1


Detective Steve Carella wasn’t sure he had heard the man correctly. This was not what a bereaved husband was supposed to say when his wife lay disemboweled on the bedroom floor in a pool of her own blood. The man was still wearing overcoat and homburg, muffler and gloves. He stood near the telephone on the night table, a tall man with a narrow face, the vertical plane of which was dramatically broken by a well-groomed gray mustache that matched the graying hair at his temples. His eyes were clear and blue and distinctly free of pain or grief. As if to make certain Carella had understood him, he repeated a fragment of his earlier statement, giving it even more emphasis this time around.

Very glad she’s dead,” he said.

“Sir,” Carella said, “I’m sure I don’t have to tell you . . .”

“That’s right,” the man said, “you don’t have to tell me. It happens I’m a criminal lawyer. I am well aware of my rights, and fully cognizant of the fact that anything I tell you of my own free will may later be used against me. I repeat that my wife was a no-good bitch, and I’m delighted someone killed her.”

Carella nodded, opened his pad, glanced at it, and said, “Are you the man who notified the police?”

“I am.”

“Then your name is Gerald Fletcher.”

“That’s correct.”

“Your wife’s name, Mr. Fletcher?”

“Sarah. Sarah Fletcher.”

“Want to tell me what happened?”

“I got home about fifteen minutes ago. I called to my wife from the front door, and got no answer. I came here into the bedroom and found her dead on the floor. I immediately called the police.”

“Was the room in this condition when you came in?”

“It was.”

“Touch anything?”

“Nothing. I haven’t moved from this spot since I placed the call.”

“Anybody in here when you came in?”

“Not a soul. Except my wife, of course.”

“And you say you got home about fifteen minutes ago?”

“More or less. You can check it with the elevator operator who took me up.”

Carella looked at his watch. “That would have been ten-thirty or thereabouts.”

“Yes.”

“And you called the police at . . .” Carella consulted the open notebook. “Ten thirty-four. Is that right?”

“I didn’t look at my watch, but I expect that’s close enough.”

“Well, the call was logged at . . .”

“Ten thirty-four is close enough.”

“Is that your suitcase in the entrance hallway?”

“It is.”

“Just returning home from a trip?”

“I was on the Coast for three days.”

“Where?”

“Los Angeles.”

“Doing what?”

“An associate of mine needed advice on a brief he’s preparing.”

“What time did your plane get in?”

“Nine forty-five. I claimed my bag, caught a taxi, and came directly home.”

“And got here about ten-thirty, right?”

“That’s right. For the third time.”

“Sir?”

“You’ve already ascertained the fact three times. If there remains any doubt in your mind, let me reiterate that I got here at ten-thirty, found my wife dead, and called the police at ten thirty-four.”

“Yes, sir, I’ve got that.”

“What’s your name?” Fletcher asked suddenly.

“Carella. Detective Steve Carella.”

“I’ll remember that.”

“Please do.”


While Fletcher was remembering Carella’s name; and while the police photographer was doing his macabre little jig around the body, flashbulbs popping, death being recorded on Polaroid film for instant verification, pull, wait fifteen seconds, beep, rip, examine the picture to make sure the lady looks good in the rushes, or as good as any lady can look with her belly wide open and her intestines spilling onto a rug; and while two Homicide cops named Monoghan and Monroe beefed about being called away from their homes on a cold night in December, two weeks before Christmas; and while Detective Bert Kling was downstairs talking to the elevator operator and the doorman in an attempt to ascertain the exact hour Mr. Gerald Fletcher had pulled up in a taxicab and entered the apartment building on Silvermine Oval and gone up in the elevator to find his once-beautiful wife, Sarah, spread amoeba-like in ugly death on the bedroom rug; while all this was happening, a laboratory technician named Marshall Davies was in the kitchen of the apartment, occupying himself with busy work while he waited for the Medical Examiner to pronounce the lady dead and state the probable cause (as if it took a genius to determine that someone had ripped her open with a switchblade knife), at which time Davies would go into the bedroom and with delicate care remove the knife protruding from the blood and slime of the lady’s guts in an attempt to salvage some good latent prints from the handle of the murder weapon.

Davies was a new technician, but an observant one, and the first thing he noticed in the kitchen was that the window was wide open, not exactly usual for a December night when the temperature outside hovered at twelve degrees Fahrenheit, not to mention Centigrade. Davies leaned over the sink and further noticed that the window opened onto a fire escape on the rear of the building. Whereas he was paid only to examine the superficial aspects of any criminal act—such as glass shards in a victim’s eyeball, or shotgun pellets in the chest, or, as in the case of the lady in the other room, a knife in the belly—he could not resist speculating that perhaps someone, some intruder, had climbed up the fire escape and into the kitchen, after which he had proceeded to the bedroom, where he’d done the lady in.

Since there was a big muddy footprint in the kitchen sink and another one on the floor near the sink, and several others fading in intensity as they traveled inexorably across the waxed kitchen floor to the door that led to the living room, Davies surmised he was onto something hot. Wasn’t it entirely possible that an intruder had climbed over the windowsill and into the sink and walked across the room, bearing the switchblade knife that had later been pulled viciously across the lady’s belly from left to right, like a rip-top cellophane tab, opening her as effortlessly as it would have a package of cigarettes?

Davies stopped speculating, and photographed the footprint in the sink and the ones on the floor. Then, because the Assistant M.E. was still fussing around with the corpse (Death by stab wound, Davies thought impatiently; evisceration, for Christ’s sake!) and seemed reluctant to commit himself without perhaps first calling his superior officer or his mother (Say, we’ve got a tough one here, lady’s belly ripped open with a knife, got any idea what might have caused death?), Davies climbed out onto the fire escape and dusted the lower edge of the window, which the intruder would have had to grab in order to open the window, and then for good measure dusted the iron railings of the ladder leading up to the fire escape.

Now, if the M.E. ever got through with the goddamn body, and if there were any latent prints on the handle of the knife, the boys of the 87th would be halfway home, thanks to Marshall Davies.

He felt pretty good.


Detective Bert Kling felt pretty lousy.

His condition, he kept telling himself, had nothing to do with the fact that Cindy Forrest had broken their engagement three weeks before. To begin with, it had never been a proper engagement, and a person certainly couldn’t go around mourning something that had never truly existed. Besides, Cindy had made it abundantly clear that, whereas they had enjoyed some very good times together, and whereas she would always think upon him fondly and recall with great pleasure the days and months (yea, even years) they had spent together pretending they were in love, she had nonetheless met a very attractive young man who was a practicing psychiatrist at Buenavista Hospital, where she was doing her internship, and seeing as how they shared identical interests, and seeing as how he was quite ready to get married whereas Kling seemed to be married to a .38 Detective’s Special, a scarred wooden desk, and a detention cage, Cindy felt it might be best to terminate their relationship immediately rather than court the possibility of trauma induced by slow and painful withdrawal.

That had been three weeks ago, and he had not seen nor called Cindy since, and the pain of the breakup was equaled only by the pain of the bursitis in his right shoulder, despite the fact that he was wearing a copper bracelet on his wrist. The bracelet had been given to him by none other than Meyer Meyer, whom no one would have dreamed of as a superstitious man given to beliefs in ridiculous claims. The bracelet was supposed to begin working in ten days (Well, maybe two weeks, Meyer had said, hedging) and Kling had been wearing it for eleven days now, with no relief for the bursitis, but with a noticeable green stain around his wrist just below the bracelet. Hope springs eternal. Somewhere in his race memory, there lurked a hulking ape-like creature rubbing animal teeth by a fire, praying in grunts for a splendid hunt on the morrow. Somewhere also in his race memory, though not as far back, was the image of Cindy Forrest naked in his arms, and the concomitant fantasy that she would call to say she’d made a terrible mistake and was ready to drop her psychiatrist pal. No Women’s Lib man he, Kling nonetheless felt it perfectly all right for Cindy to take the initiative in re-establishing their relationship; it was she, after all, who had taken the first and final step toward ending it. Meanwhile, his bursitis hurt like hell and the elevator operator was not one of those bright snappy young men on the way up (Kling winced; he hated puns even when he made them himself), but rather a stupid clod who had difficulty remembering his own name. Kling went over the same tired ground yet another time.

“Do you know Mr. Fletcher by sight?” he asked.

“Oh, yeah,” the elevator operator said.

“What does he look like?”

“Oh, you know, he calls me Max.”

“Yes, Max, but . . .”

“ ‘Hello, Max,’ he says, ‘How are you, Max?’ I say, ‘Hello there, Mr. Fletcher, nice day today, huh?’ ”

“Could you describe him for me, please?”

“He’s nice and handsome.”

“What color are his eyes?”

“Brown? Blue? Something like that.”

“How tall is he?”

“Tall.”

“Taller than you?”

“Oh, sure.”

“Taller than me?”’

“Oh, no. About the same. Mr. Fletcher is about the same.”

“What color hair does he have?”

“White.”

“White? Do you mean gray?”

“White, gray, something like that.”

“Which was it, Max, would you remember?”

“Oh, something like that. Ask Phil. He knows. He’s good on times and things like that.”

Phil was the doorman. He was very good on times and things like that. He was also a garrulous lonely old man who welcomed the opportunity to be in a cops-and-robbers documentary film. Kling could not disabuse Phil of the notion that this was a real investigation; there was a dead lady upstairs and someone had brought about her present condition, and it was the desire of the police to bring that person to justice, ta-ra.

“Oh, yeah, yeah,” Phil said, “terrible the way things are getting in this city, ain’t it? Even when I was a kid, things wasn’t this terrible. I was born over on the South Side, you know, in a neighborhood where if you wore shoes you were considered a sissy. We were all the time fighting with the wop gangs, you know? We used to drop things down on them from the rooftops. Bricks, eggs, scrap iron, a toaster one time—yeah, I swear to God, we once threw my mother’s old toaster off the roof, bang, it hit one of them wops right on the head, bad place to hit a wop, of course, never does him no damage there. What I’m saying, though, is it never was so bad like it is now. Even when we were beating up the wops all the time, and them vice versa, it was fun, you know what I mean? I mean, it was fun in those days. Nowadays, what happens? Nowadays, you step in the elevator, there’s some crazy dope fiend, he shoves a gun under your nose and says he’ll blow your head off it you don’t give him all your money. That happened to Dr. Haskins, you think I’m kidding? He’s coming home three o’clock in the morning, he goes in the elevator and Max is out taking a leak, so it’s on self-service. Only there’s a guy in the elevator, God knows how he even got in the building, probably came down from the roof, they jump rooftops like mountain goats, them dope fiends, and he sticks the gun right up under Dr. Haskins’ nose, right here, right pointing up his nostrils, for Christ’s sake, and he says, Give me all your money and also whatever dope you got in that bag. So Dr. Haskins figures What the hell, I’m going to get killed here for a lousy forty dollars and two vials of cocaine, here take it, good riddance. So he gives the guy what he wants, and you know what the guy does, anyway? He beats up Dr. Haskins. They had to take him to the hospital with seven stitches, the son of a bitch split his forehead open with the butt of the pistol, he pistol-whipped him, you know? What kind of thing is that, huh? This city stinks, and especially this neighborhood. I can remember this neighborhood when you could come home three, four, five, even six o’clock in the morning, who cared what time you came home; you could be wearing a tuxedo and a mink coat, who cared what you were wearing, your jewels, your diamond cuff links, nobody bothered you. Try that today. Try walking down the street after dark without a Doberman pinscher on a leash, see how far you get. They smell you coming, these dope fiends, they leap out at you from doorways. We had a lot of burglaries in this building, all dope fiends. They come down from the roof, you know? We must’ve fixed that lock on the roof door a hundred times, what difference does it make? They’re all experts, as soon as we fix it, boom, it’s busted open again. Or they come up the fire escapes, who can stop them? Next thing you know, they’re in some apartment stealing the whole place, you’re lucky if they leave your false teeth in the glass. I don’t know what this city’s coming to, I swear to God. It’s disgraceful.”

“What about Mr. Fletcher?” Kling asked.

“What about him? He’s a decent man, a lawyer. He comes home, and what does he find? He finds his wife dead on the floor, probably killed by some crazy dope fiend. Is that a way to live? Who needs it? You can’t even go in your own bedroom without somebody jumping on you? What kind of thing is that?”

“When did Mr. Fletcher come home tonight?”

“About ten-thirty,” Phil said.

“Are you sure of the time?”

“Positive. You know how I remember? There’s Mrs. Horowitz, she lives in 12C, she either doesn’t have an alarm clock, or else she doesn’t know how to set the alarm since her husband passed away two years ago. So every night she calls down to ask me the correct time, and to say would the day-man please call her at such and such a time in the morning, to wake her up. This ain’t a hotel, but what the hell, an old woman asks a simple favor, you’re supposed to refuse it? Besides, she’s very generous at Christmas, which ain’t too far away, huh? So tonight, she calls down and says, ‘What’s the correct time, Phil?’ and I look at my watch and tell her it’s ten-thirty, and just then Mr. Fletcher pulls up in a taxicab. Mrs. Horowitz says will I please ask the day-man to wake her up at seven-thirty, and I tell her I will and then go to the curb to carry Mr. Fletcher’s bag in. That’s how I remember exactly what time it was.”

“Did Mr. Fletcher go directly upstairs?”

“Directly,” Phil said. “Why? Where would he go? For a walk in this neighborhood at ten-thirty in the night? That’s like taking a walk off a gangplank.”

“Well, thanks a lot,” Kling said.

“Don’t mention it,” Phil said. “They shot another movie around here one time.”


Back at the ranch, they weren’t shooting a movie. They were standing in an informal triangle around Gerald Fletcher, and raising their eyebrows at the answers he gave them. The three points of the triangle were Detective-Lieutenant Peter Byrnes and Detectives Meyer and Carella. Fletcher sat in a chair with his arms crossed over his chest. He was still wearing homburg, muffler, overcoat, and gloves, as if he expected to be called outdoors at any moment and wanted to be fully prepared for the inclement weather. The interrogation was being conducted in a windowless cubicle euphemistically labeled on its frosted glass door INTERROGATION ROOM . Opulently furnished in Institutional Wood, circa 1919, the room sported a long table, two straight-backed chairs, and a framed mirror. The mirror hung on a wall opposite the table. It was (heh-heh) a one-way mirror, which meant that on this side you saw your own reflection when you looked into the glass, but if you were standing on the other side, you could look into the room and observe all sorts of criminal behavior while remaining unseen yourself; devious are the ways of law enforcers the world over. Devious, too, are the ways of criminals; there was not a single criminal in the entire city who did not recognize a one-way mirror the minute he laid eyes upon it. Quite often, in fact, criminals with a comic flair had been known to approach the mirror, place a thumb to the nose, and waggle the fingers of the hand as a gesture of esteem and affection to the eavesdropping cops on the other side of the glass. In such ways were mutual respect and admiration built between the men who broke the law and the men who tried to uphold it. Crime does not pay—but it doesn’t hurt to have a few laughs along the way, as Euripides once remarked.

The cops standing in their loose triangle around Gerald Fletcher were amazed but not too terribly amused by his honesty; or, to be more exact, his downright brutal frankness. It was one thing to discuss the death of one’s spouse without frills or furbelows; it was quite another to court lifelong imprisonment in a state penitentary. Gerald Fletcher seemed to be doing precisely that.

“I hated her guts,” he said, and Meyer raised his eyebrows and glanced at Byrnes, who in turn raised his eyebrows and glanced at Carella, who was facing the one-way mirror and had the opportunity of witnessing his own reflection raising its eyebrows.

“Mr. Fletcher,” Byrnes said, “I know you understand your rights, as we explained them to you . . .”

“I understood them long before you explained them,” Fletcher said.

“And I know you’ve chosen to answer our questions without an attorney present . . .”

“I am an attorney.”

“What I meant . . .”

“I know what you meant. Yes, I’m willing to answer any and all questions without counsel.”

“I still feel I must warn you that a woman has been murdered . . .”

“Yes, my dear, wonderful wife,” Fletcher said sarcastically.

“Which is a serious crime . . .”

“Which, among felonies, may very well be the choicest of the lot,” Fletcher said.

“Yes,” Byrnes said. He was not an articulate man, but he felt somewhat tongue-tied in Fletcher’s presence. Bullet-headed, hair turning from iron-gray to ice-white (slight bald spot beginning to show at the back), blue-eyed, built like a compact linebacker for the Minnesota Vikings, Byrnes straightened the knot in his tie, cleared his throat, and looked to his colleagues for support. Both Meyer and Carella were watching their shoelaces.

“Well, look,” Byrnes said, “if you understand what you’re doing, go right ahead. We warned you.”

