'No, Elvish. Lord of the Rings.'
'So country,' Rhyme said. 'Any particular region?'
'Not really. There's city inking and country inking. All I can say is this smells like country. Now, look at the border. The scallops. The technique is scarification. Or cicatrization is the official name for it. That's important.'
He looked up and tapped the scallops surrounding the words 'the second'.
'What's significant is that usually people scar to draw attention to an image. It's important for this dude to make that design more prominent. It would've been easier just to ink a border. But, no, he wanted cicatrization. There's a reason for it, I'm guessing. No clue what. But there it is.
'Now, there's one other thing. I was thinking about it. I brought show-and-tell.' Gordon reached into his canvas shoulder bag and lifted out a plastic sack containing a number of metal parts. Rhyme recognized the transparent container as the sort in which surgical and forensic instruments are sterilized in an autoclave. 'These are part of a tattoo machine - you don't call them guns, by the way.' Gordon smiled. 'Whatever you hear on TV.'
He took a small Swiss Army knife from his pocket and cut open the bag. In a moment he'd assembled a tattoo gun - well, machine. 'Here's what it looks like put together and ready to ink.' The tattoo artist walked closer to the others. 'These're the coils that move the needle up and down. This's the tube for the ink and here's the needle itself, coming out the end.'
Rhyme could see it, very small.
'Needles have to go into the dermis - the layer of skin just below the outermost layer.'
'Which is the epidermis,' Rhyme said.
Nodding, Gordon disassembled the device and lifted out the needle, displaying it to everyone. Resembling a thin shish kebab skewer, about three inches long, it had a ring on one end. The other end contained a cluster of tiny metal rods soldered or welded together. They ended in sharp points.
'See how they're joined together, in a star-shaped pattern? I make 'em myself. Most serious artists do. But we have to buy blanks and combine 'em. There're two types of needles: those for lining - outlining the image - and then those for filling or shading. The dude needed to get a lot of poison into her body fast. That means he had to use filling needles after he was done with the bloodline. But these wouldn't work, I don't think. They wouldn't go deep enough. But this kind of needle would.' He reached into his bag once more and extracted a small plastic jar. He shook out two rods of metal, similar to his needles but longer. 'They're from an old-time rotary machine - the new ones, like mine, are two-coil, oscillation models. Was it a portable machine?'
'Had to be. There was no electric source,' Sachs told him.
Pulaski said, 'I've been looking for portable guns ... machines. But there're a lot of them.'
Gordon thought for a moment. Then said, 'I'm guessing it would have to be an American Eagle model. Goes way back. One of the first to run off battery power. It comes from the days when tattooing wasn't very scientific. The artist could adjust the stroke of the needles. He could make them go real deep. I'd look for somebody who's got an Eagle.'
Sellitto asked, 'Are they sold here? In supply stores?'
'I've never seen any. They're not made anymore. You could get them online, I'd guess. That'd be the only way to find them.'
'No, he's not going to be buying anything that way, too traceable,' Rhyme pointed out. 'He probably picked it up where he lives. Or maybe he's had it for years or inherited it.'
'Needles're a different story. You might be able to find somebody who's sold needles for American Eagles. Anybody who bought those recently could be he.'
'What'd you say?' Rhyme asked.
'What did I say?' The slim man frowned. 'When, now? Whoever's buying needles for an American Eagle machine, it could be your perp. Don't you say that? They do on NCIS.'
The criminalist laughed. 'No. I was noting the proper use of the pronoun. Nominative case.'
Rhyme noted Pulaski roll his eyes.
'Oh, that? The "he"?' Gordon shrugged. 'I never did very ... well in school. Thought I was going to say "good", didn't you? Couple years at Hunter but got bored, you know. But when I started inking, I'd do a lot of text. Bible verses, passages from books, poems. So I learned writing from famous authors. Spelling, grammar. I mean, dude, it was pretty interesting. Typography too. The same passage in one font has a whole different impact when it's printed in another.
