The Pied Piper (47 page)

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Authors: Ridley Pearson

BOOK: The Pied Piper
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Special Agent Kay Kalidja occupied one of the two viewing benches, her purse and sweater set beside her holding a spot for Daphne, who sat down. The glass arched above them, fish swimming directly overhead, passing from one side of the tank to the other. Kalidja did not look at Daphne but at the fish. She pointed out a sand shark with a suckerfish attached. “I feel like that sometimes,” she said in her pleasing island lilt, “the one attached.”

“Yes.”

“Made to follow, to stay close.”

Kalidja's choosing a neutral site forewarned of the significance of the meeting. Excitement filled Daphne, as she nudged, “You ran the tattoo.”

“The contents of many of the Bureau's databases are classified. As you must know, we track everything from violent offenders to suspected double agents in the State Department. For this reason there are levels of access imposed, levels of security, pass codes, log-in records. It is extremely well-protected data. Hackers have fooled with our Web site before, but no one—to my knowledge—has ever come close to compromising these databases.” Kalidja found it difficult to share the information. She struggled to admit, “Yes. The tattoos.” She then said, pointing out a pair of blue and yellow fish, “Spectacular.”

“The system tracks access,” Kalidja continued. “It maintains a computerized log. Not only can internal investigators see who has been working what information, but it also allows agents to see who else has worked the information, to
share
that information. An agent in Chicago can call an agent in Dallas who has been requesting the same information. Perhaps they are pursuing the same suspect and were unaware of the connection. The database actually alerts them. Those alerts are automatic now, offering a kind of investigative bibliography.”

“Impressive,” Daphne said, suppressing her anxiety over where Kalidja was headed.

The agent faced Daphne for the first time and spoke quickly but extremely softly, “Special Agent Dunkin Hale requested any and all information on eagle tattoos—photographs of those on file, tattoo artists known for wrapping the wings around the bird like a cape. Everything he could think of.”

Daphne had expected nothing like this. She had a dozen questions to ask, but held her tongue. Kalidja was not finished.

“Special Agent Hale has never mentioned any such tattoo in any of our meetings. Never. Not once.”

“And you had said nothing to him about it?”

“Absolutely not.”

“Perhaps he saw it on your desk—”

“Never! I accepted this information from you in the strictest of confidence. I've told no one! Shown no one!”

Daphne tried to make sense of it. The schools of fish swimming over, above and around her added to her sense of confusion.

“VI-CIM, our Violent Criminal Identification and Markings database, has produced two hits, two similar tattoos,” she said, producing photocopies and showing them to Daphne. “One of the tattoos was shown on the biceps, the other on a pectoral.” They were, in fact, both unmistakably similar to the rendition drawn by Tommy Thompson: a bald eagle looking straight ahead, the wings wrapped around like a cape. “One is dead. The other is two years into serving a life sentence. Mind you, we only show federal offenders in the database, and only a limited number of them. It is by no means complete.”

“It's not our boy. His was on the forearm.”

“No, but the same artist perhaps. Special Agent Hale pursued the name of the artist. I can tell that from the database requests.”

Daphne sniped, “Imagine calling this artwork.” Studying the photos, she asked, “Wait a second! Are you saying these two cons are from the same region?”

“The same
city
,” Kalidja answered. “Both arrested and convicted in New Orleans, Louisiana.”

“The tattoo shop is in New Orleans.”

“Exactly.”

Because of Boldt, Daphne knew a great deal about the investigation that Kay Kalidja and the FBI did not, including that the Pied Piper had used a 911 telephone scam to convince the day care center into handing over Sarah to the two uniformed cops. Con artists were continually arrested and even occasionally convicted. Using this new information, she wondered if she couldn't work the New Orleans police or prosecuting attorney's office to ID any con artists using 911 telephone scams. The location was a huge find. It would shift the entire investigation. Boldt often spoke of an investigation gaining momentum, that there came a time when the evidence outweighed the mystery, when the huge rock of knowledge assembled by a squad in an uphill manner suddenly crested that hill and began the journey down. She believed that combined with Kalidja's information, the Pied Piper investigation had just crested. It would pick up steam now, and eventually that rock would crush the Pied Piper in its path.

Daphne said, “What do you intend to do with this?”

Kalidja looked a little frightened. “Honestly, Ms. Matthews, if I had not discovered that Special Agent Hale already has this same information, I was intending that we—you and I—should present the information to the task force, as we discussed. But now? I have to wonder why Special Agent Hale would withhold such information. Yes? I am, unfortunately, not in a position to take this directly to S-A-C Flemming.”

“We call that an end run.”

“Yes. I deal with the S-A-C all the time, but by design, any information, especially information such as this, must go through Special Agent Hale. S-A-C Flemming is careful to insulate himself in this manner. He has managed to keep control of this investigation far longer than others might have, in no small part because he is so carefully insulated. Special Agent Hale and I were not brought on until Portland.

