"I wanted it last week," the criminalist grumbled, the inside of his nose stinging from the cold. Maybe he'd tell the repairman he'd pay the bill in one to five months. He glanced at the folder. "I'd almost given up. I know how much you love clichés, Lon. Does the phrase 'day late and a dollar short' come to mind?"
"Naw," the detective said amiably, "the one I'm thinking of is 'If you do somebody a favor and they complain, then fuck 'em.'"
"That's a good one," conceded Lincoln Rhyme.
"Anyway, you didn't tell me how classified it was. I had to find that out on my own, and I needed Ron Scott to track it down."
Rhyme was staring at the detective as he opened the file and browsed through it. He felt an acute sense of uneasiness, wondering what he would find inside. Could be good, could be devastating. "There should be an official report. Find it."
Sellitto dug through the folder. He held up the document. On the cover was an old typewritten label that read Anthony C. Luponte, Deputy Commissioner. The folder was sealed with a fading piece of red tape that said, Classified.
"Should I open it?" he asked.
Rhyme rolled his eyes.
"Linc, tell me when the good mood's going to kick in, will you?"
"Put it on the turning frame. Please and thank you."
Sellitto ripped open the tape and handed the booklet to Thom.
The aide mounted the report in a device like a cookbook holder, to which was attached a rubber armature that turned the pages when instructed by a tiny movement from Rhyme's finger on his ECU touch pad. He now began to flip through the document, reading and trying to quell the tension within him.
"Luponte?" Sachs looked up from an evidence table.
Another page turned. "That's it."
He kept reading paragraph after paragraph of dense city government talk.
Oh, come on, he thought angrily. Get to the goddamn point…
Would the message be good or bad?
"Something about the Watchmaker?" Sachs asked.
So far, there'd been no leads to the man, either in New York or in California, where Kathryn Dance had started her own investigation.
Rhyme said, "It doesn't have anything to do with him."
Sachs shook her head. "But that's why you wanted it."
"No, you assumed that's why I wanted it."
"What's it about then, one of the other cases?" she asked. Her eyes went to the evidence boards, which revealed the progress of several cold cases they'd been investigating.
"Not those."
"Then what?"
"I could tell you a lot sooner if I wasn't interrupted so much."
Sachs sighed.
At last he came to the section he sought. He paused, looked out the window at the stark brown branches populating Central Park. He believed in his heart that the report would tell him what he wanted to hear but Lincoln Rhyme was a scientist before all else and distrusted the heart.
Truth is the only goal…
What truths would the words reveal to him?
He looked back at the frame and read the passage quickly. Then again.
After a moment he said to Sachs, "I want to read you something."
"Okay. I'm listening."
His right finger moved on the touch pad and the pages flipped back. "This is from the first page. Listening?"
"I said I was."
"Good. 'This proceeding is and shall be kept secret. From June eighteenth to June twenty-ninth, ninety seventy-four, a dozen New York City police officers were indicted by a grand jury for extorting money from shopkeepers and businessmen in Manhattan and Brooklyn and accepting bribes to fail to pursue criminal investigations. Additionally, four officers were indicted for assault pursuant to these acts of extortion. Those twelve officers were members of what was known as the Sixteenth Avenue Club, a name that has become synonymous with the heinous crime of police corruption.'"
Rhyme heard Sachs take a fast breath. He looked up and found her staring at the file the way a child stares at a snake in the backyard.
He continued reading. "'There is no trust greater than that between the citizens of these United States and the law enforcement officers who are charged with protecting them. The officers of the Sixteenth Avenue Club committed an inexcusable breach of this sacred trust and not only perpetuated the crimes they were meant to prevent but brought inestimable shame upon their courageous and self-sacrificing brothers and sisters in uniform.
"'Accordingly, I, the Mayor of the City of New York, hereby bestow upon the following officers the Medal for Valor for their efforts in bringing these criminals to justice: Patrolman Vincent Pazzini, Patrolman Herman Sachs and Detective Third-Grade Lawrence Koepel.'"
"What?" Sachs whispered.
Rhyme continued reading. "Each of these officers risked his life on a number of occasions by working undercover to provide information instrumental in identifying the perpetrators and gathering evidence to be used in their trials. Because of the dangerous nature of this assignment, these commendations are being presented in a closed proceeding, and this record will be sealed, for the safety of these three courageous officers and their families. But they should rest assured that, although the praises for their efforts are not being sung in public, the gratitude of the city is no less.'"
Amelia Sachs was staring at him. "He-?"
Rhyme nodded at the file. "Your father was one of the good guys, Sachs. He was one of the three who got away. Only they weren't perps; they were working for Internal Affairs. He was to the Sixteenth Avenue Club just what you were to the St. James crew, only he was undercover."
"How did you know?"
"I didn't know. I remembered something about the Luponte report and the corruption trials but I didn't know your father was involved. That's why I wanted to see it."
"How 'bout that," Sellitto said through a mouthful of coffee cake.
"Keep looking, Lon. There's something else."
The detective dug through the folder and found a certificate and a medal. It was an NYPD Medal for Valor, one of the highest commendations given by the department. Sellitto handed it to Sachs. Her full lips parted, eyes squinting, as she read the unframed parchment document, which bore her father's name. The decoration swung from her unsteady fingers.
"Hey, that's sweet," said Pulaski, pointing at the certificate. "Look at all those scrolls and things."
Rhyme nodded toward the folder on the turning frame. "It's all in there, Sachs. His handler at Internal Affairs had to make sure that the other cops believed him. He gave your dad a couple thousand a month to spread around, make it seem like he was on the take too. He had to be credible-if anybody thought he was an informant, he could've been killed, especially with Tony Gallante involved. IAD started a fake investigation on him so it'd look believable. That's the case they dropped for insufficient evidence. They worked out a deal with Crime Scene so that the chain-of-custody cards were lost."
Sachs lowered her head. Then she gave a soft laugh. "Dad was always the modest one. It was just like him-the highest commendation he ever got was secret. He never said a thing about it."
"You can read all the details. Your father said he'd wear a wire, he'd give all the information they needed about Gallante and the other capos involved. But he'd never testify in open court. He wasn't going to jeopardize you and your mother."
She was staring at the medal, which swung back and forth-like a pendulum of a clock, Rhyme thought wryly.
Finally Lon Sellitto rubbed his hands together. "Listen, glad for the happy news," he grumbled. "But how 'bout we get the hell out of here and go over to Manny's. I could use some lunch. And, guess what? I'll bet they pay their heating bill."
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