The colorful and quirky neighborhood was not — had never been — known for gang activity. Although the Village had been settled largely by Italian immigrants, the organized crime families did not live or work there; they were centered in Little Italy — south of the East Village — and in Brooklyn and, to some extent, the Bronx. Today the only “underworld” crew living on Bleecker and Greenwich and West Fourth worked on Wall Street and represented too-big-to-fail-whatever-nonsense-we-get-up-to banks and brokerage houses.
Rhyme glanced at the evidence bags and jars Sachs had collected. The items inside might possibly tell them something about where exactly in the Village they had gone — if in fact he had a professional or personal connection with the place and wasn’t just after a trendy meal or mixologist’s signature cocktail; even murderers read the Wednesday food section of the
“Not a hijacking or robbery?”
“No. The padlock on the back of the truck was intact, and the key was still in Rinaldo’s pocket. And his wallet and cash — a few hundred — weren’t touched. If he had anything else with him, why would the perp take that and leave the money?”
“Anything inside the truck?”
“No, empty. And there was no manifest or delivery schedule. Whatever he was supposed to deliver that day got delivered. The bodega clerk — who didn’t see the perp, he claims — says there was another witness, a woman across the street. But I couldn’t find her. Canvassing for her too.”
“Where the hell is Mel Cooper?” Rhyme grumbled. He’d called the evidence technician to come in and assist in the analysis. That had been a half hour ago and though Cooper had said it would take him sixty minutes or so to arrive Rhyme’s impatience was swelling.
Sachs didn’t bother to respond. She pinned her hair up and stuffed it under a surgical bonnet. Then she pulled on latex gloves, goggles and face mask. She ordered the evidence according to, Rhyme instructed, the location where it had been collected at the scene.
My, there
As she sorted the items she said, “Javier. He was pretty upset.”
“Who?”
“The son, Rinaldo’s son.”
“Sure. Guess he would be.” Rhyme asked absently, “He’s with his mother?”
“No mother.” She may have smiled — he couldn’t tell with the mask — as she added, “I asked him if he had a mother. He said, ‘Everybody’s got a mother.’ Then he said she’d left years ago. I got him to Child and Family Services for tonight. Tomorrow he’ll go into emergency foster care. I said I’d take him.”
“Why?”
“Because I wanted to. There’s an aunt somewhere he hasn’t seen in years but he remembers her and liked her. CFS is looking. But no hurry. I don’t want him with relatives until we find out more about what dad was up to and who took him out. And the perp himself might think he was more of a witness than he was.”
She stood back, beside Rhyme, and, with hands on her slim hips, regarded the evidence.
“My sense is it was just random. Not a professional hit.”
Rhyme supposed he agreed. But he wasn’t much interested in the line of inquiry that sought to answer
Which he wheeled forward to examine now.
II
The delivery had been shipped without problem. It had avoided detection by Customs, Immigration, Border Patrol, Coast Guard, FBI, Interstate Commerce Commission weigh stations… even state police, and local speed trap cops.
It had arrived in the borough of Manhattan.
But then…
The glitch.
And a major one it was.
The delivery was missing. The delivery he had spent $487,000 for (currency exchange issues, otherwise the purchase price would have been an even half million).
This cool spring morning Miguel Ángel Morales sat in his brownstone, on East 127th Street. He owned the whole building — and those on either side as well, as much for security as for rental income. Well,
Anglos were as far as Morales’s open arms extended, however, and Jamaicans, Cubans, Colombians, blacks, Chinese, Vietnamese could apply elsewhere.