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PART
I
BROKE IN ISTANBUL
XXPrufrock measured out
his life in coffee spoons.
XXRebecca sympathized with the compulsion.
She would have delighted in counting out days of productive work, cars
delivered on time, payrolls met. Nights of uninterrupted sleep. Or borrowed
books of poetry read, and returned.
XXInstead her life was littered with dead
bodies.
XXVal’s panicked call had come around
eleven o’clock on what had been a normal Tuesday morning. His cackle
echoed through the line competing with the background voices of men at
work, the buzz of official activity. Rebecca’s first fear had been
a logistics mix-up at the docks. Val giggled, said no. Her second fear
was worse—a twisted fender, shattered headlamps, a wire wheel bouncing
along the berm of the Washington-Baltimore Parkway.
XXShe closed her eyes. “Tell me you
didn’t wreck the Bentley.”
XXThe day before, she’d received a package
from Todd Shelley—a prayer rug he’d haggled for in some Turkish
bazaar. Pinned to it had been a four-color postcard of the interior of
Santa Sophia with the message: “Pray for the Bentley. ‘Something
that made the car go broke. And it must have been important ‘cause
now it don’t go at all.’” The quip was from NASCAR driver,
Michael Waltrip. Shelley was trying to be funny. Rebecca had not been amused.
Especially when she read the postscript saying that the 1925, 3-Litre would
arrive in Baltimore on July 22nd .
XXThree days ago.
XXVal, her youngest mechanic, had begged a flatbed
from his cousin’s wrecking yard. That morning, he took Paulie and left
Vintage & Classics at seven for the Dundalk docks in Baltimore. Instead
of being on their way back with the car, they were being hassled by District
police.
XXVal had to yell over a siren coming closer.
Cops wanted to search the 3-Litre. Said they had probable cause, didn’t
want to wait. Wanted Val to sign a consent form. No way was he letting them
near the car. That wasn’t his call. And, no, he couldn’t contact
the owner. The guy was schlepping around China in a Hispano-Suiza.
XXThen an officer had come across Rebecca Moore’s
name on the transit papers. He said she’d do.
XXRebecca had pressed the phone to her ear, sagged
against the rough edge of a workbench and stared at a splat of oil on her steel-toed
boots. Palms sweating, she’d heard Val screech that blood was dripping
through the floorboards of the Bentley.
XXRebecca downshifted, flicked the turn signal
and exited the Capitol Beltway at route 214, Central Avenue. She was in the
easternmost point of the District of Colombia, a far cry from the Capitol.
She poked along until she reached Division Street, took it north. With each
turn the per capita income dropped, as did her spirits. Mid-way down 56th Street,
she squeezed the MG against the curb behind a station wagon with four flat
tires. She was out of the car before Jo could locate the pull cord to open
his door.
XXAcross the street, the Bentley baked in the
sun. It was chained to a flatbed, draped with yellow scene-of-the-crime tape.
The green paint was streaked with fingerprint powder. The tonneau was unsnapped
and flung back, falling over the tail end of the car like a serape. The rear
door was open. An amorphous bundle hugged the floor.
XXEmergency medics wheeled a Gurney toward the
car. A large man in a polyester suit stopped them. One nodded; the other bounced
on the balls of his feet. A gust of wind slapped the wrapper from a Whopper
against the leg of her jeans. She bent to peel it off, reluctant to take her
eyes from the Bentley. It was déjà vu all over again. Last crime,
the car had been in her restoration shop with a splatter of blood on the door
edge. This time, it was parked in a rundown city neighborhood, drenched in
the stuff. There was no sign of either Val or Paulie.
XXWhat was the car doing here?
XXChained to the rollback, it squatted in front
of Naomi’s Boutique like an automotive hunchback, shadowing the display
window already obscured by orange plastic to protect Naomi’s goods from
sun fade. The surrounding block was littered with abandoned vehicles, emaciated
row houses branded with graffiti, storefronts boasting metal grilles for after-hours
protection. Derelicts huddled amid garbage cans. One balanced on a lid, stared
at the Bentley like the lookout in a crow’s nest. Next door an Hispanic
pretended to re-stack produce while he watched the policemen. A homeless woman,
layered in castoff clothing too warm for the day, stepped on and off the curb,
mumbling.
