*
Standing on the curb with three other men in street clothes, Amelia Sachs was talking to the compact man who'd ripped open the door of her Camaro and leveled his weapon at her. He'd turned out not to be 522 but a federal agent who worked for the Drug Enforcement Administration.
"We're still trying to put it together," he said, and glanced at his boss, an assistant special agent in charge of the Brooklyn DEA office.
The ASAC said, "We'll know more in a few minutes."
Not long before, at gunpoint in the car, Sachs had lifted her hands slowly and identified herself as a police officer. The agent had taken her weapon and had checked her ID twice. He'd returned the gun, shaking his head. "I don't get it," he said. He apologized but his face didn't seem to suggest he was sorry. Mostly the expression said that, well, he just didn't get it.
A moment later his boss and two other agents had arrived.
Now the ASAC got a call and listened for a few minutes. He then snapped his mobile shut and explained what seemed to have happened. Not long before somebody had made an anonymous call from a pay phone reporting that an armed woman fitting Sachs's description had just shot somebody in what seemed to be a drug dispute.
"We've got an operation going on here at the moment," he said. "Looking into some dealer and supplier assassinations." He nodded toward his agent, the one who'd tried to arrest Sachs. "Anthony lives a block away. The operations director sent him here to assess the sit while he scrambled the troops."
Anthony added, "I thought you were leaving so I grabbed some old take-out bags and moved in. Man . . ." Now the import of what he'd nearly done was sinking in. He was now ashen and Sachs reflected that Glocks have a very light trigger pull. She wondered just how close she'd come to being shot.
"What were you doing here?" the ASAC asked.
"We had a homicide-rape." She didn't explain about 522's setting up innocent people to take the fall. "I'm guessing our perp spotted me and made a call to slow up pursuit."
Or get me killed in a friendly fire incident.
The federal agent shook his head, frowning.
"What?" Sachs asked.
"Just thinking this guy is pretty sharp. If he called NYPD--which most people would've--they'd know about your operation and who you were. So he called us instead. All we'd know was that you were a shooter and we'd approach with caution, ready to take you out if you pulled a weapon." A frown. "That's smart."
"Pretty fucking scary too," Anthony said, his face still white.
The agents left and she made a call.
When Rhyme answered she told him about the incident.
The criminalist digested this, then he said, "He called the Feds?"
"Yep."
"It's almost as if he knew they were in the middle of a drug op. And that the agent who tried to collar you lived nearby."
"He couldn't know that," she countered.
"Maybe not. But he sure as hell knew one thing."
"What's that?"
"He knew exactly where you were. Which means he was watching. Be careful, Sachs."
*
Rhyme was explaining to Sellitto how the perp had set up Sachs in Brooklyn.
"He did that?"
"Looks like it."
The men were discussing how he might've gotten the information--and coming to no helpful conclusions--when the phone trilled. Rhyme glanced at caller ID and answered quickly. "Inspector."