He had over a thousand arrests to his credit. But he’d spent too much time undercover and had become “overextended,” as the Bureau-ese went. It was only a matter of time before he’d be recognized by some dealer or warlord and killed. So he’d reluctantly agreed to take an administrative job running other undercover agents and CIs—confidential informants.
“So, mah boys tell me we got us the Dancer hisself,” the agent muttered, the patois less Ebonics than, well . . . pure Dellray. His grammar and vocabulary, like his life, were largely improvised.
“Any word on Tony?” Rhyme asked.
“My boy gone missing?” Dellray asked, his face screwing up angrily. “Not. A. Thing.”
Tony Panelli, the agent who’d disappeared from the Federal Building several days before, had left behind a wife at home, a gray Ford with a running engine, and a number of grains of infuriatingly mysterious sand—the sensuous asteroids that promised answers but had so far delivered none.
“When we catch the Dancer,” Rhyme said, “we’ll get back on it, Amelia and me. Full-time. Promise.”
Dellray angrily tapped the unlit tip of a cigarette nestling behind his left ear. “The Dancer . . . Shit. Better nail his ass this time. Shit.”
“What about the hit?” Sachs asked. “The one last night. Have any details?”
Sellitto read through the wad of faxes and some of his own handwritten notes. He looked up. “Ed Carney took off from Mamaroneck Airport around seven-fifteen last night. The company—Hudson Air—they’re a private charterer. They fly cargo, corporate clients, you know. Lease out planes. They’d just gotten a new contract to fly—get this—body parts for transplants to hospitals around the Midwest and East Coast. Hear it’s a real competitive business nowadays.”
“Cutthroat,” Banks offered and was the only one who smiled at his joke.
Sellitto continued. “The client was U.S. Medical and Healthcare. Based up in Somers. One of those for-profit hospital chains. Carney had a real tight schedule. Was supposed to fly to Chicago, SaintLouis, Memphis, Lexington, Cleveland, then lay over in Erie, Pennsylvania. Come back this morning.”
“Any passengers?” Rhyme asked.
“Not whole ones,” Sellitto muttered. “Just the cargo. Everything’s routine about the flight. Then about ten minutes out of O’Hare, a bomb goes off. Blows the shit out of the plane. Killed both Carney and his copilot. Four injuries on the ground. His wife, by the way, was supposed to be flying with him but she got sick and had to cancel.”
“There an NTSB report?” Rhyme asked. “No, of course not, there wouldn’t be. Not yet.”
“Report won’t be ready for two, three days.”
“Well, we can’t wait two or three days!” Rhyme griped loudly. “I need it now!”
A pink scar from the ventilator hose was visible on his throat. But Rhyme had weaned himself off the fake lung and could breathe like nobody’s business. Lincoln Rhyme was a C4 quad who could sigh, cough, and shout like a sailor. “I need to know everything about the bomb.”
“I’ll call a buddy in the Windy City,” Dellray said. “He owes me major. Tell ’im what’s what and have ’im ship us whatever they got, pronto.”
Rhyme nodded to the agent, then considered what Sellitto had told him. “Okay, we’ve got two scenes. The crash site in Chicago. That one’s too late for you, Sachs. Contaminated as hell. We’ll just have to hope the folks in Chicago do a halfway decent job. The other scene’s the airport in Mamaroneck—where the Dancer got the bomb on board.”
“How do we know he did it at the airport?” Sachssaid. She was rolling her brilliant red hair in a twist, then pinning it on top of her head. Magnificent strands like these were a liability at crime scenes; they threatened to contaminate the evidence. Sachs went about her job armed with a Glock 9 and a dozen bobby pins.
“Good point, Sachs.” He loved her outguessing