The Vanished Man (19 page)

Read The Vanished Man Online

Authors: Jeffery Deaver

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Thrillers

BOOK: The Vanished Man
11.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

knoll's right next to the bridle path in the park, right? It's a long shot but maybe he rides or's been checking out riders. One of them could be a target. Maybe not his next one but let's just go on the assumption that it issince it's our only goddamn solid lead."

 

 

Sellitto said, "There's a stable someplace around here, isn't there?" 'Tve seen it nearby," Sachs said. "It's in the eighties, I think."

 

 

"Find out," Rhyme called. "And get some people over there."

 

 

Sachs glanced at the clock. It was 1:35 P.M. 'Well, we've got some time. Two and a half hours till the next victim." "Good," Sellitto said. 'Tll get surveillance teams set up in the park and around the stable. If they're in place by two-thirty that'll be plenty of time to spot him."

 

 

Then Rhyme noticed Kara frowning. 'What is it?" he asked her.

 

 

"You know, I'm not sure you do have that much time."

 

 

'Why?"

 

 

"I was telling you about misdirection?"

 

 

"I remember."

 

 

'Well, there's also time misdirection. That's tricking the audience by making them think something's going to happen at one time when it really happens at another. Like, an illusionist'll repeat an act at regular intervals. The audience subconsciously comes to believe that whatever he's doing has to happen only at those times. But what the performer does then is shorten the time between the intervals. The audience isn't paying attention and they completely miss whatever he's doing. You can spot a time misdirection trick because the illusionist always lets the audience know what the interval is."

 

 

"Like breaking the watches?" Sachs asked.

 

 

"Exactly."

 

 

Rhyme asked, "So you don't think we have until four?"

 

 

Kara shrugged. 'We might. Maybe he's planned to kill three people every four hours and then he'll murder the fourth victim only one hour later. I don't know."

 

 

'We don't know anything here," Rhyme said firmly. 'What do you think,

 

 

Kara? What would you do?" She gave a troubled laugh, being asked to step into the mind of a killer.

 

 

After a moment of hard debate she said, "He knows you've found the

 

 

watches by now. He knows you're smart. He doesn't need to hammer it home anymore. If I were him I'd be going after the next victim before four. I'd be going after him right now."

 

 

"That's good enough for me," Rhyme said. "Forget sUIveillance and forget soft clothes. Lon, call Haumann and get ESU into the park. In a big way."

 

 

"It might scare him off, Line-if he's in disguise and doing his own sur

 

 

veillance." "I think we have to take that chance. Tell ESU we're looking for... who knows what the hell we're looking for? Give him a general description, as best you can." Fifty-year-old killer, sixty-year-old janitor, seventy-year-old bag lady...

 

 

Cooper looked up from his computer. "Got the stable. Hammerstead

 

 

Riding Academy."

 

 

Bell, Sellitto and Sachs started for the door. Kara said, "I want to go too." "No," Rhyme said.

 

 

"There may be something I'll notice. Some sleight or a quick-change

 

 

move by somebody in a crowd. I could spot it," A nod toward the other cops. "They might not."

 

 

"No. It's too dangerous. No civilians on a tactical operation. That's the

 

 

rule." "I don't care about the rules," the young woman said, leaning toward

 

 

him defiantly. "I can help,"

 

 

"Kara-"

 

 

But the young woman silenced him by glancing at the crime scene photos of Tony Calvert and Svetlana Rasnikov then turning back to Lincoln Rhyme with a cold expression in her eyes. In this simple gesture she reminded him that it was he who'd asked her here, he who'd brought her into his world and transformed her from an innocent into someone who could now look at these horrors without flinching.

 

 

"All right," Rhyme said. Then, nodding toward Sachs, he added, "But stay close to her."

 

 

She was cautious, Malerick observed, as befitted any woman who'd just been picked up by a man in Manhattan, even if that stranger was shy, friendly and able to calm rearing horses.

 

 

Still, Cheryl Marston was relaxing little by little, enjoying the tales of his

 

 

times riding bareback with a circus, all of which were embellished considerably to keep her amused and to whittle down her defenses.