“Indeed you have warned me. Repeatedly. I can’t imagine why,” Fletcher said, “since I don’t feel myself to be in any particular danger. My wife is dead, someone killed the bitch. But it was not me.”

“Well, it’s nice to have your assurance of that, Mr. Fletcher, but your assurance alone doesn’t necessarily still our doubts,” Carella said, hearing the words and wondering where the hell they were coming from. He was, he realized, trying to impress Fletcher, trying to ward off the man’s obvious condescension by courting his acceptance. Look at me, he was pleading, listen to me. I’m not just a dumb bull, I’m a man of sensitivity and intelligence, able to understand your vocabulary, your sarcasm, and even your vituperative wit. Half-sitting upon, half-leaning against the scarred wooden table, a tall athletic-looking man with straight brown hair, brown eyes curiously slanted downwards, Carella folded his arms across his chest in unconscious imitation of Fletcher. The moment he realized what he was doing, he uncrossed his arms at once, and stared intently at Fletcher, waiting for an answer. Fletcher stared intently back.

“Well?” Carella said.

“Well what, Detective Carella?”

“Well, what do you have to say?”

“About what?”

“How do we know it wasn’t you who stabbed her?”

“To begin with,” Fletcher said, “there were signs of forcible entry in the kitchen and hasty departure in the bedroom—witness the wide-open window in the aforementioned room, and the shattered window in the latter. The drawers in the dining-room sideboard were open . . .”

“You’re a very observant person,” Meyer said suddenly. “Did you notice all this in the four minutes it took you to enter the apartment and call the police?”

“It’s my job to be an observant person,” Fletcher said, “but to answer your question, no. I noticed all this after I had spoken to Detective Carella here, and while he was on the phone reporting to your lieutenant. I might add that I’ve lived in that apartment on Silvermine Oval for the past twelve years, and that it doesn’t take a particularly sharp-eyed man to notice that a bedroom window is smashed or a kitchen window open. Nor does it take a sleuth to realize that the family silver has been pilfered—especially when there are several serving spoons, soup ladles, and butter knives scattered on the bedroom floor beneath the shattered window. Have you checked the alleyway below the window? You’re liable to find your murderer still lying there.”

“Your apartment is on the second floor, Mr. Fletcher,” Meyer said.

“Which is why I suggested he might still be there,” Fletcher answered. “Nursing a broken leg or a fractured skull.”

“In all my years of experience,” Meyer said, and Carella suddenly realized that he, too, was trying to impress Fletcher, “I have never known a criminal to jump out a window on the second floor of a building.” (Carella was surprised he hadn’t used the word “defenestrate.”)

This criminal may have had good reason for imprudent action,” Fletcher said. “He had just killed a woman, probably after coming upon her unexpectedly in an apartment he thought was empty. He had heard someone opening the front door, and had realized he could not leave the apartment the way he’d come in, the kitchen being too close to the entrance. He undoubtedly figured he would rather risk a broken leg than the penitentiary for life. How does that portrait compare to those of other Criminals You Have Known?”

“I’ve known lots of criminals,” Meyer said inanely, “and some of them are too smart for their own damn good.” He felt idiotic even as he delivered his little preachment, but Fletcher had a way of making a man feel like a cretin. Meyer ran his hand self-consciously over his bald pate, his eyes avoiding the glances of Carella and Byrnes. Somehow, he felt he had let them all down. Somehow, a rapier thrust had been called for, and he had delivered only a puny mumbletypeg penknife flip. “What about that knife, Mr. Fletcher?” he said. “Ever see it before?”

“Never.”

“It doesn’t happen to be your knife, does it?” Carella asked.

“It does not.”

“Did your wife say anything to you when you entered the bedroom?”

“My wife was dead when I entered the bedroom.”

“You’re sure of that?”

“I’m positive of it.”

“All right, Mr. Fletcher,” Byrnes said abruptly. “You want to wait outside, please?”

“Certainly,” Fletcher said, and rose, and left the room. The three detectives stood in silence for a respectable number of minutes. Then Byrnes said, “What do you think?”

“I think he did it,” Carella said.

“What makes you think so?”

“Let me revise that.”

“Go ahead, revise it.”

“I think he could have done it.”

“Even with all those signs of a burglary?”

Especially with all those signs.”

“Spell it out, Steve.”

“He could have come home, found his wife stabbed—but not fatally—and finished her off by yanking the knife across her belly. The M.E.’s report says that death was probably instantaneous, either caused by severance of the abdominal aorta, or reflex shock, or both. Fletcher had four minutes when all he needed was maybe four seconds.”

“It’s possible,” Meyer said.

“Or maybe I just don’t like the son of a bitch,” Carella added.

“Let’s see what the lab comes up with,” Byrnes said.


There were good fingerprints on the kitchen window sash, and on the silver drawer of the dining-room sideboard. There were good prints on some of the pieces of silver scattered on the floor near the smashed bedroom window. More important, although most of the prints on the handle of the switchblade knife were smeared, some of them were very good indeed. All of the prints matched; they had all been left by the same person.

Gerald Fletcher graciously allowed the police to take his fingerprints, which were then compared with those Marshall Davies had sent over from the police laboratory. The fingerprints on the window, the drawer, the silverware, and the knife did not match Gerald Fletcher’s.

Which didn’t mean a damn thing if he had been wearing his gloves when he finished her off.

2

O n Monday morning, the sky above the River Harb was a cloudless blue. In Silvermine Park, young mothers were already pushing baby buggies, eager to take advantage of the unexpected December sunshine. The air was cold and sharp, but the sun was brilliant and it transformed the streets bordering the river into what they must have looked like at the turn of the century. A tugboat hooted, a gull shrieked and swooped low over the water, a woman tucked a blanket up under her baby’s chin and cooed to him gently. Near the park railing, a patrolman stood with his hands behind his back, and idly stared out over the sun-dappled river.

Upstairs, in the second-floor rear apartment of 721 Silvermine Oval, a chalked outline on the bedroom floor was the only evidence that a woman had lain there in death the night before. Carella and Kling sidestepped the outline and moved to the shattered window. The lab boys had carefully lifted, packaged, and labeled the shards and slivers of glass, on the assumption that whoever had jumped through the window might have left bloodstains or clothing threads behind. Carella looked through the gaping irregular hole at the narrow alleyway below. There was a distance of perhaps twelve feet between this building and the one across from it. Conceivably, the intruder could have leaped across the shaftway, caught the windowsill on the opposite wall, and then boosted himself up into the apartment there. But this would have required premeditation and calculation, and if a person is going to make a trapeze leap for a windowsill, he doesn’t dive through a closed window in haste and panic. The apartment across the way would have to be checked, of course; but the more probable likelihood was that the intruder had fallen to the pavement below.

“That’s a long drop,” Kling said, peering over Carella’s shoulder.

“How far do you figure?”

“Thirty feet. At least.”

“Got to break a leg taking a fall like that.”

“Maybe the guy’s an acrobat.”

“You think he went through the window head first?”

“How else?”

“He might have broken the glass out first, and then gone through.”

“If he was about to go to all that trouble, why didn’t he just open the damn thing?”

“Well, let’s take a look,” Carella said.

They examined the latch, and they examined the sash.

“Okay to touch this?” Kling asked.

“Yeah, they’re through with it.”

Kling grabbed both handles on the window frame and pulled up on them. “Tough one,” he said.

“Try it again.”

Kling tugged again. “I think it’s stuck.”

“Probably painted shut,” Carella said.

“Maybe he did try to open it. Maybe he smashed it only when he realized it was stuck.”

“Yeah,” Carella said. “And in a big hurry, too. Fletcher was opening the front door, maybe already in the apartment by then.”

“The guy probably swung his bag . . .”

“What bag?”

“Must’ve had a bag or something with him, don’t you think? To put the loot in?”

“Probably. Though he couldn’t have been too experienced.”

“What do you mean?”

“No gloves. Left prints all over the place. Got to be a beginner.”

“Even so, he’d have carried a bag. That’s probably what he smashed the window with. Which might explain why there was silverware on the floor. He could’ve taken a wild swing when he realized the window was stuck, and maybe some of the stuff fell out of the bag.”

“Yeah, maybe,” Carella said.

“Then he probably climbed through the hole and dropped down feet first. That makes more sense than just diving through the thing, doesn’t it? In fact, what he could’ve done, Steve, was drop the bag down first . . .”

“If he had a bag.”

“Every burglar in the world has a bag. Even beginners.”

“Well, maybe.”

“Well, if he had a bag, he could’ve dropped it down into the alley there, and then climbed out and hung from the sill before he jumped, you know what I mean? To make it a shorter distance.”

“I don’t know if he had all that much time, Bert. Fletcher must’ve been in the apartment and heading for the bedroom by then.”

“Did Fletcher say anything about glass breaking? About hearing glass?”

“I don’t remember asking him.”

“We’ll have to ask him,” Kling said.

“Why? What difference does it make?”

“I don’t know,” Kling said, and shrugged. “But if the guy was still in the aparment when Fletcher came in . . .”

“Yeah?”

“Well, that cuts it very close, doesn’t it?”

“He must’ve been here, Bert. He had to hear that front door opening. Otherwise, he’d have taken his good sweet time and gone out the kitchen window and down the fire escape, the way he’d come.”

“Yeah, that’s right.” Kling nodded reflectively. “Fletcher’s lucky,” he said. “The guy could just as easily have waited and stabbed him, too.”

“Let’s take a look at that alley,” Carella said.


The woman looking through the ground-floor window saw only two big men in overcoats, poking around on the alley floor. Both men were hatless. One of them had brown hair and slanty Chinese eyes. The other one looked younger but no less menacing, a big blond tough with hardly nothing but peach fuzz on his face, the better to eat you, Grandma. She immediately went to the telephone and called the police.

In the alleyway, unaware of the woman who peered out at them from between the slats of her venetian blinds, Carella and Kling studied the concrete pavement, and then looked up at the shattered second-floor window of the Fletcher apartment.

“It’s still a hell of a long drop,” Kling said.

“Looks even longer from down here.”

“Where do you suppose he’d have landed?”

“Right about where we’re standing. Maybe a foot or so over,” Carella said, and looked at the ground.

“See anything?” Kling asked.

“No. I was just trying to figure something.”

“What?”

“Let’s say he did land without breaking anything . . .”

“Well, he must’ve, Steve. Otherwise he’d still be laying here.”

“That’s just my point. Even if he didn’t break anything, I can’t believe he just got up and walked away, can you?” He looked up at the window again. “That’s got to be at least forty feet, Bert.”

“Gets longer every minute,” Kling said. “I still think it’s no more than thirty, give or take.”

“Even so. A guy drops thirty feet . . .”

“If he hung from the windowsill first, you’ve got to subtract maybe ten feet from that figure.”

“Okay, so what do we say? A twenty-foot drop?”

“Give or take.”

“Guy drops twenty feet to a concrete pavement, doesn’t break anything, gets up, dusts himself off, and runs the fifty-yard dash, right?” Carella shook his head. “My guess is he stayed right where he was for a while. To at least catch his breath.”

“So?”

“So did Fletcher look out the window?”

“Why would he?”

“If your wife is dead on the floor with a knife in her, and the window is broken, wouldn’t you naturally go to the window and look out? On the off chance you might spot the guy who killed her?”

“He was anxious to call the police,” Kling said.

“Why?”

“That’s natural, Steve. If the guy’s innocent, he’s anxious to keep in the clear. He calls the police, he stays in the apartment . . .”

“I still think he did it,” Carella said.

“Don’t make a federal case out of this,” Kling said. “I personally would like nothing better than to kick Mr. Fletcher in the balls, but let’s concentrate on finding the guy whose fingerprints we’ve got, okay?”

“Yeah,” Carella said.

“I mean, Steve, be reasonable. If a guy’s fingerprints are on the handle of a knife, and the knife is still in the goddamn victim . . .”

And if the victim’s husband realizes what a sweet setup he’s stumbled into,” Carella said, “wife laying on the floor with a knife in her, place broken into and burglarized, why not finish the job and hope the burglar will be blamed?”

“Sure,” Kling said. “Prove it.”

“I can’t,” Carella said. “Not until we catch the burglar.”

“All right, so let’s catch him. Where do you think he went after he dropped down here?”

“One of two ways,” Carella said. “Either through the door there into the basement of the building. Or over the fence there at the other end of the alley.”

“Which way would you go?”

“If I’d just dropped twenty feet or more, I’d go home to my mother and cry.”

“I’d head for the door of the building. If I’d just dropped twenty feet, I wouldn’t feel like climbing any fences.”

“Not with the terrible headache you’d probably have.”

The basement door suddenly opened. A red-faced patrolman was standing in the doorway with a .38 in his fist.

“All right, you guys, what’s going on here?” he said.

“Oh, great,” Carella said.


Anyway, Marshall Davies had already done the work.

So while Carella and Kling went through the tedious routine of proving to a cop that they were cops themselves, Davies called the 87th Precinct and asked to talk to the detective who was handling the Fletcher homicide. Since both detectives who were handling the homicide were at that moment out handling it, or trying to, Davies agreed to talk to Detective Meyer instead.

“What’ve you got?” Meyer asked.

“I think I’ve got some fairly interesting information about the suspect.”

“Will I need a pencil?” Meyer asked.

“I don’t think so. How much do you know about the case?”

“I’ve been filled in.”

“Then you know there were latent prints all over the apartment.”

“Yes. We’ve got the I.S. running a check on them now.”

“Maybe you’ll get lucky.”

“Maybe,” Meyer said.

“Do you also know there were footprints in the kitchen?”

“No, I didn’t know that.”

“Yes, a very good one in the sink, probably left there when he climbed through the window, and some middling-fair ones tracking across the kitchen floor to the dining room. I got some excellent pictures, and some very good blowups of the heel—for comparison purposes if the need arises later on.”

“Good,” Meyer said.

“But more important,” Davies said, “I got a good walking picture from the footprints on the floor, and I think we can assume it was the man’s usual gait, neither dawdling nor hurried.”

“How can you tell that?” Meyer asked.

“Well, if a man is walking slowly, the distance between his footprints is usually about twenty-seven inches. If he’s running, his footprints will be about forty inches apart. Thirty-five inches apart is the average for fast walking.”

“How far apart were the prints you got?”

“Thirty-two inches. He was moving quickly, but he wasn’t in a desperate hurry. The walking line, incidentally, was normal and not broken.”

“What does that mean?”

“Well, draw an imaginary line in the direction the suspect was walking, and that line should normally run along the inner edge of the heelprints. Fat people and pregnant ladies will often leave a broken walking line because they walk with their feet spread wider apart . . . to keep their balance.”

“But this walking line was normal,” Meyer said.

“Right,” Davies said.

“So our man is neither fat nor pregnant.”

“Right. Incidentally, it is a man. The size and type of the shoe, and also the angle of the foot indicate that clearly.”

“Okay, fine,” Meyer said. He did not thus far consider Davies’ information valuable nor even terribly important. They had automatically assumed that anyone burglarizing an apartment would be a man and not a woman. Moreover, according to Carella’s report on the size of the footprint in the sink, it had definitely been left by a man—unless a female Russian wrestler was loose in the precinct. Meyer yawned.

“Anyway, none of this is valuable nor even terribly important,” Davies said, “until we consider the rest of the data.”

“And what’s that?” Meyer asked.

“Well, as you know, the bedroom window was smashed, and the Homicide men at the scene . . .”

“Monoghan and Monroe?”

“Yes, were speculating that the suspect had jumped through the window into the alley below. I didn’t think it would hurt to go downstairs and see if I could get some meaningful pictures.”

“Did you get some meaningful pictures?”

“Yes, I got some pictures of where he must have landed—on both feet, incidentally—and I also got another walking picture and direction line. He moved toward the basement door and into the basement. That’s not the important thing, however.”

“What is the important thing?” Meyer asked patiently.

“Our man is injured. And I think badly.”

“How do you know?”

“The walking picture downstairs is entirely different from the one in the kitchen. The footprints are the same, of course, no question but that the same person left them. But the walking line indicates that the person was leaning quite heavily on the left leg and dragging the right. There are, in fact, no flat footprints for the right foot, only scrape marks where the edges of the sole and heel were pulled along the concrete. I would suggest that whoever’s handling the case put out a physician’s bulletin. If this guy hasn’t got a broken leg, I’ll eat the pictures I took.”


A girl in a green coat was waiting in the lobby. Leaning against the wall, hands thrust deep into the slash pockets of the coat, she turned toward the basement door the instant it opened. Carella and Kling, followed by the red-faced patrolman (who was slightly more red-faced at the moment), came through the doorway and were starting for the street when the girl said, “Excuse me, are you the detectives?”

