Authors: John Donohue
write algorithms and sift cascades of electronic data. Personnel
conduct threat analyses, but the bureau also has its ops people
to train public and private personnel in streetcraft. And at the
far, hard end of the unit’s spectrum, the black clad Hercules
rapid deployment teams wait to be unleashed.
The counter-terrorism bureau is an odd mix of ex-intelli-
gence types, seasoned detectives, and bright young cops with
competency in languages like Arabic, Pashto, and Urdu. But
because the organization is still young, many of its people are
as well. As Micky once noted, they’re smart, but not yet street
smart. Which is where he and Art come in. Reading documents
can be learned in a classroom; reading people takes years of
hard life experience. My brother and his partner have a knack
for observation, for sifting information to find just the right
points of leverage when dealing with suspects. The bureau val-
ues the skill and wants them to pass it on to the greener mem-
bers of the team.
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The bureau doesn’t like visitors. So Micky and I arranged to
meet at One Police Plaza in downtown Manhattan. My brother
was waiting at the entrance: a thin, intense man with a cop
mustache and a stripe of white in his dark hair. Micky looked
at me without comment as I came in the door, his expression
one of weary annoyance. A silent uniformed officer stood next
to him.
“Nice suit,” I said and meant it. Micky had spent much
of his career in an unmarked car, a rolling trash bin of empty
coffee cups, old newspapers, and greasy, wadded-up sandwich
wrappers. His tired, rumpled clothing fit right in. But now he
was actually presentable.
My brother looked down at himself and seemed almost
amazed. “When you’re a consultant you gotta dress smart,” he
mumbled. Then he recovered his cynicism somewhat. “It gives
clients the illusion we’ve got all the answers.”
The uniformed cop moved us through the formalities of
signing in and getting the visitors’ passes we would need. Then,
without saying a word, he wheeled around and headed toward
the elevators. Micky and I followed.
We ended up on the eighth floor. “Where are we going?” I
said.The doors slid open and we stepped out into a hallway.
“RTCC,” Micky said.
“Which is?”
My brother sighed in annoyance. “Real Time Crime
Center.”
I put my hands on my hips and stood there in the middle of
the hallway. “Which is?”
He pulled me aside, his voice low. “Connor, stop being such
an asshole. Just shut up and come with me. The RTCC’s a
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John Donohue
networked data center for the PD. Lets you access all kinds of
stuff. For our purposes, it’s the next best thing to the bureau’s
center. And I go back a long way with the inspector in charge.
So he’s doing me a favor and letting us use one of his analysts.”
“But why?”
He poked me in the chest with a finger. “Look, technically,
your little incident is not of immediate interest to the bureau.
They got a mile of things that take priority over that. I have a
personal interest in the case, but they’re not gonna let me tie up
their resources. So I made some calls.”
“Why?”
Micky squinted at me and sighed. “Because you’re my
brother. And because you, you moron, have kicked over a full
bucket of shit.”
The RTCC looked like Mission Control. It had maybe a
dozen computer operators with headsets sitting behind paired
flat screens. The air was filled with the staccato plastic clicks
of people working computer keyboards. The operators’ pas-
sive faces flickered with light as images expanded, shrunk, or
were arranged in tiles in rapid succession. There was a constant,
muted hum of conversation as requests came in and data was
fed out to the laptops of detectives in the field. One entire wall
of the room was taken up by a screen that contained photos,
data, what looked like flowcharts, as well as streaming video.
“Wow,” I said.
Micky nudged me toward the giant wall screen. A small,
muscular looking cop with a shaved head was standing there,
arms crossed, and eyes focused on the huge display.
“What you got going, McHale?” my brother asked.
The man turned and smiled in recognition. “Burke. How’s
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life on the outside? I knew you said you needed some help, but
I didn’t think you were so desperate you’d be by today.”
Micky shrugged, “I’m between things…” Then gestured at
me. “My brother.”
McHale extended a hand. “The other Burke,” he said mock-
ingly. “I’ve read about you.”
“Hello Inspector,” I said as we shook hands. His grip could
crush stone. I tried not to let my voice waver as McHale tried
to see how much pressure I could take before my knees buckled
and my bones popped.
Micky came to my rescue. “What gives on the screen,
McHale?”
The Inspector, distracted, released his grip. He looked back
at the wall and squinted at the mug shot in the center of the
screen. “Liquor store robbery. Perp shot the clerk in the face,
but he’ll survive. Local surveillance camera caught him fleeing
in an ‘87 Civic. They streamed the video here, we enhanced it
for the plates and cross-reffed it to DMV. Registered to a kid
by the name of Kwame McPatrick. Ran him for priors, wants,
and warrants. Hence the mug shot. He’s gone to ground and
we’re running cross-checks for family and known associates…”
“In the old days, we’d have to pound the streets for this kind
of thing,” Micky told me.
“Now, we’re moving a bit smarter and a lot faster,” McHale
said. “We ran checks on income tax returns, credit reports,
parking tickets. Plus whatever we’ve got in our own database:
known associates, MO, identifying marks. He’s got a mother
living in Ithaca and a sister in Brooklyn. At least three old girl-
friends. We got addresses out to the field on all of them, and
prepped the responding units on the locale details.”
“On all the addresses?” I asked. “You did that from here?”
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John Donohue
“Sure,” he said simply. “We use Google Earth.”
The three of us were clustered around one of the analyst’s
stations. Her name was Park: high cheekbones with sleek dark
hair pulled into a tight ponytail. She asked the occasional ques-
tion, but her eyes rarely left the dual screens in front of her. Her
fingers flew across the computer keyboard as we talked McHale
through the problem.