 

 

After the groom and the vet on call at Hammerstead had examined Donny Boy and declared him in good health Malerick and his next unwitting performer strolled from the stable to this restaurant, which was just off Riverside Drive.

 

 

The woman now chatted amiably with John (his persona for their date) about her life in the city, her early love of horses, the ones she'd owned or ridden, her hopes of buying a summer place in Middleburg, Virginia. He responded with occasional bits of equine lore-what he could deduce from her comments and what he knew from circuses and the world of illusion. Animals have always been an important part of the profession. Mesmerizing them, vanishing them, turning them into different species. An illusionist created a hugely popular routine in the 1800s-instantly transforming a chicken into a duck. (The method was simplicity itself: the duck made his entrance wearing a quick-change chicken costume.) Killing and resurrecting animals was popular in less politically correct times, though they were rarely actually harmed; after all, it's a rather inept illusionist who has to really kill an animal to create the illusion that it's dead. It tends to be expensive too.

 

 

For his routine in Central Park today to snare Cheryl Marston, Malerick had drawn on the routines of Howard Thurston, a popular illusionist in the early 1900s, who specialized in animal acts. The trick Malerick performed wouldn't've met with Thurston's approval, though; the famous illusionist had treated the animals in his act as if they were human assistants, if not family members. Malerick had been less humane. He'd captured a pigeon by hand. He'd then turned it on its back and stroked the neck and sides slowly until it was hypnotized-a technique magicians have used for years to create the appearance of a dead bird. As Cheryl Marston approached on her horse, he'd flung the pigeon hard into the horse's face. Donny Boy's rearing in pain and fright had nothing to do with the bird, though, but was caused by an ultrasonic pitch generator, set to a frequency that stung the horse's ears. As Malerick stepped out of the bushes to "rescue" Cheryl he shut the generator off and by the time he grabbed the bridle the horse was calming.

 

 

Now, little by little, the equestrian was growing even less cautious as she

 

 

learned how much they had in common. Or appeared to.

 

 

This illusion was due to Malerick's use of mentalism, not one of his strongest skills but one that he was competent at. Mentalism has nothing to do with telepathically discerning someone's thoughts, of course. It's a combination of mechanical and psychological techniques to deduce facts. Malerick was now doing what the best mentalists did-body reading, it was called, as opposed to mind reading. He was noting very subtle changes in Cheryl's poses and facial expressions and gestures in response to comments he made. Some told him he was straying from her thoughts, others that he was on the mark.

 

 

He mentioned, for instance, a friend who'd just been through a divorce and he could see easily that she had too--and she'd been on the receiving end. So, grimacing, he told her that he was divorced and that his wife'd had an affair and left him. It had devastated him but he was now recovering.

 

 

"

 

 

I gave up a boat," she said, sourly, "just to get away from that son-of-a-bitch. A twenty-four-foot sailboat."

 

 

Malerick also used "Barnum statements" to make her think they had more in common than they did. The classic example was a mentalist sizing up his subject and offering gravely, "I sense you're often extroverted but at times you find yourself quite shy."

 

 

Which is interpreted as insightful but, of course, applies to nearly

 

 

everybody on earth. Neither the fictional John nor Cheryl had children. Both had cats, divorced parents and a love of tennis. Look at all these coincidences! A match made in heaven.... Almost time, he thought. Though he was in no hurry. Even if the police had some leads to what he was up to they'd be thinking he wouldn't kill anyone again until 4:00; it was now just after two. You may think, Revered Audience, that the world of illusion never inter

 

 

sects the world of reality but that's not wholly true. [ think of John Mulholland, the renowned magician and editor of the

 

 

magic magazine, The Sphinx. He abruptly announced his early retirement from magic and journalism in the nineteen fifties. No one could figure out why. But then the rumors began-rumors that he'd started working for the American intelligence community to teach spies how to use magic techniques to dA31iver drugs in such subtle ways that even the most paranoid Communist didn't know he was being given a mickey.

