Линкольн Чайлд - City of Endless Night

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Most of her, anyway. Her head is still missing.
Lieutenant CDS Vincent D'Agosta knows his investigation will attract fierce media scrutiny, so he's delighted when his old acquaintance FBI Special Agent A.X.L. Pendergast is assigned to the case.
But neither man is prepared for what lies ahead. A diabolical presence is haunting New York City and Grace is only the first of many victims to be murdered... and decapitated.
As mass hysteria sweeps the city, it will take all of Pendergast's skill and strength to unmask this most dangerous foe — let alone survive to tell the tale.

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As D’Agosta looked around, he said, “This is a crazy place to commit a murder.”

Pendergast inclined his head. “Perhaps it isn’t, strictly speaking, a murder.”

D’Agosta let this one pass, as he did so many of Pendergast’s other cryptic remarks.

“You want to walk the whole floor or just see the murder scene?” Curry asked.

D’Agosta looked at Pendergast, who shrugged almost with indifference. “As you wish, Vincent.”

“Let’s just have a look at the scene,” D’Agosta told Curry.

“Yes, sir.” Curry led them across the reception area. The place had the hushed feeling of a sickroom, or a hospital ward for terminal patients, and it smelled strongly of forensic chemicals.

“There are cameras everywhere,” said D’Agosta. “Were they disabled?”

“No,” said Curry. “We’re downloading the video from the data drives now. But it looks like they captured everything.”

“They recorded the killer coming and going?”

“We’ll know as soon as we take a look. We’ll go down to the security office after this, if you want.”

“I want.” He added: “Wonder how the perp walked out of here with two heads under his arms.”

At the far end of the outer offices, D’Agosta spied a man, also in a CSU suit, taking pictures with a cell phone in a ziplock bag. He was clearly not a cop or crime scene investigator, and he looked a bit green around the gills. “Who’s that guy?” he asked.

“He’s with the SEC,” said Curry.

“SEC? What for? How’d he get clearance?”

Curry shrugged.

“Bring him over.”

Curry went and fetched him. The man was large and bald with horn-rimmed glasses, wearing a gray suit under his gown, and he was sweating something fierce.

“I’m Lieutenant D’Agosta,” he said, “Commander Detective Squad, and this is Special Agent Pendergast, FBI.”

“Supervising Agent Meldrum, SEC Division of Enforcement. Glad to make your acquaintance.” He stuck out his hand.

“Sorry, no handshaking at a crime scene,” said D’Agosta. “You know — might exchange DNA.”

“Right, they did mention that, sorry.” The man pulled his hand back sheepishly.

“If you don’t mind me asking,” D’Agosta said, “what’s the SEC’s interest and who authorized you on the crime scene?”

“Authorization from U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District. We’ve been after these two for a long time.”

“That right?” D’Agosta asked. “What’d they do?”

“Plenty.”

“When we finish the walk-through,” said D’Agosta, “and get rid of these damn suits, I’d like you to fill us in.”

“Glad to.”

They walked across the open space toward a pair of ornate wooden doors, which were wedged open. Light streamed out from the interior of the inner office, and the primary color D’Agosta could see beyond was a deep crimson. There was a team inside, moving with exquisite care on mats laid down over a blood-soaked rug.

“Oh, Jesus. Did the perp leave them arranged like that?”

“The bodies haven’t been moved, sir.”

The two bodies lay stretched out on the floor, side by side, arms folded over their chests, carefully arranged by the killer or killers. In the intense lights set up by the CSU team it looked fake, like a movie set. But the smell of blood was real, a mingling of damp iron and meat starting to go bad. While the sight was awful enough, D’Agosta could never get used to the smell. Never. He felt his gorge rise and struggled to calm the spastic reaction that had abruptly seized his stomach. The blood was everywhere . This was crazy. Where was the blood spatter guy? There he was.

“Hey, Martinelli? A word?”

Martinelli rose and came over.

“What’s the story with this blood? This some kind of deliberate paint job?”

“I’ve still got a lot of analysis to do.”

“Prelim?”

“Well, seems both the victims were beheaded standing up.”

“How do you know?”

“The blood on the ceiling. That’s sixteen feet. It shot straight up, arterial jetting. In order for it to reach that height, their heart rate and blood pressure must’ve been sky-high.”

“What would cause that? The high blood pressure, I mean.”

“I’d say these two knew what was coming, at least during the last few moments. They were made to stand up and knew they were about to be decapitated, and that produced an extremity of terror that would have resulted in spikes in both blood pressure and heart rate. Again, that’s my first impression only.”

D’Agosta tried to wrap his head around it. “Chopped off with what?”

Martinelli nodded. “Right over there.”

D’Agosta turned and there it was: a medieval weapon of some kind, lying on the floor, its blade completely covered in blood.

“It’s called a bearded ax. Viking. Replica, of course. Razor-sharp.”

D’Agosta glanced at Pendergast, but he was even more opaque than usual inside the Tyvek suit.

“Why didn’t they scream? Nobody heard anything.”

“We’re pretty sure a secondary weapon was involved. Probably a firearm. Used in a threatening way to keep them quiet. On top of that, those doors are extremely thick, and the entire suite is heavily soundproofed.”

D’Agosta shook his head. It was the craziest thing, killing the twin CEOs of a major company right in their own offices at the busiest time of day, with cameras running and a thousand people around. He looked again at Pendergast. In contrast to his usual poking and prying about with tweezers and test tubes, this time he was silent, and as calm as if he were out for a stroll in the park. “So, Pendergast, you got any questions? Anything you want to look at? Evidence?”

“Not at present, thank you.”

“I’m just the blood spatter guy,” Martinelli said, “but it would seem to me the killer’s sending some kind of message. The Post is saying that—”

D’Agosta cut him off with a gesture. “I know what the Post is saying.”

“Right, sorry.”

Pendergast now spoke at last. “Mr. Martinelli, wouldn’t the perpetrator be covered in blood after decapitating two standing people?”

“You’d think so. But the handle is unusually long on that ax, and if he stood at some distance, decapitated each of them with one clean swipe, and if he were agile enough to jump aside to avoid the jetting arterial blood as the bodies fell, he might just get away without being splattered.”

“Would you say he was proficient in the use of that ax?”

“If you look at it that way, yes. It’s not easy to decapitate someone with a single blow, especially if they’re standing up. And to do it without getting covered in blood — yeah, I would say that takes serious practice.”

D’Agosta shuddered.

“Thank you, that is all,” said Pendergast.

They met up with the SEC guy in the security office in the basement. On their way down, passing through the lobby, they had seen a crowd in front of the building. At first D’Agosta thought it was the usual unruly press, and it was that, of course, but more. The waving signs and muffled chanting indicated it was some sort of demonstration against the one percent. Damn New Yorkers, any excuse to protest.

“Chat over there?” he said, indicating a seating area in the waiting room. The NYPD techies were downloading and preparing the last of the security footage.

“As good as any.”

The three of them took their seats, the SEC guy, Pendergast, and D’Agosta.

“So, Agent Meldrum,” D’Agosta said. “Brief us on the SEC investigation.”

“Of course.” Meldrum handed over a card. “I’ll have copies of our files sent over to you.”

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