“Yes?” Carella said.

“Hey, listen, I’m sorry,” the patrolman said. “I just got transferred up here, you know, I ain’t too familiar with all you guys.”

“That’s okay,” Kling said.

“The super told me you were in the building,” the girl said.

“So, like excuse it, huh?” the patrolman said.

“Right, right,” Kling said, and waved him toward the front door.

“You’re investigating the Fletcher murder, aren’t you?” the girl said. She was quite soft-spoken, a tall girl with dark hair and large brown eyes that shifted alternately from one detective to the other, as though searching for the most receptive audience.

“How can we help you, miss?” Carella asked.

“I saw somebody in the basement last night,” she said. “With blood on his clothes.”

Carella glanced at Kling, and immediately said, “What time was this?”

“About a quarter to eleven,” the girl said.

“What were you doing in the basement?”

“My clothes,” the girl said, sounding surprised. “That’s where the washing machines are. I’m sorry, my name is Nora Simonov. I live here in the building.”

“So long, you guys,” the patrolman called from the front door. “Excuse it, huh?”

“Right, right,” Kling said.

“I live on the fifth floor,” Nora said. “Apartment 5A.”

“Tell us what happened, will you?” Carella said.

“I was sitting by the machine, watching the clothes tumble—which is simply fascinating, you know,” she said, and rolled her eyes and flashed a quick, surprising smile, “when the door leading to the backyard opened. The door to the alley. You know the door I mean?”

“Yes,” Carella said.

“And this man came down the stairs. I don’t even think he saw me. The machines are sort of off to the side, you know. He went straight for the steps at the other end, the ones that go up to the street. There are two flights of steps. One goes to the lobby, the other goes to the street. He went up to the street.”

“Was he anyone you recognized?”

“What do you mean?”

“From the building? Or the neighborhood?”

“No. I’d never seen him before last night.”

“Can you describe him?”

“Sure. He was about twenty-one, twenty-two years old, your height and weight, well, maybe a little bit shorter, five-ten or eleven. Brown hair.”

Kling was already writing. “Notice the color of his eyes?” he said.

“No, I’m sorry.”

“Was he white or black?”

“White.”

“What was he wearing?”

“Dark trousers, high-topped sneakers, a poplin windbreaker. With blood on the sleeve and on the front.”

“Which sleeve?”

“The right one.”

“Any hat?”

“No.”

“Was he carrying anything?”

“Yes. A small red bag. It looked like one of those bags the airlines give you.”

“Any scars, tattoos, marks?”

“Well, I couldn’t say. He wasn’t that close. And he went by in pretty much of a hurry, considering.”

“Considering what?” Carella asked.

“His leg. He was dragging his right leg. I think he was hurt pretty badly.”

“Would you recognize him if you saw him again?” Carella asked.

“In a minute,” Nora said.


What they had in mind, of course, was identification from a mug shot. What they had in mind was the possibility that the I.S. would come up with something positive on the fingerprints that had been sent downtown. What they all hoped was that maybe, just once, it would turn out to be a nice, easy one—the Identification Section would send them the record of a known criminal, and they would pick him up without a fuss, and parade him in a squad-room lineup, from which Nora Simonov would pick him out as the man she had seen in the basement at 10:45 the night before, with blood on his clothes.

The I.S. reported that none of the fingerprints in their file matched the ones found in the apartment.

So the detectives sighed, and figured it was going to be a tough one after all (they are all tough ones, after all, they groaned, awash in a sea of self-pity), and did exactly what Marshall Davies had suggested: they sent out a bulletin to all of the city’s doctors, asking them to report any leg fractures or sprains suffered by a white man in his early twenties, five feet ten or eleven inches tall, weighing approximately 180 pounds, brown hair, last seen wearing dark trousers, high-topped sneakers, and a poplin windbreaker with bloodstains on the front and on the right sleeve.

And, just to prove that cops can be as wrong as anyone else, it turned out to be a nice, easy one, after all.


The call came from a physician in Riverhead at 4:37 that afternoon, just as Carella was ready to go home.

“This is Dr. Mendelsohn,” he said. “I have your bulletin here, and I want to report treating a man who fits your description.”

“Where are you located, Dr. Mendelsohn?” Carella asked.

“On Dover Plains Avenue. In Riverhead. 3461 Dover Plains.”

“When did you treat this man?”

“Early this morning. I have early office hours on Monday. It’s my day at the hospital.”

“What did you treat him for?”

“A bad ankle sprain.”

“No fracture?”

“None. We X-rayed the leg here. It was quite swollen, and I suspected a fracture, of course, but it was merely a bad sprain. I taped it for him, and advised him to stay off it for a while.”

“Did he give you his name?”

“Yes. I have it right here.”

“May I have it, sir?”

“Ralph Corwin.”

“Any address?”

“894 Woodside.”

“In Riverhead?”

“Yes.”

“Thank you, Dr. Mendelsohn,” Carella said.

“Not at all,” Mendelsohn said, and hung up.

Carella pulled the Riverhead telephone directory from the top drawer of his desk, and quickly flipped to the C’s. He did not expect to find a listing for Ralph Corwin. A man would have to be a rank amateur to first burglarize an apartment without wearing gloves, then stab a woman to death, and then give his name when seeking treatment for an injury sustained in escaping from the murder apartment.

Ralph Corwin was apparently a rank amateur.

His name was in the phone book, and the address he’d given the doctor was as true as the day was long.


They kicked in the door without warning, fanning into the room, guns drawn.

The man on the bed was wearing only undershorts. His right ankle was taped. The bedsheets were soiled, and the stench of vomit in the close, hot room was overpowering.

“Are you Ralph Corwin?” Carella asked.

“Yes,” the man said. His face was drawn, the eyes squinched in pain.

“Police officers,” Carella said.

“What do you want?”

“We want to ask you some questions. Get dressed, Corwin.”

“There’s nothing to ask,” he said, and turned his head into the pillow. “I killed her.”

3

R alph Corwin made his confession in the presence of two detectives of the 87th Squad, a police stenographer, an assistant district attorney, and a lawyer appointed by the Legal Aid Society. The man from the D.A.’s office conducted the Q and A.

Q: What is your name, please?

A: Ralph Corwin.

Q: Where do you live, Mr. Corwin?

A: 894 Woodside Avenue. In Riverhead.

Q: Will you relate to us, please, the events that took place on the night of December twelfth. That would be last night, Mr. Corwin, Sunday, December twelfth.

A: Where do you want me to start?

Q: Did you enter a building at 721 Silvermine Oval?

A: I did.

Q: How did you enter the building?

A: First I went down the steps from the street, where the garbage cans were. I went in the basement, and through the basement and up the steps at the other end, into the backyard. Then I climbed up the fire escape.

Q: What time was this?

A: I went in the building at about ten o’clock.

Q: Ten P . M .?

A: Yes, ten P . M .

Q: What did you do then?

A: I went in an apartment.

Q: Which apartment?

A: Second-floor rear.

Q: Why did you go into the apartment?

A: To rip it off.

Q: To burglarize it?

A: Yes.

Q: Had you ever been in this building before?

A: No. I never done nothing like this in my life before. Never. I’m a junkie, that’s true, but I never stole nothing in my life before this. Nor hurt nobody, either. I wouldn’t have stole now except this girl I was living with left me, and I was desperate. She used to give me whatever bread I needed. But she left me. Friday. She just walked out.

Q: Which girl is that?

A: Do we have to drag her in? She’s got nothing to do with it. She never done me no harm, I got no hard feelings toward her, even though she walked out. She was always good to me. I don’t want to drag her name in this.

Q: You say you had never been in this building before?

A: Never.

Q: Why did you pick this particular apartment to enter?

A: It was the first one I saw without no lights inside. I figured there was nobody home.

Q: How did you get into the apartment?

A: The kitchen window was open a tiny crack. I squeezed my fingers under the bottom of it, and opened it all the way.

Q: Were you wearing gloves?

A: No.

Q: Why not?

A: I don’t have no gloves. Gloves cost money. I’m a junkie.

Q: Weren’t you afraid of leaving fingerprints?

A: I figured that was crap. For the movies, you know? For television. Anyway, I don’t have no gloves, so what difference does it make?

Q: What did you do after you opened the window?

A: I stepped in the sink, and then down to the floor.

Q: Then what?

A: I had this little flashlight. So I used it to find my way across the kitchen to the dining room.

Q: Would you look at this photograph, please?

A: Yeah?

Q: Is this the kitchen you were in?

A: I don’t know. It was dark. I guess it could be. I don’t know.

Q: What did you do in the dining room?

A: I found where they kept the silverware, and I emptied the drawer and put the stuff in this airlines bag I had with me. I had to go to Chicago last month because my father died, so I went by plane, and I bought this little airlines bag. My girlfriend paid for me to fly out there. She was a great girl, I wish I could figure why she left. I wouldn’t be in this trouble now, if she’d stayed, you know that? I never stole nothing in my life, nothing, I swear to God. And I never hurt nobody. I don’t know what got into me. I must’ve been scared out of my wits. That’s the only thing I can figure.

Q: Where did you go when you left the dining room?

A: I was looking for the bedroom.

Q: Was the flashlight on?

A: Yeah. It’s just this little flashlight. A penlight is what they call them. A tiny little thing, you know? So you can have some light.

Q: Why were you looking for the bedroom?

A: I figured that’s where people leave watches and rings, stuff like that. I was going to take whatever jewelry I could find and then get out. I’m not a pro, I was just hung up real bad and needed some bread to tide me over.

Q: Did you find the bedroom?

A: I found it.

Q: What happened?

A: There was a lady in bed. This was only like close to ten-thirty, you don’t expect nobody to be asleep so early, you know what I mean? I thought the apartment was empty.

Q: But there was a woman in bed.

A: Yeah. She turned on the light the minute I stepped in the room.

Q: What did you do?

A: I had a knife in my pocket. I pulled it out.

Q: Why?

A: To scare her.

Q: Would you look at this knife, please?

A: Yeah, it’s mine.

Q: This is the knife you took from your pocket?

A: Yeah. Yes.

Q: Did the woman say anything to you?

A: Yeah, it was almost comical. I mean, when I think back on it, it was comical, though at the time I was very scared. But it was like a movie, you know? Just like a movie. She looks at me and she says “What are you doing here?” Which is funny, don’t you think? I mean, what did she think I was doing there?

Q: Did you say anything to her?

A: I told her to keep quiet, that I wasn’t going to hurt her.

Q: Then what?

A: She got out of bed. Not all the way, she just threw the covers back, and swung her legs over the side, you know? Sitting, you know? I didn’t realize what was happening for a minute, and then I saw she was reaching for the phone. That’s got to be crazy, right? A guy is standing there in your bedroom with a knife in his hand, so she reaches for the phone.

Q: What did you do?

A: I grabbed her hand before she could get it. I pulled her off the bed, away from the phone, you know? And I told her again that nobody was going to hurt her, that I was getting out of there right away, to just please calm down.

Q: You said that?

A: What?

Q: You asked her to calm down?

A: I don’t know if those were the exact words, but I told her like to take it easy because I could see she was getting hysterical.

Q: Would you look at this photograph, please? Is this the bedroom you were in?

A: Yeah. There’s the night table with the phone on it, and there’s the window I went out. That’s the room.

Q: What happened next?

A: She started to scream.

Q: What did you do when she screamed?

A: I told her to stop. I was beginning to panic by now. I mean, she was really yelling.

Q: Did she stop?

A: No.

Q: What did you do?

A: I stabbed her.

Q: Where did you stab her?

A: I don’t know. It was a reflex. She was yelling, I was afraid the whole building would come down. I just . . . I just stuck the knife in her. I was very scared.

Q: Did you stab her in the chest?

A: No.

Q: Where?

A: The belly. Someplace in the belly.

Q: How many times did you stab her?

A: Once. She . . . she backed away from me, I’ll never forget the look on her face. And she . . . she fell on the floor.

Q: Would you look at this photograph, please?

A: Oh, Jesus.

Q: Is that the woman you stabbed?

A: Oh, Jesus. Oh, Jesus, I didn’t think . . . oh, Jesus.

Q: Is that the woman?

A: Yes. Yes, that’s her. Yes.

Q: What happened next?

A: Can I have a drink of water?

Q: Get him a drink of water. You stabbed her, and she fell to the floor. What happened next?

A: There was . . .

Q: Yes?

A: There was somebody at the door. I heard the door opening. Then somebody came in.

Q: Came into the apartment?

A: Yes. And yelled her name.

Q: From the front door?

A: I guess. From someplace at the other end of the apartment.

Q: Called her name?

A: Yeah. He yelled, “Sarah!” and when he got no answer, he yelled, “Sarah, it’s me, I’m home.”

Q: Then what?

A: I knew I was trapped. I couldn’t go out the way I come in because this guy was home. So I ran past the . . . the woman where she was laying on the floor . . . Jesus . . . and I tried to open the window, but it was stuck. So I smashed it with the airlines bag and . . . I didn’t know what to do . . . I was on the second floor, how was I going to get out? I threw the bag down first because I figured no matter what happened I was going to need bread for another fix, and then I climbed through the broken window—I cut my hand on a piece of glass—and I hung down from the sill, scared to let go, and finally I let go, I had to let go.

Q: Yes?

A: I must’ve dropped a mile, it felt like a mile. The minute I hit, I knew I busted something. I tried to get up, and I fell right down. My ankle was killing me, my hand was bleeding. I must’ve been in that alley ten, fifteen minutes, trying to stand up, falling down, trying again. I finally made it. I finally got out of that alley.

Q: Where did you go?

A: Through the basement and up to the street. The way I come in.

Q: And where did you go from there?

A: I took the subway home. To Riverhead. I turned on the radio right away to see if there was anything about . . . about what I done. But there wasn’t. So I tried to go to sleep, but the ankle was very bad, and I needed a fix. I went to see Dr. Mendelsohn in the morning because I figured it was like life or death, you know what I mean? If I couldn’t get around, how was I going to make a connection?

Q: When did you visit Dr. Mendelsohn?

A: Early. Nine o’clock. Nine A . M .

Q: Is he your family physician?

A: I never saw him before in my life. He’s around the corner from where I live. That’s the only reason I picked him, because he was close. He strapped up the ankle, but it didn’t do no good. I still can’t walk on it, I’m like a lousy cripple. I told him to bill me for it. I was going to pay him as soon as I got some bread. That’s why I gave him my right name and address. I wasn’t going to cheat him. I’m not that kind of person. I know that what I done is bad, but I’m not a bad person.

Q: When did you learn that Mrs. Fletcher was dead?

A: I bought a newspaper on the way home from the doctor’s. The story was in it. That’s when I knew I killed her.

Q: You did not know until then?

A: I did not know how bad it was.

4

O n Tuesday, December 14, which was the first of Carella’s two days off that week, he received a call at home from Gerald Fletcher. He knew that no one in the squad room would have given his home number to a civilian, and he further knew that the number was unlisted in the Riverhead directory. Puzzled, he said, “How’d you get my number, Mr. Fletcher?”

“Friend of mine in the D.A.’s office,” Fletcher said.

“Well, what can I do for you?” Carella asked. His voice, he realized, was something less than cordial.

“I’m sorry to bother you at home this way.”

“It is my day off,” Carella said, fully aware that he was being rude.

“I wanted to apologize for the other night,” Fletcher said.

“Oh?” Carella answered, surprised.

“I know I behaved badly. You men had a job to do, and I wasn’t making it any easier for you. I’ve been trying to understand what provoked my attitude, and I can only think I must have been in shock. I disliked my wife, true, but finding her dead that way was probably more unnerving than I realized. I’m sorry if I caused any trouble.”

“No trouble at all,” Carella said. “You’ve been informed, of course, that . . .”

“Yes, you caught the murderer.”

“Yes.”

“That was fast and admirable work, Detective Carella. And it only adds to the embarrassment I feel for having behaved so idiotically.”

“Well,” Carella said, and the line went silent.

“Please accept my apologies,” Fletcher said.

“Sure,” Carella said, beginning to feel embarrassed himself.

“I was wondering if you’re free for lunch today.”

“Well,” Carella said, “I was going to get some Christmas shopping done. My wife and I made out a list last night, and I thought . . .”

“Will you be coming downtown?”

“Yes, but . . .”

“Perhaps you could manage both.”

“Well, look, Mr. Fletcher,” Carella said, “I know you feel bad about the other night, but you said you’re sorry and that’s enough, believe me. It was nice of you to call, I realize it wasn’t an easy thing to . . .”

“Why not meet me at The Golden Lion at one o’clock?” Fletcher said. “Christmas shopping can be exhausting. You might welcome a break along about then.”

“Well . . . where’s The Golden Lion?” Carella asked.