“You got a incident file number on this case?” Park asked.
Micky fished a rumpled slip of paper from his pocket, handed
it to her and the report appeared on screen. Park dragged it to a
corner with her mouse, then popped up mug shots of the three
men who had tried to kill me.
“
Los Gemenos
,” McHale whistled in recognition. “Bad news
comes in twos.”
Park moved one of the pictures to her left-hand screen.
“Xavier Soledad. Dead on the scene.”
McHale looked at Micky. “What happened?”
My brother jerked his chin at me. “Him.”
McHale seemed incredulous. “
He
took out one of the
Twins?”
Micky nodded. “Stuck a knife in his eye.” For a split sec-
ond, Park looked up at me.
McHale shook his head. “Burke, is everyone in your family
a complete maniac?” But it was a rhetorical question, and he
returned to scanning the data on the screen before him. “Seems
we got another dead guy, but Martín got away?” We nodded.
“Whoa boy,” McHale continued, “I would not want Martín on
the loose and after me.”
“You begin to see the dimension of our problem here,” Micky
said. The remaining Twin’s mug shot stared out at us from the
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center of the screen. He had a thick neck and pitted skin. People
rarely look their best in arraignment photos, but Martín’s picture
did him justice. He looked like a homicidal toad.
Micky continued. “I need whatever you can pull on Sole-
dad and Martín: known associates, places where Martín might
go to ground.”
“Sure. Who’s the other stiff?” McHale asked.
“That one took a while,” Micky said. “He’s not local. The
bureau ran a search, and the guy’s name is Ruiz, a gangbanger.
In and out of trouble. Bad rep on the street. Moved from LA
to Phoenix two years ago. On the surface, nothing really out of
the ordinary.”
Except he almost killed me
. I remembered this man, the smell
of him as we fought that day, the odd horn-like designs inked
on his head, the cruel look of satisfaction on his face as he
watched me start to bleed out.
“So why do you need us?” McHale asked.
“I was describing Ruiz to an operative I know,” Micky said.
“I mentioned his tats and he said that we might want to do a
bit more research on that angle.”
McHale nodded. “Tattoos can tell us all kinds of things:
where someone did time, gang membership. We’ve been amass-
ing quite a series of data sets on these things.”
Park spoke again. Her ancestry was probably Korean, but
her accent was pure Queens. “We’ll need more detailed descrip-
tions of his tattoos. Did the coroner get some shots?”
Micky gave her another file reference number and a series
of digital photos stacked up on the screen. Park’s fingers flew
and windows began flashing open and closed. “I’m running an
image recognition program against a series of files we’ve devel-
oped on tattoos,” she explained.
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John Donohue
“It may take a few minutes,” McHale commented. “In the
meantime, we’ll dump a file for you on what we’ve got on
Los
Gemenos
.”
He looked at Micky and then at me. “Basically, the info on
Ruiz is not the problem here.”
“No shit,” Micky said. “The real mystery is why he showed
up in Brooklyn with the Twins to off my brother.”
McHale nodded. “It does seem like overkill. The Twins
were usually more than enough to get a job done.” He looked
shrewdly at Micky. “More than one reason for the visit?”
“That’s what I’m thinking,” my brother said. “The Twins
were experienced local talent. Ruiz didn’t need to be there.
Unless something else needed to be done…”
“Like what?” I said.
“From what I picked up from that operative, I’m start-
ing to get a pretty good sense,” Micky said. “But I need it
corroborated.”
Park’s program was spitting out information. She was
watching as line after line of information began flowing across
the screen. She sat back in satisfaction. “Ah,” she said.
“Ah?” I couldn’t help myself.
“Ruiz had a lot of tattoos,” Park said. “Any stick out?”
“He had horn tattoos,” I said. “Devil’s horns.”
Park nodded at the screen and highlighted a line for
McHale. McHale seemed suddenly tired. “Nice job, Sue,” he
told Park. “Dump this stuff in a folder and keep trolling on
known associates of Ruiz.”
“Whatta we got?” Micky prompted.
“Your visitor from Phoenix wasn’t just involved with any
gang,” McHale said. “He was a member of TM-7,
Todos
Muertos.
”
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Kage
Micky looked at me. “Oh. Shit. I was hoping I was wrong.”
“About what?” I asked.
“TM-7 is one of the fastest growing and most violent gangs
out there,” McHale said.
“Worse than that,” Micky said. “There are plenty of TM-7
members in the New York area. The fact that the gang sent one
of their own all the way from Phoenix to visit you does not
bode well, Connor.”
“If it was just a hit, they could have handled it locally,”
McHale chimed in. “It’s bad enough to have pissed these guys
off, but this…”
“What?” I said. “I don’t get it.”
“If they sent Ruiz, it was because they wanted something
from you, Connor,” Micky explained. “Something important.
Something they didn’t want to have to reveal to anyone local…”
“But I don’t have anything like that,” I protested.
“You may not know you have it, but you do,” McHale
said. “And if I were you, I’d wrack my brains to figure that out.
Because these guys are not going away.”
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16
Fading Things
“It gets better with time,” I told her. I would have liked to
say that the dreams go away, but they never do. At least not
entirely. Yamashita’s worked hard with me, but even still the
images return, unbidden.
Sarah’s voice sounded shaky over the phone, even as she
tried to be upbeat. “That’s good to know,” she said. But she
didn’t sound convinced.
“The cops say that Martín is gone.”
“Gone where?” Her voice rose slightly in concern.
“Gone, Sarah,” I said, trying to be soothing. “Away. Out
of our lives.” I wasn’t sure that this was entirely true, but she
needed some safe space and a sense that normalcy was return-