Kimberly Norton was dead. She lay on a futon, wearing a medium-expensive silk kimono that was bunched just below the knees, exposing her lower legs. Postmortem lividity was beginning to color the underside of her body as gravity drew her blood downward. Soon the top of the body would be the color of ash, and the lower regions would be maroon. Death was so cruel, John thought. It wasn't enough that it stole life. It also stole whatever beauty the victim had once possessed. She'd been pretty—well, that was the point, wasn't it? John checked the body against the photograph, a passing resemblance to his younger daughter, Patsy. He handed the picture to Ding. He wondered if the lad would make the same connection.
"It's her."
"Concur, John," Chavez observed huskily. "It's her." Pause. "Shit," he concluded quietly, examining the face for a long moment that made his face twist with anger. So, Clark thought, he sees it too.
"Got a camera?"
"Yeah." Ding pulled a compact 35mm out of his pants pocket. "Play cop?"
"That's right."
Clark stooped down to examine the body. It was frustrating. He wasn't a pathologist, and though he had much knowledge of death, more knowledge still was needed to do this right. There…in the vein on the top of her foot, a single indentation. Not much more than that. So she'd been on drugs? If so, she'd been a careful user, John thought. She'd always cleaned the needle and…He looked around the room. There. A bottle of alcohol and a plastic bag of cotton swabs, and a bag of plastic syringes.
"I don't see any other needle marks."
"They don't always show, man," Chavez observed.
Clark sighed and untied the kimono, opening it. She'd been wearing nothing under it.
"Fuck!" Chavez rasped. There was fluid inside her thighs.
"That's a singularly unsuitable thing to say," Clark whispered back. It was as close as he'd come to losing his temper in many years. "Take your pictures."
Ding didn't answer. The camera flashed and whirred away. He recorded the scene as a forensic photographer might have done. Clark then started to rearrange the kimono, uselessly giving the girl back whatever dignity that death and men had failed to rob from her.
"Wait a minute…left hand."
Clark examined it. One nail was broken. All the others were medium-long, evenly coated with a neutral polish. He examined the others. There was something under them.
"Scratched somebody?" Clark asked.
"See anyplace she scratched herself, Mr. C?" Ding asked.
"No."
"Then she wasn't alone when it happened, man. Check her ankles again," Chavez said urgently.
On the left one, the foot with the puncture, the underside of the ankle revealed bruises almost concealed by the building lividity. Chavez shot his last frame.
"I thought so."
"Tell me why later. We're out of here," John said, standing. Within less than a minute they were out the back door, down the meandering alley, and back on a main thoroughfare to wait for their car.
"That was close," Chavez observed as the police car pulled up to Number 18. There was a TV crew fifteen seconds behind.
"Don't you just love it? They're going to tie up everything real nice and neat…What is it, Ding?"
"Ain't right, Mr. C. Supposed to look like an OD, right?"
"Yeah, why?"
"You OD on smack, man, it just stops. Boom, bye-bye. I seen a guy go out like that back in the old days, never got the sticker out of his arm, okay? Heart stops, lungs stop, gone. You don't get up and set the needle down and then lay back down, okay? Bruises on the leg. Somebody stuck her. She was murdered, John. And probably she was raped, too."
"I saw the paraphernalia. All U.S.—made. Nice setup. They close the case, blame the girl and her family, give their own people an object lesson." Clark looked over as the car pulled around the corner. "Good eye, Ding."
"Thanks, boss." Chavez fell silent again, his anger building now that he had nothing to do but think it over. "You know, I'd really like to meet that guy."
"We won't."
Time for a little perverse fantasy: "I know, but I used to be a Ninja, remember? It might be real fun, especially barehanded."
"That just breaks bones, pretty often your own bones."
"I'd like to see his eyes when it happens."
"So put a good scope on the rifle," Clark advised.
"True," Chavez conceded. "What kind of person gets off on that, Mr. C?"
"One sick motherfucker, Domingo. I met a few, once."
Just before they got into the car, Ding's black eyes locked on Clark.
"Maybe I will meet this one personally, John. El fado can play tricks. Funny ones."
"Where is she?" Nomuri asked from behind the wheel.
"Drive," Clark told him.
"You should have heard the speech," Chet said, moving up the street and wondering what had gone wrong.
"The girl's dead," Ryan told the President barely two hours later, 1:00 P.M., Washington time.
"Natural causes?" Durling asked.
"Drug overdose, probably not self-administered. They have photos. We ought to have them in thirty-six hours. Our guys just got clear in time. The Japanese police showed up pretty fast."
"Wait a minute. Back up. You're saying murder?"
"That's what our people think, yes, Mr. President."
"Do they know enough to make that evaluation?"
Ryan took his seat and decided that he had to explain a little bit. "Sir, our senior officer knows a few things about the subject, yes."
"That was nicely phrased," the President noted dryly. "I don't want to know any more about that subject, do I?"
"No reason for it right now, sir, no."
"Goto?"
"Possibly one of his people. Actually the best indicator will be how their police report it. If anything they tell us is at variance with what we've learned from our own people, then we'll know that somebody played with the data, and not all that many people have the ability to order changes in police reports." Jack paused for a moment. "Sir, I've had another independent evaluation of the man's character." He went on to repeat Kris Hunter's story.
"You're telling me that you believe he had this young girl killed, and will use his police to cover it up? And you already knew he likes that sort of thing?" Durling flushed. "You wanted me to extend this bastard an olive branch? What the hell's the matter with you?"
Jack took a deep breath. "Okay, yes, Mr. President, I had that coming. The question is, now what do we do?"
Durling's face changed. "You didn't deserve that, sorry."
"Actually I do deserve it, Mr. President. I could have told Mary Pat to get her out some time ago—but I didn't," Ryan observed bleakly. "I didn't see this one coming."
"We never do, Jack. Now what?"
"We can't tell the legal attache at the embassy because we don't 'know' about this yet, but I think we prep the FBI to check things out after we're officially notified. I can call Dan Murray about that."
"Shaw's designated hitter?"
Ryan nodded. "Dan and I go back a ways. For the political side, I'm not sure. The transcript of his TV speech just came in. Before you read it, well, you need to know what sort of fellow we're dealing with."
"Tell me, how many common bastards like that run countries?"
"You know that better than I do, sir." Jack thought about that for a moment. "It's not entirely a bad thing. People like that are weak, Mr. President. Cowards, when you get down to it. If you have to have enemies, better that they have weaknesses."
He might make a state visit, Durling thought. We might have to put him up at Blair House, right across the street. Throw a state dinner: we'll walk out into the East Room and make pretty speeches, and toast each other, and shake hands as though we're bosom buddies. Be damned to that! He lifted the folder with Goto's speech and skimmed through it.