“Yeah, but she usual y picks up the phone.”

The detective stopped and turned. “You worried?”

“I just wish I’d stayed at her place last night.”

“Why didn’t you?”

“Stupid.”

Rodriguez shook his head. “You don’t take care, you gonna lose that woman. Come on, it’s this way.”

CHAPTER 35

Rachel lay at the bottom of a deep wel, cool air flowing over her skin. She wanted nothing more than to rest, slip into the comfortable black that pressed down al around her. Then the darkness began to lighten. The low buzz above her became distinct sounds, voices. Rachel opened her eyes. The first thing she saw was the brick used to hit her, a foot from her head. Beyond that, the empty face of the boy who’d used the brick. He was lying on his side, eyes open, throat gashed. The boy blinked once, a bubble of saliva at the corner of his mouth, and issued a low groan as his lungs emptied. Then he was dead. Rachel inched back from the widening pool of communal blood. To her left was the boy’s flashlight, throwing crazy shapes up on the wal s. From the right came sounds of a struggle. Then another body hit the floor. It was the second boy, tumbling out of the shadows and smiling vacantly at her for a moment before a hand grabbed his shoulder and flipped him back into the darkness. The man who’d brought her to this place picked up the flashlight and shined it in her face.

“Greedy fuckers. Must have busted through the lock on the door.”

He ran a hand across her flanks, much like he’d size up a dog at the pound, checking to see what was broken.

“Beat you up pretty good, huh?” He spit on the tiled floor and uncuffed her from the pipe. Then he moved to a corner of the room. Rachel pul ed the torn pieces of her clothing together and took inventory of the rest. The boy had hit her a glancing blow, knocking her sil y, but not completely out. Her cheek felt crushed, her left eye didn’t work very wel, and the bones in her jaw rubbed together where they shouldn’t. She tried to flex her left hand and realized she also had a couple of broken fingers. Then she glanced over at her would-be rapists, one with his jeans stil partial y undone. Just kids. Fuck that. If God ever gave her the chance and the man who sat in the corner ever gave her his knife, she’d kil them al over again.

“You okay?”

His voice was rough, but welcome. She nodded and tried to stand up. The room around her tipped and tilted. She dropped to the floor and emptied her stomach against the wal.

“Take your time.” The man was inspecting a long, black rifle and spoke without looking at her. She wiped gingerly at the blood on her face and realized she was crying. Then she huddled back near the radiator. The man was talking to her, but his voice seemed far away.

“You understand what I’m saying?” The man was close now. She shook her head.

“No matter.” He crouched down and shackled her again to the pipe. Then he left the room and returned, carrying a video camera and a tripod.

“Got a schedule to keep, Rachel, so don’t fuck with me.”

She watched him set up the tripod and mount the camera. He knew her name and had let her see his face, which meant he was going to kil her, or expected to die himself. Or both. She tried to process that as he pul ed the shade off a window, uncuffed her from the pipe and dragged her to a chair in the middle of the room. A thread of light wound its way into the apartment and, for the first time, she was able to get a larger sense of where she was. The door to the room she was in stood to her right. Behind her was a wal, with a huge hole in it, leading to a second room that dead-ended into a second wal. She had seen the holes before. Cops cal ed them honeycombs, tunnels dug out by gangs and used to link apartments in CHA highrises. There weren’t that many public housing high-rises left standing in the city, and they were mostly abandoned. If that’s where she was, there’d be no one close enough to hear her.

“We have to make a recording,” the man said and moved the camera between her and the window. He shoved a piece of paper in front of her. “This is what you have to say. Play any games and you wind up like your pals over there. Do it right and you might get out of this room alive. Course a lot of that depends on your boyfriend.”

For the first time she saw some emotion, a dance of light across pale blue eyes, then gone. The man turned his back on her and began to fiddle with the camera again. She looked at the watch on her wrist like it belonged to someone else. She was further amazed to discover it was stil working and read 7:00 a.m. On cue, a church bel tol ed out the hours. A lonesome siren picked up the note, its cry waxing and waning in the streets below. Over the man’s shoulder, she could see Chicago’s skyline sketched in subtle morning shades. And then she knew exactly where she was. It had to be.

“I think I’m going to be sick again,” Rachel said, testing her jaw and finding she could talk. The man turned back toward her. “Don’t be,” he said.

The siren was clearer now, harder and cold as it moved closer.

“If you want to do this, then hurry up,” she said and hung her head low.

“Okay, we’re ready.” The man moved behind the camera. “Remember, say what’s on the paper. Nothing else.”

The red light flared just as the church bel was finishing, the siren moving in and out, looking for trouble in some other part of the neighborhood. Rachel put her hands on either side of her swol en face and rubbed her good eye gently. Then she looked into the camera. The man waited. Rachel gave it five more good seconds before she cast her gaze down and began to read from the paper.

CHAPTER 36

Rita Alvarez stood as we came in. The reporter shook hands with both of us, smiling brightly, but focusing mostly on the detective. Rodriguez answered the unasked question.

“This is Michael Kel y. He’s a private investigator, attached to the task force. If it’s al right with you, he’s going to sit in.”

Alvarez nodded. I didn’t know the name, but I recognized the face. She’d been one of the media throng at the CTA shooting in the Loop. I’d thought she looked smart back then. Now I’d get to see if I was right.

“I know who Mr. Kel y is,” Alvarez said. “And yes, by al means, I think it would be good for him to be here.”

The three of us sat. We were in a smal room used by cops to question suspects and potential witnesses. In Chicago, the questioning often continued until the latter became the former, so it al seemed to make sense. Alvarez had brought a slim buff-colored folder with her. She laid it down on the table and folded her hands over it as she spoke.

“Thanks for seeing me on such short notice. And so early in the morning.”

Rodriguez didn’t respond. Like any good cop looking to extract information, he’d let Alvarez do most of the talking.

“As I indicated on the phone, I have some matters I’d like to discuss in connection with the recent sniper shootings.” The reporter dropped her eyes briefly to her folder, found nothing there, and looked back up. “I’ve come across some information that may be relevant to your case. I’m happy to share it with you before we go ahead and publish. In fact, I’d prefer to. But I’d like to get some assurances.”

Alvarez waited. Rodriguez waited. I watched. Final y, Rodriguez spoke. “We’re not in the business of giving assurances, Ms. Alvarez.”

“Rita.”

“Rita. I can get someone from County in here if you want. But if this is relevant evidence, I’d suggest-”

“Save it, Detective.”

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