He nodded. “Unlocked, hot to the touch.”
“Could you tell if there’d been forced entry?”
“No sign, none I saw. We hit the room with a stream. Bedroom on the . . . the left, fully engaged, kitchen straight back, thick black smoke. He’d set chimneys.”
“Where?”
“I saw one in the kitchen, maybe two. Window was open. Me and Brittle, we swung toward the bedroom. The whole room was going. I could see the body on the bed. Crisped. Then it blew. From the kitchen. I smelled the gas, and it blew. And Carter . . .”
She closed a hand over his. And, sitting with him, watched the men surround and drown the lethal beauty of the fire.
Her shoes crunched broken glass when she rose, walked over to meet O’Donnell. “He killed two this time. One civilian inside the apartment he used as point of origin, and a firefighter who was killed in the explosion, probably gas from the stove. He timed it, timed it to call me so by the time the fire department arrived on scene, it would already be fully involved.”
“Reena.” He waited until she turned away from the belching smoke, the stubborn tongues of flame. “Deb Umberio lives at this address.”
“Who?” She rubbed the back of her neck, struggled to place the name. When it hit, her heart slammed her ribs. “Umberio? Relation to Detective Umberio?”
“His widow. Tom died a couple years ago. Car wreck. That was Deb’s apartment.”
“God. Oh God.” She pressed her hands to her eyes. “Alistar? What about his partner, Detective Alistar?”
“In Florida. Retired, moved there six months ago. I’ve put a call in to him, gave him a heads-up.”
“Good, okay, good, then we . . . Oh sweet Jesus. John.”
She was already fumbling out her phone when O’Donnell clamped her arm. “He’s okay. I got him on his cell. Some lucky bug crawled up his butt and told him to drive to New York tonight, check up on Pastorelli in person. He’s okay, Hale, and since he’s already on the turnpike, he’s going to follow this through. We’ve got a unit going by his place, just in case. Check it out.”
“We’ll want to put a net over his social worker from back then, the court psychologist, hell, the family court judge. Anybody who had a piece of this. But I think he’ll be concentrating on those who had any part in taking his father down. I need my family protected.”
“We’ve got that. We’ll stay on that until we’ve got him.”
“I’m going to call home—I mean my parents and the rest—just clear that out of my head first.”
“You do that. I’ll talk to some of the tenants, see who saw what.”
Once she’d made her calls, she walked back to where Bo waited. “He killed two people tonight.”
“I saw them take that firefighter away.” In a body bag, he thought. “I’m sorry.”
“The woman he killed was the widow of one of the detectives who arrested his father for the fire at Sirico’s. He’s made his big move now, he’s opened the field. It doesn’t matter that we know who’s done this. It doesn’t matter to him that we know why. It just matters that he can do it. I’m going to ask you to do me a favor.”
“Name it.”
“Don’t go home. Call Brad, stay with him tonight. Or Mandy. Or my parents.”
“How about a compromise? I won’t go home. I’ll wait for you.”
“This is going to take hours, and you can’t help me here. You can take my car. I’ll ride with O’Donnell. Do me a favor, okay?”
“One condition. When you’re done, you don’t go home either. Not without calling me first so I can meet you there.”
“All right, that’s fair.”
She leaned against him for a moment, let herself be held.
An ambulance whizzed by, sirens screaming. On its way to take someone toward help, maybe comfort. She walked back through the smoke and into the weeping.
29
The heat hung, a curtain soaked in sweat, when John threaded through the unfamiliar streets of the Bronx. The call from O’Donnell had changed his plans to find a motel off the turnpike, get some sleep and track down Joe Pastorelli in the morning.
Even with the map he’d printed off the Internet, he’d made a couple of wrong turns. His own fault, he admitted, shifting to find comfort behind the wheel after four hours in the car.
Getting old, he mused. Old and creaky. His eyes weren’t as good for driving at night—and when the hell had that happened?
Used to be he could work forty-eight hours straight on a couple of catnaps and coffee. Used to be he had work that could keep him going two days straight, he reminded himself. Those days were gone.
Retirement wasn’t a reward at the end of a well-run career, not in his mind. In his mind it was a void surrounded by endless dull hours, haunted by memories of the work.
It was probably foolish to have driven all this way, but Reena had come to him, asked for help. That was a hell of a lot more to him than a gold watch and a pension.
Still, his eyes were gritty from the strain by the time he found the right street, and his head was aching when he searched out a parking lot.