 

 

What do you see in my hands, Revered Audience? Look closely at my

 

 

fingers. Nothing, right? They seem empty. And yet, as you've probably guessed, they aren't....

 

 

Now using one of Mulholland's smoother clandestine drugging techniques, Malerick picked up his spoon with his left hand. As he tapped it absently on the tabletop Cheryl glanced at it. A mere fraction of a second. But it gave Malerick enough time to empty a tiny capsule of tasteless powder into her coffee as he reached for the sugar with his other hand.

 

 

John Mulholland would've been proud.

 

 

Mter a few moments Malerick could see that the drug was having its effect; her eyes were slightly unfocused and she was weaving as she sat. She didn't sense anything was wrong, though. That was the good thing about flunitrazepam, the famous date-rape drug Rohypnol: you didn't know you'd been drugged. Not until the next morning. Which in Cheryl Marston's case wasn't going to be an issue.

 

 

He looked at her and smiled. "Hey, you want to see something fun?" "Fun?" she asked drowsily. She blinked, smiling broadly.

 

 

He paid the check and then said to her. "I just bought a boat."

 

 

She laughed in delight. "A boat? I love boats. What kind?"

 

 

"Sailboat. Thirty-eight feet. My wife and I had one," Malerick added sadly. "She got it in the divorce." "John, no, you're kidding me!" she said, laughing groggily. "My husband and I had one! He got ours in the divorce." "Really?" He laughed and stood. "Hey, let's walk down to the river. You can see it from there."

 

 

"I'd love to." She rose unsteadily and took his arm.

 

 

He steered her through the doorway. The dosage seemed right. She was submissive but she wasn't going to pass out before he got her into the bushes next to the Hudson. They headed toward Riverside Park. "You were talking about boats," she said drunkenly.

 

 

"That's right."

 

 

"My ex and I had one," she said.

 

 

"I know," Malerick said. "You told me."

 

 

"Oh, did I?" Cheryl laughed.

 

 

"Hold on," he said. "I have to get something."

 

 

He stopped at his car, a stolen Mazda, and took a heavy gym bag from the backseat, locked the car again. From inside the bag came a loud clank

 

 

of metal. Cheryl glanced at it, began to speak but then seemed to forget what she was going to say.

 

 

"Let's go this way." Malerick led her to the end of the cross street, across a pedestrian bridge over the parkway and down into an overgrown, deserted strip of land on the riverbank.

 

 

He disengaged her arm from his and gripped her firmly around the back and under the arm. He felt her breast with his fingers as her head lolled against him.

 

 

"Look," she said, pointing unsteadily into the Hudson, where dozens of sailboats and cabin cruisers moved over the sparkling dark blue water. Malerick said, "My boat's down there."

 

 

"I like boats."

 

 

"So do I," he said softly.

 

 

"Really?" she asked, laughing and adding in a whisper that, guess what, she and her ex-husband had had one. But she'd lost it in the divorce.

 

 

Chapter Fifteen

 

 

The riding academy was a slice of old New York.

 

 

Smelling powerful barn scent, Amelia Sachs looked through an archway into the interior of the woody old place at the horses and, atop them, riders-all of whom looked stately in their tan pants, black or red riding jackets, velvet helmets.

 

 

A half-dozen uniformeds from the nearby Twentieth Precinct stood in and outside the lobby. More officers were in the park, under the command of Lon Sellitto, deployed around the bridle path, looking for their elusive prey.

 

 

Sachs and Bell walked into the office and the detective flashed his gold shield to the woman behind the counter. She looked over his shoulder at the officers outside and asked uneasily, "Yes? Is there a problem?"

 

 

"Ma'am, do you use Tack-Pure to treat the saddles and leather?"

 

 

She glanced at an assistant, who nodded. "Yessir, we do. We use a lot of it." Bell continued, 'We found traces of some and of some horse manure at

Other books

The 13th Horseman by Barry Hutchison
Angels Passing by Hurley, Graham
Can't Let Go by Michelle Brewer
Loose Screws by Karen Templeton
Ghosting the Hero by Viola Grace