The Vanished Man (2 page)

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Authors: Jeffery Deaver

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Thrillers

BOOK: The Vanished Man
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'We have to go in, Diane," Ausonio whispered.

 

 

"That's what I'm thinking. Okay. We'll go in." Speaking a bit manically as

 

 

she thought of both her family and how to curl her left hand over her right when firing an automatic pistol in a combat shooting situation. "Tell the guard we'll need lights inside the hall."

 

 

A moment later Ausonio said, "The switch is out here. He'll turn 'em on when 1 say so." A deep breath that Franciscovich heard through the microphone. Then Ausonio said, "Ready. On three. You count it."

 

 

"Okay. One... Wait. I'll be coming in from your two o'clock. Don't shoot me."

 

 

"Okay. Two o'clock. I'll be-"

 

 

"You'll be on my left."

 

 

"Go ahead."

 

 

"One." Franciscovich gripped the knob with her left hand. "Two."

 

 

This time her finger slipped inside the guard of her weapon, gently ca

 

 

ressing the second trigger-the safety on Glock pistols.

 

 

"Three!" Franciscovich shouted so loud that she was sure her partner heard the call without the radio. She shoved through the doorway into the

 

 

large rectangular room just as the glaring lights came on.

 

 

"Freeze!" she screamed-to an empty room.

 

 

Crouching, skin humming with the tension, she swung her weapon from

 

 

side to side as she scanned every inch of the space.

 

 

No sign of the killer, no sign of a hostage.

 

 

A glance to her left, the other doorway, where Nancy Ausonio stood, do

 

 

ing the same frantic scan of the room. "Where?" the woman whispered.

 

 

Franciscovich shook her head. She noticed about fifty wooden folding chairs arranged in neat rows. Four or five of them were lying on their backs or sides. But they didn't seem to be a barricade; they were randomly kicked over. To her right was a low stage. On it sat an amplifier and two speakers. A battered grand piano.

 

 

The young officers could see virtually everything in the room.

 

 

Except the perp.

 

 

'What happened, Nancy? Tell me what happened."

 

 

Ausonio didn't answer; like her partner she was looking around frantically, three-sixty, checking out every shadow, every piece of furniture, even

 

 

though it was clear the man wasn't here.

 

 

Spooky...

 

 

The room was essentially a sealed cube. No windows. The air-conditioning

 

 

and heating vents were only six inches across. A wooden ceiling, not acoustic tile. No trapdoors that she could see. No doors other than the main one Ausonio had used and the fire door that Franciscovich had entered through.

 

 

Where? Franciscovich mouthed.

 

 

Her partner mouthed something back. The policewoman couldn't decipher it but the message could be read in her face: I don't have a clue.

 

 

"Yo," a loud voice called from the doorway. They spun toward it, drawing targets on the empty lobby. "Ambulance and some other officers just got here." It was the security guard, hiding out of sight.

 

 

Heart slamming from the fright, Franciscovich called him inside.

 

 

He asked, "Is it, uhm... I mean, you get him?"

 

 

"He's not here," Ausonio said in a shaky voice.

 

 

What?" The man peeked cautiously into the hall.

 

 

Franciscovich heard the voices of the officers and EMS techs arriving. The jangle of equipment. Still, the women couldn't bring themselves to join their fellow cops just yet. They stood transfixed in the middle of the recital space, both uneasy and bewildered, trying vainly to figure out how the killer had escaped from a room from which there was no escape.

 

 

Chapter Two

 

 

"He's listening to music."

 

 

"I'm not listening to music. The music happens to be on. That's all." "Music, huh?" Lon Sellitto muttered as he walked into Lincoln Rhyme's

 

 

bedroom. "That's a coincidence."

 

 

"He's developed a taste for jazz," Thorn explained to the paunchy detec

 

 

tive. "Surprised me, I have to tell you."

 

 

"As I said," Lincoln Rhyme continued petulantly, "I'm working and the music happens to be playing in the background. What do you mean, coincidence?"

