“So,” Micelli said, pumping his fists to demonstrate that his bravado was intact, “this setback is not totally unexpected. Next we go to the ER, unless any of you has another thought.”
How about we all go home, Will was thinking.
“Ms. Leary,” Micelli continued, “if you would lead the troops, I have a matter to go over with Dr. Grant.”
He waited until Will had dropped back, then lowered his voice.
“Sorry about the strikeout in the ICU,” he said.
“I didn’t expect any different.”
“Maybe the ER will come through.”
“Maybe.”
“Listen, if I’m going to adjust my attitude, the least you can do is to stay in this game until it’s over.”
“Sorry, Augie, really I am. All of a sudden I just started overthinking—projecting like hell, getting myself all tied up in knots over things that haven’t happened and might not ever happen.”
“Been there, done that,” Micelli said.
“For so long, I just took being a doc for granted.”
“I understand. You know that I do.”
“I’ll pull it together.”
“Good. So, what’s the deal with Patty Moriarity?”
Will snapped around to face him.
“What about her?”
“She’s on our side, right?”
“Right. I told you a little about her. She’s the detective who got taken off the managed-care case.”
“Well, she called my office while I was on my way here, but I had the line on call forwarding to my cell phone.”
“Why didn’t she call me?”
“She said something about not being able to get through to your cell and not wanting to call you at home. She said to tell you she was off on business and would be in touch either late tonight or tomorrow. She said another thing, too. She doesn’t want you to go home until you speak with her.”
“What?”
“You heard me. Don’t go home tonight.”
“But why?”
“No idea, but she made it sound as if you might be in some danger if you do.”
“This is crazy.”
“I asked her if you should stay with me tonight and she thought that would be a good idea.”
Why not with her? Will wondered.
“You have room?” he asked.
“I do.”
“I have some business to attend to tomorrow morning, but I suppose I can go from your pad as well as mine. She give you any idea what’s going on?”
“Nope.”
“I don’t get it.”
“Listen, you’ll come to my place tonight. I’ll fix you up with a toothbrush and a set of purloined scrubs, and we’ll talk.”
They had arrived at the ER. Leary motioned Micelli to the head of the line and he led the expeditionary force into the waiting room. The ER seemed surprisingly calm, especially considering the miles of rain-slicked roadways outside. The waiting room could probably hold twenty-five, but at the moment there were just a mother and her baby, neither of whom seemed particularly ill, and a grizzled man with a hard hat on the seat beside him and an ice pack on his wrist.
“Good news,” Micelli said after a brief trip to the inner sanctum of the ER. “We can all go in.”
What interest Will had left in the fruitless search for his shoes had been shoved aside by the news of Patty’s call and her insinuation that he would be in some sort of danger should he return home tonight.
Barbara Cardigan, the charge nurse, had two decades of experience in the ER and a carefully maintained gruff exterior that Will knew would crack for almost anyone with a legitimate illness or injury. She met the five of them by the nurses’ station.
“How are you doing, Will?” she asked, her concern genuine.
“It’s been hell.”
“I’m sorry. Well, much as I’d like to, I don’t think we’re going to be able to help you out. We’ve certainly had clothing bags left around, but not for more than a day or two. You were brought down from the OR to the Crash Room and intubated there. I wasn’t here that day, but Reneé Romanowski was. I just called her. She’s certain that you were stripped down here, not in the OR, and that someone put your clothes in a bag.”
Will visualized the scene and found himself feeling embarrassed in front of the others.
“I was in scrubs,” he said, for no particular reason.
“Well, I certainly hope so,” Cardigan said, “given that you came from the OR. Mr. Micelli, how would you like to proceed?”
“How many rooms do you have?”
“Altogether, fifteen. Two of those have four beds. Five of them have two.”
“And how many of those have closets?”
“I think about half of them do. The rest just have shelves.”
“And there’s a closet in the Crash Room?”
“Yes, the largest one.”
Will saw the muscles in Jill Leary’s face tighten. Seven or eight closets to inspect followed by a notarizing session in her office to document that they had found nothing. Coming off a long workday, and with her husband and child waiting at home, she had to be desperate to have the safari disbanded.
“I’ll tell you what,” Micelli said, as if reading Leary’s mind, “I’m assuming the Crash Room’s empty right now.”
“It is.”
“Well, let’s all go there together, and if we have no luck, we can split up and each of us can check a closet in the rooms where there are no patients. Perhaps Ms. Cardigan can check the others.”
The nurse nodded her agreement, and the six of them trooped into ER 4, the Crash Room, which was reserved for major emergencies, both medical and trauma. Will, still distracted, was brought back to the moment by the sight of the room where he had so often been one of the central players in a life-and-death medical drama. He was again captivated by the vivid image of himself, lying naked, vulnerable, and unconscious, endotracheal tube down his throat, IVs in his arms, a catheter draining urine from his bladder into a plastic bag, his career as a physician about to slip away.
Goddamn whoever did this to me! Damn you!
The ER used narrower beds than the ICU, each with a wire holder underneath for a patient’s belongings. Under normal circumstances, there was no way a clothing bag could remain unnoticed for long. But with a major emergency such as Will’s, and a roomful of technicians, nurses, and physicians, it was possible, albeit remotely so, that someone could have shoved the bag aside or even into the closet. At the moment, the accordion door of the closet was pulled shut, but during a code it was often left open to make supplies more accessible.
Micelli and Barbara Cardigan agreed to inspect the closet together. Will gave passing thought to waiting in the hall but instead stood off to one side, feeling somewhat foolish for having gotten so excited about Micelli’s theory in the first place.
The lawyer and nurse entered the supply closet, which Will knew was perhaps twelve feet by eight and filled with both medical and janitorial supplies. A minute passed, then another. The four remaining in the Crash Room could hear snatches of an animated conversation coming from within. Finally, Micelli appeared at the doorway, his expression neutral.
“Dr. Grant,” he said, “why don’t you come on in here?”
Will did as he was asked.
The bag was there—heavy, bright blue plastic, somewhat larger than a shopping bag, with white plastic handles. It was on the floor, wedged in a corner behind two mops, a broom, and a bucket. DR. W. GRANT was printed in black Magic Marker across the front.
Will stared at the clothing bag in utter disbelief, as if the numbers on his lottery ticket had just matched the ones shown on TV.
“We haven’t opened it,” Micelli said, “but we each felt it. There are two shoes in there—sneakers, from what we can tell.”
He pulled a small digital camera from his jacket pocket and took half a dozen shots. Then he turned, put his hands on Will’s arms, and squeezed.
/> “I don’t believe this,” Will muttered.
“We’ll get this bag sealed up, initialed by all of us, and off to the station evidence room with Bob McGowen. As soon as tomorrow, I might be able to have the state lab examining those shoes. One of the women who works there had her renal artery accidentally tied off during a tubal ligation and lost a kidney. Lucky for us, she’s still working at the lab.”
“But with the Law Doctor on her side,” Will said, imagining a six- or even seven-figure settlement, “not for much longer, I’ll bet.”
“You’ve got that right, brother,” Micelli said, beaming. “You’ve got that right.”
CHAPTER 26
With the Camaro’s windshield wipers throbbing against what had become a steady downpour, Patty slashed through the night toward Camp Sunshine. Several miles back, she had passed the white H on a purple background indicating that there was a hospital somewhere off to her right. Will’s hospital. He would be there right now with Augie Micelli, searching the emergency ward and intensive care unit for a bag of clothing that had been taken from him two weeks ago. It felt strange knowing that she was so near to him and that she couldn’t simply swing a right and be there, but at the moment she had a more pressing matter to deal with.
Wayne Brasco, operating with zero insight and no feel for the case, and probably with Lieutenant Court’s cooperation, had concocted a plan that was either going to fail utterly and without a whimper, or fail utterly and get people killed—quite possibly Brasco himself. Unless she was greatly overestimating the skill and cunning of Brasco’s quarry, and she seriously doubted that she was, they would know that the classified ad and phone conversation were bogus and would take Brasco’s attempt to trap them as a challenge.
Putting Will in danger by pirating his voice without his knowing was as irresponsible as any police action she had ever encountered. After this night was over, providing Brasco survived, she was going to find a way to make him and their CO answer for what they had done, even if it meant going to her father.
At least Will was safe for the moment. Calling Micelli when she couldn’t get through to him had been inspired. It was clear he really cared for Will and would do whatever was needed to ensure that he was out of harm’s way until Brasco’s grandstanding stunt played itself out.
One very legitimate concern she had was that while Brasco was trying to lure the killer into the open at Camp Sunshine, the killer was poised somewhere within range of Will’s apartment, waiting. Now, at least, she could shove that worry to the back of her mind.
There were still unanswered questions about the serial killings of four managed-care executives, but one by one, pieces of the puzzle were falling into place. Misdirection and mayhem. Smoke and mirrors. Boyd Halliday and his killers had been operating that way from the very beginning, and Patty was ready to bet her career that it was going to be that way tonight. Misdirection and mayhem.
Brasco, you jerk!
It was quarter to nine when she skidded onto the narrow two-lane that the map on the passenger seat said would lead to the entrance of Camp Sunshine. Three to four miles to go. She had five or six minutes to cover that distance, but she knew it wasn’t going to happen even if she made it to the camp entrance on time. There was no way she would be allowed simply to drive right up to the rendezvous area and make an impassioned plea for Brasco and Court to forget about their grand scheme and pull everyone back to safety.
The streetlights became more widely spaced, then disappeared altogether. The trim little houses gave way to dense woods, making it even more difficult for the headlight beams of the Camaro to slice through the rain and heavy darkness. Patty switched on her brights, then just as quickly cut them off and actually slowed down. She wasn’t going to make it on time anyway, and the last thing she wanted was to be wrong about Brasco’s plan, then to compound her stupidity and arrogance by alerting the killer.
This was parkland, she remembered—maybe a state forest. Not too far ahead on the left would be a long, serpentine dirt drive ending at a narrow rectangular parking area demarcated by a ragged border of large, decaying logs. Camp Sunshine. Ten years ago, she and a bunch of classmates had celebrated their fifth high-school reunion at the place. Not that it mattered to their softball, swimming, drinking, flirting, and cookout, but even then, the camp was in a state of impressive disrepair. Of the former sleeping quarters—canvas tents set on wooden platforms—only rotting sheets of flooring remained. The outbuildings were in a similar state of decay and overgrowth.
In addition to the minuscule rent, which was by far the cheapest they could find, the features of Camp Sunshine that had led Patty’s reunion committee to choose the site were the natural beauty of the woods, the ball field, and the waterfront. In addition, there were acres of dense, hilly woodland, crisscrossed by narrow dirt trails. The ball field was as well-maintained as the rest of the camp was ignored—a vast, grassy space with a rusting wire backstop in one corner, and a barbecue pit. The waterfront, on a lake that was perhaps a mile long and half a mile or less across, featured a sandy beach and a two-story rec hall that, at least at the time of the reunion, was intact and used for outings when the weather made softball impractical.
As Patty turned onto the narrow, winding access road, she wondered about the person or people who owned the decaying camp, which, even nearly a decade ago, was simply begging to be turned into condominiums or some other kind of profitable development. Perhaps there were zoning constraints, perhaps a clause in a will, or perhaps the owners were sentimental eccentrics. No matter. Tonight, serial killers had selected their camp to humiliate the state police and Wayne Brasco. It was never about a vendetta against managed care. It was never about a mother tragically dead. It was never about principle. It was never about Will Grant. It was always about business.
Smoke and mirrors.
Misdirection and mayhem.
Remember Clementine.
Remember Tombstone.
Death to the policeman who thinks he’s smarter than we are.
A hundred yards or so down the road, two men stepped out of the forest, their powerful flashlights intersecting upon Patty’s face. Blinded, she skidded to a stop, grabbed her shield from the passenger seat, and held it up in front of the lights. At the same time, she smoothly opened her window, hoping that neither of the men thought she was reaching for a weapon. They split up and headed for her car from both sides, their lights still fixed on her face.
“Police,” the man to her left whispered harshly, holding a semiautomatic weapon, possible some sort of MP5, where she could see it. “Both hands, let me see ’em.”
Patty lifted her hands palms out, dangling the leather case with her shield and ID from between her thumb and index finger.
“Detective Patty Moriarity, State Police,” she said urgently. “I’ve got to get in there. I have reason to believe this is a trap, and the officer in charge is in danger. Maybe others, too.”
The policeman, dressed in black with a black watch cap and greasepainted face, told her to cut her headlights, then motioned her out of the car.
“Kara, you got her,” he said, stepping back and sliding a radio from his belt.
Patty actually managed a wry smile at herself for assuming the two cops were men. A slight woman, who looked absolutely gigantic with a semiautomatic at the ready, moved around the Camaro and kept her at bay from a respectful distance.
“Weapon?” she said stonily.
“On the floor, driver’s side. Listen, I’ve got to—”
“Quiet!”
The woman sidestepped around so she could shine her flash inside the car, then motioned Patty to get her gun and drop it on the ground. Patty could hear the man conversing in hushed tones with, she suspected, Lieutenant Court.
“We’re close to being out of time,” she whispered.
“Shut up!” Kara punctuated the order with a menacing flick of the muzzle of her MP5.
Patty sighed and did as she was commanded. No sense gett
ing her head blown off by a cop. Finally, the other officer shoved his radio back into its holder and returned.
“Those people down there aren’t exactly your biggest fans,” he said.
“That’s because I don’t leave the toilet seat up in the precinct loo.”
Patty thought she saw Kara crack a smile beneath her blackface.
“Kara, take her down the road to the others. I’ll stay here with B Squad and take care of her car. Be careful.”
“Did they say if anything’s happened down there?” Patty asked.
“Nope.”
“I think that’s good.”
“Your car’ll be on a little road into the woods off this one, about ten yards down there on the right. There may be some camouflage netting on it.”
“Fine. My weapon?”
“Why not?”
Patty retrieved her shoulder holster from the trunk, slid in her Smith & Wesson .38 five-shot, and slipped it on.
“Nice piece,” Kara whispered as they made their way into the darkness.
Fifty feet from the parking lot, another SWAT team member materialized from the heavy underbrush, quickly got the skinny on Patty from her guide, then took charge, leading her across the narrow parking lot, over the rotting logs, and down a rocky, uneven trail toward the waterfront. Thirty yards from the lake, he motioned her off the path and into the woods, raised a finger to his lips, and pointed to a spot nearby, gesturing that she should stay there.
With the forest and dense cloud cover, the scene ahead was impressively dark, although Patty knew that somewhere overhead the moon was nearly full. The rain had given way to a fine mist, which was being blown by a steady wind from directly behind her. Across the lake, isolated lights from scattered houses battled feebly against the night. Closer, Patty thought she could make out the two-story blackness of the rec hall.
“What in hell are you doing here?”
The man’s voice, a harsh, angry whisper from behind the trees to her right, nearly stopped her heart. Lieutenant Court. Either the rustling of leaves had masked his footsteps or he was incredibly good at this sort of thing.
The Society Page 27