Authors: Andrew Vachss
Tags: #Hard-Boiled, #Mystery & Detective, #Children, #Children - Crimes against, #Terrorists, #Mystery Fiction, #Saudi Arabians - United States, #New York, #Kidnapping, #General, #New York (N.Y.), #United States, #Fiction, #Crime, #Private investigators - New York (State) - New York, #Child molesters, #Private Investigators, #New York (State), #Burke (Fictitious Character), #Saudi Arabians
* * *
T
he Devil dont need to breed to sow his seed.
So
having
the baby
wasnt enough. You cant be born with what that scumbag was teaching his child. He loses the kid, he loses all the work he put into him.
So you think?
That the babys seen a whole lot more than Pryces people found out about? Sure! That wasnt no single meal the freak was feeding him, Schoolboy; it was that little childs
diet,
hear me?
Yeah, Prof, I said to the old man in the hospital bed. And I did. Thats why ethnic cleansers use rape as a weapon of war. Any baby born from those rapes will be doomed, rejected as impure by his own people, a living symbol of their enemys triumph
if its allowed to live at all. What better place to leave your mark than inside your enemy?
Genocidal rapists always claim a holy reason for what they
want
to do.
Only one thing is true about Truth: when everybody claims to be telling it, some of them have to be lying.
Years ago, Id watched Wolfe throw a brick through that plate-glass window. A man and a womancitizens words, not minehad been convicted of slow-killing a little baby. At the trial, the Medical Examiner testified that the exact cause of death couldnt be determined. Too many possibilities: complications from the violent sodomy, food-deprivation, traumatic shock
All he could say for sure was that the death was a homicide.
Wolfe stood up at the sentencing hearing, wearing her trademark black-and-white colors, gray gunfighters eyes locked on the slab-faced political appointee who got to make the final call. I can still hear every word:
Your Honor, as you know, the law provides for Victim Impact
Statements, so the victims loved ones have an opportunity to tell the Court how the offenders crime affected their own lives. All
this
Court needs to know about
this
case is that there isnt a single human being on this planet who could make such a statement.
The judge listened to the mothers lawyer claim she was a battered woman, totally under the control of her sadistic monster of a husband. He listened to the fathers lawyer say how the mother had taken her frustration at her husbands repeated affairsfor which he takes full responsibility, Your Honorout on the helpless child.
Then he maxed them both. Whether it was the truth of the torture chamber that had been the childs life, or the truth of Wolfes clear threat to answer the medias questions the wrong way, nobody knows.
The mother would be out by now, released while she was young enough to have a couple more babies and score a Welfare check to hand over to her new man.
The father had been on Rikers, waiting for his transfer Upstate, when someone slid a concrete-honed sliver of steel deep into his kidney, then snapped off the taped handle. When the guards couldnt wake him up the next morning, they rolled him onto a gurney.
Nobody claimed the body.
* * *
I
didnt like working so close to the Moles junkyard, but it was the only place where we could have built the set in privacy before the opening curtain.
Identical black Mercedes sedans formed a circle around the aluminum Quonset hut like an army laying siege to a flimsy fort. A dozen men positioned themselves, weapons starkly outlined against the Hunts Point prairie twilight.
Two men entered the hut, immediately stepping to opposite sides in a gears-meshing move they must have practiced a thousand times. Each held a shoulder-strapped machine pistol in one hand and a portable spotlight in the other. One swept up, the other down.
All they saw was a dirt floor, a bare aluminum ceiling, and a man sitting on an old padded secretarys chair with a hollow orange crate to his right, topped with a blue glass ashtray. The mans face was covered with a black mesh mask, slit at the mouth. Pale-yellow glasses covered his eyes and distorted the shape of his face. A dull-gray sweatshirt hung loosely over his upper body.
They could also see the back of a brand-new black leather armchair, with its own orange crate and ashtray.
The man they saw was smoking. A red scar was visible on the back of his hand.
One of them said something in Arabic into a hand-held. About a minute later, the door opened again, and another man made an entrance. He lacked the centered balance of the first two, but moved with the confidant grace of an Invulnerable.
The hardest thing to disguise is the voice, the Mole had told me. It is fortunate that your teeth
It was a while before he said, There! Now concentrate on moving your lips as little as possible. Let your voice come through the new upper bridge. Do not speak from your stomach or your chest; use only your throat. Shallow breaths. Are you ready to practice?
When I nodded, he flipped some switches, adjusted the microphones, and watched his meters until he was satisfied.
The special man took the leather armchair, reached into a jacket that cost enough to buy a hundred human lives in his home country, removed a single dark-papered cigarette from a slim, dull-colored metal case, and fired it up with a lighter so small it looked as if flame had materialized in his hand. He took a connoisseurs sip of his smoke, leaned back, and regarded me silently.
