Изменить стиль страницы

“Comandante Garza,” he said, “I would be pleased to offer the full resources of the Secret Service’s Threat Assessment Division to assist you in determining if such a plot is, in fact, imminent.”

“That will not be necessary. The threat is imminent.”

Dukes gave her a wincing smile. “Perhaps I’m not being clear enough, Comandante. If you expect to have our fullest assistance and cooperation in the protection of your president, it is imperative that you present us with any actionable intelligence you might possess with respect to any imminent assassination plot.”

Garza sat silently, looking at Dukes as though he had not spoken at all. Dukes shook his head, exaggerating a shrug.

“Are you refusing to accept our assistance?” Dukes asked.

“My agency, along with assets of the New York Police Department, is following up on several leads at this very moment, Agent Dukes. We will bring them to you the moment that we have reached more solid and actionable conclusions.”

Dukes folded his arms across his chest. “That is absolutely unacceptable, Comandante Garza.”

“You may take it up with my boss.”

“General de Aguilar? I’ll call him right away,” said Dukes, the wincing smile still frozen on his face.

“I was referring to President Vargas,” said Garza, producing her phone and ready to press a speed-dial button. “I’ll let you speak with him directly.”

Dukes frowned, unimpressed by this power play, but having to stand down anyway. “That won’t be necessary at this time, Comandante.”

She tilted her head a few degrees to the side, then thumbed her phone off. “As you wish,” she said.

Dukes gave Fisk a look, as though to say, You fucking owe me for this.

“The way I see it, three things need your immediate attention,” said Dukes, speaking to Garza. “One is already taken care of, and that is the hotel move.”

Garza looked perturbed. “How did you know?”

Dukes smiled flatly. “We know,” he said. “The second is the Mexican Independence Day celebration in Woodside, where Vargas is due to speak. An outdoor daytime event, that’s an obvious red flag. And the big one is the dinner with POTUS, currently scheduled at that Mexican restaurant . . .” Dukes snapped his fingers, trying to recall the name.

“Ocampo,” said Garza.

“It’s almost too late to reset and rescreen everybody for that event.”

Fisk was shaking his head. What was this?

Dukes said, “A dinner at a small restaurant in the West Village, on Waverly, a half block off Seventh Ave. It’s already a nightmare, that venue. Now with the thermostat turned up even higher, I don’t know if it’s going to fly.”

Garza said, “President Vargas will not alter his schedule—”

Dukes didn’t let her finish. “Well, it may get altered for him. I’m going to set up a fresh walk-through at this Ocampo, my office will let your people know when. Try to talk him out of the festival. The earlier he cancels, the better. For him.”

Fisk’s telephone and Garza’s telephone buzzed almost simultaneously. They were answering theirs when Dukes’s phone rang.

CHAPTER 36

St. Michael’s Cemetery on Astoria Boulevard in East Elmhurst is one of the oldest cemeteries in the New York metropolitan area. The cemetery is open to all faiths, though it is owned and operated by St. Michael’s Episcopal congregation on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. It is the final resting place of Granville T. Woods, better known as “the black Edison,” and ragtime composer Scott Joplin.

Again, a secondary entrance gate had been breached overnight. But the gate had swung back to its usual position, making it appear closed as usual. The bodies had been discovered by a groundskeeper removing dead flowers from a nearby grave.

Silvia Volpi lay floating in a small pond on the southeastern corner of the property. She was facedown, only her back and shoulders out of the water, but Fisk recognized the dress from the hotel security camera. He could see abrasions and blood on her neck and shoulders.

They were pulling her to the bank as he arrived. That she was floating indicated that she was dead before she was put in the water. A drowning person swallows water, expelling oxygen from the lungs, usually resurfacing a day or two later as gases build up inside the body. An already dead body in still water generally remains buoyant due to its air-filled chest cavity.

The other body floated closer to the bank on the other side of the pond. Fisk could tell by the way Garza looked at the body that it was Virgilio, even before they hauled him to dry land and turned him over.

He had been beaten, but the wounds were barely swollen, indicating that he had been in a fight and died soon after. His shirt was torn and bloodstained. The way the fabric lay against his chest, Fisk could see multiple stab wounds in his chest, a half dozen or more. His hands were also cut with defensive wounds. His eyes stared at the sky, but lacking the supreme blankness of most corpses Fisk had seen. He wondered if knowing he was dying for a cause—choosing death over betrayal—informed Virgilio’s steadfast expression.

Garza stared down at the man. Fisk could only guess at their relationship, but felt it had been purely professional. Perhaps she saw in Virgilio a dedication to lawful order complementary to hers, but which, as a woman in Mexico, she felt herself unable to fulfill as completely as he had. Perhaps she envied his easier road to success . . . and perhaps it was this ease that had allowed him to let his guard down at the worst possible time.

Fisk went around backing off arriving law enforcement. There is, even in veterans, a human impulse to get close to the scene of a crime. He wondered why they had chosen two different cemeteries.

He came back to Garza, who was on the phone with General de Aguilar. “Yes, General . . . It would be most proper for you to come, I think. I cannot remain here a moment longer than is necessary . . . No, too many things to do. Yes. Thank you. . . .”

She hung up. Fisk watched her. She seemed to be okay. Maybe too okay.

“No cameras in a cemetery,” said Fisk. “I’m thinking they dumped the other car and body first, hoping to get something out of your man. Looks to me like he went down fighting.”

“Of course he did,” said Garza quietly.

“And the girl? Probably killed because she was a link to them.”

“Exactly why,” said Garza. “No witnesses. Ever.”

“We should key on her. I know she’s an illegal, but she had to live somewhere, sleep somewhere. Know someone.”

Garza nodded, still looking at the ground.

Fisk said, “There are enough traffic cameras in the areas surrounding both cemeteries that we should get some images of them. License plates, maybe faces. It will take time, but we will have something.”

Garza nodded again, saying nothing.

Fisk said, “I’m not going to ask you if you are okay, because I know you are not.”

“I am fine.”

Fisk waited for more. “We’re going to get this guy. This is New York City, not Mexico.”

She looked up at him with heated eyes, as though taking offense.

Fisk said, “What I mean is, this isn’t his native country, he doesn’t know how everything works. He’s going to screw up.”

A crime scene tech came over. “We checked his pockets, no phone.”

Garza stared at the young man, then nodded. She e-mailed this news back to her people. “He will have cloned the phone by now, disabling GPS and cellular service. He wants to know what Virgilio’s schedule was . . . and by extension, President Vargas’s.”

Fisk said, “I’m sure he had it encoded. It was a secure phone?”

“It was,” said Garza. “But how can we assume anything except that he has that information, or will have it soon?”

“It’s mostly public, I imagine.”