XXVal had complained about a stupid bag lady.
Said that, while they were in the store, she’d crawled onto the flatbed
to nap in the sun. Beat cops had spotted her. Crossed the street to roust her.
When she’d rolled off and stood up her backside had been covered in blood
that wasn’t hers.
XXRebecca sensed her friend and lawyer, Jo Delacroix,
standing an arm’s length behind her.
XXHe waited for her to turn before informing her
that the employees had been taken to the Sixth District Police Headquarters
on 42nd Street for questioning. An officer would drive him there. Rebecca nodded.
She would follow the transporter to the impound lot and see the car safely
stowed, then join them. Val was just eighteen; Paulie was a naive rich kid,
amused at life. She fretted over what they’d already said to the police.
They needed their lawyer.
XXShe needed her workers.
XXRebecca started across the street. The man in
the shapeless suit glared as she advanced, blocked her progress midway. He
was the size of your average football tight end, six-two maybe six-four if
the hunched shoulders ever straightened. He introduced himself as Lieutenant
Theodore Schneider. He flashed his badge, widened his stance to center his
bulk.
XXHe asked for identification. His eyes bounced
from her face to the plastic likeness, trying to match the shaved hair and
smudged eyes to the woman in the photo. The picture had been snapped at the
height of her days as an investigative reporter: eighty dollar hair cut skimmed
the collar of an Ungaro suit, cocky grey-green stare, lips smug at an insider’s
joke.
XXSchneider shoved the license at an underling,
wrapped his hand around her upper arm and leered down at her.
XX“You faint?”
XXRebecca shook her head. Probably not. She hadn’t
the last two times she’d seen a body.
XXThe detective propelled her toward the car.
He elbowed a medical technician aside. With one hand he hoisted Rebecca up
onto the bed of the rollback. She hugged the edge of the Bentley to balance.
XXBelow her in the open car was the body of a
girl. She lay face down on the floor, wedged between the seats. She was bent
over, kneeling with one arm outstretched, fingers curved like a ballerina’s
in first position. Her other hand disappeared under her body. Black hair spilled
across her shoulders concealing her face. She could have been a dancer waiting
for her music, poised to unfold and begin the routine.
XXIf it weren’t for the blood.
XXBlood saturated the thin chiffon covering her
thighs. It pooled around her knees. Rivulets streaked away from the body like
electricity seeking an easier path. It ran under the foot rests, toward the
door sills. Seeped through the carpet, soaked into the floorboards, dripped
onto the bed of the trailer. The metallic stench, intensified by the heat,
rose in waves. Rebecca could taste it in the back of her throat. Again. So
much blood. Drained from the body of a girl too young to die.
XXRebecca didn’t realize she’d swayed
until a technician asked if she was okay. She held onto the door with both
hands, said she was fine.
XXSchneider told him to cut the crap.
XXThe medic’s mouth hardened into a frown.
He leaned in from the opposite side and gripped the body under her arms. He
gently pulled the torso erect. With latex fingertips he raked back strands
of matted hair then raised the elfin chin of the too-white face of an alabaster
angel.
XXSomeone on the ground inhaled a gasp, turned
it into a short cough. As if that were a cue, the corpse’s arm extended,
her hand eased away from her body. Graceful fingers remained curled, frozen
in the act of clutching the knife embedded in her flesh. One drop of blood
trickled down her finger, quivered, then plopped onto the ivory chiffon shielding
her lap.
XXRebecca forced herself to look up. The teen’s
soft lips were parted over small even teeth. Her dark almond eyes were wide.
They stared directly at Rebecca, slightly perplexed. As if asking how her life
could have been cut so short? Asking who had thrust the blade into her stomach?
Why had they done such a senseless thing? |