Jeffery Deaver - The Twelfth Card

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The stunning new Lincoln Rhyme thriller – by the number one bestselling author of THE VANISHED MAN and GARDEN OF BEASTS. Geneva Settle is a bright young high school student from Harlem writing a paper about one of her ancestors, a former slave called Charles Singleton. Geneva is also the target of a ruthless professional killer. Criminalist Lincoln Rhyme and his policewoman partner Amelia Sachs are called into the case, working frantically to anticipate where the hired gun will strike next and how to stop him, all the while trying to get to the truth of Charles Singleton, and the reason that Geneva has been targeted. For Charles Singleton had a secret – a secret that may strike at the very heart of the United States constitution, and have disastrous consequences for human rights today. And Sachs is going to have to search a crime scene that's 140 years old before she can stop the killer.

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A black woman stood on a porch, watering some spectacular red geraniums that the recent frost hadn’t killed.

A squirrel buried, or dug up, something in the largest plot of dirt nearby: a five-by-four-foot rectangle dusted with yellow grass, in the middle of which rested the carcass of a washing machine.

And on East 123rd Street, near the Iglesia Adventista Church, with the soaring approach to the Triborough Bridge in the background, three police officers looked diligently out over a shabby brownstone and the surrounding streets. Two – a man and a woman – were in plain clothes; the cop in the alley was in uniform. He marched up and down the alley like a recruit on guard duty.

These observations were made by Thompson Boyd, who’d followed Geneva Settle and her guards here and was now standing in a boarded-up building across the street and several doors west. He peered through the cracks in a defaced billboard advertising home equity loans.

Curious that they’d brought the girl out into the open. Not by the book. But that was their problem.

Thompson considered the logistics: He assumed this was a short trip – a hit-and-run, so to speak, with the Crown Victoria and the other car double-parked and no attempt made to hide them. He decided to move fast to take advantage of the situation. Hurrying out of the ruined building, via the back door, Thompson now circled the block, pausing only long enough to buy a pack of cigarettes in a bodega. Easing into the alley behind the tenement where Geneva now was, Thompson peered out. He carefully set the shopping bag on the asphalt and moved forward a few more feet. Hiding behind a pile of garbage bags, he watched the blond officer on his patrol in the alley. The killer began counting the young man’s footsteps. One, two

At thirteen the officer reached the back of the building and turned around. He was covering a lot of ground in his guard detail; he must’ve been told to watch the entire alleyway, both front and back, and to keep an eye on the windows in the opposite building too.

At twelve he reached the front sidewalk and turned, started back. One, two, three

It took twelve steps again to get to the rear of the building. He glanced around then paced his way to the front, stepping thirteen times.

The next trip was eleven steps, then twelve.

Not clockwork, but close enough. Thompson Boyd would have at least eleven steps to slip unseen to the rear of the building, while the boy’s back was turned. He’d then have another eleven until he appeared at the rear again. He pulled the ski mask over his head.

The officer now turned and headed toward the street once more.

In an instant Thompson was out of cover and sprinting to the back of the apartment building, counting… three, four, five, six

Quiet on his Bass walking shoes, Thompson kept his eyes on the boy’s back. The cop didn’t look around. The killer reached the wall on eight, pressed against it, catching his breath; he turned toward the alleyway where the uniformed cop would soon be appearing.

Eleven . The cop would have just reached the street and be turning and starting back. One, two, three

Thompson Boyd, slowing his breathing.

Six, seven

Thompson Boyd, gripping the club in both hands.

Nine, ten, eleven

Feet scraped on the gritty cobblestones.

Thompson stepped quickly out of the alley, swinging the club like a baseball bat, fast as a sidewinder striking. He noted the pure shock on the boy’s face. He heard the whistling of the stick and the cop’s gasp, which stopped at the same moment the club struck his forehead. The boy dropped to his knees, a gurgling sound coming from his throat. The killer then clocked the man on the crown of the head.

The officer fell face forward to the filthy ground. Thompson dragged the quivering young man, still partly conscious, around the back of the building, where they couldn’t be seen from the street.

At the sound of the gunshot, Roland Bell leapt to the window of the apartment, looked out carefully. He unbuttoned his jacket and grabbed his radio.

He ignored Aunt Lilly’s wide-eyed friend, who said, “Lord, what’s going on?”

The great-aunt herself stared silently at the huge gun on the detective’s hip.

“Bell,” the detective said into the microphone. “What’ve we got?”

Luis Martinez replied breathlessly, “Gunshot. Came from the back of the building, boss. Pulaski was there. Barbe’s gone to check.”

“Pulaski,” Bell called into his radio. “Respond.”

Nothing.

“Pulaski!”

“What’s this about?” Lilly demanded, terrified. “Lord.”

Bell held up a finger. Into his radio: “Positions. Report.”

“I’m still on the front porch,” Martinez responded. “Nothing from Barbe.”

“Move to the middle of the ground-floor corridor, keep your eye on the back door. That’s the way I’d come in, I was him. But cover both entrances.”

“Roger.”

Bell turned to Geneva and the two elderly women. “We’re leaving. Now.”

“But -”

Now , miss. I’ll carry you if I have to but that’ll put us more at risk.”

Barbe Lynch finally transmitted. “Pulaski’s down.” She called in a 10-13, officer needs assistance, and requested medics.

“Back entrance intact?” he asked.

Lynch answered, “Door’s closed and locked. That’s all I can tell you.”

“Stay in position, cover the back alley. I’m taking her out.

“Let’s go,” he said to the girl.

The defiance faded but she said, “I’m not leaving them.” Nodding toward the women.

“You tell me right now what’s this about,” her great-aunt said, eyeing Bell angrily.

“It’s a police matter. Somebody might be trying to hurt Geneva. I want you to leave. Is there a friend’s apartment here you can stay in for a spell?”

“But -”

“Gonna have to insist here, ladies. Is there? Tell me quick.”

They glanced at each other with frightened eyes and nodded. “Ann-Marie’s, I guess,” the aunt said. “Up the hall.”

Bell walked to the doorway and looked out. The empty corridor yawned at him.

“Okay, now. Go.”

The older women moved quickly down the hall. Bell saw them knock on a door. It opened and there were some hushed voices, then the face of an elderly black woman looked out. The women vanished inside, the door closed and the sound of chains and locks followed. The detective and the girl hurried down the stairs, with Bell pausing at every landing to make sure the lower level was cleared, his large, black automatic in hand.

Geneva said nothing. Her jaw was set; fury had blossomed inside her once again.

They paused in the lobby. The detective directed Geneva into the shadows behind him. He shouted, “Luis?”

“This level’s clear, boss, for now at least,” the cop called in a harsh whisper from halfway up the dim corridor that led to the back door.

Barbe’s calm voice said, “Pulaski’s still alive. I found him holding his gun – he got off one round. That was the shot we heard. No sign he hit anything.”

“What’s he say?”

“He’s unconscious.”

So maybe the guy’s rabbited, Bell thought.

Or maybe he planned something else. Was it safer to wait here for backup? That was the logical answer. The real issue, though: Was it the right answer to the question of what Unsub 109 had in mind?

Bell made a decision.

“Luis, I’m taking her out of here. Now. Need your help.”

“With you, boss.”

Thompson Boyd was once again in the burnt-out building across the street from the tenement Geneva Settle and the cops had gone into.

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