Chapter 77
Harry R. Chislett, deputy chief of the Washington Heights North district, stood at the central control point on Indian Road, a radio in each hand. Faced with an unprecedented and utterly unexpected development, he had nevertheless — so he considered — adapted with remarkable speed and economy. Who could have foreseen so many protesters, so quickly, all moving with the ruthless precision and purpose of a single mind? Yet Chislett had risen to the occasion. What a tragedy, then, that — for all his probity — he was surrounded by incompetence and ineptitude. His orders had been misinterpreted, improperly carried out, even ignored. Yes: there was no other word for it than tragedy.
Picking up his field glasses, he trained them on the entrance to the Ville. The protesters had managed to get inside, and his men had gone after them. The reports were chaotic and contradictory; God only knew what was really going on. He would go in himself except that a commander must not place his own person in danger. There might be violence; perhaps even murder. It was the fault of his men in the field, and that was how his report would most emphatically read.
He raised the radio in his right hand. 'Forward position alpha,' he rapped out. 'Forward position alpha. Move up to defense position.'
The radio cracked and sparked.
'Forward position alpha, do you read?'
'Position alpha, roger,' came the voice. 'Please verify that last order.'
'I
'I just wanted to make sure, sir,' came the voice again, 'because two minutes ago you told us to fall back and—'
'Just do as you're told!'
From the gaggle of officers milling around confusedly on the baseball diamond, one figure in a dark suit separated itself and came trotting over. Inspector Minerva.
'Yes, Inspector,' said Chislett, careful to let his voice radiate a dignified, McClellan — like tone of command.
'Reports are coming back, sir, from inside the Ville.'
'You may proceed.'
'There is significant conflict between the inhabitants and the protesters. There are reports of injuries, some serious. The interior of the church is being torn up. The streets of the Ville are filling with displaced residents.'
'I'm not surprised.'
Minerva hesitated.
'Yes, Inspector?'
'Sir, once again I'd recommend you take… well, firmer action.'
Chislett looked at him. 'Firmer action? What the devil are you talking about?'
'With all due respect, sir, when the protesters began their march on the Ville I recommended you immediately call for backup units. We've got to have more people.'
'We have sufficient manpower,' he said fussily.
'I also recommended that our officers move quickly to take up positions across the road to the Ville, to block the march.'
'That is precisely what I ordered.'
Minerva cleared his throat. 'Sir… you ordered all units to maintain their positions.'
'I gave no such command!'
'It's not too late for us to—'
'You have your orders,' Chislett said. 'Please carry them out.' He glared at the man as he dropped his eyes and mumbled a 'Yes sir,' while walking slowly back to the gaggle of officers. Honestly, it was nothing but incompetence, incompetence, even from those he had hoped to rely on the most.
He raised his binoculars again. Now, this was interesting. He could see protesters — first just a few, but as he watched, more and more — running out of the Ville and back down the drive, faces contorted with fear. His officers were finally flushing them out. Sprinkled among them were robed and cowled figures, residents of the Ville itself. All were streaming out of the Ville, sprinting away from the ancient wooden structures, falling over one another in a panicked effort to get as far away as possible.
Excellent, excellent.
Lowering the binoculars, he raised his radio. 'Forward position delta, come in.'
After a moment, the radio squawked. 'Forward position delta, Wegman speaking.'
'Officer Wegman, the protesters are beginning to disperse,' said Chislett primly. 'Clearly, my tactics are having the intended effect. I want you and your men to shunt the protesters back toward the baseball diamond and the street, to effect an orderly dispersal.'
'But, sir, we're all the way across the park at the moment, where you told us to—'
'Just do as you're told, Officer.' And Chislett shut off the man's protests with the flick of the transmit button. Weak as water, the whole lot of them. Had ever a commander in the history of organized aggression ever been burdened with such monumental ineptitude?
He lowered the radio with a disheartened sigh and watched as the crowd of people streaming out of the Ville became a river, then a flood.
Chapter 78
Pendergast moved through the tunnel, keeping close to the left — hand wall, the narrow beam of the penlight carefully shielded. As he came around a bend in the tunnel, he spied something in the dim glow — a long, whitish object lying on the tunnel floor.
He approached. It was a heavy plastic bag, zippered on one side, smeared with mud, dirt, and grass, as if it had been dragged. Printed on the side were the words morgue of the city of new york and a number.
He knelt and reached out, grasping the zipper. Slowly he drew it back, keeping the sound as low as possible. An overpowering stench of formalin, alcohol, and decomposition assaulted his nostrils. Inch by inch, the corpse within was exposed. He pulled the zipper back until the bag was half open, grasped the edges of the plastic and spread them apart, exposing the face.
William Smithback, Jr.
For a long time, Pendergast stared. Then, with an almost reverent care, he fully opened the zipper, exposing the entire body. It was at the worst stage of decomposition. Smithback's cadaver had been autopsied and then, the day before it disappeared, reassembled for turning over to the family: the organs replaced, the Y — incision sewn up, the cranium reattached with the scalp pulled back over it and sutured closed, the face repaired, everything stuffed and packed and padded. It was a crude job — delicate work wasn't a pathologist's forte — but it was a package a good mortician could, at least, work with.
Only, the body hadn't gone to the funeral home. It had been stolen. And now it was here.
Suddenly, Pendergast peered more closely. Reaching into the pocket of his suit coat, he extracted a pair of tweezers and used them to pluck away a few bits of white latex rubber that were clinging to the corpse's face: one from a nostril, another from an earlobe. He examined them closely with the penlight, then placed them thoughtfully in his pocket.
He slowly played the light about — and saw, fifty feet away, another decaying corpse, neatened up and dressed for burial in a black suit. An unknown person, but tall and lanky, the same approximate height and build as Smithback and Fearing.
Looking at the two corpses, the final details of Esteban's plot crystallized in his mind. It was most elegant. Only one question now remained: what was in the document Esteban looted from the tomb? It would have to be