“On Juniper and High.”

“Downtown? Near the Criminal Courts Building?”

“Exactly. Do you know it?”

“I’ll find it.”

“One o’clock then?” Fletcher said.

“Well, yeah, okay,” Carella said.

“Good, I’ll look for you.”


Carella did not know why he went to see Sam Grossman at the Police Lab that afternoon. He told himself that he was going to be in the neighborhood, anyway, The Golden Lion being all the way downtown in the area bordered by the city’s various courthouses. But this did not explain why he rushed through the not-unpleasant task of choosing a doll for his daughter, April, in order to get to Police Headquarters on High Street a full half hour before he was to meet Fletcher.

Grossman was hunched over a microscope when Carella walked in, but without opening his one closed eye, and without raising his head from the eyepiece, he said, “Sit down, Steve, be with you in a minute.”

Grossman kept adjusting the focus and jotting notes on a pad near his right hand, never lifting his head. Carella was trying to puzzle out how Grossman had known it was he. The sound of his footfalls? The smell of his aftershave lotion? The faint aroma of his wife’s perfume clinging to the shoulder of his overcoat? He had not, until this moment, been aware that Detective-Lieutenant Sam Grossman, he of the spectacles and sharp blue eyes, he of the craggy face and clipped no-nonsense voice, was in reality Sherlock Holmes of 221B Baker Street, who was capable of recognizing a man without looking at him. Grossman’s remarkable trick occupied all of Carella’s thoughts for the next five minutes. At the end of that time, Grossman looked up from the microscope, extended his hand, and said, “What brings you to the eighth circle?”

“How’d you know it was me?”

“Huh?” Grossman said.

“I came into the room, and you never looked up, but you said, ‘Sit down, Steve, be right with you.’ How’d you know it was me without first looking at me?”

“Ah-ha,” Grossman said.

“No, come on, Sam, it’s bugging the hell out of me.”

“Well, it’s really quite simple,” Grossman said, grinning. “You will notice that the time is now twenty-five minutes to one, and that the sun, having passed its zenith, is glancing obliquely through the bank of windows lining the laboratory wall, touching the clock ever so faintly and casting shadows the angle of which can easily be measured.”

“Mmm?” Carella said.

“Moreover, the specimen on this microscope slide is particularly light-sensitive, meaning that the slightest deviation of any ray you might care to name—X, ultraviolet, or infrared—could easily have caused recognizable changes on the slide while I was examining it. Couple this, Steve, with the temperature, which I believe is close to ten above zero, and the air pollution level, which is, as usual in this city, unsatisfactory, and you can understand how all this might account for immediate identification without visibility being a necessary factor.”

“Yeah?” Carella said.

“Exactly. There’s one other important point, of course, and I think we should consider it, too, if we’re to understand the complete picture. You wanted to know how I knew you had entered the laboratory and were approaching the worktable? To begin with, when I heard the door opening . . .”

“How’d you know it was me?”

“Well, here’s the single most important element in the deductive process that led me to my inescapable conclusion . . .”

“Yes, what?”

“Marshall Davies saw you in the hall. He popped in just before you opened the door, to tell me you were coming.”

“You son of a bitch,” Carella said, and burst out laughing.

“How do you like the job he did for you guys?” Grossman asked.

“Beautiful,” Carella said.

“Practically handed it to you on a platter.”

“No question.”

“The Police Laboratory strikes again,” Grossman said. “Pretty soon we’ll be able to do without you guys entirely.”

“I know. That’s why I came down to see you. I want to turn in my badge.”

“About time,” Grossman said. “Why did you come down? Big case you want us to crack in record time?”

“Nothing more important than a couple of purse snatches on Culver Avenue.”

“Bring the victims in. We’ll try to lift some latents from their backsides,” Grossman said.

“I don’t think they’d like that,” Carella said.

“And why not? We would treat the ladies with great delicacy.”

“Oh, I don’t think the lady would mind. But the guy whose purse was snatched . . .”

“You son of a bitch!” Grossman shouted, and both men began laughing hysterically.

“Seriously,” Carella said, laughing.

“Yes, yes, seriously,” Grossman said.

“Listen, I’m really trying to be serious here.”

“Yes, yes, of course.”

“I came down to thank you.”

“For what?” Grossman said, sobering immediately.

“I was about to go out on a limb. The stuff you got for us clinched the case and made an arrest possible. I wanted to thank you, that’s all.”

“What kind of a limb, Steve?”

“I thought the husband did it.”

“Mmm?”

“Mmm.”

“Why?”

“No reason.” Carella paused. “Sam,” he said, “I still think he did it.”

“Is that why you’re having lunch with him today?” Grossman asked.

“Now how the hell do you know that?” Carella said.

“Ah-ha,” Grossman answered. “He was in Rollie Chabrier’s office when he called you. I spoke to Rollie a little while after that, and . . .”

“Good day, sir,” Carella said. “You’re too much of a smart-ass for me.”


Most policemen in the city for which Carella worked did not very often eat in restaurants like The Golden Lion. They ate lunch at one or another of the greasy spoons in and around the precinct, where the meal was on the arm, tribute to Caesar. Or they grabbed a quick sandwich and a cup of coffee at their desks. On their own time, when they entertained wives or girl friends, they often dropped in on restaurants where they were known as cops, protesting demonstratively when the proprietor said, “This is on the house,” but accepting the gratuity nonetheless. Not a single cop in the city considered the practice dishonest. They were underpaid and overworked and they were here to protect the average citizen against criminal attack. If some of those citizens were in a position to make the policeman’s lot a bit more tolerable, why should they embarrass those persons by refusing a free meal graciously offered? Carella had never been inside The Golden Lion. A look at the menu posted on the window outside would have frightened him out of six months’ pay.

The place was a faithful replica of the dining room of an English coach house, circa 1637. Huge oaken beams crossed the room several feet below the vaulted ceiling, binding together the rough white plastered walls. The tables were sturdy, covered with immaculate white cloths, sparkling with heavy silver. Here and there throughout the room there hung the portraits of Elizabethan gentlemen and ladies, white-laced collars and cuffs discreetly echoing the color of the walls, rich velvet robes or gowns adding muted touches of color to the pristine candlelit atmosphere. Gerald Fletcher’s table was in a secluded corner of the restaurant. He rose as Carella approached, extended his hand, and immediately said, “Glad you could make it. Sit down, won’t you?”

Carella shook Fletcher’s hand, and then sat. He felt extremely uncomfortable, nor could he tell whether his discomfort was caused by the room or the man with whom he was dining. The room was intimidating, true, brimming with lawyers discussing their most recent cases in voices best saved for juries. In their presence Carella felt somewhat like a numbers collector in the policy racket, picking up the work to deliver it to the higher-ups for processing and final disposition. The law was his life, but in the midst of lawyers he felt like a menial. The man sitting opposite him was a criminal lawyer, which was intimidating in itself. But he was something more than that, and it was this perhaps that made Carella feel awkward and clumsy in his presence. It did not matter whether or not Fletcher truly was cleverer than Carella, or more sophisticated, or better at his work, or handsomer, or more articulate—the truth was unimportant. Carella felt Fletcher was all of these things; the man’s manner and bearing and attack (yes, it could be called nothing else) utterly convinced Carella that he was in the presence of a superior being, and this was as good as, if not more potent than, the actual truth.

“Would you care for a drink?” Fletcher asked.

“Well, are you having one?” Carella asked.

“Yes, I am.”

“I’ll have a scotch and soda,” Carella said. He was not used to drinking at lunch. He never drank at lunch when he was on duty, and the next time he would drink at lunch in his own home would be on Christmas day, when the family came to celebrate the holiday.

Fletcher signaled for the waiter. “Have you ever been here before?” he asked Carella.

“No, never.”

“I thought you might have. It being so close to all the courts. You do spend a lot of time in court, don’t you?”

“Yes, quite a bit,” Carella said.

“Ah,” Fletcher said to the waiter. “A scotch and soda, please, and another whiskey sour for me.”

“Thank you, Mr. Fletcher,” the waiter said, and padded off.

“I cannot tell you how impressed I was by the speed with which you people made your arrest,” Fletcher said.

“Well, we had a lot of help from the lab,” Carella said.

“Incredible, wasn’t it? I’m talking about the man’s carelessness. But then I understand from Rollie . . .” Fletcher paused. “Rollie Chabrier, in the D.A.’s office. I believe you know him.”

“Yes, I do.”

“He’s the one who gave me your home number. I hope you won’t think too badly of him for it.”

“No, no, quite all right,” Carella said.

“I called you directly from his office this morning. Quite coincidentally, he’ll be prosecuting the case against Corwin.”

“Scotch and soda, sir?” the waiter asked rhetorically, and set the drink down before Carella. He put the second whiskey sour on the table before Fletcher and then said, “Would you care to see menus now, Mr. Fletcher?”

“In a bit,” Fletcher said.

“Thank you, sir,” the waiter answered, and went off again.

Fletcher raised his glass. “Here’s to a conviction,” he said.

Carella lifted his own glass. “I don’t expect Rollie’ll have any trouble,” he said. “It looks airtight to me.”

Both men drank. Fletcher dabbed his lips with a napkin and said, “You never can tell these days. I practice criminal law, as you know, and I’m usually on the other side of the fence. You’d be surprised at the number of times we’ve won acquittal on cases that seemed cinches for the people.” He lifted his glass again. His eyes met Carella’s. “I hope you’re right, though,” he said. “I hope this one is airtight.” He sipped at the drink. “Rollie was telling me . . .”

“Yes, you were starting to say . . .”

“Yes, that the man is a drug addict . . .”

“Yes . . .”

“Who’d never before burglarized an apartment.”

“That’s right.”

“I must admit I feel a certain amount of sympathy for him.”

“Do you?”

“Yes. If he’s an addict he’s automatically entitled to pity. And when one considers that the woman he murdered was a bitch like my wife . . .”

“Mr. Fletcher . . .”

“Gerry, okay?”

“Well . . .”

“I know, I know. It isn’t very kind of me to malign the dead. I’m afraid you didn’t know my wife, though, Mr. Carella. May I call you Steve?”

“Sure.”

“My enmity might be a bit more understandable if you did. Still, I shall take your advice. She’s dead, and no longer capable of hurting me. So why be bitter? Shall we order, Steve?”

The waiter came to the table. Fletcher suggested that Carella try either the trout au meunière or the beef and kidney pie, both of which were excellent. Carella ordered prime ribs, medium rare, and a mug of beer. As the men ate and talked, something began happening. Or at least Carella thought something was happening; he would never be quite sure. Nor would he ever try to explain the experience to anyone because the conversation with Fletcher seemed on the surface to be routine chatter about such unrelated matters as conditions in the city, the approaching holidays, several recent motion pictures, the effectiveness of the copper bracelet Meyer had given Kling, the University of Wisconsin (where Fletcher had gone to law school), the letters Carella’s children had written and were still writing daily to Santa Claus, the quality of the beef, and the virtues of ale as compared to beer. But rushing through this inane, polite, and really quite pointless discussion was an undercurrent that caused excitement, fear, and apprehension. As they spoke, Carella knew with renewed dizzying certainty that Gerald Fletcher had killed his wife. Without ever being told so, he knew it. Without the murder ever being mentioned again, he knew it. This was why Fletcher had called this morning, this was why Fletcher had invited him to lunch, this was why he prattled on endlessly while every contradictory move of his body, every hand gesture, every facial expression signaled, indicated, transmitted on an almost extrasensory level that he knew Carella suspected him of the murder, and was here to tell Carella (without telling him) that, Yes, you stupid cop bastard, yes, I killed my wife. However much the evidence may point to another man, however many confessions you get, I killed the bitch, and I’m glad I killed her.

And there isn’t a goddamn thing you can do about it.

5

R alph Corwin was being held before trial in the city’s oldest prison, known to law enforcers and law breakers alike as “Calcutta.” How Calcutta had evolved from Municipal House of Detention, Male Offenders was anybody’s guess. The automatic reference, one might have thought, would be to “The Black Hole,” but Calcutta was not bad as prisons went; there were certainly less hanging-suicides among its inmates than there were at several of the city’s other fine establishments. The building itself was old, but built at a time when masons knew how to handle bricks (and, more important, cared how they were handled) and so it had withstood the onslaught of time and weather, yielding only to the city’s soot, which covered the rust-red bricks like a malevolent black jungle fungus. Inside the buildings, the walls and corridors were clean, the cells small but sanitary, the recreational facilities (Ping-Pong, television, and, in the open yard outside, handball) adequate, and the guards about as dedicated as those to be found anywhere—which is to say they were brutal, sadistic, moronic clods.

Ralph Corwin was being kept in a wing of the building reserved for heavy felony offenders; his cell block at the moment was occupied by himself, a gentleman who had starved his six-year-old son to death in the basement of his Calm’s Point house, another gentleman who had set fire to a synagogue in Majesta, and a third member of the criminal elite who had shot and blinded a gas-station attendant during a holdup in Bethtown. The wounded attendant had rushed out into the highway gushing blood from his shattered face and, because he could not see, was knocked down and killed by a two-ton trailer truck. As the old gag goes, however, he wouldn’t have died if he hadn’t been shot first. Corwin’s cell was at the end of the row, and Carella found him there that Wednesday morning sitting on the lower bunk, hands clasped between his knees, head bent as though in prayer. It had been necessary to get permission for the visit from both the district attorney’s office and Corwin’s lawyer, neither of whom, apparently, felt that allowing Carella to talk to the prisoner would be harmful to the case. Corwin was expecting him. He lifted his head as soon as he heard approaching footsteps, and then rose from the bunk as the turnkey opened the cell door.

“How are you?” Carella said, and extended his hand. Corwin took it, shook it briefly, and then said, “I was wondering which one you’d be. I got your names mixed up, you and the blond cop, I couldn’t remember which was which. Anyway, now I know. You’re Carella.”

“Yes.”

“What’d you want to see me about?”

“I wanted to ask you some questions.”

“My lawyer says . . .”

“I spoke to your lawyer, he knows . . .”

“Yeah, but he says I’m not supposed to add anything to what I already said. He wanted to be here, in fact, but I told him I could take care of myself. I don’t even like that guy. Did you ever meet that guy? He’s this little fink with glasses, he’s like a goddamn cockroach.”

“Why don’t you ask for another lawyer?”

“Can I do that?”

“Sure.”

“Who do I ask?”

“The Legal Aid Society.”

“Can you do that for me? Can you give them a call and tell them . . .”

“I’d rather not.”

“Why?” Corwin said, and studied Carella suspiciously.

“I don’t want to do anything that might be considered prejudicial to the case.”

“Whose case? Mine or the D.A.’s?”

“Either one. I’m not familiar enough with what the Court might consider . . .”

“Okay, so how do I call the Legal Aid?”

“Ask one of the officers here. Or simply tell your lawyer. I’m sure if you explain your feelings to him, he would have no objection to dropping out. Would you want to defend someone who didn’t like you?”

“Yeah, well,” Corwin said, and shrugged. “I don’t want to hurt his feelings. He’s a little cockroach, but what the hell.”

“You’ve got a lot at stake here, Corwin.”

“That’s just the point. What the hell difference does it make?”

“What do you mean?”

“I killed her. So what does it matter who the lawyer is? Nobody’s going to save me. You got it all in black and white.”

Corwin’s eyelid was twitching. He wrung his hands together, sat on the bunk again, and said, “I got to hold my hands together. I got to squeeze them together, otherwise I’m afraid I’ll shake myself to pieces, you know what I mean?”

“How bad has it been?”

“Cold turkey’s never good, and it’s worse when you can’t yell. Every time I yell, that son of a bitch in the next cell tells me to shut up, the one who put his own kid in the basement. He scares me. Did you get a look at him? He must weigh two hundred and fifty pounds. Can you imagine a guy like that chaining his own kid in the basement? And not giving him anything to eat? What makes people do things like that?”

“I don’t know,” Carella said. “Have they given you any medication?”

“No. They said this ain’t a hospital. Which I know it ain’t, right? So I asked my cockroach lawyer to get me transferred to the Narcotics Service at Buenavista, and he said the prison authorities would have to make tests before they could transfer me there as a bona-fide addict, and he said that might take a couple of days. So in a couple of days I won’t be a fuckin’ bona-fide addict anymore, because by then I’ll vomit up my guts and kick it cold turkey, so what kind of sense does that make? I don’t understand rules. I swear to God, I really don’t understand rules. That’s one thing about junk. It makes you forget all the bullshit rules. You stick a needle in your arm, all the rules vanish. Man, I hate rules.”

“You feel like answering some questions?” Carella said.

“I feel like dropping dead is what I feel like.”

