2:45 AM
December 27th
Manhattan, New York
From the flashing lights of
police cars, it wasn’t hard to spot the site of the carnage. NYPD blue and
whites sat blocking traffic at both ends of Baxter Street in Chinatown. A half
dozen uniformed officers and barricades were holding back onlookers and the
media. In the middle of the intersection, Dan stopped the car and stared down
the block.
“Come on buddy, keep it moving,” an NYPD uniformed
officer said as he rapped his nightstick on Dan’s car window. “Move it!”
Dan pulled over to the curb in front of a hydrant
and sat in the car looking down the block. What was he doing here? He placed
the red light and FBI placard on the dashboard, and walked toward the
restaurant.
At the roadblock, Dan flashed his credentials to a
uniformed policeman wearing sergeant stripes. “Sarge, who’s in charge?”
“Detective LeBeau.”
“I need to talk to him.” Dan started to walk past
the sergeant.
“Hold on a minute fella.” The sergeant extended a
muscled arm and blocked his path. “This is a homicide. I don’t know why the FBI
needs to be here. Why do you need to see LeBeau?”
“That’s between me and LeBeau.” Dan glared at the
sergeant. The sergeant held and returned the intense gaze. Then without
breaking eye contact, he called to a uniformed officer. “Hey Murphy. Come here
a minute.”
“What, sergeant?” said a uniformed officer as he
trotted towards the pair.
“For some reason FBI Agent,” the sergeant glanced at
Dan’s identification, “Robertson, thinks he needs to speak with LeBeau. Escort
him, find LeBeau, and as soon as this guy’s finished, bring him back so he
doesn’t contaminate our crime scene.”
“Thanks sergeant,” Dan said, keeping his anger in
check. He slipped his badge onto his coat pocket, ignored the sergeant’s stare,
and followed Murphy.
Baxter Street was narrow and difficult to navigate
on the best of days, but tonight it was a total impasse. Up and down the entire
block, Radio Motor Patrol cars, or RMPs, their lights flashing and radios
crackling, were parked half on the sidewalk, half on the street. Eight black
minivans from the Coroner’s Office lined the middle of the street, their
drivers waiting for the release of the remains. Murphy silently led Dan around
and between cars. At the restaurant, they ducked under the yellow “Crime Scene...Do
Not Enter” tape, walked up the stairs, and stepped into the foyer.
Dan took in the crime scene. Tables and chairs were
overturned and riddled with bullet holes. Tablecloths were stained with spilled
food, pieces of bone, body, brains, hair, and lots of blood. The mirrors on the
walls had bullet holes in them, all of which had been marked with a wax pencil.
On the floor near the door, small numbered pieces of paper had been placed near
each spent cartridge.
Several detectives were directing the collection of
evidence. While Dan looked over the scene, Murphy walked over to a detective
wearing a fedora and spoke in hushed tones.
The ME was examining one of the eight blood-soaked
bodies that lay where it had fallen. One victim was an old man...missing the lower
part of one arm and half of his neck. Two were young women, one with the left
side of her face gone, and the other with most of her chest blown away. The
other five victims were young men. Dan’s eyes quickly darted among them. One of
the men had been cut in half at the waist, another had a diagonal row of bullet
holes across his chest. The third had no face left on his skull. It might be
easy to misidentify someone. Maybe there’d been a mistake and Sammy hadn’t been
killed. The head of the last young man was turned slightly away, as if he tried
to avoid facing his death. Dan stepped to his left to get a better look.
“What do think you’re doing?” It was the detective
with the fedora, stepping over the bodies and around the furniture towards him.
“You’ve got no business being here! Who the hell do you think you are?”
Dan ignored the detective’s shouts, and stepped over
the body so he could see. Dan’s shoulders sagged. The back of the young man’s
skull was missing, but he could see the face. It was Sammy. No mistake. He
wanted to reach down and touch Sammy’s face, wipe the blood from the two bullet
holes in his cheek, but that was impossible.
The detective finally reached him. “I’m LeBeau. What
the hell do you want?”
“My name’s Robertson. I’m an FBI Agent.” He showed
his identification, and tried to think of something to tell LeBeau that
wouldn’t sound asinine. “I got a call that there’d been some people killed.”
“Yeah?”
“I thought I might know one of them.”
“What was their name...this person you might just happen
to know?”
“They’re not here.” As he said it, Dan felt in not
acknowledging Sammy, he had betrayed him. But if he told this detective the
whole story . . . No, the operation was need-to-know, and there was no need for
this detective to know.