'Sometimes a couple'd come in and they'd want to ink wedding vows on their arms or ankles. Or crappy love poems they'd written, like I mentioned. I'd say, okay, dudes, you sure you want to go through life with "Jimmy I love you you're heart and mine for ever" on your biceps. That's Jimmy no comma, you no period or semicolon, Y-O-U apostrophe R-E, and for ever two words. They'd say, "Huh." I'd edit anyway when I inked them. They'll have kids and have to go to a PTA meeting, meet the English teacher. After all, not like you can use White-Out, right?'
'And cut and paste would be really bad,' Pulaski joked, drawing smiles.
But not from Gordon. 'Oh, there's a version of scarification where people actually cut strips of skin out of their body.'
Rhyme then heard a click in the front door latch and the door open - or, more accurately, the wind howl and the sleet clatter from the sky.
The door closed.
After that footsteps and a light, airy laugh.
He knew who had come to visit and shot a glance to Sachs, who quickly rose and turned around the whiteboard that contained the crime scene pictures of Chloe Moore and switched the high-def screens away from the images TT Gordon had been examining.
A moment later Pam Willoughby stepped into the room. The pretty, slim nineteen year old was enwrapped in a brown overcoat trimmed in faux fur. Her long, dark hair was tucked up under a burgundy stocking cap, and her outer garments were dusted with dots of sleet or snow, melting fast. She waved hello to everyone.
Accompanying her was her boyfriend, Seth McGuinn, a handsome, dark-haired man of about twenty-five. She introduced him to Pulaski and Mel Cooper, neither of whom he'd met.
Seth's dark-brown eyes, which matched Pam's, blinked when they turned to TT Gordon, who greeted the couple pleasantly. Pam had a similar reaction. Rhyme had seen athletic Seth in a T-shirt and jogging shorts, when he and Pam had been going to the park several weeks ago, and noted he'd sported no tattoos. Pam had none either, visible at least. The young couple now tried, unsuccessfully, to hide their surprise at Rhyme's quirky visitor.
Pam detached herself from Seth's arm, kissed Rhyme on the cheek and hugged Thom. Seth shook everyone's hand.
TT Gordon asked if they needed any more help with the case. Sellitto glanced around the room at the others and when Rhyme shook his head, said, 'Thanks for coming in. Appreciate it.'
'I'll keep an eye out for anything weird. In the community, you know what I mean? So long, dudes.'
Gordon stashed his gear, pulled on his pitifully thin jacket and headed out the door.
Seth and Pam shared a smile, looking after Gordon's exit.
Sachs said, 'Hey, Pam. I think Seth needs a 'stache.'
The clean-cut young man nodded, frowning. 'Hell, I can outdo him. I'd go with braids.'
Pam said, 'Naw, get pierced. That way we can swap earrings.'
Seth said he had to be going; a deadline for his ad agency loomed. He kissed Pam, chastely, as if Rhyme and Sachs were the girl's real parents. Then he nodded a farewell to the others. At the archway he turned and reminded Sachs and Rhyme that his parents would like to have lunch or dinner with them soon. Rhyme generally disliked such socializing but since Pam was, in effect, family, he'd agreed to go. And reminded himself to endure the pleasantries and mundane conversation with a smile.
'Next week?' Rhyme asked.
'Perfect. Dad's back from Hong Kong.' He added that his father had found a copy of Rhyme's book about New York crime scenes. 'Any chance of an autograph?'
Recent surgery had improved Rhyme's muscle control to the point that he actually could write hi
s name - not as clearly as before the accident but as good as any doctor writing a prescription. 'Delighted to.'
When he'd left, Pam pulled off her jacket and hat, set them on a chair, asked Sachs, 'So, your message? What's up?'
The detective nodded toward the sitting room, across the hall from Rhyme's lab/parlor, and said, 'How 'bout we go in there.'
CHAPTER 15
'Now,' Sachs said, 'listen. I don't think there's anything to worry about.'
In her charming lilt of an alto voice Pam said, 'Okay, there's a way to start a conversation.' She tossed her hair, which she wore like Sachs's, beyond shoulder length, no bangs.
Sachs smiled. 'No, really.' She was looking the girl over closely and decided that she had a glow about her. Maybe it was her job, 'costuming', Pam called it, for a theater production company. She loved behind the scenes Broadway. College too she enjoyed.
But, no, Sachs asked herself: What'm I thinking? Of course. The answer was Seth.