“If you’d rather I came back another . . .”

“No, no, go ahead. What do you want to know?”

“I want to know exactly how you stabbed Sarah Fletcher.”

Corwin squeezed his hands tightly together. He wet his lips, abruptly leaned forward as though fighting a sudden cramp, and said, “How do you think you stab somebody? You stick a knife in her, that’s how.”

“Where?”

“In the belly.”

“Left-hand side of the body?”

“Yes. I guess so. I’m right-handed, and she was facing me, so I guess that’s where I stabbed her. Yes.”

“Then what?”

“What do you mean?”

“What did you do then?”

“I . . . you know, I think I must’ve let go of the knife. I think I was so surprised I stabbed her that I let go of it, you know? I must’ve let go, don’t you think? Because I remember her backing away from me, and then falling, and the knife was still in her.”

“Did she say anything to you?”

“No. She just had this . . . this terrible look on her face. Shocked and . . . and hurt . . . and . . . and like, wondering why I did it.”

“Where was the knife when she fell?”

“I don’t know what you mean.”

“Was the knife on the right-hand side of her body or the left?”

“I don’t know.”

“Try to remember.”

“I don’t know. That was when I heard the front door opening and all I could think of was getting out of there.”

“When you stabbed her, did she twist away from you?”

“No. She backed away.”

“She didn’t twist away while you were still holding the knife?”

“No. She moved straight back. As if she couldn’t believe what I done, and . . . and just wanted to get away from me, you know?”

“And then she fell?”

“Yes. She . . . her knees sort of gave way and she grabbed for her belly, and her hands sort of . . . it was terrible . . . they just . . . they were grabbing air, you know? And she fell.”

“In what position?”

“On her side.”

Which side?”

“I could still see the knife, so it must’ve been the opposite side. The side opposite from where I stabbed her.”

“Facing her, how was she lying on the floor? Show me.”

“Well . . .” Corwin rose from the bunk and stood before Carella. “Let’s say the toilet bowl there is the window, her feet were toward me, and her head was toward the window. So if you’re me . . .” Corwin got on the floor and stretched his legs toward Carella. “This is the position she was in.”

“All right, now show me which side she was lying on.”

Corwin rolled onto his right side. “This side,” he said.

“Her right side.”

“Yes.”

“And you saw the knife sticking out of the opposite side, the left side.”

“Yes.”

“Exactly where you’d stabbed her.”

“I suppose so, yes.”

“Was the knife still in that position when you broke the window and left the apartment?”

“I don’t know. I didn’t look at the knife again. Nor at her neither. I just wanted to get out of there fast. There was somebody coming, you understand?”

“One last question, Ralph. Was she dead when you went through that window?”

“I don’t know. She was bleeding and . . . she was very quiet. I . . . guess she was dead. I don’t know. I guess so.”


“Hello, Miss Simonov?”

“Yes.”

“Detective Kling, 87th Squad. I’ve . . .”

“Who?”

“Kling. Detective Kling. You remember we talked in the hallway . . .”

“Oh, yes, how are you?”

“Fine, thanks. I’ve been trying to get you all afternoon. It finally occurred to me, big detective that I am, that you probably work, and wouldn’t be home until after five.”

“I do work,” Nora said, “but I work right here in the apartment. I’m a freelance artist. I really should get an answering service, I suppose. I was uptown visiting my mother. I’m sorry you had trouble getting me.”

“Well,” Kling said, “I’ve got you now.”

“Just barely. I still haven’t taken off my coat.”

“I’ll wait.”

“Would you? This apartment’s stifling hot. If you close all the windows, they send up steam you could grow orchids with. And if you leave them open the tiniest crack, you come home and it’s like an arctic tundra. I’ll just be a minute. God, it’s suffocating in here.”

Kling waited. While he waited, he looked at his copper bracelet. If the bracelet actually began working, he would send one to his aunt in San Diego, who had been suffering from rheumatism for close to fifteen years. If it didn’t work, he would sue Meyer.

“Hello, I’m back.”

“Hello,” Kling said.

“Boy, that’s much better,” Nora said. “I can’t stand extremes, can you? It’s bitter cold in the street, and the temperature in here has to be at least a hundred and four. Wow. What were you calling about, Mr. Kling?”

“Well, as you probably know, we apprehended the man who committed the Fletcher murder . . .”

“Yes, I read about it.”

“And the district attorney’s office is now preparing the case against him. They called us this morning to ask whether you’d be available to make a positive identification of Corwin as the man you saw in the basement of the building.”

“Why is that necessary?”

“I don’t follow you, Miss Simonov.”

“The newspapers said you had a full confession. Why do you need . . .”

“Yes, of course, but the prosecuting attorney still has to present evidence.”

“Why?”

“Well . . . suppose, for example, that I confessed to the same murder, and it turned out my fingerprints were not on the knife, I was not the man you saw in the basement, I was in fact in Schenectady on the night of the murder, do you see what I mean? Confession or not, the D.A. has to make a case.”

“I see.”

“So what I’m calling about is to find out if you’d be willing to identify the man.”

“Yes, of course I would.”

“How about tomorrow morning?”

“What time tomorrow morning? I usually sleep late.”

“Name it.”

“First tell me where it’ll be.”

“Downtown. On Arbor Street. Around the corner from the Criminal Courts Building.”

“Where’s that?”

“The Criminal Courts Building? On High Street.”

“Oh. That’s all the way downtown.”

“Yes.”

“Would eleven o’clock be too late?”

“No, I’m sure that’ll be fine.”

“All right then.”

“I’ll meet you downstairs in the lobby. That’s 33 Arbor Street. At five to eleven, okay?”

“Yes, okay.”

“Unless I call you back. I want to check with the . . .”

“When would you be calling back? If you called.”

“In the next two or three minutes. I just want to contact the D.A.’s office to make sure . . .”

“Oh, okay then. Because I want to take a bath.”

“If you don’t hear from me within the next—let’s say, five minutes, okay?—I’ll see you in the morning.”

“Good.”

“Thank you, Miss Simonov.”

“’Bye,” she said, and hung up.

6

C orwin’s attorney, cockroach or otherwise, realized that, if he did not grant the D.A.’s office permission to run a lineup on his client, they would simply get a Supreme Court judge to order such a lineup, so he agreed to it at once. He stipulated only that it be a fair lineup and that he be permitted to attend it. Rollie Chabrier, who was handling the case for the people, readily granted both of his demands.

A fair lineup meant that Corwin and the other men in the lineup should be dressed in approximately the same style of clothing, and should be of the same general build, height, and color. It would not have been considered fair, for example, if the other men in the lineup were all Puerto Rican midgets wearing clown costumes since the witness would then automatically eliminate them and identify the remaining man whether or not he was truly the one she had seen rushing in and out of the basement on the night of the murder. Rollie Chabrier chose men from the D.A.’s detective squad, all of whom were about the same size and general build as Corwin, asked them all to dress casually, and then trotted them into his office together with Corwin himself, who was wearing civilian clothing for the occasion of his visit from Calcutta.

In the presence of Bert Kling, Nora Simonov, and Corwin’s attorney—a cockroach, indeed, whose name was Harvey Johns—Rollie Chabrier said, “Miss Simonov, would you please look at these seven men and tell me if one of them is the man you saw in the basement of 721 Silvermine Oval on the night of December the twelfth, at or about 10:45 P . M .?”

Nora looked, and then said, “Yes.”

“You recognize one of these men?”

“I do.”

“Which one is the man you saw in the basement?”

“That one,” Nora said, and pointed unerringly to Ralph Corwin.

The detectives from the D.A.’s squad handcuffed Corwin once again, and walked him up the corridor to the elevator, which whisked him down ten floors to the basement of the building, where he was led up a ramp to a waiting police van that transported him back to Calcutta. In Chabrier’s office, Harvey Johns thanked him for the fairness of the lineup he had run, and then advised him that his client had told him he no longer desired his services as defense attorney and that probably a new attorney would be appointed to the case, but this did not mean it had not been a pleasure working with Chabrier anyhow. Chabrier thanked Johns, and Johns went back to his office in midtown Isola. Chabrier also thanked Nora for her cooperation, and Kling for his assistance in getting Miss Simonov downtown, and then he shook hands with Kling, and walked them to the elevator, and said good-bye, and scurried off just before the elevator doors closed, a round, pink-cheeked man with a pencil-line mustache, wearing brown shoes with a dark blue suit. Kling figured he had Presidential aspirations.

In the marble entrance lobby of the building, Kling said, “Now that was simple, wasn’t it?”

“Yes,” Nora answered. “And yet, I feel . . . I don’t know. Somewhat like an informer, I guess. I realize the man killed Sarah Fletcher, but at the same time I hate to think my identification will help convict him.” She shrugged, and then smiled suddenly and apologetically. “Anyway, I’m glad it’s over.”

“I’m sorry it was painful,” Kling said. “Can the Department make amends by taking you to lunch?”

“Would it be the Department or would it be you?”

“Me, actually,” Kling said. “What do you say?”

She had, Kling noticed, a direct approach to most matters, asking questions as guilelessly as a child, expecting honest answers in return. Without breaking her stride now, she turned her head toward him, long brown hair falling free over one eye, and said, “If it’s just lunch, fine.”

“That’s all,” Kling said, and he smiled, but he could not hide his disappointment. He realized, of course, that he was still smarting from Cindy Forrest’s abrupt termination of their relationship, and a nice way for a man to prove he was still attractive to women was to sweep someone like Nora Simonov off her feet and into his arms before Cindy could even raise her eyebrows in astonishment. But Nora Simonov wasn’t having any, thanks. “If it’s just lunch, fine,” she had said, making it clear that she wasn’t looking for any more meaningful relationship. She had caught the tone of Kling’s reply, however, he knew that; her face was a direct barometer of her emotions, pressure-sensitive to every nuance of feeling within. She nibbled at her lip now, and said, “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to make it sound so . . . terminal. It’s just that I am in love with someone, you see, and I didn’t want to give the impression that I might be, well, available, or interested, or . . . my God, I’m only screwing it up worse!”

“No, you’re doing fine,” Kling said.

“I normally detest people who wear their hearts on their sleeves. God, are they boring! Anyway, do we have to have lunch, I’m not even hungry yet. What time is it?”

“A little after twelve.”

“Couldn’t we walk a little and just talk? If we did, I wouldn’t feel I was compromising my grand amour,” she said, rolling her eyes, “and you wouldn’t feel you were wasting lunch on a completely unresponsive dud.”

“I would love to walk and talk a little,” Kling said.

They walked.

The city that Thursday nine days before Christmas was overcast with menacing clouds; the weather bureau had promised a heavy snowfall before midafternoon. Moreover, a sharp wind was blowing in off the river, swirling in cruel eddies through the narrow streets of the financial district that bordered the municipal and federal courts. Nora walked with her head ducked against the wind, her fine brown hair whipping about her head with each fierce gust. As a defense against the wind, which truly seemed determined to blow her off the sidewalk, she took Kling’s arm as they walked, and on more than one occasion turned her face into his shoulder whenever the blasts became too violent. Kling began wishing she hadn’t already warned him off. As she chattered on about the weather and about how much she liked the look of the city just before Christmas, he entertained wild fantasies of male superiority: bold, handsome, witty, intelligent, sensitive cop pierces armor of young, desirable girl, stealing her away from ineffectual idiot she adores . . .

“The people, too,” Nora said. “Something happens to them just before Christmas, they get, I don’t know, grander in spirit.”

Young girl, in turn, realizing she has been waiting all these years for handsome witty, etc., cop lavishes adoration she had previously wasted on mealy-mouthed moron . . .

“Even though I recognize it’s been brutalized and commercialized, it reaches me, it really does. And that’s surprising because I’m Jewish, you know. We never celebrated Christmas when I was a little girl.”

“How old are you?” Kling asked.

“Twenty-four. Are you Jewish?”

“No.”

“Kling,” Nora said, and shrugged. “It could be Jewish.”

“Is your boyfriend Jewish?”

“No, he’s not.”

“Are you engaged?”

“Not exactly. But we do plan to get married.”

“What does he do?”

“I’d rather not talk about him, if you don’t mind,” Nora said.

They did not talk about him again that afternoon. They walked through streets aglow with lighted Christmas trees, passing shop windows hung with tinsel and wreaths. Streetcorner Santa Clauses jingled their bells and solicited donations; Salvation Army musicians blew their tubas and trombones, shook their tambourines, and likewise asked for funds; shoppers hurried from store to store clutching giftwrapped packages while overhead the clouds grew thicker and more menacing.

Nora told him that she usually kept regular working hours in the studio she had set up in one room of her large, rent-controlled apartment. (“Except once a week, when I go up to Riverhead to visit my mother, which is where I was all day yesterday while you were trying to reach me”), and that she did many different kinds of freelance design, from book jackets to theatrical posters, from industrial brochures to line drawings for cookbooks, color illustrations for children’s books, and what-have-you. (“I’m usually kept very busy. It isn’t just the art work, you know, it’s running around to see editors and producers and authors and all sorts of people. I’ll be damned if I’ll give twenty-five percent of my income to an art agent. That’s what some of them are getting these days, don’t you think there should be a law?”) She had studied art at Cooper Union in New York City, and then had gone on for more training at the Rhode Island School of Design, and then had come here a year ago to work for an advertising firm named Thadlow, Brunner, Growling and Crowe (“His name really was Growling, Anthony Growling”) where she had lasted for little more than six months, doing illustrations of cans and cigarette packages and other such rewarding subjects before she’d decided to quit and begin freelancing. (“So that’s the story of my life.”)

It was almost three o’clock.

Kling suspected he was already halfway in love with her, but it was time to get back to the squadroom. He took her uptown in a taxi, and just before she got out in front of her building on Silvermine Oval, on the off-chance that her earlier protestations of undying love were in the nature of a ploy, he said, “I enjoyed this, Nora. Can I see you again sometime?”

She looked at him with an oddly puzzled expression, as though she had tried her best to make it abundantly clear that she was otherwise involved and had, through some dire fault of her own, failed to communicate the idea to him. She smiled briefly and sadly, shook her head, and said, “No, I don’t think so.”

Then she got out of the taxi and was gone.


Among Sarah Fletcher’s personal effects that were considered of interest to the police before they arrested Ralph Corwin was an address book found in the dead woman’s handbag on the bedroom dresser. In the Thursday afternoon stillness of the squadroom, Carella examined the book while Meyer and Kling discussed the potency of the copper bracelet Kling wore on his wrist. The squadroom was unusually quiet; a person could actually hear himself think. The typewriters were silent, the telephones were not ringing, there were no prisoners in the detention cage yelling their heads off about police brutality or human rights, and all the windows were tightly closed, shutting out even the noises of the street below. In deference to the calm (and also because Carella seemed so hard at work with Sarah Fletcher’s address book), Meyer and Kling spoke in what amounted to whispers.

“I can only tell you,” Meyer said, “that the bracelet is supposed to work miracles. Now what else can I tell you?”

“You can tell me how come it hasn’t worked any miracles on me so far?”

“When did you put it on?” Meyer said.

“I marked it on my calendar,” Kling said. They were sitting in the corner of the squadroom closest to the detention cage, Kling in a wooden chair behind his desk, Meyer perched on one end of the desk. The desk was against the wall, and the wall was covered with departmental flyers, memos on new rules and regulations, next year’s Detectives’ Duty Chart (listing Night Duty, Day Duty, and Open Days for each of the squad’s six detective teams), a cartoon clipped from the police magazine every red-blooded cop subscribed to, several telephone numbers of complainants Kling hoped to get back to before his tour ended, a photograph of Cindy Forrest (which he’d meant to take down), and several less-flattering mug shots of wanted criminals. Kling’s calendar was buried under the morass on the wall; he had to take down an announcement for the P.B.A.’s annual New Year’s Eve party to get at it. “Here,” he said. “You gave me the bracelet on December first.”

“And today’s what?” Meyer asked.

“Today’s the sixteenth.”

“How do you know I gave it to you on the first?”

“That’s what the MB stands for. Meyer’s bracelet.”

“All right, so that’s exactly two weeks. So what do you expect? I told you it’d begin working in two weeks.”

“You said ten days.”

“I said two weeks.”

“Anyway, it’s more than two weeks.”

“Listen, Bert, the bracelet works miracles, it can cure anything from arthritis to . . .”

“Then why isn’t it working on me?”

“What do you expect?” Meyer asked. “Miracles?”


