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Little Girl Blue.
By David Cray.
To the Reader: Although my novel, Little Girl Blue, does not concern itself with terrorism, several pivotal chapters are set in lower Manhattan, blocks from where the towers of the World Trade Center once stood. Given the length of time between the writing (Little Girl Blue was completed in October 2000) and the publication of books, I'm sure my situation is far from unique. Nevertheless, I feel obliged to make a statement.
I love the city of my birth, the city in which I continue to live, every greedy, grimy, glorious inch of it; my sense of violation could not be more profound. Nor can I overstate the grat.i.tude and respect I feel for the cops and the firefighters and the paramedics who gave their lives in those stairways. It is to these men and women, and to their wives and their daughters and their husbands and their sons, and to all the grieving families whose tears now flood our hearts, that I respectfully and humbly dedicate this book.
One final note. In the year 1835, a great fire swept through lower Manhattan. Driven by high winds, the fire raged for two full days. More than six hundred buildings were utterly destroyed, including the Merchant's Exchange. A year later, five hundred new buildings had risen from the ashes and the city was again marching north.
Keep the faith.
David Cray, September 20, 2001, New York City
ONE.
WHEN LIEUTENANT JULIA BREN NAN pushed through a semicircle of uniformed cops to view the body for the first time, the words Little Girl Blue jumped into her mind as if they'd been crouching in her unconscious, patiently awaiting an opportunity to catch her unawares. She brought her gloved right hand to her mouth, though she hadn't spoken aloud, but was unable to withdraw the words, or even to stop thinking them, because the body was, indeed, the milky blue of the winter sky above Central Park. It was the body of a little girl as well, curled into a fetal position beneath the folded leaves of a wintering rhododendron.
"Ain't this a shame, loo? Ain't this a shame?"
Julia turned from the body to find Detective Albert Griffith standing alongside. He was s.h.i.+fting his weight from one foot to another, biting at the edge of his lower lip. Griffith was a deeply religious black man, had been, as he put it "... church-raised by my Auntie Bernice."
Julia looked back at the girl. Maybe eight or nine years old, she wore no clothes, not even shoes or socks, and her hair was matted with dried leaves and clods of dirt. The soles of her feet were also dirty. They appeared to be abraded, as if she'd walked or run some distance.
"You look around?" Julia asked.
"The ground's froze up. There's no trail. Nothin' obvious, anyway."
Julia sighed. "I was hoping for a dropped wallet," she admitted. When Griffith didn't respond, she quickly added, "They're gonna be screaming for blood. The bra.s.s, the mayor, the press, the public." A frigid gust of wind rattled the dry leaves of the rhododendrons and Julia instinctively hunched her shoulders. "Us, too," she added. "We're gonna need this one, too."
At five feet ten inches tall, Julia Brennan was able to look her subordinate in the eye. Griffith had been a part of C Squad, Manhattan North Homicide, for the five years she'd been its supervisor. There'd been some friction at first (whether more or less than would have been aroused by an equally young, equally ambitious male she couldn't be sure), but it had disappeared when C Squad's clearance rate, mediocre when she'd come on board, rose to compete with those of the top squads in the city.
"How you think she got here, Bert?" Julia asked.
Griffith caught his lower lip between his front teeth, then shrugged. "Could'a walked. Could'a been carried."
"But not driven."
"Uh-uh, not driven. Can't see it, lieutenant. Not unless there was two of 'em."
Julia nodded. Central Park's nearest east-west transverse road was almost a quarter-mile from where they stood, and Central Park Drive, which traced an irregular ellipse within the park, lay two hundred yards to the west, as did Fifth Avenue, the nearest city street. Because there was no legal parking on any of these roads, it was extremely unlikely that the perpetrator if there was a perpetrator left his vehicle unattended for the time it would take to carry the girl to where she now lay, then return.
"What about a car? Could she have jumped out of car, maybe coming down Fifth Avenue? What if she was s.n.a.t.c.hed somewhere else, then escaped? If her abductor wasn't somebody she knew, he just might let her go."
Detective Frank Turro, Bert Griffith's partner, came up alongside them. "The ME's here," he announced. New to the squad, Turro was six months short of his third decade on the job. He'd been sent over from Queens Homicide after Julia arranged the transfer of C Squad's most notorious f.u.c.kup. From what little Julia had seen of him, Turro could be relied on to do what he was told but lacked initiative.
"Already?"
