Alley is a cul-de-sac. Fifteen feet wide by one hundred and four feet long, surfaced in cobblestones, body was fifteen feet from Cedar Street.
Victim:
Theodore Adams.
Lived in Battery Park.
Freelance copywriter.
No known enemies.
No warrants, state or federal.
Checking for a connection with buildings around alley. None found.
Perp:
The Watchmaker.
Male.
No database entries for the Watchmaker.
M.O.:
Dragged from vehicle to alley, where iron bar was suspended over him. Eventually crushed throat.
Awaiting medical examiner's report to confirm.
No evidence of sexual activity.
Time of death: approximately 10:15 P.M. to 11 P.M. Monday night. Medical examiner to confirm.
Evidence:
Clock.
No explosives, chemical- or bioagents.
Identical to clock at pier.
No fingerprints, minimal trace.
Arnold Products, Framingham, MA.
Sold by Hallerstein's Timepieces, Manhattan.
Poem left by perp at both scenes.
Computer printer, generic paper, HP LaserJet ink.
Text:
The full Cold Moon is in the sky,
shining on the corpse of earth,
signifying the hour to die
and end the journey begun at birth.
– The Watchmaker
Not in any poetry databases; probably his own.
Cold Moon is lunar month, the month of death.
$60 in pocket, no serial number leads; prints negative.
Fine sand used as "obscuring agent." Sand was generic. Because he's returning to the scene?
Metal bar, 81 pounds, is needle-eye span. Not being used in construction across from the alleyway. No other source found.
Duct tape, generic, but cut precisely, unusual. Exactly the same lengths.
Thallium sulfate (rodent poison) found in sand.
Soil containing fish protein-from perp, not victim.
Very little trace found.
Brown fibers, probably automotive carpeting.
Other:
Vehicle.
Ford Explorer, about three years old. Brown carpet. Tan.
Review of license tags of cars in area Tuesday morning reveals no warrants. No tickets issued Monday night.
Checking with Vice about prostitutes, re: witness.
No leads.
INTERVIEW WITH HALLERSTEIN
Perp:
EFIT composite picture of the Watchmaker-late forties, early fifties, round face, double chin, thick nose, unusually light blue eyes. Over 6 feet tall, lean, hair black, medium length, no jewelry, dark clothes. No name.
Knows great deal about clocks and watches and which timepieces had been sold at recent auctions and were at current horologic exhibits in the city.
Threatened dealer to keep quiet.
Bought 10 clocks. For 10 victims?
Paid cash.
Wanted moon face on clock, wanted loud tick.
Evidence:
Source of clocks was Hallerstein's Timepieces, Flatiron District.
No prints on cash paid for clocks, no serial number hits. No trace on money.
Called from pay phones.
CRIME SCENE THREE
Location:
481 Spring Street.
Victim:
Joanne Harper.
No apparent motive.
Didn't know second victim, Adams.
Perp:
Watchmaker.
Assistant.
Probably man spotted earlier by victim, at her shop.
White, heavyset, in sunglasses, cream-colored parka and cap. Was driving the SUV.
M.O.:
Picked locks to get inside.
Intended method of attack unknown. Possibly planning to use florist's wire.
Evidence:
Fish protein came from Joanne's (orchid fertilizer).
Thallium sulfate nearby.
Florist's wire, cut in precise lengths. (To use as murder weapon?)
Clock.
Same as others. No nitrates.
No trace.
No note or poem.
No footprints, fingerprints, weapons or anything else left behind.
Black flakes-roofing tar.
Checking ASTER thermal images of New York for possible sources.
Other:
Perp was checking out victim earlier than attack. Targeting her for purpose. What?
Have police scanner. Changing frequency.
Vehicle.
Tan.
No tag number.
Putting out Emergency Vehicle Locator.
423 owners of tan Explorers in area. Cross-reference against criminal warrants. Two found. One owner too old; other is in jail on drug charges.
Owned by the man in jail.
WATCHMAKER'S EXPLORER
Location:
Found in garage, Hudson River and
Houston Street.
Evidence:
Explorer owned by man in jail. Had been confiscated, and stolen from lot, awaiting auction.
Parked in open. Not near exit.
Crumbs from corn chips, potato chips, pretzels, chocolate candy. Bits of peanut butter crackers. Stains from soda, regular, not diet.
Box of Remington.32-caliber auto pistol ammo, seven rounds missing. Gun is possible Autauga Mk II.
Book-Extreme Interrogation Techniques. Blueprint for his murder methods? No helpful information from publisher.
Strand of gray-and-black hair, probably woman's.
No prints at all, throughout entire vehicle.
Beige cotton fibers from gloves.
Sand matching that used in alleyway.
Smooth-soled size-13 shoe print.
Chapter 20

"I need a case file."
"Yeah." The woman was chewing gum. Loudly.
Snap.
Amelia Sachs was in the file room at the 158th Precinct in Lower Manhattan, not far from the 118th. She gave the night-duty file clerk at the gray desk the number of the Sarkowski file. The woman typed on a computer keyboard, a staccato sound. A glance at the screen. "Don't have it."
"You sure?"
"Don't have it."
"Hm." Sachs gave a laugh. "Where do we think it's run off to?"
"Run off to?"
"It came here on the twenty-eighth or twenty-ninth of November from the One Three One house. It looked like it was requested from somebody here."
Snap.
"Well, it's, like not logged in. You sure it came here?"
"No, not one thousand percent. But-"
"One thousand?" the woman asked, chewing away. A pack of cigarettes sat next to her, ready to be scooped up in a hurry when she fled downstairs on her break or left for the night.
"Is there any scenario where it wouldn't've been logged?"
"Scenario?"
"Would a file always be logged in?"
"If it's for a specific detective it'd go directly to his office and he'd log it. You've gotta log it. It's a rule."
"If there was no recipient name on the request?"
"Then it'd come here." She nodded at a large basket holding a card that said Pending. "And whoever wanted it'd have to come down and pick it up. Then he'd log it in. Has to be logged in."
"But it wasn't."
"Has to be. Because otherwise, how do we know where it is?" She pointed to another sign. Log it!
Sachs prowled through the large basket.
"Like, you're not supposed to do that."
"But see my problem?"
A blink. The gum snapped.
"It came here. But you can't find it. So what do I do about that?"
"Submit a request. Somebody'll look for it."
"Is that really going to happen? Because I'm not sure it would." Sachs looked toward the file room. "I'll just take a look, you don't mind."
"Really, you can't."
"Just take a few minutes."
"You can't-"