There was nothing terribly fascinating about the alphabetical listings in Sarah Fletcher’s address book. She had possessed a good handwriting, and the names, addresses, and telephone numbers were all clearly written and easily read. Even when she’d crossed out a telephone number to write in a new listing, the deletion was made with a single sure stroke of her pen, the new number written directly beneath it. Carella leafed through the pages, finding that most of the listings were for obviously married couples, (Chuck and Nancy Benton, Harold and Marie Spander, George and Ina Grossman, and on and on), some were for girlfriends, some for local merchants and service people, one for Sarah’s hairdresser, another for her dentist, several for doctors, and a few for restaurants in town and across the river. A thoroughly uninspiring address book—until Carella came to a page at the end of the book, with the printed word MEMORANDA at its top.

“All I know,” Kling said, “is that my shoulder still hurts. I’m lucky I haven’t been in any fierce pistol duels lately, because I’m sure I wouldn’t be able to draw my gun.”

“When’s the last time you were in a fierce pistol duel?” Meyer asked.

“I’m in fierce pistol duels all the time,” Kling said, and grinned.

Under the single word MEMORANDA there were five names, addresses, and telephone numbers written in Sarah’s meticulous hand. All of the names were men’s names. They had obviously been entered in the book at different times because some were written in pencil and others in ink. The parenthetical initials following each entry were all noted in felt marking pens of various colors:

If there was one thing Carella loved, it was a code. He loved a code almost as much as he loved German measles.

Sighing, he opened the top drawer of his desk and pulled out the Isola directory. He was verifying the address for the first name on Sarah Fletcher’s MEMORANDA list when Kling said, “There are some guys who won’t let a case go, even after it’s been solved.”

“Who did you have in mind?” Meyer asked.

“Certain very conscientious guys,” Kling said.

Carella pretended neither of them was there. The telephone book address for Andrew Hart matched the one in Sarah’s handwriting. He flipped to the back of the directory.

“I knew a very conscientious cop one time,” Meyer said, and winked.

“Tell me about him,” Kling said, and winked back.

“He was walking a beat out in Bethtown, oh, this must have been three or four winters ago,” Meyer said. “It was a bitter cold day, not unlike today, but he was a very conscientious man, this cop, and he walked his beat faithfully and well, without once taking a coffee break, or even stopping in any of the local bars for a nip.”

“He sounds like a stalwart,” Kling said, grinning.

Carella had found an address for Michael Thornton, the second name on Sarah’s list. It, too, was identical to the one in her book.

“Oh, he was a stalwart, no question,” Meyer said. “And conscientious as the day was long. Did I mention it was a bitter cold day?”

“Yes, I believe you did,” Kling said.

“Nonetheless,” Meyer said, “it was the habit of a very pretty and well-built Bethtown lady to take a swim every day of the year, rain or shine, snow, hail, or sleet. Did I mention she had very big boobs?”

“I believe you did.”

Carella kept turning pages in the directory, checking names and addresses.

“The lady’s house was right on the beach, and it was her habit to bathe stark naked because this was a very isolated part of Bethtown, way over near the end of the island. This was before they put the new bridge in, you still had to take a ferry to get out there. It so happened, however, that the lady’s house was also on the conscientious cop’s beat. And on this particularly bitter day some three or four winters ago, the lady rushed out of her back door with her arms crossed just below her big bulging boobs, hugging herself because it was so cold, and the conscientious cop . . .”

“Yes, yes, what about him?” Kling said.

“The conscientious cop took one look at that lady hugging herself as she ran down toward the water, and he yelled, ‘Stop, police!’ and when the lady stopped, and faced him, still clutching herself under those big boobs, she indignantly asked, ‘What have I done, officer? What crime have I committed?’ And the conscientious cop said, ‘It ain’t what you done, lady, it’s what you were about to do. You think I’m going to stand by while you drown those two chubby pink-nosed puppies?’”

Kling burst out laughing. Meyer slapped the top of his desk and roared at his own joke. Carella said, “Will you guys please shut up?”

He had verified all five addresses.

In the morning, he would get to work.


The letter was the sixth one April Carella had written to Santa Claus. In the kitchen of the Riverhead house, she read it silently over her mother’s shoulder:

“What do you think, Mom?” she said.

She was standing behind her mother’s chair, and Teddy could not see her lips, and had no idea that she had spoken. Teddy was a deaf mute, a beautiful woman with midnight hair and dark luminous brown eyes that cherished words because to her they were visible and tangible; she saw them forming as they tumbled from fingers; she touched them in the dark on her husband’s lips, and heard them more profoundly than she would have with normal “hearing.” She was thoroughly absorbed by the inconsistencies in her daughter’s letter, and did not look up as April came around the chair. Why someone should be able to spell a word like “personally” while making a shambles of simple words like “busy” or “would” was beyond Teddy’s comprehension. Perhaps she should visit April’s teacher, mildly suggest to her that whereas the child possessed undeniable writing ability, wouldn’t her style be more effective if her imaginative spelling were controlled somewhat? Some of the avant-garde quality might be lost, true . . .

April touched her arm.

Teddy looked up into her daughter’s face. The two, in the light of the Tiffany lamp that overhung the old oak table in the large kitchen, were something less than mirror images, but the resemblance, even for mother and daughter, was uncanny nonetheless. More remarkable, however, was the identical intensity of their expressions. As April repeated her question, Teddy studied her lips, and then raised her hands and slowly spelled out her answer, while April’s gaze never faltered. It occurred to Teddy, with some amusement, that a child who could not spell “would” might have difficulty deciphering the letters and words that Teddy deftly and fluidly formed with her fingers, especially when the message she was communicating was “Your spelling is bad.” But April watched, nodding as she caught letters, smiling as the letters combined to form a word, and then another word, and finally grasping the short sentence, and saying, “Which ones are spelled wrong, Mom? Show me?”

They were going over the letter again when April heard a key in the front door. Her eyes met briefly with her mother’s. A smile cracked instantly across her face. Together, they rose instantly from the table. Mark, April’s twin brother, was already bounding down the steps from his bedroom upstairs.

Carella was home.

7

A t a little past eight the next morning, on the assumption that most men worked for a living and would be in transit to their jobs after that hour, Carella called Andrew Hart at the number listed in Sarah’s address book. The phone was picked up on the fifth ring.

“Hello?” a man’s voice said.

“Mr. Hart?”

“Speaking.”

“This is Detective Carella of the 87th Squad. I wonder . . .”

“What’s the matter?” Hart said immediately.

“I’d like to ask you some questions, Mr. Hart.”

“I’m in the middle of shaving,” Hart said. “I’ve got to leave for the office in a little while. What’s this about?”

“We’re investigating a homicide, Mr. Hart . . .”

“A what? A homicide?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Who? Who’s been killed?”

“A woman named Sarah Fletcher.”

“I don’t know anyone named Sarah Fletcher,” Hart said.

“She seems to have known you, Mr. Hart.”

“Sarah who? Fletcher, did you say?”

“That’s right.”

“I don’t know anybody by that name. Who says she knew me? I never heard of her in my life.”

“Your name’s in her address book.”

“My what? My name? That’s impossible.”

“Mr. Hart, I have her book right here in my hand, and your name is in it, together with your address and your phone number.”

“Well, I don’t know how it got there.”

“Neither do I. That’s why I’d like to talk to you.”

“Okay, okay,” Hart said. “What time is it? Jesus, is it ten after eight already?”

“Yes, it is.”

“Look, I’ve got to shave and get out of here. Can you come to the office later? About . . . ten o’clock? I should be free around then. I’d see you earlier, but someone’s coming in at nine.”

“We’ll be there at ten. Where is the office, Mr. Hart?”

“On Hamilton and Reed. 480 Reed. The sixth floor. Hart and Widderman. We’ve got the whole floor.”

“See you at ten, Mr. Hart.”

“Right,” Hart said, and hung up.


Like a woman in her tenth month, the clouds over the city twisted and roiled in angry discomfort but refused to deliver the promised snow. The citizens grew anxious. Hurrying to their jobs, dashing into subway kiosks, boarding buses, climbing into taxicabs, they glanced apprehensively at the bloated skies and wondered if the weather bureau, as usual, was wrong. To the average city dweller, being alerted to a snowstorm was like being alerted to the bubonic plague. Nobody in his right mind liked snow. Nobody liked putting on rubbers and galoshes and skid-chains and boots; nobody liked shoveling sidewalks and canceling dinner dates and missing theater parties; nobody liked slipping and sliding and falling on his ass. But worse than that, nobody liked being promised all that, and being forced to anticipate all that, and then not having all that delivered. The city dweller, for all his sophistication, was a creature of habit who dreaded any break in his normal routine. He would accept blackouts or garbage strikes or muggings in the park because these were not breaks in the routine, they were the routine. And besides, they reinforced the image he carried of himself as an urban twentieth-century swashbuckler capable of coping with the worst disasters. But threaten a taxicab strike and then postpone or cancel it? Promise a protest and have it dispersed by the police? Forecast snow and then have the storm hover indefinitely over the city like a writhing gray snake ready to strike? Oh no, you couldn’t fool with a city person that way. It made him edgy and uncomfortable and insecure and constipated.

“So where the hell is it?” Meyer asked impatiently. One hand on the door of the police sedan, he looked up at the threatening sky and all but shook his fist at the gray clouds overhead.

“It’ll come,” Carella said.

“When?” Meyer asked flatly, and opened the door, and climbed into the car. Carella started the engine. “Damn forecasters never know what they’re doing,” Meyer said. “Last big storm we had, they were predicting sunny and mild. We can put men on the moon, but we can’t tell if it’s going to drizzle on Tuesday.”

“That’s an interesting thing,” Carella said.

“What is?”

“About the moon.”

“What about the moon?”

“Why should everything down here be expected to work perfectly just because we’ve put men on the moon?”

“What the hell are you talking about?” Meyer said.

“We can put men on the moon,” Carella said, “but we can’t get a phone call through to Riverhead. We can put men on the moon, but we can’t settle a transit strike. We can put men on the moon . . .”

“I get your point,” Meyer said, “but I fail to see the parallel. There is a connection between the weather and the billions of dollars we’ve spent shooting meteorological hardware into space.”

“I merely thought it was an interesting observation,” Carella said.

“It was very interesting,” Meyer said.

“What’s the matter with you this morning?”

“Nothing’s the matter with me this morning.”

“Okay,” Carella said, and shrugged.

They drove in silence. The city was a monochromatic gray, the backdrop for a Warner Brothers gangster film of the thirties. The color seemed to have been drained from everything—the most vivid billboards, the most vibrant building façades, the most lurid women’s clothing, even the Christmas ornaments that decorated the shop windows. Overhung with eternal grayness, the trappings of the yuletide season stood revealed as shabby crap, tinsel and plastic to be exhibited once a year before being returned to the basement. In this bleak light, even the costumes of the streetcorner Santa Clauses appeared to be a faded maroon rather than a cheerful red, the fake beards dirty, the brass bells tarnished. The city had been robbed of sunshine and denied the cleansing release of snow. It waited, and it fretted, and it grew crankier by the minute.

“I was wondering about Christmas,” Carella said.

“What about it?”

“I’ve got the duty. You feel like switching with me?”

“What for?” Meyer said.

“I thought I’d give you Chanukah or something.”

“How long do you know me?” Meyer asked.

“Too long,” Carella said, and smiled.

“How many years has it been?” Meyer said. “And you don’t know I celebrate both Chanukah and Christmas? I’ve had a Christmas tree in the house ever since the kids were born. Every year. You’ve been there every year. You were there last year with Teddy. You saw the tree. Right in the living room. Right in the middle of the goddamn living room.”

“I forgot,” Carella said.

“I celebrate both,” Meyer said.

“Okay,” Carella said.

“Okay. So the answer is no, I don’t want to switch the duty.”

“Okay.”

“Okay.”

In this mood of joyous camaraderie, Meyer and Carella parked the car and went into the building at 480 Reed Street, and up the elevator to the sixth floor—in silence. Hart and Widderman manufactured watchbands. A huge advertising display near the receptionist’s desk in the lobby proudly proclaimed H & W BEATS THE BAND ! and then backed the slogan with more discreet copy that explained how Hart and Widderman had solved the difficult engineering problems of the expansion watch bracelet to present to the world their amazing new line, all illustrated with photographs as big as Carella’s head, in gleaming golden tones he felt certain he could hock at the nearest pawnshop. The receptionist’s hair was almost as golden, but it did not look as genuine as that in the display. She glanced up from her magazine without much interest as the detectives approached her desk. Meyer was still reading the advertising copy, fascinated.

“Mr. Hart, please,” Carella said.

“Who’s calling?” the receptionist asked. She had a definite Calm’s Point accent, and she sounded as if she were chewing gum, even though she was not.

“Detectives Carella and Meyer.”

“Just a minute, please,” she said, and lifted her phone, and pushed a button in the base. “Mr. Hart,” she said, “there are some cops here to see you.” She listened for a moment, and then said, “Yes, sir.” She replaced the receiver on its cradle, gestured toward the inside corridor with a nod of her golden tresses, said, “Go right in, please. Door at the end of the hall,” and then went back to discovering what people were talking about in Vogue.

The gray skies had apparently got to Andrew Hart, too.

“You didn’t have to broadcast to the world that the police department is here,” he said immediately.

“We merely announced ourselves,” Carella said.

“Well, okay, now you’re here,” Hart said, “let’s get it over with.” He was a big man in his middle fifties, with iron-gray hair and black-rimmed eyeglasses. His eyes behind their lenses were brown and swift and cruel. His jacket was draped over the back of the chair behind his desk, and his shirt sleeves were rolled up over powerful forearms dense with black hair. A gold expansion bracelet, undoubtedly one of his own, held his watch fastened to his thick wrist. “If you want to know the truth,” he said, “I don’t know what the hell you’re doing here, anyway. I told you I don’t know any Sarah Fletcher, and I don’t.”

“Here’s her book, Mr. Hart,” Carella said, figuring there was no sense wasting time with a lot of bullshit. He handed the address book to Hart, opened to the MEMORANDA page. “That’s your name, isn’t it?”

“Yeah,” Hart said, and shook his head. “But how it got there is beyond me.”

“You don’t know anybody named Sarah Fletcher, huh?”

“No.”

“Is it possible she’s someone you met at a party, someone you exchanged numbers with . . .”

“No.”

“Are you married, Mr. Hart?”

“What’s that got to do with it?”

Are you?”

“No.”

“We’ve got a picture of Mrs. Fletcher, I wonder . . .”

“Don’t go showing me any pictures of a corpse,” Hart said.

“This was taken when she was alive. It’s a recent picture, it was on the dresser in her bedroom. Would you mind looking at it?”

“I don’t see any sense in this at all,” Hart said. “I told you I don’t know her. How’s looking at her picture . . . ?”

“Meyer?” Carella said, and Meyer handed him a manila envelope. Carella opened the flap and removed from the envelope a framed picture of Sarah Fletcher, which he handed to Hart. Hart looked at the photograph, and then immediately looked up at Carella.

“What is this?” he said.

“Do you recognize that picture, Mr. Hart?”

“Let me see your badge,” Hart said.

“What?”

“Your badge, your badge. Let me see your identification.”

Carella took out his wallet, and opened it to where his detective’s shield was pinned opposite his I.D. card. Hart studied both, and then said, “I thought this might be a shakedown.”

“Why’d you think that?”

Hart did not answer. He looked at the photograph again, shook his head, and said, “Somebody killed her, huh?”

“Yes, somebody did,” Carella answered. “Did you know her?”

“I knew her.”

“I thought you said you didn’t.”

“I didn’t know Sarah Fletcher, if that’s who you think she was. But I knew this broad, all right.”

“Who’d you think she was?” Meyer asked.

“Just who she told me she was.”

“Which was?”

“Sadie Collins. She introduced herself as Sadie Collins, and that’s who I knew her as. Sadie Collins.”

“Where was this, Mr. Hart? Where’d you meet her?”

“In a bar.”

“Where?”

“Who the hell remembers? A singles’ bar. The city’s full of them.”

“Would you remember when?”

“At least a year ago.”

“Ever go out with her?”

“Yes.”

“How often?”

“Often enough.”

How often?”

“I used to see her once or twice a week.”

Used to? When did you stop seeing her?”

“Last summer.”

“But until then you used to see her quite regularly.”

“Yeah, on and off.”

“Twice a week, you said.”

“Well, yeah.”

“Did you know she was married?”

“Who? Sadie? You’re kidding.”

“She never told you she was married?”

“Never.”

“You saw her twice a week . . .”

“Yeah.”

“But you didn’t know she was married?”

“How was I supposed to know that? She never said a word about it. Listen, there are enough single girls in this city, I don’t have to go looking for trouble with somebody who’s married.”

“Where’d you pick her up?” Meyer asked suddenly.

“I told you. A bar. I don’t remember which . . .”

“When you went out, I mean.”

“What?”

“When you were going out, where’d you pick her up? At her apartment?”

“No. She used to come to my place.”

“Where’d you call her? When you wanted to reach her?”

“I didn’t. She used to call me.”

“Where’d you go, Mr. Hart? When you went out?”

“We didn’t go out too much.”

“What did you do?”

“She used to come to my place. We’d spend a lot of time there.”

“But when you did go out. . . .”

“Well, the truth is we never went out.”

“Never?”

“Never. She didn’t want to go out much.”

“Didn’t you think that was strange?”

“No.” Hart shrugged. “I figured she liked to stay home.”

“If you never went out, what did you do, exactly, Mr. Hart?”

“Well now, what the hell do you think we did, exactly?” Hart said.

“You tell us.”

“You’re big boys. Figure it out for yourself.”

“Why’d you stop seeing her, Mr. Hart?”

“I met somebody else. A nice girl. I’m very serious about her. That’s why I thought . . .”

“Yes?”

“Nothing.”

“That’s why you thought what, Mr. Hart?”

“Okay, that’s why I thought this was a shakedown. I thought somebody had found out about Sadie and me and . . . well . . . I’m very serious about this girl, I wouldn’t want her to know anything about the past. About Sadie and me. About seeing Sadie.”

“What was so terrible about seeing Sadie?” Meyer asked.

“Nothing.”

“Then why would anyone want to shake you down?”

“I don’t know.”

“If there was nothing terrible . . .”

“There wasn’t.”

“Then what’s there to hide?”

“There’s nothing to hide. I’m just very serious about this girl, and I wouldn’t want her to know . . .”

“To know what?”

“About Sadie.”

“Why not?”

“Because I just wouldn’t.”

“Was there something wrong with Sadie?”

“No, no, she was a beautiful woman, beautiful.”

“Then why would you be ashamed . . . ?”

“Ashamed? Who said anything about being ashamed?”

“You said you wouldn’t want your girlfriend . . .”

“Listen, what is this? I stopped seeing Sadie six months ago, I wouldn’t even talk to her on the phone after that. If the crazy bitch got herself killed . . .”

“Crazy?”

Hart suddenly wiped his hand over his face, wet his lips, and walked behind his desk. “I don’t think I have anything more to say to you, gentlemen. If you have any other questions, maybe you’d better charge me with something, and I’ll ask my lawyer’s advice on what to do next.”

“What did you mean when you said she was crazy?” Carella asked.

“Good day, gentlemen,” Hart said.


In the lieutenant’s corner office, Byrnes and Carella sat drinking coffee. Byrnes was frowning. Carella was waiting. Neither of the men said a word. A telephone rang in the squadroom outside, and Byrnes looked at his watch.

“Well, yes or no, Pete?” Carella asked at last.

“I’m inclined to say no.”

“Why?”

“Because I don’t know why you still want to pursue this thing.”

“Oh come on, Pete! If the goddamn guy did it . . .”

“That’s only your allegation. Suppose he didn’t do it, and suppose you do something to screw up the D.A.’s case?”

“Like what?”

“I don’t know like what. They’ve got a grand jury indictment, they’re preparing a case against Corwin, how the hell do I know what you might do? The way things are going these days, if you spit on the sidewalk that’s enough to get a case thrown out of court.”

“Fletcher hated his wife,” Carella said calmly.

“Lots of men hate their wives. Half the men in this city hate their wives.”

“According to Hart . . .”

“All right, so she was playing around a little, so what? She had herself a little fling, who doesn’t? Half the women in this city are having little flings right this minute.”

Her little fling gives Fletcher a good reason for . . . look, Pete, what the hell else do we need? He had a motive, he had the opportunity, a golden one, in fact, and he had the means—another man’s knife sticking out of Sarah’s gut. What more do you want?”

“Proof. There’s a funny little system we’ve got here in this city, Steve. It requires proof before we can arrest a man and charge him with murder.”

“Right. And all I’m asking is the opportunity to try for it.”

“Sure. By putting a tail on Fletcher. Suppose he sues the goddamn city?”

“For what?”

“He’ll think of something.”

“Yes or no, Pete? I want permission to conduct a round-the-clock surveillance of Gerald Fletcher, starting Sunday morning. Yes or no?”

“I must be out of my mind,” Byrnes said, and sighed.

8

A t 7:30 P . M . on the loneliest night of the week, Bert Kling did a foolish thing. He telephoned Nora Simonov. He did not expect her to be home, so he really did not know why he was calling her. He could only suppose that he was experiencing that great American illness known as the Saturday Night Funk, not to be confused with the Sunday Evening Hiatus or the Monday Morning Blues, none of which are daily newspapers.

The Saturday Night Funk (or the Snf, as it is familiarly known to those who have ever suffered from it) generally begins the night before, along about eight o’clock, when one realizes he does not have a date for that fabulous flight of **FUN** and **FRIVOLITY** known as S*A*T*U*R*D*A*Y N*I*G*H*T U*S*A.

There is no need for panic at this early juncture, of course. The mythical magical merriment is not scheduled to begin for at least another twenty-four hours, time yet to call a dozen birds or even a hundred, no need for any reaction more potent than a mild sort of self-chastisement for having been so tardy in making arrangements for the gay gaudy gala to follow. And should one fail to make a connection that Friday, there is still all day tomorrow to twirl those little holes in the telephone dial and ring up this or that hot number—Hello, sweetie, I was wondering whether you’d be available for an entertaining evening of enjoyment and eventual enervation—plenty of time, no need to worry.

By Saturday afternoon at about three, the first signs of anxiety begin to set in as this or that luscious lovely announces that, Oh my, I would have been thrilled and delighted to accompany you even into the mouth of a cannon, but oh goodness here it is Saturday afternoon already and you can’t expect to call a girl at the last minute and have her free on D*A*T*E N*I*G*H*T U*S*A, can you? Last minute? What last minute? It is still only three in the afternoon, four in the afternoon, five in the evening. Evening? When did it become evening? And desperation pounces.

A quick brush of the hair, a sprinkle of cologne in the armpits, a bold adventurous approach to the phone (cigarette dangling from the lip), a nonchalant scanning of the little black book, a forthright dialing, and, Oh my, I would have adored going with you to the moon or even Jupiter and back, but here it is almost six o’clock on the most R*O*M*A*N*T*I*C N*I*G*H*T of the week, you don’t expect a girl to be free at this late hour, do you? The Snf has arrived. It has arrived full-blown because it is now six o’clock, fast approaching seven, and at the stroke of seven-thirty you will turn into Spiro Agnew.

At the stroke of seven-thirty, Bert Kling called Nora Simonov, certain that she’d be out having a good time, like everybody else in the United States of America on this Saturday night.

“Hullo?” she said.

“Nora?” he said, surprised.

“Yes?”

“Hi. This is Bert Kling.”

“Hullo,” she said, “what time is it?”

“Seven-thirty.”

“I must’ve fallen asleep. I was watching the six o’clock news.” She yawned and then quickly said, “Excuse me.”

“Shall I call you back?”

“What for?”

“Give you a chance to wake up.”

“I’m awake, that’s okay.”

The line went silent.

“Well . . . uh . . . how are you?” Kling asked.

“Fine,” Nora said, and the line went silent again.

In the next thirty seconds, as static crackled along the line and Kling debated asking the risky question that might prolong his misery eternally, he could not help realizing how spoiled he had been by Cindy Forrest, who, until four weeks ago at least, had been available at any hour of the day or night, and especially on Saturday, when no red-blooded American male should be left alone to weep into his wine.

“Well, I’m glad you’re okay,” Kling said at last.

“Is that why you called? I thought maybe you had another suspect for me to identify,” Nora said, and laughed.

“No, no,” Kling said. “No.” He laughed with her, immediately sobered, and quickly said, “As a matter of fact, Nora, I was wondering . . .”

“Yes?”

“Would you like to go out?”

“What do you mean?”

“Out.”

“With you?”

“Yes.”

“Oh.”

In the next ten seconds of silence, which seemed much longer to Kling than the earlier thirty seconds of silence had been, he realized he had made a terrible mistake; he was staring directly into the double-barreled shotgun of rejection and about to have his damn fool bead blown off.

“I told you, you know,” Nora said, “that I’m involved with someone . . .”

“Yes, I know. Well, listen . . .”

“But I’m not doing anything tonight, and . . . if you want to go for a walk or something . . .”

“I thought maybe dinner.”

“Well . . .”

“And maybe dancing later.”

“Well . . .”

“I hate to eat alone, don’t you?”

“Yes, as a matter of fact, I do. But Bert . . .”

“Yes?”

“I feel sort of funny about this.”

“Funny how?”

“Leading you on,” Nora said.

“I’ve been warned,” he said. “You’ve given me fair warning.”

“I would like to have dinner with you,” Nora said, “but . . .”

“Can you be ready at eight?”

“You do understand, don’t you, that . . . ?”

“I understand completely.”

“Mmm,” she said dubiously.

“Eight o’clock?”

“Eight-thirty,” she said.

“See you then,” he said, and hung up quickly before she could change her mind. He was grinning when he looked into the mirror. He felt handsome and assured and sophisticated and in complete control of America.

He did not know who Nora’s phantom lover was, but he was certain now that she was only playing the age-old maidenly game of shy resistance and that she would succumb soon enough to his masculine charm.

He was dead wrong.


Dinner was all right, he couldn’t knock dinner. They exchanged thoughts on a wide variety of subjects:

“I once did a cover for a historical novel,” Nora said, “with a woman wearing one of these very low-cut velvet gowns, you know, and I was bored to tears while I was doing the roughs, so I gave her three breasts. The art director didn’t even notice. I painted out the third one when I did the final painting.”

“I look at myself,” Kling said, “and I know I’m not a pig, I’m a fairly decent human being trying to do his job. And sometimes my job involves getting into situations that are distasteful to me. You think I like going onto a college campus and breaking up a protest by kids who don’t want to die in a stupid war? But I’m also supposed to see that they don’t burn down the administration building. So how do I convince them that keeping law and order, which is my job, is not the same as suppression? It gets difficult sometimes.”

“Contact sports,” Nora said, “are all homosexual in nature, I’m convinced of it. You can’t tell me the quarterback isn’t copping a feel off the center every time he grabs that ball.”

And like that.

But after dinner, when Kling suggested that they go dancing at a little place he knew in the Quarter, three-piece band and nice atmosphere, Nora at first demurred, saying she was awfully tired and had promised her mother she would take her out to the cemetery early tomorrow morning, and then finally acquiescing when Kling said it was still only ten-thirty, and promised to have her home by midnight.

Pedro’s, as Kling had promised, was long on atmosphere and good music. Dimly illuminated, ideal for lovers both married and un-, adulterated or pure, it seemed to work as a deterrent on Nora from the moment she stepped into the place. She was not good at hiding whatever she was feeling (as Kling had earlier noticed), and the ambience of Pedro’s was either threatening or nostalgic (and possibly more), with the result that her eyes took on a glazed look, her mouth wilted, her shoulders slumped, she became the kind of Saturday-night date red-blooded American males feared and avoided; she became a thorough and complete pain in the ass.

Kling asked her to dance in the hope that bodily contact, blood pulsing beneath flesh, hands touching, cheeks brushing, all that jazz might speed along the seduction he had so successfully launched during dinner. But she held him at bay, with a rigid right arm on his left shoulder, so that eventually he tired physically of trying to draw her close, being afflicted with bursitis, and tired mentally of all the adolescent fumbling and maneuvering. He decided to ply her with booze, having been raised in a generation that placed strong store in the seductive powers of alcohol. (He was, incidentally, a cop who had tried pot twice and enjoyed it. He had realized, however, that he could not very well go around offering grass to young ladies, or even lighting up himself, and had abandoned that pleasant pastime.) Nora drank one drink, count it, or to be more exact, half a drink, toying with the remainder of it while Kling consumed two more and asked politely, “Sure you don’t want to drink up and have another?” To which she politely shook her head with a wan little smile.

And then, despite her protestations, two days ago, that she did not want to talk about her grand amour, the band began playing the Beatles’ “Something” and her eyes misted over, and the next thing Kling knew he was being treated to a monologue about her lover. The man, she confessed, had until just recently been married, and there were still some complications, but she expected they would be cleared up within the next several months, at which time she hoped to become his wife. She did not say what the complications were, but Kling surmised she was talking about a divorce settlement or some such; at this point, he could not have cared less. He had been warned, true, but spending a Saturday night with someone who talked about another man was akin to taking one’s mother to a strip joint, maybe worse. He tried to change the subject, but the power of “Something” prevailed, and, as the band launched into a second chorus, Nora similarly launched into her second chorus, so that the music seemed to be accompanying her little tone poem.

“We met entirely by accident,” she said, “though we learned later that actually we could have met at any time during the past year.”

“Well, most people meet entirely by chance,” Kling said.

“Yes, of course, but this was just the most remarkable coincidence.”

“Mmm,” Kling said, and then launched into what he considered a provocative and perhaps completely original observation on The Beatles Phenomenon, remarking that their rise and fall had encompassed a mere five years or so, which seemed significant when one remembered that they were a product of the space age, where speed was of the essence and . . .

“He’s so far superior to me,” Nora said, “that sometimes I wonder what he sees in me at all.”

“What does he do for a living?” Kling asked, thinking Ho-hum.

Nora hesitated for only an instant. But because her face was such a meticulous recorder of anything she felt, he knew that what she said next would be a lie. He was suddenly terribly interested.

“He’s a doctor,” Nora said, and turned her eyes from his, and lifted her drink, and sipped at it, and then glanced toward the bandstand.

“Is he on staff any place?”

“Yes,” she said immediately, and again, he knew she was lying. “Isola General.”

“Over on Wilson Avenue?” he asked.

“Yes,” she said.

Kling nodded. Isola General was on Parsons and Lowell, bordering the River Dix.

“When do you expect to be married?” he asked.

“We haven’t set the date yet.”

“What’s his name?” Kling asked conversationally, and turned away from her, and lifted his own glass, and pretended to be completely absorbed in the band, which was now playing a medley of tunes from the forties, presumably for the Serutan members of their audience.

“Why do you want to know?” Nora asked.

“Just curious. I have a thing about names. I think certain names go together. If, for example, a woman named Freida did not eventually hook up with a man named Albert, I would be enormously surprised.”

“Who do you think a ‘Nora’ should hook up with?”

“A ‘Bert,’” he said immediately and automatically, and was immediately sorry.

“She’s already hooked up with someone whose name isn’t ‘Bert.’ ”

“What is his name?” Kling asked.

Nora shook her head. “No,” she said. “I don’t think I’ll tell you.”

It was twenty minutes to twelve.

True to his promise, Kling paid the check, hailed a taxicab, and took Nora home. She insisted that it wasn’t necessary for him to come up in the elevator with her, but he told her there’d been a woman killed here in this very building less than a week ago, and since he was a cop and all, armed to the teeth and all, he might just as well accompany her. Outside the door to her apartment, she shook hands with him and said, “Thank you, I had a very nice time.”

“Yes, me, too,” he answered, and nodded bleakly.

He got back to his apartment at 12:25, and the telephone rang some twenty minutes later. It was Steve Carella.

“Bert,” he said, “I’ve arranged with Pete to put a twenty-four-hour tail on Fletcher, and I want to handle the first round myself. You think you can go with Meyer tomorrow when he hits Thornton?”

“Hits who?”

“The second guy in Sarah Fletcher’s book.”

“Oh, sure, sure. What time’s he going?”

“He’ll be in touch with you.”

“Where are you, Steve? Home?”

“No, I’ve got the graveyard shift. Incidentally, there was a call for you.”

“Oh? Who called?”

“Cindy Forrest.”

Kling caught his breath. “What’d she say?”

“Just to tell you she’d called.”

“Thanks,” Kling said.

“Good night,” Carella said, and hung up.

Kling put the receiver back on its cradle, took off his jacket, loosened his tie, and began unlacing his shoes. Twice he lifted the receiver from its cradle, began dialing Cindy’s number, and changed his mind. Instead, he turned on the television in time to catch the one o’clock news. The weather forecaster announced that the promised snowstorm had blown out to sea. Kling got undressed, and went to bed.

9

M ichael Thornton lived in an apartment building several blocks from the Quarter, close enough to absorb some of its artistic flavor, distant enough to escape its high rents. Kling and Meyer did not knock on Thornton’s door until 11 A . M ., on the theory that a man is entitled to sleep late on a Sunday morning, even if his name is listed in a dead lady’s address book.

The man who opened the door was perhaps twenty-eight years old, with blond hair and a blond beard stubble. He was wearing pajama bottoms and socks, and his brown eyes were still edged with sleep. They had announced themselves as policemen through the wooden barrier of the closed door, and now the blond man looked at them bleary-eyed and asked to see their badges. He studied Meyer’s shield, nodded, and, without moving from his position in the doorway, yawned and said, “So what can I do for you?”