 

 

Nodding at the flat-screen monitor in front of Rhyme's Flexicair bed, the slim, young aide, dressed in a white shirt, tan slacks and solid purple tie, said, "No, he's not working. Unless staring at the same page for an hour is work. He wouldn't let me get away with work like that."

 

 

"Command, turn page." The computer recognized Rhyme's voice and obeyed his order, slapping a new page of Forensic Science Review onto the monitor. He asked Thom acerbically, "Say, you want to quiz me on what I've been staring at? The composition of the top five exotic toxins found in recent terrorist laboratories in Europe? And how 'bout we put some money on the answers?"

 

 

"No, we have other things to do," the aide replied, referring to the various bodily functions that caregivers must attend to several times a day when their patients are quadriplegics like Lincoln Rhyme.

 

 

'We'll get to that in a few minutes," the criminalist said, enjoying a par

 

 

ticularly energetic trumpet riff.

 

 

'We'll get to that now. If you'll excuse us for a moment, Lon."

 

 

"Yeah, sure." Large, rumpled Sellitto stepped into the corridor outside

 

 

the second-floor bedroom of Rhyme's Central Park West town house. He closed the door.

 

 

As Thom expertly performed his duties lincoln Rhyme listened to the

 

 

music and wondered: Coincidence?

 

 

Five minutes later Thom let Sellitto back into the bedroom. "Coffee?" "Yeah. Could use some. Too fucking early to work on a Saturday." The aide left.

 

 

"So, how do I look, linc?" asked the pirouetting middle-aged detective, whose gray suit was typical ofms wardrobe-made apparently from perma

 

 

nently wrinkled cloth.

 

 

"A fashion show?" Rhyme asked.

 

 

Coincidence?

 

 

Then his mind slipped back to the CD. How the hell does somebody play the trumpet so smoothly? How can you get that kind of sound from a metal instrument?

 

 

The detective continued: "I lost sixteen pounds. Rachel has me on a diet. Fat's the problem. You cut out fat, you'd be amazed how much weight

 

 

you can lose."

 

 

"Fat, yes. I think we knew that, Lon. So... ?" Meaning, get to the point. "Gotta bizarre case. Found a body a half hour ago at a music school up

 

 

the street from here. I'm case officer and we could use some help." Music school. And I'm listening to music. That's a piss-poor coincidence. Sellitto ran through some of the facts: student killed, the perp was nearly collared but he got away through some kind of trapdoor that nobody could find.

 

 

Music was mathematical. That much Rhyme, a scientist, could understand. It was logical, it was perfectly structured. It was also, he reflected, infinite. An unlimited number of tunes could be written. You could never be bored writing music. He wondered how one went about it. Rhyme believed he had no creativity. He'd taken piano lessons when he was eleven or twelve but, even though he'd developed an enduring crush on Miss Osborne, the lessons themselves were a write-off. His fondest memories of the instrument were taking stroboscopic pictures of the resonating strings for a science fair project.

 

 

"You with me, Linc?"

 

 

"A case, you were saying. Bizarre."

 

 

Sellitto gave more of the details, slowly corralling Rhyme's attention. "There's got to be some way outta the hall. But nobody from the school or

 

 

our team can find it."

 

 

"How's the scene?"

 

 

"Still pretty virgin. Can we get Amelia to run it?"

 

 

Rhyme glanced at the clock. "She's tied up for another twenty minutes or so."

 

 

"That's not a problem," Sellitto said, patting his stomach as if he were

 

 

searching for the lost weight. "I'll page her."

 

 

"Let's not distract her just yet."

 

 

"Why, what's she doing?"

 

 

"Oh, something dangerous," Rhyme said, concentrating once more on the silken voice of the trumpet. 'What else?"

 

 

She smelled the wet brick of the tenement wall against her face.

