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She’d peered inside but couldn’t see anything other than plants and rocks covered with moss. ‘I don’t see anything, Daddy.’
‘It’s a leeren Käfig .’
‘Wow. What’s that?’ Snake, she’d wondered. Lizard? ‘Is it dangerous?’
‘Oh, the most dangerous thing in the zoo.’
‘What is it?’
‘It means “empty cage” in German.’
She’d laughed, tossing her tiny red ponytail as she’d looked up at him. But Herman Sachs, a seasoned NYPD patrol officer, wasn’t joking. ‘Remember, Amie. The most dangerous things are the ones you can’t see.’
And now too she saw nothing.
Where was he?
Keep going.
Ducking and, with as deep a breath as she could take yet not choke on the mist in the air, she stepped through the cloud.
And she saw him. Unsub 11 5.
‘Jesus, Rhyme,’ she whispered, stepping closer. ‘Jesus.’
Only after some moments of hearing nothing but the wail and hiss of the water did she remember that the mike and camera were off.
The experts from Fort Detrick had helicoptered into town in all of forty five minutes.
When the poison in question is sufficient to kill a high percentage of the population of a major US city, the national security folks don’t fool around.
Once it was clear that the unsub was not going to be shooting anyone, Sachs was politely but emphatically ordered out of the tu
Rhyme’s voice clattered through the radio. ‘What, Sachs? What’s going on?’ She was standing, freezing, on the slushy sidewalk near Third, where she’d parked her Torino.
She told him, ‘They’ve secured the botulinum. It was in three syringes in a thermos. They’ve got them in a negative pressure containment vehicle.’
‘They’re sure none got into the water?’
‘Absolutely positive.’
‘And the unsub?’
A pause. ‘Well, it’s bad.’
Rhyme’s plan to have the city a
Unsub 11 5, wearing nothing more protective than Department of Environmental Protection coveralls, had been standing right in front of the hole he was drilling. When he’d broken through the main, the stream of water, like a buzz saw, had cut straight through his chest, killing him instantly. As he’d dropped to the floor, the water had continued to slice through his neck and head, cutting them apart.
Blood and bone and tissue were everywhere, some blasted onto the far wall, many feet away. Sachs had known she should get the hell out and let the bio team secure the scene but she’d been compelled, out of curiosity, to perform one last task: to tug the unsub’s left sleeve up. She had to see his body art.
The red centipede stared out at her with probing, human eyes. It was brilliantly done. And utterly creepy. She’d actually shivered.
‘What’s the status of the scene?’
‘Army’s sealing it – about a two block radius. I got prints and DNA from our unsub and pocket litter and bags he had with him before I got kicked out.’
‘Well, bring back what you have. He’s not working on his own. And who knows what else they have in mind?’
‘I’m on my way.’
CHAPTER 66
The TV news was frantic but ambiguous.
A terrorist attack on the water supply in New York, improvised explosive devices …
Harriet and Matthew Stanton sat on the couch in the suite at their hotel. Their son, Joshua, was beside them in a chair, fiddling. One of those bracelets the kids wore nowadays, even boys. Colored rubber. Not normal. Gay. Matthew tried to frown his son to stillness but Joshua kept his eyes on the TV. He sipped water from a bottle; the family had brought gallons with them. For obvious reasons. He asked questions that his parents didn’t have the answers to.
‘But how could they know? Why isn’t Billy calling? Where’s the, you know, poison?’
‘Shut up.’
The simple minded commentators on the media (the liberal cabal and the conservative in this case) were offering nonsense: ‘There are several types of bombs and some are calculated to do more damage than others .’ ‘A terrorist could have access to a number of types of explosives .’ ‘The psychology of a bomber is complicated; basically, they have a need to destroy .’ ‘As we know from the recent hurricane, water in the subways can cause serious problems .’
But that was all they could say because apparently the city wasn’t releasing any real information.
More troubling, Matthew was thinking, was what Josh was stewing over. Why hadn’t they heard from Billy? The last word from him: After they’d reported that the city had shut down the valves, he was going to start drilling. The botulinum was ready to go. He’d have the toxin in the water supply within a half hour.
The talking heads kept droning on about bombs and floods … which would be like some teenager’s pimple, when the true attack would be a cancer. Poison to destroy the poisoned city.
The stations kept repeating the ca
But no word of people getting sick. Nobody retching to death. No word yet about panic.
Stealing the thought from her husband, Harriet asked, ‘He couldn’t’ve gotten the poison on him, could he?’
Of course he could. In which case he’d die an unpleasant if brief death. But he’d be a martyr to the cause of the American Families First Council, strike a blow for the true values of this country and, not incidentally, solidify Matthew Stanton’s role in the underground militia movement.
‘I’m worried,’ Harriet whispered.
Joshua looked her way and played with his homosexual bracelet even more. At least he’d fathered children, Matthew reflected. A miracle, that was.
He ignored both wife and son. It seemed inconceivable that the authorities had figured out the plot. The elaborate scheme – crafted and refined over months – had been as detailed as a blueprint for a John Deere tractor. They’d executed it exactly as pla
And thinking of time: Now it passed like a glacier. Whenever a new anchor appeared, a new man in the street began talking into an obscene microphone, Matthew hoped for more information. But he heard the same old story, recycled. No news of thousands of people dying in horrific ways dribbling from the predatory journalists’ lips.
‘Joshua?’ he asked his son. ‘Call again.’
‘Yessir.’ The young man fumbled the phone, dropped it and looked up, apologizing with a fierce blush.
‘That’s your prepaid?’ Matthew asked sternly.
‘Yessir.’
No testy retorts from Josh, ever. Billy was respectful but he had a backbone. Joshua was a slug. Matthew waved a dismissing hand to the boy, who rose and stepped away from the noise of the TV.
‘Water Tu
‘Father?’ Joshua said, nodding at the phone. ‘Still no answer.’
Outside the windows, sirens made up the soundtrack of the bleak afternoon. All three in the room fell silent, as if plunged into icy water.
Then an anchor girl was speaking crisply: ‘… have an a