“This assignment has been a graveyard. Three of the S-A-C's former deputies and two of his former intelligence officers were removed prior to Portland. He shoots the messenger, you see. It allows him to preserve his position.” She looked Daphne up and down, head to toe, and then met eyes with her. “There is something else, something far more disturbing,” she said softly. “I overheard Special Agent Hale inform the S-A-C that the task force was his whenever he wanted it.”

“Meaning?”

“Those were his words exactly: ‘yours whenever you want it.' S-A-C Flemming does not like Captain Hill having control over the task force—we all know that, but he is an astute politician. He will not take control of a sinking ship. Nonetheless, I believe Special Agent Hale has discovered a way to push Captain Hill out of her chair when and if the time comes. If the time comes. Your Captain would do well to watch her back.” Looking at the fish, she said, “I do not care to see men ganging up on a woman just because she holds the position of power.”

Daphne recalled Hill's request that she study and report on each member of the task force. “Captain Hill is quite the politician herself. I wouldn't count her out.”

“Do not underestimate S-A-C Flemming. He is a brilliant man and a brilliant investigator. If the Pied Piper is caught, it will not be Sheila Hill's collar. This I promise you. There will be only one person giving the press conference, and that person will be S-A-C Flemming.”

“And these?” Daphne asked, indicating the photocopies of the database information. “Why don't I follow up on this for you?”

Kalidja had clearly been hoping for such an offer. “It is not for me to act upon information.”

“Your name will now appear as having accessed the same database.”

“Yes.”

“Hale may notice that.”

“Only if he seeks the same information a second time. I see no reason he would do that.”

“I accept,” Daphne took the envelope, to her a treasure.

“Watch out for Special Agent Hale,” Kalidja said in a hushed voice. She stood and straightened her knee-length skirt.

“Message received.”

CHAPTER

Boldt, LaMoia and Daphne took a walk around Pioneer Square in order to avoid ears within Public Safety. Dodging tourists, panhandlers and ticket scalpers, they passed a sax player and Boldt left a dollar bill in his case, much to LaMoia's disapproval.

“You just encourage them,” LaMoia complained.

“It's how he makes his living.”

“You can't call that music. You of all people—you know music. So why give up your hard-earned money?”

“They are con artists,” Daphne said. “The nine-one-one scam tells us that much. Their world is illusion. He could have been arrested and charged by the state, not the Feds. They wouldn't have him in their database.”

“Hale is ahead of us?” LaMoia complained. “You know what that means for Sarah?”

Daphne answered, “We don't know that for sure. We know only that he searched the same information that Kalidja supplied us. He probably got the names of the two cons with the same eagle tattoo.”

“It had to be Indiana, Michigan, Denver or New Orleans,” Boldt informed them. “New Orleans fits,” he confirmed.

“And just how the hell do you know that?” LaMoia protested.

“Anderson's photos,” he answered. “The ones
you
gave me.”

“I went over those things a dozen times. Two dozen. There was no license plate, no markers or identifiers of any kind to indicate—”

“The sweatshirt,” Boldt supplied. “Coming down the dock he's facing the camera. You can't see his face because of the hat, but the sweatshirt has two colors on it: purple and gold. School colors. Those same colors are used by colleges in—”

“Indiana, Michigan, Denver and New Orleans,” LaMoia completed, understanding the logic.

“There was the off-chance it might have been high school colors, but I was betting university or college.”

“So it
is
New Orleans,” LaMoia said.

“Our suspect spent time there,” Daphne said, picking up on the reasoning. “Maybe went to school there. More than likely got a tattoo there. Could have spent time locked up. Kalidja stressed that only some of the inmates end up on the database.”

“May still have contacts there,” LaMoia added, “or a sheet.”

Boldt warned, “If we involve the law down there it will have to be done carefully. The ransom demand…,” he reminded.

LaMoia asked, “Why would Hale stonewall this from his own people?”

“Flemming's attitude fosters independents,” Daphne said. “Kalidja warned me of that.”

Boldt suggested, “We need that tattoo shop.”

“Agreed,” LaMoia echoed.

“I have the address,” Daphne announced proudly, drawing looks of astonishment from both men. “You think I wanted fresh air?” she asked sarcastically.

Boldt asked, “Hale?”

“Probably has it too,” she admitted. “It was in their database.”

Boldt warned, “We can't have him IDing a suspect.”

“No,” Daphne agreed.

“We going to Cajun Country?” LaMoia asked. “We gotta find this tattoo shop ahead of Hale.”

“I'll book the flights,” Boldt said.

Boldt's phone was ringing as he reentered his office. He caught it before voice mail picked up. He answered tersely, having no interest in Intelligence work, the pressure of Hale's advance work threatening Sarah.

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