The walk from the lot to the address he had on Pastorelli worked out the kinks in his legs, but did nothing for the dull pain in his lower back. Sweat clung to him like a second skin. He stopped at a Korean grocer’s, bought a bottle of water and a pack of Excedrin. He downed two on the sidewalk, watched a hooker on the corner come to terms with a john and slide into his car. Wanting to avoid the others still hawking their wares, he cut across the street.
Pastorelli’s building was a low-rise, its bricks scarred and smoked from time and generations of exhaust. His name was printed beside a first-floor apartment. John pushed buttons for third- and fourth-floor apartments, then opened the door when some cooperative soul buzzed him in.
If the air outside had been a steam bath, inside was a closed box baked in a high oven. The headache traveled from the back of his eyes up into his skull.
He could hear the TV through Pastorelli’s door clearly enough to make out some dialogue. He recognized Law & Order, and had the sudden, uncomfortable flash that if he hadn’t taken this impulsive trip north, he’d be sitting alone in a darkened room watching the same damn thing.
If it was Pastorelli watching justice climb the slippery rope of the law, he sure as hell hadn’t been in Maryland playing with fire ninety minutes before.
He balled his fist, thumped the side of it on the door.
He’d thumped a second, then a third time before the door creaked open on the chain.
Wouldn’t have recognized you, Joe, he thought. Would’ve passed you on the street without a glance. The tough, handsome face had devolved into a hollow-eyed, jaundiced skull with skin bagging at the jowls as if it had melted off the bone and pooled there.
He smelled cigarettes and beer, with something soft, like rotted fruit, underlying it.
“What the hell you want?”
“Want to talk to you, Joe. I’m John Minger, from Baltimore.”
“Baltimore.” A dim light bloomed in those sunken eyes. “Joey sent you?”
“Yeah, you could say that.”
The door shut, the chain rattled. “He send money?” Pastorelli asked when he opened the door. “He’s supposed to send some money.”
“Not this time.”
A couple of fans stirred the stale heat and spread the smell of smoke and beer, and that underlying stench.
John recognized it now. Not just old man, not just old, sick man. It was old, dying man.
A black leather recliner sat like a man in a tuxedo at a homeless shelter. The rickety TV tray beside it held a can of Miller, an overflowing ashtray, the remote for the TV that looked as shiny and out of place as the recliner. With them were bottles of medication.
A sofa held together by dust and duct tape was pushed against the wall. The counters in the kitchenette were spotted with grease and layered with boxes from various takeout and deliveries. John could see the menu for the
last few days had included Chinese, pizza, Subway.
A roach strolled across the pizza box, obviously at home.
“How do you know Joey?” Pastorelli demanded.
“You don’t remember me, Joe? Why don’t we sit down?”
The man looked like he needed to, John thought. He wasn’t sure how he managed to move the bag of bones he’d become without rattling. John took the single chair—a metal folding type—and pulled it opposite the recliner.
“Joey’s supposed to send money. I gotta have money, pay the rent.” He sat, picked up a pack of cigarettes. John watched the bony fingers fish one out, fight to light a match.
“When did you see him last?”
“Couple months maybe. Bought me a new TV. That’s a thirty-six-inch, flat screen. Fucking Sony. He don’t buy cheap.”
“Nice.”
“Got me this chair last Christmas. Son of a bitch vibrates, you want it to.” Those dead eyes latched onto John’s face. “He’s supposed to send money.”
“I haven’t seen him, Joe. Fact is, I’m looking for him. Talk to him lately?”
“What’s this about? You a cop?” He shook his head slowly. “You ain’t no cop.”
“No, I’m not a cop. It’s about fire, Joe. Joey’s got himself in a real fix down in Baltimore. That keeps up, he won’t be sending you any money.”
“You looking to get my boy in trouble?”
“Your boy’s in trouble. He’s been lighting fires back home, back in the neighborhood. He killed somebody tonight, Joe. He killed the widow of one of the arson investigators who helped put you away for the Sirico fire.”
“Bastards dragged me out of my own house.” He blew out smoke, hacked until his sunken eyes watered. “Out of my own house.” He picked up the beer, sipped and hacked some more.
“How long did they give you, Joe? How long do you have left?”
When he grinned, he looked like a nightmare. “Asshole doctors said I’d be dead already. Here I am, so what the fuck do they know? I beat ’em.”
“Joey know you’re sick?”
“Took me to the doctor a couple times. They wanted to put poison in me. Screw that. Cancer, pancreas. Said the cancer’s eating up my liver and shit now, too, and how I can’t drink, can’t smoke.” Still grinning with that death’s head, he sucked on the cigarette. “Fuck them, fuck them all.”
