, was the most significant aspect of the happenstance: Its appearance in a reading indicates spiritual searching leading to a decision, a transition, a change of direction. The card often foretells a surrendering to experience, ending a struggle, accepting what is. When this card appears in your reading you must listen to your inner self, even if that message seems to be contrary to logic.
He was amused because he’d been doing plenty of seeking lately—before the Unsub 109 case and the appearance of the fortune-telling card. Lincoln Rhyme needed to make a decision.
A change of direction . . .
Now he didn’t remain in the bedroom but instead drove to the room that was the epicenter of this churning debate: his therapy room, where he’d spent hundreds of hours hard at work on Dr. Sherman’s exercise regimen.
Parking the wheelchair in the doorway, he studied the rehab equipment in the dim room—the ergometer bike, the treadmill. Then he glanced down at his right hand, strapped at the wrist to the padded arm of his red Storm Arrow wheelchair.
Decision . . .
Go on, he told himself.
Try it. Now. Move your hand.
Breathing hard. Eyes riveted to his right hand.
No . . .
His shoulders slumped, to the extent they could, and he looked into the room. Thinking of all the grueling exercise. Sure, the effort had improved his bone density and muscle mass and circulation,reducing infections and the chance of a neurovascular episode.
But the real question surrounding the exercise could be summed up in a two-word euphemism from the medical specialists: functional benefit. Rhyme’s translation was less foggy: feeling and moving.
The very aspects of his recovery he’d dismissed when speaking to Sherman earlier today.
To put it frankly, he’d lied to the doctor. In his heart, not confessed to anyone, was the
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher