âHeâs on the second floor. Number Two A. Shouldnât be hard to find,â the heavier of the two grumbled to his partner, eyeing the old staircase skeptically and consulting his notebook.
âLooks like you can skip your Zumba class tonight after this workout,â his partner replied, smirking. Neither had been within a hundred yards of a gym in their lives.
They mounted the stairs reluctantly, sniffing at the stagnant air with distaste. The garbage collection bin was off to one side, its door hanging partially off its hinges, allowing the odor of rotting food to fill the area. When they arrived at the second floor, there were only two doors, so it wasnât hard to make out which was Koshiâs. One of the officers knocked, calling his name, but there was no response. His partner tried the door handle, which turned.
They glanced at each other, and tried once again.
âMister Yamaguchi. NYPD. Are you here? Hello?â
There was no response. The cop whoâd turned the knob unclipped the safety strap on his pistol holster and drew his gun, pointing it at the ceiling after carefully moving the gunâs safety lever to the off position. His partner followed suit.
âMister Yamaguchi? Weâre entering your apartment now. We have been asked to check on your wellbeing by a concerned friend,â the cop called out. He pointed at the lower part of a leg on the living room sofa, ensconced in a combat boot, which was visible from the narrow hall. âMister Yamaguchi?â
Nothing.
They moved down the hall until they were in the small living area, and they looked at each other again and holstered their weapons. The heavier officer activated his shoulder radio handset to call in their discovery. His partner pushed the bedroom and then the bathroom doors open with his toe, verifying they were alone.
âFucking A. Well, there goes any shot at an early lunch,â the heavier officer complained.
Koshiâs body lay sprawled on the sofa, a syringe still protruding from his arm, partially filled with blood. Another junkie who got the purity wrong on a street buy and unwittingly gave himself a hot shot. The scumbag needle-freaks never seemed to learn that heroin would be the death of them. A common story in the big city, and annoying for the police as it would waste half a day processing the body and the scene, which was inevitably a complete waste of time and money.
Ken got the call a few minutes later and instructed the dispatcher to warn the uniforms they were to treat the scene as a homicide, not an overdose. He shook his head wearily, and nodded to Chuck, who raised one eyebrow before standing and grabbing his jacket and gun.
âIâll fill you in on the way. Looks we have another 187 related to the literary agent. Probably framed to look like an overdose. Seems like everyone who came into contact with the old manâs office is suddenly suffering from a decreased life expectancy. Jim went sidewalk diving last night, and now the guy who processed the old manâs computers shows up with a needle in his arm,â Ken reported bitterly.
âThatâs a lot of depressed security professionals in a short period of timeâ¦â Chuck commented, deadpan.
âYeah. Thatâs what I was thinking.â
âRemind me not to go into that line of work when Iâm looking to make some extra cash after retirement. Maybe something safer, like lion taming or mercenary,â Chuck said drily.
They made their way down to their cruiser, and Ken popped a rotating blue light onto the roof before starting the engine and pulling away from the curb into the dense late morning traffic.
********
The scene at Koshiâs was confused because the forensics group wasnât sure why they were being told to treat an obvious overdose as a homicide. Ken and Chuck arrived to find them griping, which Ken dealt with in short order. Rebuffed, they began processing the apartment with care while Ken moved alongside them wearing paper booties, so as not to contaminate the area.
âYour boy here doesnât look like he was a regular user. Thereâs no obvious evidence of track marks, although weâll need to get him to the morgue to process him and check his legs and other areas,â the lead tech, Melanie Gomez, told him.
âI donât think he was a user. I think this might be staged,â Ken told her.
âWell, we found some cooking paraphernalia on the table and two dime bags of Mexican brown, but obviously if this is a setup, that would be the expected part of it,â she added.
âExactly. I think Iâll go next door and talk to his neighbor, see if he heard anything.â Ken nodded in the direction of the corpse. âHow long ago did he die?â Ken asked.
âFrom preliminary temperature, Iâd say ten hours, twelve max. So youâll want to focus on between midnight and two,â Melanie said.
âLet me know if you find anything that looks odd. Iâll be next door for a bit.â
Ken moved back down the hall to the front door, where he spotted the neighbor standing with his arms crossed, watching the commotion. He was wearing a stained jogging ensemble that looked like mid-eighties K-Mart. His face had the blotchy red quality of a man who put down a good liter of scotch every day by the time it was dark out. He smelled like cheap booze and sweat.
âIâm Detective Ken Romer. Iâm heading up the investigation into Mister Yamaguchiâs death and Iâd like to ask you a few questions,â Ken explained reasonably, holding out his badge as he spoke. âAnd this is my partner, Charles Barron.â
Chuck had his notepad out and looked somewhat narcoleptic, about to drift off to sleep. The neighbor didnât look much better.
âNameâs Sam Rigley. What happened in there? He slit his wrists?â Sam asked.
âThis will probably go smoother if I ask the questions. This is just routine follow-up. We can take your statement here, or at the station. Which would you prefer?â Ken asked politely, knowing full well nobody ever wanted to go to the station.
