David ed. - Face Off (2014) Anthology
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- Название:Face Off (2014) Anthology
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- Издательство:Simon & Schuster
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- Год:2014
- ISBN:9781476762067
- Рейтинг книги:4 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Face Off (2014) Anthology: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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“Wouldn’t be too sure about that,” Lucas said. “There’s another possibility.”
Lincoln understood. “Could be that Narcotics Four has been using Verlaine to torture and kill the women to get leads they could use.”
“Exactly.”
Amelia scowled. “Sure. Verlaine’s been a bad boy. Maybe somebody from the drug detail’s been extorting him to get information from the women. That way the cops’ll keep their hands clean.”
Lily sighed. “I’ll take the hit on this one.”
They looked at her.
“We’ve got to tell Markowitz the news: A, we don’t have enough evidence to collar our favorite suspect. And B, his world-famous drug detail isn’t in the clear, either.” She looked over her teammates. “Unless, of course, somebody else’d rather have that little chat.”
They all smiled her way.

“WE’VE CAUGHT ANOTHER ONE, SIR. Woman, twenties.”
It was eight thirty the next morning and COD Stan Markowitz was sipping his first coffee of the day, in one of the old-time containers, blue with Greek athletes on it. But hearing this news he lost all taste for java. And for the bagel sitting in front of him, too.
It took a fuck of a lot for him to sour on walnut cream cheese.
The chief of detectives snapped, “In her twenties? Or in the twenties?”
The young detective, a skinny Italian American, said, “She was twenty-nine. Latina. Found the body in a vacant lot in NoHo.” He was standing in the doorway, not in or out, as if Markowitz might decide to fling a stapler at him. It’d happened before.
“I don’t like the name NoHo. It’s not a real place. I can live with SoHo but even TriBeCa’s pushing it.”
The kid didn’t respond but there was really nothing to respond to.
“Crime Scene’s on it now,” he said.
Markowitz stroked his round belly through the striped white shirt the wife had laid out for him that morning. He wadded up the oozing bagel and pitched it emphatically into the wastebasket. It landed with a surprisingly loud thud; this was the first entry of the morning.
“TOD?”
“Examiner’s saying about midnight,” the detective said. “No specific leads yet. No wits. Same as the others: she was a user, crack and smack. Found in a lot known for drug activity.”
“He’s a psycho, that’s what he is. It has nothing to do with the drugs. Don’t get that rumor started.”
“Sure. Only—”
“Only what?”
A hesitation at this. “All right.”
Markowitz glanced down at a file on his desk.
RED HOOK OPERATION. CLASSIFIED.
The NYPD had top-secret files, too. Langley has nothing on us, he thought.
“That’s all,” Markowitz said. “I want the crime scene report before the ink’s dry. Got it?”
“Sure.” The young detective remained standing.
With a glare, the COD sent him scurrying.
His landline had started ringing. Six buttons, lighting up like Christmas trees.
One reporter, two reporters, three reporters, four.
He glanced at the empty doorway and sent a text, then hit the intercom switch.
“Yes, sir?”
“Hold all calls.”
“Yes, sir, except the—”
“I said hold—”
“The commissioner’s on two.”
Naturally.
“Stan. There’s another one?” The man didn’t have a brogue, but Markowitz often imagined that Commissioner of Police Patrick O’Brien sounded like he just came off the boat from the old country.
“Afraid so, Pat.”
“This is a nightmare. I’m getting calls from Gracie Mansion. I’m getting calls from Albany.” His voice lowered and delivered the most devastating news. “I’m getting calls from the Daily News and the Times . The Huffington Post, for heaven’s sake.”
One reporter, two reporters.
The commissioner continued, “The vics are minorities, Stan. The killings are bad for everyone.”
Especially them, Markowitz thought.
Then finally the commish wasn’t wailing anymore, but asking a question. “What do you have, Stan?” A grave tone in his voice, then: “It’s pretty important that you have something. You hear me, Stan? I mean, really important.”
You have something.
Not we. Not the department. Not the city.
Markowitz said quickly, “We’ve got a suspect.”
“Why didn’t anybody tell me?” But his voice was balmed with relief.
“It happened fast.”
“You’ve got him in custody?”
“No, but he’s more than a person of interest.”
The pause said that wasn’t what the commissioner wanted to hear. “Is he the perp or not?”
“Has to be. Just a few loose ends on the case before we can collar him.”
“Who is he?”
“Sculptor. Lives downtown. And the evidence is solid.”
“Listen, Stan,” the commissioner said, back to whining, “there is way too much flak hitting the fan.” Patrick O’Brien would rather butcher a figure of speech than utter an expletive. “Make it work.”
“Uhm, what, Pat?”
“Wouldn’t the citizens of New York love to read that we have a suspect?”
“Well, Pat, we do have a suspect. Just not enough for a warrant. Or an announcement in the press.”
“You said the evidence was solid. I heard you say that. The citizens of the city’d feel so much better knowing that we’re on top of it. It’d be great if they could read that by the time the Times online got updated in the next cycle.”
Which was about every half hour.
“And I’d feel better too, Stan.”
Despite the COD’s dozen-year track record, the commissioner could drop him to a low-level spot in public affairs in the time it took to microwave a Stouffer’s lasagna. “All right, Pat.”
After organizing his thoughts, Markowitz picked up his cell phone. Hit a number.
“Rothenburg.”
“I just heard, Detective. Another one.”
“That’s right, Stan. We’re at the scene. Amelia’s running it now. The vic was tortured first, just like the other ones.”
“I wanted to let you know you’re going to hear in the press that we have a suspect.”
After a dense pause, Lily said, “Who?”
“Well, the sculptor, Verlaine.”
“He’s our suspect, Stan. He’s not the press’s suspect. There’s a big difference. Verlaine’s not for public consumption at this point.”
“What does your gut tell you, Lily?”
“He’s an asshole, he’s a sadist. And he’s the doer.”
“What’s the percentage?”
“Percentage? Christ, I don’t know. How does ninety-six and three-tenths percent sound?”
The COD let the irrelevance pass.
“It’s going to put people at ease, Lily.”
Silence, presumably as she tried to process why they needed to put people at ease. “That’s not in my job description, Stan. My job is catching assholes and putting them in jail.”
He looked up. He noted a woman in a suit, standing in his outer office, waiting. She was the one he’d texted fifteen minutes ago.
Markowitz said, “And I’ve looked into your other theory.”
“What’s that?” she asked, an edge to her voice.
“What you told me last night. That somebody, maybe from Narcotics Four or someplace else in the department, was using Verlaine to kill the women. Don’t waste time pursuing that.”
“Why not?”
Now his voice was hard as a metal file. “Because, Detective, I was profiling perps when you were getting your knuckles rapped for mouthing off in class. Verlaine’s a single operator. His psych profile is as obvious as the front page of the Post . Now make the case against him. STAT.”
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