"What could I say, loo. Somebody must've got him motivated." Turro's breath whitened the air in little bursts. "Also, Chief Flan-nery's waitin' for you on Fifth Avenue. In his Lincoln."
Chief Linus Flannery was the Manhattan North Borough Commander, a man more at ease with a flow chart than an investigation.
"Is he alone?"
"He's with Clark."
"Great."
Linus Flannery's protege, Harry Clark, was the Manhattan North Detective Commander. In theory, he reported only to the Chief of Detectives; in fact, he was a notorious sycophant who sucked up to any superior officer. Thus, if Flannery said, "Bring me a suspect in ten minutes," Clark would check his watch.
a.s.sistant Medical Examiner Solomon Bucevski, a cigarette dangling from his lips, trundled up to stand alongside Frank Turro. Bucevski had only recently immigrated to the United States from Moscow, where crime had skyrocketed after the breakup of the old Soviet Union. Unimpressed with the virtues of democracy at the best of times, he stared at the corpse through narrowed eyes, then muttered, "Whoever does this, you must to kill him."
I EN MINUTES later, Chief Flannery echoed Bucevski's sentiments. "This sc.u.mbag oughta fry," he declared. "They oughta bring back crucifixion for this sc.u.mbag."
Julia's gaze lingered on Flannery's tiny mouth. Somewhere along the line, he'd learned to speak without exposing his teeth, as if protecting a toothache. She wanted to ask him if he'd been to the scene, maybe approached the victim, contaminated the search area, but ever mindful of the relations.h.i.+p between discretion and valor, kept her insubordinate tongue in check.
Harry Clark spoke up from the front seat of the Chief's midnight-blue Towncar. "We been to the scene," he announced, "We snuck a peek before you showed up."
"We were in the neighborhood," Flannery explained. "Coming from Ma.s.s at St. Pat's. We do it every month." He cleared his throat. "The Holy Name Society."
A rebuke. The Holy Name Society was the largest of the job's fraternal organizations, and though dominated by Irish cops, included Germans, Italians, and Hispanics in its members.h.i.+p. Julia was Irish, at least nominally Catholic, and a member of the Holy Name Society, but she neither attended prayer meetings nor made the monthly ma.s.s. Even for a climber like herself, the NYPD's fraternal societies were a bit too fraternal. There were the little digs at the monthly dinners, the offhand references to "femin.a.z.is," the dirty jokes once the drinks began to flow. After a while, no matter how strong your stomach, how thick your skin, it got depressing.
"We can't be sure it's a homicide," Julia finally said, hoping to change the subject, maybe get to the point.
"You think she was takin' a walk?" Flannery's chortle quickly became a phlegmy cough. He lowered the window to his right and spat onto the sidewalk.
"We can't be sure," Julia insisted, "that we're looking at a homicide."
"And what," Clark asked, "leads you to that conclusion, lieutenant? Exactly what?"
"The fetal position. It looks to me as if she lay there for some time, trying to conserve body heat, and the soles of her feet are abraded. I think she might have walked into the park."
"It's January, for Christ's sake." Flannery glanced out the window as if the date was somehow in question. "It's gotta be what out there?"
"Ten degrees," Clark dutifully responded. "Fifteen at the outside."
"I mean, if she was only cold, why didn't she just walk out of the park and ask somebody for help?" When Julia replied with a shrug, he continued. "We want you to brief the reporters."
Clark laughed, "But we don't want you to tell them anything." "Anything," Flannery corrected, "you don't have to tell them.
Understand, lieutenant? We may have a formal press conference late this afternoon."
llELEASED, JULIA walked south on Fifth Avenue, from Seventy-sixth Street directly across from the crime scene to the Seventy-second Street transverse road running from Fifth Avenue to Central Park West. Then she retraced her steps and continued on to Seventy-ninth Street and another transverse. The townhouses and apartments on this section of Fifth Avenue, directly east of the park, were among the most expensive in the city. Not only did every apartment building have a doorman, most of them also had surveillance cameras mounted on the outer walls. The doormen would have to be questioned, the tapes viewed. If Griffith wasn't already on top of it, she'd bring him up to speed when he got back to the station house.
There was nothing more to do at the scene, but Julia lingered on Fifth Avenue as the words Little Girl Blue again forced their way into her thoughts. This time, however, she resolutely pushed the words away, telling herself to be a professional. Telling herself, You can't bring them back to life.
