The Inner Circle - Brad Meltzer [279]
They signed him in at the door and Custer stepped through, Noyes following at his heels. They made their way quickly down to the basement apartment. Outside, the reporter could still be heard, voice raised in protest.
The first thing Custer noticed when he stepped into the apartment was a big hole, lots of dirt. There were the usual photographers, lights, forensics, an ME, the SOC people. And there was the commissioner.
The commissioner glanced up and spotted him. A spasm of displeasure went across his face. “Custer!” he called, nodding him over.
“Yes, sir.” Custer swallowed, gritted his teeth. This was it.
“Congratulations.”
Custer froze. Rocker’s sarcasm was a bad sign. And right in front of everybody, too.
He stiffened. “I’m sorry, sir, this was completely unauthorized from beginning to end, and I’m personally going to—”
He felt the commissioner’s arm snake around his shoulder, pull him closer. Custer could smell stale coffee on his breath. “Custer?”
“Yes sir?”
“Please, just listen,” the commissioner muttered. “Don’t speak. I’m not here to attend to excuses. I’m here to put you in charge of this investigation.”
This was a really bad sign. He’d been victimized by the commissioner’s sarcasm before, but not like this. Never like this.
Custer blinked. “I’m truly sorry, sir—”
“You’re not listening to me, Captain.” Arm still around his shoulder, the commissioner steered Custer away from the press of officials, back into the rear of the narrow apartment. “I understand your man O’Shaughnessy had something to do with uncovering this site.”
“Yes, and I am going to severely reprimand—”
“Captain, will you let me finish?”
“Yes, sir.”
“The mayor has called me twice this morning. He’s delighted.”
“Delighted?” Custer wasn’t sure if this was more sarcasm, or something even worse.
“Delighted. The more attention that gets deflected from the new copycat murders, the happier he is. New murders are very bad for approval ratings. Thanks to this discovery, you’re the cop of the hour. For the mayor, at least.”
Silence. It was clear to Custer that Rocker didn’t fully share the mayor’s good opinion.
“So are we crystal-clear, Captain? This is now officially your case.”
“What case?” Custer was momentarily confused. Were they opening an official investigation into these old killings, too?
“The Surgeon case.” Rocker waved his hand dismissively at the huge hole with their skeletons. “This is nothing. This is archaeology. This is not a case.”
“Right. Thank you, sir,” Custer said.
“Don’t thank me. Thank the mayor. It was his, ah, suggestion that you handle it.”
Rocker let his arm slip from Custer’s shoulder. Then he stood back and looked at the captain: a long, appraising glance. “Feel you can do this, Captain?”
Custer nodded. The numbness was beginning to fade.
“The first order of business is damage control. These old murders will give you a day, maybe two, before the public’s attention returns to the Surgeon. The mayor may like seeing these old murders getting the attention, but frankly I don’t. It’ll give the copycat killer ideas, egg him on.” He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “I brought in Bryce Harriman. You know him?”
“No.”
“He’s the one who first put a finger on the copycat angle. We need to keep him where we can see him. We’ll give him an exclusive, but we’ll control the information he gets. Understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Good. He’s a nice sort, eager to please. He’s waiting out front. Remember to keep the conversation on the old bones and on this site. Not on the Surgeon or the new killings. The public may be confounding the two, but we’re sure as hell not.”
Custer turned back toward the living room. But Rocker put out a hand to stop him.
“And, Captain? Once you’re done with Harriman, I’d suggest you get to work on this new case of yours. Get right to work. Catch that killer. You don’t want another, fresher