Thom appeared in the doorway with a tray. Hot chocolate. The smell was both bitter and sweet. 'Don't you just love the winter?' he asked. 'When the temperature's below thirty-five hot chocolate doesn't have any calories. Lincoln could come up with the chemical formula for that.'
They thanked the aide. He then asked Pam, 'When's the premiere?'
Pam was attending NYU but she had a light class load this semester and - as a talented seamstress - was working part-time as an assistant to the assistant costumer for a Broadway revival of Sweeney Todd - the musical adaptation, by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler, of an older play detailing the life of the homicidal barber in London. Todd would slice his customers' throats and a conspirator would bake the victims into pies. Rhyme had reported to Sachs and Pam that the perp reminded him of a criminal he'd once pursued, though he added that Todd was purely fictional. Pam had seemed playfully disappointed at that factoid.
Cutting throats, cannibalism, Sachs reflected. Talk about body modification.
'We open in a week,' Pam said. 'And I'll have tickets for everybody. Even Lincoln.'
Thom said, 'He's actually looking forward to going.'
Sachs said, 'No!'
'Gospel.'
'Heart be still.'
Pam said, 'I've got a disabled slot reserved. And you know the theater has a bar.'
Sachs laughed. 'He'll be there for sure.'
Thom left, closing the door behind him, and Sachs continued, 'So, here's what's happened. The man who kidnapped you and your mother? Years ago?'
'Oh, yeah. The Bone Collector?'
Sachs nodded. 'It looks like there's somebody who's copying him. In a way. He's not obsessed with bones, though. But skin.'
'God. What does he ...? I mean, does he skin people?'
'No, he killed his victim by tattooing her with poison.'
Pam closed her eyes and shivered. 'Sick. Oh, wait. That guy on the news. He killed the girl in SoHo?'
'Right. Now, there's no evidence he has any interest in the surviving victims from back then. He's using the tattoos to send a message, so he'll pick targets in out-of-the-way places, we think - if we don't stop him first. We checked but none of the other survivors of the Bone Collector are in the area. You're the only one. Now, has anybody asked you anything about being kidnapped, about what happened?'
'No, nobody.'
'Well, we're ninety-nine percent sure he has no interest in you at all. The killer--'
'The unsub,' Pam said, offering a knowing smile.
'The unsub won't know about you - your name wasn't in the press because you were so young. And your mother used a pseudonym back then anyway. But I wanted you to know. Keep an eye out. And at night we're going to have an officer parked outside your apartment.'
'Okay.' Pam didn't seem fazed by this information. In fact, Sachs now realized something: The news that there might be a connection, however tenuous, with Unsub 11-5 whom the press had dubbed the Underground Man, was greeted with what seemed to Sachs to be such lack of concern that she realized the girl had another topic in mind.
And it was soon placed - no, dumped - on the table.
Pam sipped some cocoa and her eyes looked everywhere but at Sachs's. 'So, here's the thing, Amelia. Something I wanted to talk about with you.' Smiling. Smiling too much. Sachs grew nervous. She too took a sip. Didn't taste a bit of the rich brew. She thought immediately: Pregnant?
Of course. That was it.
Sachs stifled her anger. Why hadn't they been careful? Why--?
'I'm not going to have a baby. Relax.'
Sachs did. Coughed a brief laugh. She wondered if her body language was that readable.
'But Seth and me? We're moving in together.'
This soon? Still, Sachs kept the smile on her face. Was it just as fake as the teenager's?
'Are you now? Well. That's exciting news.'
Pam laughed, apparently at the disconnect between the modifier and Sachs's less-than-excited expression. 'Look, Amelia. We're not getting married. Just, it's time for this to happen. I feel it. He feels it. It's just right. We're like totally compatible. He knows me, really knows me. There're times I don't even have to say anything and he knows what I'm thinking. And he's just so nice, you know?'
'It's kind of fast, don't you think, honey?'
Pam's enthusiasm, the sparkle, dimmed. Sachs recalled that her mother, who'd beaten the girl and locked her in a closet for hours on end, had called her 'honey', and Pam had grown to hate the endearment. Sachs regretted using it but she'd been flustered and forgotten the word was tainted.