âUh, Iâd just as soon do it here then.â
âOkay. Officer Barron is going to tape this so weâre sure we donât get anything wrong later. Is that all right with you, Mister Rigley?â Ken asked, for the record.
âSure, whatever. And you can call me Sam.â
âGreat, Sam. Letâs move over to the stairs, where itâs quieter, unless we can come insideâ¦â Ken suggested.
âStairs are fine. What do you want to know?â Sam asked, squinting at Ken dubiously.
âDid you know Mister Yamaguchi well, Mistâ¦Sam?â Ken asked.
âNot really. Kept to ourselves, mostly. Hardly saw each other. Iâ¦we musta kept different hours. I donât go out a whole lot. Iâm a vet, on disability,â Sam explained, as though that clarified everything.
âWhat was your impression of him?â Ken probed.
âWhadda ya mean?â Sam looked like he was having a tough time following the simple questions and seemed to lose focus every few seconds. Ken noted his hands were shaking with a subtle tremor, which Sam seemed accustomed to.
âWell, you know, was he loud? Did he play music all night long? Did he throw parties? Have a lot of friends over, or high traffic?â Ken suggested.
âNah. Kid was a freak, looked like some punk rocker but he was quiet. Kept to himself, like I said. I think he was a computer geek. Garbage was always full of boxes for some new gizmo or another. What, was he running a porn operation or something? Is that what this is about?â Sam asked, grinning suggestively.
âSo he was quiet, and you didnât see him much. Does that pretty much sum it up?â Chuck interjected impatiently.
âYup.â
âHow do you like living here? Are the walls pretty thin, do you hear everything? My place, you can hear my neighbor drop a quarter at the other end of the building,â Chuck asked, apparently curious about acoustics.
â�
�Nah, this place is built outta brick and rebar. You could shoot a gun off next door and not hear a sound, except for the traffic outside. That you hear twenty-four seven,â Sam complained.
âNice. So, again, back to the routine, did you hear anything last nightâ¦anything unusual or unexpected?â Ken queried.
âLike what?â Sam fired back, unsure of what answer they were looking for.
Ken tried again. âI donât know. Anything at all. Did you hear anything last night you can remember as being odd or out of the ordinary?â
âChiefââ
âDetective, Sam.â
âEr, Detective, I tend to get to sleep early, and Iâm a sound sleeper with my medication and all. So I didnât hear nuthinâ last night, or any other night. I was snoozing like a baby till morning.â Sam grinned a barflyâs smirk, his eyes recessed in their sockets, yellowing from jaundice.
âSo for the record, you heard nothing last night,â Ken summarized.
âThatâs right. Not a thing. Sorry I canât help you on that. Now, mind tellinâ me what happened in there? I overheard one a your guys say it was a dope thing?â Sam probed.
Kenâs cell phone rang. He extricated it from his jacket pocket and looked at the number. âI have to take this. Detective Barron will finish this up,â he told Sam, and moved to the landing to descend the stairs to the street.
âKen, this is Michael. What did you find out? Is Koshi okay? Did you find him?â Michael asked.
âYeah, we found him, but no, heâs not okay. Did Koshi have a drug problem, Michael?â Ken inquired.
âDid he? Past tenseâ¦no, I donât think so, beyond the usual booze and weed thing, although Iâm guessing on the pot. What happened, Ken? Why is Koshi past tense?â
Ken explained the situation. Michael listened in silence.
âKen, you canât possibly believe that this is an accident or a genuine OD, right? I mean, Jim ends it all, and Koshi ODs within hours?â Michael blurted, frustrated with what he was hearing.
âDo I seem like a rookie to you, Michael? Am I giving off the first day on the force vibe? I hate it when I do thatâ¦â
âSorry, Ken. Really. Itâs justâ¦it just wasnât what I was expecting to hear, I guess,â Michael said.
âAre you sure youâre that surprised? I mean, you seem like you were pretty worked up about making sure Koshi was safe, so that tells me you had a better than fair idea he could be in real dangerâ¦â Ken observed.
âIâ¦I assumed the worst when you told me about Jim. Someoneâs taking out my security group, one by oneâ¦â Michael explained.
âNot just your team, Michael. I called your agent buddyâs office again, and nobodyâs heard from the receptionist since the day you saw her. Want to bet a dollar that sheâs gone missing? Look, I donât have a lot of time here, but Iâll give you some free advice. Stay gone until we figure out what the hell is going on here, because otherwise I have a feeling Iâm going to be putting a tag on your toe next,â Ken advised.
âThanks. I get it. But itâs not looking good, Ken. I think youâll find that there are no leads on any of these, at the end of the day. If this is a covert ops team doing this, theyâll be ghosts and youâll never get within a mile of them. Thatâs my best guess given what I know so far, and it scares the hell out of me,â Michael admitted.
âIt should. Iâll tell you what. I donât want to know where you are. And I donât want to hear any more half-truths. Two of your team are dead, for doing nothing but a routine security sweep. That doesnât add up. People donât get killed for trying to recover a file or checking phone lines. So either thereâs way more going on here than youâre telling me, and you know what it is, and are keeping me in the dark for some reason, or you donât know, which is almost worse. Either way, though, you need to stay gone indefinitely. And if you call me, do so from a line that canât be traced, because this is scary shit and Iâm out of my depth on it,â Ken finished.