When Julia had first come on the job, nearly twelve years before, she'd believed that her s.e.x would protect her from the most soul-deadening aspects of her profession. Now she understood that it was not possible to acknowledge even the smallest part of the misery that pervades a cop's workday. You either harden or find another line of work. That was why cops, though overwhelmingly Christian, have such contempt for bleeding hearts. If cops, including herself, were to allow the slightest tear in the armor that protects their own hearts, they would lose every drop of blood in an instant.
Inevitably, because she hadn't quit, Julia had toughened. Her husband, Sam Brennan, had been first to pick it up. "You look at me," he'd complained, "as if you were trying to make up your mind about something. You look like you're waiting for me to make a mistake."
Poor Sam. He'd married his high-school sweetheart, the compliant blonde who'd cheered his exploits, both on the athletic fields of Bay-side High and in the back seat of his father's Cadillac; adjusting to the woman she'd become was beyond him. As for Julia, there was no going back for her either. Instead, in the years following her divorce, she'd advanced from sergeant to lieutenant, from patrol to detective. Only a week before, she'd been notified that she'd ranked twelfth on the captain's exam and was likely to be promoted within the next couple of years.
A celebratory dinner with the woman Julia had come to think of as her "rabbette," Deputy Chief Bea Shepherd, had followed the formal posting of the list. They'd met at the Hudson Cafe, then lingered for nearly two hours. As far as Julia could remember, at no point had they discussed the virtues of law enforcement or the historically low crime rate. Instead they gossiped about the job through c.o.c.ktails, exchanging rumors and anecdotes, then moved on to their ex-husbands, their children, boyfriends past and present.
A SHARPLY spoken "d.a.m.n you" drew Julia's attention. A middle-aged man in a cashmere overcoat was shaking his fist at a retreating taxi. The man looked at Julia, his jaw thrust forward as if he expected her to offer some objection to his display, then strode beneath the canopy fronting an apartment building, through a gla.s.s door held open by a uniformed doorman, and into the lobby.
As the door closed, Julia became aware of her huddled shoulders. As a general rule weather was something you learned to ignore, but the cold was now reaching down into her chest. Her feet, even in fur-lined boots that rose almost to her knees, were cold enough to hurt. Still she lingered; still the words rose into her consciousness. Little Girl Blue.
There was a song, she remembered, called "Little Girl Blue," but it was a sad song about someone a lot older than ten, a love song. Plus, there was the nursery rhyme, Little Boy Blue, a very sad poem as well.
Julia stamped her feet. She'd been an ambitious cop long enough to know that high-profile crimes, the kind that make careers, are usually stolen away by even more ambitious superiors. She would have to fight to protect her interests and it was past time to get on with it. As if to confirm her judgement, a FOX-TV news van slid into the bus stop on the Central Park side of Fifth Avenue. A moment later, a CBS van followed. Julia didn't wait for the doors to open. She turned her back and quickly marched off toward Madison Avenue, her unmarked department Taurus, and her cell phone.
At NINE o'clock on Sunday morning Julia started the Ford, turned on the heater, and settled down. As she waited for the engine to warm, she watched a man and a woman, trailed by a pair of young girls, march north along Madison Avenue. The family was dressed for church, the girls in hooded yellow parkas and patent leather shoes. The younger of the girls had a runny nose, which she wiped with the sleeve of her coat.
"That's disgusting, Annie," the older girl remarked.
Annie's mouth curled into a defiant grimace. "I don' know whatta do," she insisted.
"Can you spell handkerchief?"
"No."
Inside her Taurus, with the heater pus.h.i.+ng warm air across her ankles, Julia made two phone calls. The first was to her mentor, Bea Shepherd. Bea listened patiently as Julia explained the situation, then asked, "What do you want here?"
"I want the case."
"There's only two ways you get to keep the case, Julia. You make an arrest within the next seventy-two hours, or your investigation goes nowhere. If it looks like the job's gonna be embarra.s.sed, like the case can't be put away, Harry Clark will leave you to swing in the breeze. Count on it."
"I don't care, Bea. I want the job. If Clark decides to organize a task force, then I want a piece of the task force. What I don't want is to be cut out."
"Duly noted." Bea Shepherd's voice carried a wistful undertone. If Julia chose not to follow her advice, Bea Shepherd would not be held responsible when things turned out badly. "Anything else?"
"Don't get p.i.s.sed off, Bea. I'm a detective, remember? I asked for the detectives."
"And I advised against that as well."
