"Sorry, nope."
She thanked him and walked outside, Pam beside her. "If there's one scratch on her, heads're going to roll," she muttered. Could 522 have been behind the towing? It wouldn't have surprised her, though how he'd arrange it she couldn't imagine.
Another stab of uneasiness at how close he'd gotten to her, how much information about her he could access.
The man who knows everything . . .
She asked Pam, "Can I borrow your Civic?"
"Sure. Only, can you drop me at Rachel's? We're going to do our homework together."
"Tell you what, honey, how 'bout if I have one of the guys from the precinct run you into the city?"
"Sure. How come?"
"This guy knows way too much about me already. Think it's best just to keep a little distance." She and the girl walked back into the precinct house to arrange for the ride. Outside once again, Sachs looked up and down the sidewalk. No sign of anyone watching her.
She glanced up fast at motion in a window across the street. She thought immediately of the SSD logo--the window in the watchtower. The person who'd glanced out was an elderly woman but that didn't stop the chill from trickling down Sachs's spine yet again. She walked quickly to Pam's car and fired it up.
Chapter Forty With a snap of systems shutting down, deprived of their lifeblood, the town house went dark.
"What the hell is going on?" Rhyme shouted.
"The electricity's out," Thom announced.
"That part I figured," the criminalist snapped. "What I'd like to know is why."
"We weren't running the GC," Mel Cooper said defensively. He looked out the window, as if checking to see if the rest of the neighborhood grid had gone down too, but since it was not yet dusk there were no ConEd references to tell the story.
"We can't afford to be offline now. Goddamnit. Get it taken care of!"
Rhyme, Sellitto, Pulaski and Cooper remained in the silent, dim room, while Thom walked into the hall and, on his cell phone, made a call. He was soon talking with somebody at the electric company. "Impossible. I pay the bills online. Every month. Never missed one. I have receipts. . . . Well, they're in the computer and I can't go online because there's no electricity, now can I? . . . Canceled checks, yes, but once again, how can I fax them to you if there's no electricity? . . . I don't know where there's a Kinko's, no."
"It's him, you know," Rhyme said to the others.
"Five Twenty-Two? He got your power shut off?"
"Yep. He found out about me and where I live. Malloy must've told him this is our command post."
The silence was eerie. The first thing Rhyme thought of was how completely vulnerable he was. The devices that he relied on were useless now and he had no way to communicate, no way to lock or unlock the doors or use the ESU. If the blackout continued and Thom couldn't recharge his wheelchair's battery he'd be immobilized completely.
He couldn't remember the last time he'd felt so vulnerable. Even having others around didn't allay the concern; 522 was a threat to anybody, anywhere.
He was also wondering: Is the blackout a diversion, or the prelude to an attack?
"Keep an eye out, everybody," he announced. "He could be moving in on us."
Pulaski glanced out the window. Cooper too.
Sellitto pulled out his cell phone and called someone downtown. He explained the situation. He rolled his eyes--Sellitto was never one for stoic faces--then ended the conversation with: "Well, I don't care. Whatever it takes. This asshole's a killer. And we can't do a thing to find him without any fucking electricity. . . . Thanks."
"Thom, any luck?"
"No," came the aide's abrupt reply.
"Shit." Rhyme then reflected on something. "Lon, call Roland Bell. I think we need protection. Five Twenty-Two went after Pam, he went after Amelia." The criminalist nodded at a dark monitor. "He knows about us. I want officers on Amelia's mother's place. Pam's foster home. Pulaski's house, Mel's mother's place. Your house too
, Lon."