âThis lineâs clean. Iâll check back in a day or two, Ken. I wish I could tell you something that would help you nail whoever is doing this, but I donât have anything that will get you any closer,â Michael said.
âMeaning you either donât know, or youâre sure that these will never get solved because of what you do know.â Ken was astute, and was losing patience with Michael.
âEither way, sounds like Iâm fucked,â Michael muttered.
âAt least youâre alive. Thatâs more than Jim and Koshi can say,â Ken reminded him and then terminated the call. It wasnât going anywhere, and he wasnât feeling chatty. Michael sounded scared, and worse, resigned. Like he was facing certain death. Ken didnât envy him.
Although given what he knew of Michaelâs background, it wouldnât be so easy to take him off the board. He was one tough bastard, Ken knew firsthand. His brother had been a marine and had told him stories about the SEALs, so he understood that Michael was a capable adversary and wouldnât go down without a fight. He just hoped that whatever it was heâd gotten involved in would eventually die down so Michael didnât have to have a showdown he could never win.
What a cluster fuck.
He turned and made his way back up the stairs to the apartment. Chuck was waiting for him in the hall, the interview concluded. They compared notes. There wasnât a lot to go on, and their best hope was that CSI would be able to find something, some trace, to point them in a direction.
Ken doubted that was going to happen, but he still had a trick or two at his disposal.
********
âSir, we just intercepted a cell call at one of the active sites. The target was communicating with the detective who is investigating the overdose of the computer hacker. We have confirmation that heâs gone to ground and is probably not in the city any longer. Couldnât trace the calling number, unfortunately, but we were able to record the discussion,â the voice recounted evenly.
âI donât need to hear it. Just give me the top level,â Sid instructed.
âThe detective believes the OD is a homicide and is handling it as such, treating it as linked to the book agent and the surveillance technicianâs fall from grace. He sounds sharp, so we should assume heâll continue to investigate them as a related set of deaths,â the voice said.
âDo we particularly care?â
âNo, not really. Weâve taken steps to ensure these incidents will never be solved and Iâm confident there are no loose ends. But I would advise that, from this point on, thereâs no reason to continue working the literary agentâs staff. The risks now outweigh any possible reward.â
âFair enough. Iâm not sure thereâs a lot more to do now other than monitor the detectiveâs communications and maintain a watch on the targetâs apartment, on the off chance heâs stupid enough to stop by. I think thatâs a long shot, but you never know. And of course, implement the usual database monitoring so that whenever he accesses funds or uses a credit card, weâre pinged. Am I missing anything?â Sid asked.
âThatâs about all we can do. I understand this is less than an optimum solution, but as of now, thereâs nothing to do other than be prepared for whenever the target surfaces. Iâm sure he will. Itâs inevitable. Thereâs no evidence of the kind of financial resources he would need to disappear indefinitely, so worst scenario, we have to wait for his cash to run out. The moment he uses an ATM, weâll know. Just a matter of when.â
âI hope youâre right. So far this man has managed to elude your team with little apparent effort and has now vanished without a trace. Given his background, it would be foolish to underestimate him, or his ingen
uity. Itâs theoretically impossible he would have made it this long without tripping up, and yet here we are, holding our dicks in our hands hoping he makes a rookie mistake,â Sid warned.
âI agree, and your input is noted. He obviously went dark almost immediately upon discovering the agent was dead, which shows above-average paranoia, as well as significant stagecraft. Then again, his business is security, and it pays to be paranoid in that field. So we can expect him to be difficult to trace. But not impossible. Nobodyâs that good.â
âLetâs hope we donât have to modify that statement to, âNobodyâs ever been that good beforeâ. What about the source of the document â the author? Any leads?â Sid shifted gears.
âNo, weâve analyzed it, and thereâs nothing to go on, other than an e-mail address. But itâs hosted in Austria, and not only do we not have a lot of reach there, but given the depth of knowledge of our operations and capabilities, we can expect that the Austrian address was set up using a blind account somewhere like the Ukraine, so we wonât be able to get anything on it. Weâre still working the issue, but for now itâs a non-starter.â
âUntil we discover the source, weâre exposed in much greater way than acceptable. I want all available resources committed to tracking down who drafted this, and terminating him. I canât underscore enough the importance of us putting an end to this misadventure, with extreme prejudice,â Sid stated, slamming the table top with his hand for emphasis.
âI understand. Iâll report in when I have something more,â the voice said and then disconnected.
Sid paced the floor, furious at the way things had developed. They were exposed. Secrets that could bring the power structure of the greatest nation on the planet to its knees were now out in the world, where they could potentially surface at the worst possible moment. Everything heâd worked so hard to build and to protect, his entire life, was jeopardized. The honor of every administration for decades would be called into question and regardless of how much spin and rationalization they brought to bear, the nationâs allies would know the truth, as would the rest of the world. It would be the end of the empire, with a whoâs who of the most important dynasties in the country brought to disgrace and ruin.
The Manuscript Page 14