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'A ...?'

He explained: a tennis ball you gave to customers you didn't think could handle the pain of the tattooing process. 'That kid couldn't take it. But, you gonna get inked, you gotta have the pain. Them's the rules: pain and blood. The commitment, dude. Get it? So what can I do you for, now that I know there's no, you know, mid-life crisis involved.'

The detective grumbled. 'You ever say "Dig it" instead of "Get it"?'

'"Dig it." From your day.'

'From my day,' Sellitto said. 'Me and the beatniks.'

TT Gordon laughed.

'There's a case we're working on. I need some help.'

'I guess. Gimme one minute.' Gordon stepped to a third workstation. This fellow tat artist, arms blue-and-red sleeves of elaborate inking, was working on a man in his late twenties. He was getting a flying hawk on his biceps. Sellitto thought of the falcons on Rhyme's window ledges.

The customer looked like he'd just subwayed it up here from Wall Street and would head back to his law firm afterward for an all-nighter.

Gordon looked over the job. Gave some suggestions.

Sellitto examined the shop. It seemed to belong to a different era: specifically, the 1960s. The walls were covered with hundreds of bright samples of tats: faces, religious symbols, cartoon characters, slogans, maps, landscapes, skulls ... many of them psychedelic. Also, several dozen photos of piercings available for purchase. Some frames were covered by curtains. Sellitto could guess in what body parts those studs and pins resided, though he wondered why the modesty.

The inking stations reminded Sellitto of those in a hair salon with the reclining chairs for customers and stools for the artists. Equipment and bottles and rags sat on a counter. On the wall was a mirror, on which were pasted some bumper stickers and taped certificates from the Board of Health. Despite the fact that the place existed for the purpose of spattering body fluids about, it looked immaculate. The smell of disinfectant was strong and there were warning signs everywhere about cleaning equipment, sterilizing.

130 Degrees Celsius Is Your Friend.

Gordon finished his suggestions and gestured Sellitto to the back room. They pushed through a plastic bead curtain into the office part of the shop. It too was well ordered and clean.

Gordon took a bottle of water from a mini fridge and offered it to Sellitto, who wasn't putting in his mouth anything from this shop. Shook his head.

The owner of the store unscrewed the top and drank. He nodded to the doorway, where the beads still pendulumed. 'That's what we've become.' As if Sellitto was his new best dude.

'How's that?'

'The guy in the business suit,' he said softly. The hawk man. 'You see where his tat is?'

'His biceps.'

'Right. High. Easy to hide. Guy's got two point three children, or will have in the next couple years. Went to Columbia or NYU. Lawyer or accountant.' A shake of the head. The ponytail swung. 'Tats used to be insidious. The inked were bad boys and girls. Now getting a work's like putting on a charm bracelet or a tie. There's a joke somebody's going to open a tattoo franchise in strip malls. Call it Tat-bucks.'

'That's why the rods?' Sellitto nodded at the bars in Gordon's head.

'You have to go to greater lengths to make a statement. That sounded effete. Sorry. So. What can I do for you, Officer?'

'I'm making the rounds of the big parlors in the city. None of 'em could help so far but they all said I had to come see you. This's the oldest parlor in the city, they said. And you know everybody in the community.'

'Hard to say about the oldest. Inking - I mean modern inking in the US, not tribal - pretty much began in New York. The Bowery, late eighteen hundreds. But it was banned in 'sixty-one after some hepatitis outbreaks. Only legalized again in 'ninety-seven. I found some records that this shop dated back to the twenties - man, those must've been the days. You got a tat, you were Mr Alternative. Or Miss, though women rarely got works done then. Not unheard of. Winston Churchill's mother had a snake eating its tail.' He noted that Sellitto was not much interested in the history lesson. A shrug. My enthusiasm isn't your enthusiasm. Got it.

'This is, what I'm about to tell you, this's confidential.'

'No worries there, dude. P

eople tell me all sorts of shit when they're under the machine. They're nervous and so they start rambling away. I forget everything I hear. Amnesia, you know.' A frown. 'You here about somebody might be a customer of mine?'

'Don't have any reason to think so but could be.' Sellitto added, 'If we showed you a tat, you think you could tell us something about the guy who did it?'

'Maybe. Everybody's got their own style. Even two artists working from the same stencil're going to be different. It's how you learned to ink, the machine you use, the needles you hack together. A thousand things. Anyway, I can't guarantee it but I've worked with artists from all over the country, been to conventions in almost every state. I might be able to help you out.'

'Okay, here.'


Tags: Jeffery Deaver Lincoln Rhyme Mystery