The clerk took the copy, examined it closely. Slowly the officious look slid off his officious little face like a gobbet of ice cream slipping off a cone and splattering on the cement.

“Ah . . . er,” said the clerk. “Is your name by any chance Houston?”

“No. Why?”

“Because we have a problem.”

“How delicious.” She leaned forward and rested her knuckles on the desk. “Now, why don’t you tell me about our little problem before I start getting curious.”

“It’s the doctor who signed the certificate and declared Mr. Byrne dead, the Dr. Manzone whose signature is right there.”

“That’s not his signature?”

“No, that at least appears to be legit.”

“Then I’ll need to talk to your Dr. Manzone.”

“That might be difficult.” The clerk winced involuntarily. “He’s

not with us anymore.”

“No?”

“He was indeed here in 1994 when he signed the certificate, but

he’s gone now. Gone, gone, gone.”

“I get the sense I’m being shuffled like a deck of cards, but all

right, deal. Where can I find this Dr. Manzone now?”

“Rahway.”

“In another hospital?”

“No, ma’am. In the state prison. There were some—how should I

put it?—irregularities.”

Detective Ramirez smiled a wolfish smile and sat down in one

of the chairs facing the clerk, leaned forward over the desk, glanced

right and left to make sure no one was in earshot. “All right, you

sweet little man. Dish.”

ON HER WAY to the East Jersey State Prison in Rahway, New Jersey, a quick thirty-minute drive from the hospital, she called Henderson. “You would not believe the shit that we stepped into.”

“I’ve been trying to get hold of you,” said Henderson.

“I had to turn my phone off in the hospital. Now, listen to this. Liam Byrne’s death certificate was signed by a Dr. Manzone. Manzone certified that Liam Byrne died of a heart attack at this hospital in a place called Summit, New Jersey. But the hospital doesn’t have any record of Liam Byrne. It might be just a clerical error, right? Except that this Dr. Manzone isn’t your normal ear, nose, and throat guy. He had something else going on the side.”

“Ramirez, you need to come back.”

“You’re not listening. There was this place in Elizabeth that was doing embalming for a host of funeral parlors from New York, New Jersey, and even Philadelphia. I thought everyone did their own, but apparently often they outsource. But it wasn’t enough to just juice these bodies with formaldehyde. These guys in Elizabeth would cut out the kidneys, the eyes, even the bones, and sell them to distribution centers, some kind of biomedical supply houses, to be used in transplants. And the guy doing the harvesting was our Dr. Manzone.”

“Where’s this heading?” said Henderson. “Because we got stuff going on down here you need to be a part of.”

“Hang on, Pops, it’s just starting to get interesting. Sometimes the corpses they got weren’t in good enough shape for the transplants— too old or they died too long ago or there was some disease eating at their bones. So what did our guy Manzone do? The son of a bitch doctored the death certificates, or made new ones, so that the organs they were selling would look like A-one used parts instead of the rusted refuse of rent-a-wrecks. Are you getting me? I’d bet dollars to those doughnuts you stuff down your gut each morning that Liam Byrne didn’t die of something as natural as a heart attack.”

“Where are you going now?”

“Rahway. Our Dr. Manzone is in the same prison where they held Hurricane Carter. Manzone cooperated fully with the New Jersey authorities and apparently could remember the details of every doctored certificate, down to the specific parts cut out and sold. I bet he’ll remember what the hell happened to Liam Byrne.”

“Forget it, Ramirez.”

“Forget it? Are you crazy, old man, or just lazy? We’re on top of something huge here. If Byrne was murdered fourteen years ago, then Toth might have been killed by the same guy for the same reason. Which means this same bastard was probably trying to kill young Byrne last night. And the reason was in that file cabinet. I wouldn’t be surprised if we have a serial killer on our hands and Kyle Byrne is next on the list.”

“Forget about it. Come on back. Lieutenant’s orders.”

“What’s going on here, Henderson? Why are you shutting this down?”

“You were right all along, Ramirez. You had it pegged from the start. We got a call from a pawnshop about the watch. We just picked up the ticket holder, with what appears to be the right gun and a box from the Toth office.”

“You’re killing me.”

“He’s waiting for us in interrogation room six. Come on back. We’ll go in together and break down his ass and put the Laszlo Toth homicide to bed.”

CHAPTER 38

WELCOME TO SENATOR TRUSCOTT’S Philadelphia office,” said

the pretty receptionist at the desk facing the front door. “Can I help you?”

Kyle looked around at the paneled walls, the dark wood furnishings, the august seal of the United States Senate above the receptionist’s desk, at the tight, smiling face of the senator himself bolted onto the wall next to the seal. Maybe this was what his father meant about glory. If so, the son of a bitch could have it. There was something forced and artificial about the whole scene, something whose only purpose was to impress. From what he could tell about the job of a senator, it was all about sucking up for money, checking your values at the door, and voting with your party. Kyle would just as soon cut out the middle stuff and head straight to the party.

He looked at the receptionist’s sincere brown eyes and tilted his head. She seemed familiar. He had met her before. At a bar? At a club?

“Hi, I’m looking for that Senator Truscott,” said Kyle. “Is he around?”

“No, I’m sorry.”

“But he’s coming to Philadelphia tomorrow, right?”

“He has an event at the convention center.” She eyed his outfit. “A fund-raising event. Would you like to buy a ticket? There are still a few available.”

“For a pretty stiff donation, I assume.”

“Oh, it will be worth it, I assure you.” Her pretty eyes widened, and she lowered her voice. “It’s not definite yet, but I have it on good authority that the vice president is scheduled to attend.”


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