“Joey went back to clean things up, finish things off for you.”
“Don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Take care of the people who screwed with you. Especially Catarina Hale.”
“Little slut. Sashaying around the neighborhood like she’s better than anybody else. Teasing my boy. So he tried to get a piece, so what? That asshole Hale thinks he can mess with me and mine? Showed him.”
“You paid for it.”
“Ruined my life.” The grin melted away. “That asshole Hale ruined my life. Couldn’t get a decent job after. Mopping up other people’s puke, for chrissake. Took my dignity’s what he did. Took my life away. I got sick ’cause of being in prison, no matter what the fuckhead doctors say. Probably pass this on to Joey, good chance of it. All because of that little whore.”
John decided not to point out you couldn’t catch pancreatic cancer in prison. And if you could, you couldn’t pass it on to your son.
“Pisser, all right. I guess Joey felt that way, too.”
“He’s my son, isn’t he? He respects his father. Knows it’s not my fault he maybe got the cancer genes offa me. He’s got brains. Joey’s always had brains. He didn’t get them from his stupid bitch of a mother. He’s going to send me some money, maybe take me on a trip so I can get out of this godforsaken heat.”
He closed his eyes a moment as he turned his face toward one of the fans. His wispy hair stirred in the stale breeze. “Going to Italy, up north, in the mountains where it’s cool. He’s got something going, the cops’ll never take him for it. He’s too smart.”
“He burned a woman to death in her own bed tonight.”
“Maybe he did, maybe he didn’t.” But the sudden light in those eyes showed a father’s horrible pride. “If he did, she must’ve had it coming.”
“If he gets in touch with you, Joe, do yourself a favor.” John took out a notebook, wrote down his name and number. “Give me a call. You help me find him, it’ll be better for him. Cops do, I can’t promise what’ll happen. He killed a cop’s wife. You call me, Joe, and maybe I can fix it so you get a little money.”
“How much money?”
“Couple hundred,” John said as his gut roiled with disgust. “Maybe more.”
He rose, put the number on the tray table. “He’s pushing his luck, I promise you.”
“You got brains, you don’t need luck.”
While John was driving out of the Bronx, Joey picked the lock on the rear door of his row house. A couple of stops along the way, and he was right on schedule.
He imagined the cop’s wife roasting like a suckling pig, and the image made him smile as he finessed the locks.
Places to go, he’d told her. Yeah, he had places to go. And people to burn. Big-nosed John Minger was on his short list.
He slipped in the back, took the snub-nosed .22 out of his pack. He’d shoot him first. Kneecap him. Then they’d have a little talk while he set the fire.
Going to keep the city’s heroes busy tonight, he thought and worked his way carefully through the darkened house.
Old man was probably in bed already. Already sawing them off this time of night.
He’d rather be dead than old.
Age wouldn’t be a problem for Minger much longer. He’d be dead, the whole fucking slew of them would be dead before his father bought it. That was justice.
They’d killed his father sure as if they’d carved him open with a knife. Every mother’s son of them was going to pay for it.
He made his way upstairs, excitement and pleasure building. In the knees, he thought again. Pop, pop! See how he liked it.
See how he liked watching the fire claw across the bed toward him. See how he liked having it eat at him the way the cancer was eating at his father.
He wasn’t going down that way. No fucking way. Joseph Pastorelli’s boy, Joey, wasn’t going by cancer.
Things to do, he thought again, a lot of things to do before he walked into the fire and ended it.
When Minger was done, it’d be time to move on to the main attractions. The night was young yet.
But he slipped into and searched every room, and didn’t find his prey.
His finger vibrated on the trigger, his hand shook with the effort of resisting the urge to fire into the empty bed.
Went out to watch the cop’s bitch burn, that’s what he did. People like to watch. Reena probably called crying to him, so he went to hold her hand.
Probably banged her plenty over the years.
He could wait a little bit. Yeah, the night was young so he could spare a little time. Get him when he got home. Just wait like a cat at the rat hole.
He’d just put the wait time to good use and set things up.
Smoke still curtained the room, and her boots squished in the wet of the bedroom carpet as Reena looked down on the remains of Deborah Umberio.
The sodden remains of the charred mattress told the tale.
“She burned where she lay,” O’Donnell said. “Right into the padding.”
Peterson, the ME in a short-sleeved shirt and khakis, waited while Reena took digitals. “Could have been dead before he lit the room. Or unconscious. I’ll let you know what we find. We’ll move on this right away.”
“She wouldn’t have been dead, or unconscious.” Reena lowered the camera. “He’d have wanted her alive and aware. He’d want her to