"True enough." Julia paused long enough to be sure Bea had nothing to add. Despite the negativity, Bea had a vested interest in Julia's remaining with the case. Julia would be Deputy Chief Shepherd's eyes and ears in an environment where knowledge and power were as intertwined as the bodies of copulating snakes. "There's something else," she said, pleased to note that her voice was steady. "I need to reach someone in s.e.x Crimes, maybe in the DA's office. Somebody I can talk to if I need help."
"s.e.x Crimes? What makes you think you're looking at a s.e.x crime? Why couldn't she be emotionally disturbed, maybe r.e.t.a.r.ded? Why couldn't she be running away from physical abuse? Why couldn't .. . By the way, Julia, do you have a name for this kid yet?"
"Little Girl Blue." Julia was sorry for the words almost before they'd left her mouth. Almost.
"That's good. That'll play alongside Son of Sam. The reporters will eat it up." Bea laughed into the phone, then said. "But you haven't answered my question."
"I don't know where she came from, Bea. And I don't know how she ended up in Central Park. I just want to be ready for anything."
Bea drew a breath, then sighed. "Julia, I have to leave. Keep me up to date."
UUL1A DUG Robert Reid's number from her phone book and quickly punched it into her cell phone. Reid, Julia's uncle, was the dean of New York reporters. His column, My Town, had been running in the Daily News longer than anyone cared to remember.
When Reid answered on the third ring, Julia said, "It's me, Uncle Bob."
"Julia," Reid replied without hesitation, "got something good for me?" After decades of near-legendary boozing, Reid's voice was little more than a hoa.r.s.e rasp, despite his having cleaned up his act five years before.
"A body in Central Park near East Seventy-sixth Street. A child."
"White?"
Julia swallowed, then replied, "Yeah, she's white."
"She?"
"A little girl, maybe eight or nine."
"How'd she die?"
"Don't know yet."
"I'm not getting this."
"She's naked, Uncle Bob, and there's no sign of her clothing."
"Ah."
TWO.
FATHER JEAN Lucienne turned to the congregation and spread his hands. "Ite, missa est," he said. Go, the ma.s.s has ended.
Peter Foley, from his place in the choir loft, responded, "Deo gratias," then rose to put on a gray car coat, a tweed cap, and a pair of lined leather gloves. Having long ago accepted the fact that his fellow paris.h.i.+oners were drawn as much to Holy Savior's clubby atmosphere as to the Latin rite it espoused, Foley usually forced himself to join the buzz of conversation that followed Sunday ma.s.s. But on this particular Sunday he had an appointment that left him no time for more than a nod and a smile as he s.n.a.t.c.hed his briefcase, then made his way down the stairs and out onto East Eighty-first Street. A moment later, after quickly shaking Father Lucienne's hand, Foley was heading west toward Central Park, covering the ground with long casual strides. At 41, he stood an inch-and-a-half above six feet and kept in shape by throwing himself whenever possible into the seemingly endless stream of pedestrians making their their way along the sidewalks of Manhattan. These hikes meant at least as much to Foley as the ma.s.ses he attended several times each week, and there were moments when he felt himself pulled forward by the flow as if weightless, a twig on the surface of a river. Then he might walk for hours, from neighborhood to neighborhood, weaving around slower pedestrians until the solid ache in his legs drew him once again to the specifics of flesh and gravity. Until fatigue made sleep again possible. On this occasion, however, with a destination in mind and barely enough time to get there, Foley was too preoccupied with his coming appointment to appreciate the joggers, the cyclists, and the in-line skaters who'd braved the cold to display their skills on Central Park's inner drive. He was unaware, too, of the bright winter sun, though he often came to the park in winter to escape the shadowed sidewalks. He thought only of Wallace Carpenter, and the investment he, Foley, had already made in the man. Now it was crunch time.
It TOOK Foley forty-five minutes to cover the three miles between Holy Savior and the Paradise Diner on Tenth Avenue and Thirty-ninth Street. The Paradise was a typical New York coffeehouse: Formica tables, Naugahyde benches, an acoustical drop ceiling, water-stained in the corners. Beneath a plastic dome, a half-consumed peach pie leaked glutinous filling onto a greasy aluminum pie plate.
As Foley entered, a young woman bearing a stack of menus approached him. She wore a tight green skirt over lumpy hips and spoke in a distinctive Greek accent. Her face was very broad across the top, then narrowed to a tiny pointed jaw below which an incipient double chin swelled ever so slightly. "One for breakfast? There's room at the counter."
"I'm meeting someone."