She tried again. 'Pam, he's a great guy. Lincoln and I both think so.'
This was true.
But Sachs couldn't stop herself. 'It's just, I mean, don't you really think it'd be better to wait? What's the hurry? Just hang out, date. Spend the night ... Go away on a trip.'
Coward, Sachs told herself, having given the last two suggestions, since her goal was to wedge some distance between Pam and Seth. She was negotiating against herself.
'Well, interesting you say that.'
Interesting? Sachs reflected. If she's not pregnant ... Oh, no. Her jaw tightened and the next words confirmed her fear.
'What we're going to do is take a year off. We're going to travel.'
'Oh. Okay. A year.' Sachs was simply buying time at this point. She might've said, 'How 'bout them Yankees?' Or 'I hear the sleet's going to break in a day or so.'
Pam pressed forward. 'He's sick of copywriting freelance. He's totally talented. But nobody appreciates him in New York. He doesn't complain but I can see he's upset. The ad agencies he works for, they have budget problems. So they can't hire him full-time. He wants to go places. He's ambitious. It's so hard here.'
'Well, sure. New York is always a tough place to get ahead.'
Pam's voice hardened as she said, 'He's tried. It's not like he hasn't tried.'
'I didn't mean--'
'He's going to write travel articles. I'm going to help him. I've always wanted to travel; we've talked about that.'
They had, yes. Except Sachs had always imagined that she and Pam would explore Europe or Asia. Big sister and kid sister. She had a fantasy of touring the parts of Germany her ancestors had come from.
'But school ... The statistics show it's so hard to come back after dropping out.'
'Why? What statistics? That doesn't make sense.'
Okay, Sachs didn't have any numbers. She was making that up. 'Hon - Pam, I'm happy for you, both of you. Just, well, you have to understand. This's a pretty big surprise. Fast, like I was saying. You haven't known him that long.'
'A year.'
True. In a way. They'd met last December and dated briefly. Then Seth had gone to England for training with an ad agency planning to open a New York office, and he and Pam had joined the ranks of those keeping a relationship afloat via text, Twitter and email. The company had decided not to venture into the US market, though, and Seth had come back a month ago and resumed freelance copywriting. Normal dating had
resumed.
'And so what if it's fast?' An edge to Pam's voice again. She'd always had a temper - you couldn't have her upbringing and not find anger near the surface. But she pulled back. 'Look, Amelia. Now's the time to do this. When we're this age. Later? If we get married and if we have kids?'
Please. Don't go there.
'You can't backpack around Europe then.'
'What about money? You can't work over there.'
'That's not a problem. He'll sell his articles. And Seth's been saving for a while and his parents're totally rich. They can help us out.'
His mother was a lawyer and father an investment banker, Sachs recalled.
'And we have the blog. I'll keep doing that from the road.'
Seth had created a website a few years ago where people could post their support for various social and political issues, mostly left-leaning. Women's right to choose, support for the arts, gun control. Pam was now more involved than he was in running the site. Yes, it seemed popular, though Sachs estimated that the donations they received totaled about a thousand dollars a year.
'But ... where? What countries? Is it safe?'
'We don't know yet. That's part of the adventure.'
Desperate to buy time, Sachs asked, 'What do the Olivettis say?'
After Sachs had rescued her the girl had gone into a foster home (which Sachs had checked out as if vetting the president's personal bodyguard). The temporary parents had been wonderful but at eighteen, last year, Pam had wanted to be on her own and - with Rhyme's and Sachs's help - she enrolled in college and got a part-time job. Pam had remained close to her foster mom and dad, though.
'They're okay with it.'
But, of course, the Olivettis were professional parents; they'd had no connection with Pam before she'd been placed with them. They hadn't kicked in a door and saved her from the Bone Collector and a wild dog eager to shake her to death. They hadn't leapt into a firefight with Pam's stepfather, who was trying to suffocate her.
And, those traumas aside, it had been Sachs who'd spent a lot more time than the busy foster parents schlepping Pam to and from after-school activities, doctors' appointments and counselling sessions. And it was the detective who'd used some of the few existing connections from her former fashion model career to get Pam the wardrobe department job on Broadway.
Sachs couldn't help but note too that the girl had told the Olivettis first about her travel plans.