When I grant an audience, I expect to see the face of the man who sits across from me, he said, after he realized I wasnt going to speak until he did.
If Id been one of those Chandler-clone private eyes, it would have been time for a wisecrack about burqas. But I dont walk the mean streets, I live below them. Im not an ex-cop with friends on the force; Im an ex-con who knows the cops for what they are. Im not a war hero; Im a man for hire. So I just said, This is what you agreed to with my boss.
When a man takes my money
This glossy, silk-wrapped thing was cruder than the stuff they pumped from the ground he owned, about as subtle as a Tijuana sausage show. Whoever was paying me, he could pay moregee, never heard
that
one before.
Im on salary, I told him, listening to the reedy voice of a man I wouldnt have recognized myself. I just do what Im told.
That
he recognized. An almost effeminate gesture with the fingers of his right hand dismissed the two professionals who had cleared the path for him. They barely disturbed the air as they left, but I knew I had been photographed somehow.
I need to get the facts straight, I told him, no authority in my voice, just a man explaining his assignment.
I have already
This is my specialty, I interrupted. Some of those who do
what was done in your case, have what we call a signature. A highly stylized way of doing things, as distinctive as a fingerprint. This is even more prevalent for teams. Everything you told my employers was recorded, of course. But that was an account, not an
I do not submit to interrogations, he said, in the tone of a man who was making it clear he was used to
ordering
them.
I was going to say interactive conversation, I told him.
I have a title, he reminded me.
I understand. I even understand what that means to the people I work for. I already told you what I do. No disrespect intended, but I cant do my work if I have to keep remembering titles; it breaks the rhythm, and I might miss something. Something important.
Then perhaps your employers can provide someone with a better sense of his place.
Im sure they could. Im sure they would do whatever you asked them to.
Including disclosing your identity. He smiled.
I lit a fresh cigarette, as if his devastating riposte had shaken my confidence. Thats up to them, I admitted.
I have come this far, you may as well go ahead and ask your questions, he said, satisfied that things were finally as they were meant to be.
* * *
Y
ou were parked overlooking the Hudson River?
Yes, he replied, annoyed at having to repeat the memorized lie so many times.
Approximately two-thirty in the morning?
Yes.
Your vehicle was a
Rolls-Royce. A 100EX drophead.
That model was supposed to be a concept car, not available to the public. But it wouldnt surprise me if this human pile of privilege had one of his own, sitting in a private garage. But youd never find the custom Rolls he used to train his baby there. It wouldnt be in any police crime lab, either.
Your son
The Prince.
was in the front seat with you?
Next to me. In his own seat. He is still too young to sit quietly by himself.
And the top was down?
Yes. The sun rises in the east, as Allah intended. We were facing west, because I was teaching him to anticipate its emergence.
No other cars pulled in? After you did, I mean.
None.
And then?
Then!? From nowhere they appeared. I was turned to my right, speaking to my son, when I sensed some kind of movement behind me. Suddenly there was a sharp pain somewhere heretouching the back of his neckand the next thing I remember, two police officers were talking to me.
By then, you were in a different car, in a different place?
Yes. That car was mine as well. Another Rolls, but with custom coachwork.
Do you have any idea how?
I ended up in the other car? The keys were in my pocket, and the other car was parked within eyeshot, in front of a shipbuilders facility. I had arranged all this the day before. The drophead has a panel to cover the area into which the top is lowered. The panel itself is teakwoodas on a yachtso it requires regular maintenance. I was planning to exchange the cars when the facility opened, and drive the one in which I was later found back to my residence.
So you think the kidnappers changed cars because the one you were originally in would be so visible?
The drophead is a sort of iridescent blue, while the other is plain black, very low-key. How else to explain such conduct? Obviously, these were no common thieves. My wristwatch alone would have brought
And by moving you all the way downtown to where they did, they bought themselves some time before youd be discovered.
I am certain that is also true.
So two teams
I trailed off my voice, letting him hear my thoughts. One to take the baby away; another to transport your other car, with you in it.
It seems so, he said, not really interested. Id already shown myself stupid enough to buy his story, so how useful could I be?
Do you remember?
I have already
anything you
havent
been asked about, I went on, as if he hadnt spoken. Like, for example, a strange smell?
A
smell?
Whoever took you out had to be very close to do it. Thats what anesthesia is: it doesnt put you to sleep, it knocks you unconscious. No puncture mark was found, so they probably used a nerve block. And your nostrils and upper lip showed slight chloroform burns.
I never smelled any
Not chloroform; you would have already been out by then. I mean just
before
there was any physical contact. There had to be a gap there, if only for a split second. It would take a minimum of two men to do what I just described, and
Alcohol!
Alcohol as in?
Liquor, he said, nodding slowly to himself, as if absorbing a revelation. Liquor is forbidden among our people. I can instantly detect its presence, just as a non-smoker can discern if another person uses tobacco, even if they are not doing so at the time they meet.