“We’re looking for a man named Michael Thornton. Would you happen to be . . . ?”

“Mike isn’t here right now.”

“Does he live here?”

“He lives here, but he isn’t here right now.”

“Where is he?”

“What’s this about?” the man said.

“Routine investigation,” Kling said.

The words “routine investigation,” Kling noticed, never failed to strike terror into the hearts of man or beast. Had he said they were investigating a hatchet murder or a nursery school arson, the blond man’s face would not have gone as pale, his eyes would not have begun to blink the way they did. In the land of supersell, the understatement—“routine investigation”—was more powerful than trumpets and kettledrums. The blond man was visibly frightened and thinking furiously. Somewhere in the building, a toilet flushed. Meyer and Kling waited patiently.

“Do you know where he is?” Kling said at last.

“Whatever this is, I know he had nothing to do with it.”

“It’s just a routine investigation,” Kling repeated, and smiled.

“What’s your name?” Meyer asked.

“Paul Wendling.”

“Do you live here?”

“Yes.”

“Do you know where we can find Michael Thornton?”

“He went over to the shop.”

“What shop?”

“We have a jewelry shop in the Quarter. We make silver jewelry.”

“The shop’s open today?”

“Not to the public. We’re not violating the law, if that’s what you’re thinking.”

“If you’re not open to the public . . .”

“Mike’s working on some new stuff. We make our jewelry in the back of the shop.”

“What’s the address there?” Meyer asked.

“1156 Hadley Place.”

“Thank you,” Meyer said.

Behind them, Paul Wendling watched as they went down the steps, and then quickly closed the door.

“You know what he’s doing right this minute?” Meyer asked.

“Sure,” Kling said. “He’s calling his pal at the shop to tell him we’re on the way over.”

Michael Thornton, as they had guessed, was not surprised to see them. They held up their shields to the plate-glass entrance door, but he was clearly expecting them, and he unlocked the door at once.

“Mr. Thornton?” Meyer asked.

“Yes?”

He was wearing a blue work smock, but the contours of the garment did nothing to hide his powerful build. Wide-shouldered, barrel-chested, thick forearms and wrists showing below the short sleeves of the smock, he backed away from the door like a boulder moving on ball bearings and allowed them to enter the shop. His eyes were blue, his hair black. A small scar showed white in the thick eyebrow over his left eye.

“We understand you’re working,” Meyer said. “Sorry to break in on you this way.”

“That’s okay,” Thornton said. “What’s up?”

“You know a woman named Sarah Fletcher?”

“No,” Thornton said.

“You know a woman named Sadie Collins?”

Thornton hesitated. “Yes,” he said.

“This the woman?” Meyer asked, and showed him a newly made stat of the photograph they had confiscated from the Fletcher bedroom.

“That’s Sadie. What about her?”

They were standing near Thornton’s showcase, a four-foot-long glass box on tubular steel legs. Rings, bracelets, necklaces, pendants dizzily reflected the sunshine that slanted through the front window of the shop. Meyer took his time putting the stat back into his notebook, meanwhile giving Kling a chance to observe Thornton. The picture seemed to have had no visible effect on him. Like the solid mass of mountain that he was, he waited silently, as though challenging the detectives to scale him.

“What was your relationship with her?” Kling said. Thornton shrugged. “Why?” he asked. “Is she in trouble?”

“When’s the last time you saw her?”

“You didn’t answer my question,” Thornton said.

“Well, you didn’t answer ours, either,” Meyer said, and smiled. “What was your relationship with her, and when did you see her last?”

“I met her in July and the last time I saw her was in August. We had a brief hot thing, and then good-bye.”

“Where’d you meet her?”

“In a joint called The Saloon.”

“Where’s that?”

“Right around the comer. Near what used to be the legit theater there. The one that’s showing skin flicks now. The Saloon’s a bar, but they also serve sandwiches and soup. It’s not a bad joint. It gets a big crowd, especially on weekends.”

“Singles?”

“Mostly. A couple of fags thrown in for spice. But it’s not a gay bar, not by the usual definition.”

“And you say you met Sadie in July?”

“Yeah. The beginning of July. I remember because I was supposed to go out to Greensward that weekend, but the broad who was renting the bungalow already invited ten other people to the beach, so I got stuck here in the city. You ever get stuck here in the city on a weekend in July?”

“Occasionally,” Meyer said dryly.

“How’d you happen to meet her?” Kling asked.

“She admired the ring I was wearing. It was a good opening gambit because the ring happened to be one of my own.” Thornton paused. “I designed it and made it. Here at the shop.”

“Was she alone when you met her?” Kling asked.

“Alone and lonely,” Thornton said, and grinned. It was a knowing grin, a grin hoping for a similar grin in response from Kling and Meyer, who, being cops, had undoubtedly seen and heard all kinds of things and were therefore men of the world, as was Thornton himself, comrades three who knew all about lonely women in singles’ bars.

“Did you realize she was married?” Kling asked, sort of spoiling the Three Musketeers image.

“No. Is she?”

“Yes,” Meyer said. Neither of the detectives had yet informed Thornton that the lady in question, Sarah or Sadie or both, was now unfortunately deceased. They were saving that for last, like dessert.

“So what happened?” Kling said.

“Gee, I didn’t know she was married,” Thornton said, seeming truly surprised. “Otherwise nothing would’ve happened.”

“What did happen?”

“I bought her a few drinks, and then I took her home with me. I was living alone at the time, the same pad on South Lindner, but alone. We balled, and then I put her in a cab.”

“When did you see her next?”

“The following day. It was goofy. She called me in the morning, said she was on her way downtown. I was still in bed. I said, ‘So come on down, baby.’ And she did. Believe me, she did.” Thornton grinned his man-of-the-world grin again, inviting Kling and Meyer into his exclusive all-male club that knew all about women calling early in the morning to say they were on their way down, baby. Somehow, Kling and Meyer did not grin back.

Instead, Kling said, “Did you see her again after that?”

“Two or three times a week.”

“Where’d you go?”

“To the pad on South Lindner.”

“Never went any place but there?”

“Never. She’d give me a buzz on the phone, say she was on her way, and was I ready? Man, I was always ready for her.”

“Why’d you quit seeing her?”

“I went out of town for a while. When I got back, I just didn’t hear from her again.”

“Why didn’t you call her?”

“I didn’t know where to reach her.”

“She never gave you her phone number?”

“Nope. Wasn’t listed in the directory, either. No place in the city. I tried all five books.”

“Speaking of books,” Kling said, “what do you make of this?”

He opened Sarah Fletcher’s address book to the MEMORANDA page and extended it to Thornton. Thornton studied it and said, “Yeah, what about it? She wrote this down the night we met.”

“You saw her writing it?”

“Sure.”

“Did she write those initials at the same time?”

“What initials?”

“The ones in parentheses. Under your phone number.”

Thornton studied the page more closely. “How would I know?” he said, frowning.

“You said you saw her writing . . .”

“Yeah, but I didn’t see the actual page, I mean, we were in bed, man, this was like after the second time around, and she asked me what the address was, and how she could get in touch with me, and I told her. But I didn’t actually see the page itself. I only saw her writing in the book, you dig?”

“Got any idea what the initials mean?”

“TS can only mean ‘Tough Shit,’ ” Thornton said, and grinned.

“Any reason why she might want to write that in her book?” Meyer asked.

“Hey, I’m only kidding,” Thornton said, the grin expanding. “We had a ball together. Otherwise, why’d she keep coming back for more?”

“Who knows? She stopped coming back, didn’t she?”

“Only because I went out of town for a while.”

“How long a while?”

“Four days,” Thornton said. “I went out to Arizona to pick up some Indian silver. We sell some crap here, too, in addition to what Paul and I make.”

“Gone only four days, and the lady never called again,” Kling said.

“Yeah, well, maybe she got sore. I left kind of sudden like.”

“What day was it?”

“Huh?”

“The day you left?”

“I don’t know. Why? The middle of the week, I guess. I don’t remember. Anyway, who cares?” Thornton said. “There are plenty of broads in this city. What’s one more or less?” He shrugged, and then looked suddenly thoughtful.

“Yes?” Meyer said.

“Nothing. Just . . .”

“Yes?”

“She was kind of special, I have to admit it. I mean, she wasn’t the kind of broad you’d take home to mother, but she was something else. She was really something else.”

“How do you mean?”

“She was . . .” Thornton grinned. “Let’s put it this way,” he said. “She took me places I’d never been before, you know what I mean?”

“No, what do you mean?” Kling said.

“Use your imagination,” Thornton said, still grinning.

“I can’t,” Kling answered. “There’s no place I’ve never been before.”

“Sadie would’ve found some for you,” Thornton said, and the grin suddenly dropped from his face. “She’ll call again, I’m sure of it. She’s got my number right there in her book, she’ll call.”

“I wouldn’t count on it,” Meyer said.

“Why not? She kept coming back, didn’t she? We had . . .”

“She’s dead,” Meyer said.

They kept watching his face. It did not crumble, it did not express grief, it did not even express shock. The only thing it expressed was sudden anger.

“The stupid twat,” Thornton said. “That’s all she ever was, a stupid twat.”


Police work (like life) is often not too tidy. Take surveillance, for example. On Friday afternoon, Carella had asked Byrnes for permission to begin surveillance of Gerald Fletcher on Sunday morning. Being a police officer himself, and knowing that police work (like life) is often not too tidy, Byrnes never once thought of asking Carella why he would not prefer to start his surveillance the very next day, Saturday, instead of waiting two days. The reason Carella did not choose to start the very next day was that police work (like life) is often not too tidy—as in the case of the noun “surveillance” and the noun/adjective “surveillant,” neither of which has a verb to go with it in the English language.

Carella had 640 odds-and-ends to clean up in the office on Saturday before he could begin the surveillance of Gerald Fletcher with anything resembling an easy conscience. So he had spent the day making phone calls and typing up reports and generally trying to put things in order. In all his years of police experience, he had never known a criminal who was so considerate of a policeman’s lot that he would wait patiently for one crime to be solved before committing another. There were four burglaries, two assaults, a robbery, and a forgery still unsolved in Carella’s case load; the least he could do was try to create some semblance of order from the information he had on each before embarking on a lengthy and tedious surveillance. Besides, surveillance (like police work) is often not too tidy.

On Sunday morning, Carella was ready to become a surveillant. That is to say, he was ready to adopt a surveillant stance and thereby begin surveillance of his suspect. The trouble was, just as the English language had been exceptionally untidy in not having stolen the verb from the French when it swiped the noun and the adjective, a surveillance (like life and like police work) is bound to get untidy if there is nobody to surveille.

Gerald Fletcher was nowhere in sight.

Carella had started his surveillance with the usual police gambit of calling Fletcher’s apartment from a nearby phone booth early in the morning. The object of this sometimes transparent ploy was to ascertain that the suspect was still in his own digs, after which the police tail would wait downstairs for him to emerge and then follow him to and fro wherever he went. Gerald Fletcher, however, was not in his digs. This being Sunday morning, Carella automatically assumed that Fletcher was spending the weekend elsewhere. But, intrepid law enforcer he, and steadfast surveillant besides, he parked the squad’s new (used) 1970 Buick sedan across the street from Fletcher’s apartment building, and alternately watched the front door of 721 Silvermine Oval and the kids playing in the park, thinking that perhaps Fletcher had merely spent S*A*T*U*R*D*A*Y N*I*G*H*T someplace and might return home momentarily.

At twelve noon, Carella got out of the car, walked into the park, and sat on a bench facing the building. He ate the ham and cheese sandwich his wife had prepared for him, and drank a soft drink that beat the others cold but wasn’t so hot hot. Then he stretched his legs by walking over to the railing that overlooked the river, never taking his eyes off the building, and finally went back to the car. His vigil ended at 5 P . M ., when he was relieved by Detective Arthur Brown, driving the squad’s old 1968 Chevrolet sedan. Brown was equipped with a description of Fletcher as well as a photograph swiped from the bedroom dresser in Fletcher’s apartment. In addition, he knew what sort of automobile Fletcher drove, courtesy of the Motor Vehicle Bureau. He told Carella to take it easy, and then he settled down to the serious business of watching a doorway for the next seven hours, at which time he was scheduled to be relieved by O’Brien, who would hold the fort until eight in the morning, when Kapek would report to work for the long daytime stretch.

Carella went home to read his son’s latest note to Santa Claus, and then he had dinner with the family and was settling down in the living room with a novel he had bought a week ago and had not yet cracked, when the telephone rang.

“I’ve got it!” he yelled, knowing that Teddy could not hear him, and knowing this was Fanny’s day off, but also knowing that Mark, his son, had a habit these days of answering the telephone with the words “Automobile Squad, Carella here,” all well and good unless the caller happened to be a detective from the Automobile Squad trying to report on a stolen vehicle.

“Hello?” Carella said into the mouthpiece.

“Hello, Steve?”

“Yes?” Carella said. He did not recognize the voice.

“This is Gerry.”

“Who?”

“Gerry Fletcher.”

Carella almost dropped the receiver. “Hello,” he said, “how are you?”

“Fine, thanks. I was away for the weekend, just got back a little while ago, in fact. I frankly find this apartment depressing as hell. I was wondering if you’d like to join me for a drink.”

“Well,” Carella said, “it’s late, and I was just about to . . .”

“Nonsense, it’s not even eight o’clock.”

“Yes, but it’s Sunday night . . .”

“Hop in your car and meet me down here,” Fletcher said. “We’ll do a little old-fashioned pub crawling, what the hell.”

“No, I really couldn’t. Thanks a lot, Gerry, but . . .”

“Take you half an hour to get here,” Fletcher said, “and you may end up saving my life. If I sit here alone another five minutes, I’m liable to throw myself out the window.” He suddenly began laughing. “You know what the Penal Law has to say about suicide, don’t you?”

“No, what?” Carella asked.

“Silliest damn section in the book,” Fletcher said, still laughing. “It says, and I quote ‘Although suicide is deemed a grave public wrong, yet from the impossibility of reaching the successful perpetrator, no forfeiture is imposed.’ How do you like that for legal nonsense? Come on, Steve. I’ll show you some of the city’s brighter spots, we’ll have a few drinks, what do you say?”

It suddenly occurred to Carella that Gerald Fletcher had already had a few drinks before placing his call. It further occurred to him that if he played this too cozily, Fletcher might rescind his generous offer. And since there was nothing Carella wanted more than a night on the town with a murder suspect who might possibly drink more than was prudent for his own best interests, he immediately said, “Okay, I’ll see you at eight-thirty. Provided I can square it with my wife.”

“Good,” Fletcher said. “See you.”

10

P addy’s Bar & Grille was on the Stem, adjacent to the city’s theater district. Carella and Fletcher got there at about nine o’clock, while the place was still relatively quiet. The action began a little later, Fletcher explained, the operative theory behind a singles operation being that neither bachelor nor career girl should seem too obvious about wanting to make each other’s acquaintance. If you began to prowl too early, you appeared eager. If you got there too late, however, you missed out. The idea was to time your arrival just as the crowd was beginning to reach its peak, wandering in as though casually looking for a phone booth instead of a partner.

“You seem to know a lot about it,” Carella said.

“I’m an observant man,” Fletcher said, and smiled. “What are you drinking?”

“Scotch and soda,” Carella said.

“A scotch and soda,” Fletcher said to the bartender, “and a Beefeater’s martini, straight up.”

He had drunk whiskey sours the day they’d had lunch together, Carella remembered, but he was drinking martinis tonight. Good. The more potent the drinks, the looser his tongue might become. Carella looked around the room. The men ranged in age from the low thirties to the late fifties, a scant dozen in the place at this early hour, all of them neatly dressed in city weekend clothes, sports jackets and slacks, some wearing shirts and ties, others wearing shirts with ascots, still others wearing turtlenecks. The women, half in number, were dressed casually as well—pants suits, skirts, blouses or sweaters, with only one brave and rather ugly soul dressed to the teeth in a silk Pucci. The mating game, at this hour, consisted of sly glances and discreet smiles; no one was willing to take a real gamble until he’d had an opportunity to look over the entire field.

“What do you think of it?” Fletcher asked.

“I’ve seen worse,” Carella said.

“I’ll bet you have. Would it be fair to say you’ve also seen better?” Their drinks arrived at that moment, and Fletcher lifted his glass in a silent toast. “What kind of person would you say comes to a place like this?” he asked.

“Judging from appearances alone, and it’s still early . . .”

“It’s a fairly representative crowd,” Fletcher said.

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