 

 

Her palms sweated and, beneath the fiery red hair shoved up under her dusty issue hat, her scalp itched fiercely. Still, she remained completely motionless a_ a uniformed officer slipped up close beside her and planted his face against the brick too.

 

 

"Okay, here's the situation," the man said, nodding toward their right. He explained that just around the comer of the tenement was a vacant lot, in the middle of which was a getaway car that'd crashed a few minutes ago after a high-speed pursuit.

 

 

"Drivable?" Amelia Sachs asked.

 

 

"No. Hit a Dumpster and's out of commission. Three perps. They bailed

 

 

but we got one in custody. One's in the car with some kind of Jesus-long hunting rifle. He wounded a patrolman."

 

 

"Condition?"

 

 

"Superficial."

 

 

"Pinned down?"

 

 

"No. Out of the perimeter. One building west of here."

 

 

She asked, "The third perp?"

 

 

The officer sighed. "Hell, he made it to the first floor of this building

 

 

here." Nodding toward the tenement they were hugging. "It's a barricade. He's got a hostage. Pregnant woman."

 

 

Sachs digested the flood of information as she shifted her weight from one foot to the other, to ease the pain of the arthritis in her joints. Damn, that hurt. She noticed her companion's name on his chest. "The hostage taker's weapon, Wilkins?"

 

 

"Handgun. Unknown type."

 

 

'Where's our side?"

 

 

The young man pointed out two officers behind a wall at the back of the

 

 

lot. "Then two more in front of the building, containing the H-T." "Anybody call ESU?"

 

 

"1 don't know. 1 lost my handy-talkie when we started taking fire." "You in armor?"

 

 

"Negative. 1 was doing traffic stops.... What the hell're we going to do?" She clicked her Motorola to a particular frequency and said, "Crime

 

 

Scene Five Eight Eight Five to Supervisor."

 

 

A moment later: "This is Captain Seven Four. Go ahead." "Ten-thirteen at a lot east of six-oh-five Delancey. Officer down. Need backup, EMS bus and ESU immediately. Two subjects, both armed. One

 

 

with hostage; we'll need a negotiator."

 

 

"Roger, Five Eight Eight Five. Helicopter for observation?" "Negative, Seven Four. One suspect has a high-powered rifle. And

 

 

they're willing to target blues."

 

 

'We'll get backup there as soon as we can. But the Secret Service's closed up half of downtown' cause the vice president's coming in from JFK.

 

 

There'll be a delay. Handle the situation at your discretion. Out."

 

 

"Roger. Out."

 

 

Vice president, she thought. Just lost my vote.

 

 

Wilkins shook his head. "But we can't get a negotiator near the apart

 

 

ment. Not with the shooter still in the car."

 

 

"I'm working on that," Sachs replied.

 

 

She edged to the comer of the tenement again and glanced at the car, a cheap low-rider with its nose against a Dumpster, doors open, revealing a

 

 

thin man holding a rifle.

 

 

I'm working on that....

 

 

She shouted, "You in the car, you're surrounded. We're going to open

 

 

fire if you don't drop your weapon. Do it now!"

 

 

He crouched and aimed in her direction. She ducked for cover. On her Motorola she called the two officers in the back of the lot. "Are there hostages in the car?"

 

 

"None."

 

 

"You're sure?"

 

 

"Positive" was the officer's reply. 'We got a good look before he started

 

 

shooting."

 

 

"Okay. You got a shot?"

 

 

"Probably through the door."

 

 

"No, don't shoot blind. Go for position. But only if you've got cover all

 

 

the way."

 

 

"Roger."

 

 

She saw the men move to a flanking position. A moment later one of the

 

 

officers said, "I've got a shot to kill. Should 1 take it?"

 

 

"Stand by." Then she shouted, "You in the car. With the rifle. You have ten seconds or we'll open fire. Drop your weapon. You understand?" She

 

 

repeated this in Spanish.

 

 

"Fuckyou."

 

 

Which she took to be affirmative.

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