Was it overpowering, or just a?
Not drunk, he said, thoughtfully. But it was a man who
does
drink. It wasnt his breath, it was his body. Do you follow what I am?
Yes, I encouraged him. Liquor remains in the liver for a long time. Thats why you see alcoholics dying from cirrhosis even years after they quit drinking.
Nobody asked me that question, the Prince said. He lit another smoke, slightly less ceremoniously this time. Do you have others?
* * *
D
id anyone know your plans for the day your son was taken? Or for the night before?
My
plans? he said, as if the very concept was beyond comprehension. Nobody had ever taught him that haughtiness is a lousy disguise for anxiety. I had no plans. I told you, I only wanted my
Ah. Excuse my poor phrasing, I assured him, indicating I wasnt suspicious, just ignorant. I meant your
schedule.
A person of your position, there would be a secretary, perhaps more than one? A personal assistant? A
chargé daffaires
? And there are always security considerations as well, isnt that so?
In some situations, certainly, he said, choosing to respond only to my last question. But I have no need to travel about with bodyguards all the time.
Not unless you go back where you came from,
I thought. But I wasnt going to let him divert the probe so easily: Still, the staff
I have no need of
With all respect,
someone
would have to keep track of your appointments, make reservations
If you mean at restaurants and the like, I require no reservations. My appearance is sufficient.
Real good at talking about what you
dont
need, arent you?
I thought. But there are so many trivial matters
.
He demonstrated his understanding of both royal privilege and triviality by not deigning to respond. Id seen that move, too.
Your clothes? I tried another tack.
My personal tailor sees to that. He comes to my residence whenever he is summoned.
Jewelry?
I do not go shopping, as you Americans seem so addicted to. That is womens work, shopping. When one of the designers I have deemed acceptable has something to show me, he will call and seek an audience.
Call
who,
you dumb fuck?
I kept that one to myself, and switched angles. Doctors
?
This is quite annoying, he reminded me. Apparently, you do not understand. Those who serve me always
come
to me. Doctors, lawyers, financial managers
My turn to remind
him.
Somebody knew where you were going to be that night. This was no random attack. They had to have
some
advance notice in order to get both of those teams in place.
Sometimes you have to tighten a soft interrogation, pressurize the situation. But you still have to color inside the lines, keep the subject thinking you believe his story as long as possible.
Nobody knew, he said, firmly. No problem believing
that
part: no way he told some secretary every time he went out to find another way to show his son that all women were holes.
That leaves only one possibility, I mused out loud.
Which is? he asked. He spoke casually, but his body posture was too rigid to carry it off.
Surveillance.
That cannot be done, he said, with a sureness I knew he couldnt possibly feel, even if his eyes werent already clouding with doubt.
I was inside before he realized thered been an opening. An operation such as you described is very expensive, I said. And very risky. Whoever pulled it off had only one objective: the baby.
Your
baby. That leaves only three possibilities. Ransom
There has been no request for money. If there had been, I would already
Then two more. Does the baby have an unusual blood type?
He is the direct linear descendant of
Not that kind of blood. A rare type that could make a certain transfusion work. Or a bone-marrow donation. Or even a transplant.
They would harvest
my
!
I dont know. I can only work with what we
do
know. Your baby was taken for a reason. If we can find the reason, we can find the baby. Thats why Im here.
He made a visible effort to calm himself. I would have helped him with his breathing if I didnt know that it wasnt the thought of someone chopping his baby up for parts that was making that vein throb in his temple; it was the personal affront. That baby was
his
property.
It took a long minute before he could calm himself enough to talk. But by then, he had recaptured the imperiousness of a ruler instructing a slow-witted servant:
The childs blood type is O-positive. He has been examined since birth
before
birthby the finest physicians in the world. Not a trace of unusual
anything
has ever been detected. He is an exceptionally intelligent child, very handsomeall have remarked upon this. But to even suggest he has some rare genetic trait is insane. All such information would have been presented to me long ago.
Yeah. And all you Nazis know what to do with defectives, dont you?
I thought. I knew no member of the Royal House of Saud was going to have a Down-syndrome kid. Not for long, anyway.
A ransom demand could still come, I said out loud. But its been a while. Holding on to a baby is tricky business. For all the kidnappers know, the child could have a serious allergy. A medication he has to take. A special diet. Its a long list, and every hour increases the risk.
Their
risk. And theres one thing we know for sure
.
He raised his royal eyebrows.
The baby
must
be kept alive. If they want to sell him back to you, they have to show the goods.
But no one has even
If they wanted him dead, why not do it right there? I countered. You, too, for that matter.
You said three, he said, wanting to get away from all these frightening speculations and return to where he was comfortable.
I did. So
do you have any enemies? I asked, blindsiding a man who couldnt even see what was sitting across from him.