Mrs. Charles McFadden, Sr., a plump, gray-haired woman of fortyfive, was watching television in the living room of her home, a row house on Fitzgerald Street not far from Methodist Hospital in South Philadelphia when the telephone rang.
Not without effort, and sighing, she pushed herself out of the upholstered chair and went to the telephone, which had been installed on a small shelf mounted on the wall in the corridor leading from the front door past the stairs to the kitchen.
"Hello?"
"Can I reach Officer McFadden on this number?" a male voice inquired.
"You can," she said. "But he's got his own phone. Did you try that?"
"Yes, ma'am. There was no answer."
Come to think of it, Agnes McFadden thought, I didn't 't hear it ring.
"Just a minute," she said, and then: "Who did you say is calling?"
"This is Sergeant Henderson, ma'am, of the Highway Patrol. Is this Mrs. McFadden?"
"Senior," she said. "I'm his mother."
"Yes, ma'am."
"I'll get him," she said. "Just a moment."
She put the handset carefully beside the base and then went upstairs. Charley's room was at the rear. When he had first gone on the job-working Narcotics undercover, which had pleased his mother not at all, the way he went around looking like a bum and working all hours at night-he had had his own telephone line installed.
Then, as happy as a kid with a new toy train, he had found a little black box in Radio Shack that permitted the switching on and off of the telephone ringer. It was a great idea, but what happened was that after he turned off the ringer, he forgot to turn it back on, which meant that either he didn't get calls at all, or the caller, as now, had the number of the phone downstairs, and she or his father had to climb the stairs and tell him he had a call.
She knocked at his door and, when there was no answer, pushed it open. Charley was lying facedown on the bed in his Jockey shorts, his arms and legs spread, snoring softly. That told her that he'd stopped off for a couple (to judge by the sour smell, a whole hell of a lot more than a couple) of beers when he got off work last night.
She called his name and touched his shoulder. Then she put both hands on his shoulders and bounced him up and down. He slept like the dead. Always had.
Finally he half turned and raised his head.
"What the hell, Ma!" Charley said.
"Don't you swear at me!"
"What do you want, Ma?"
"There's some sergeant on the phone."
Still half asleep, Charley found his telephone, picked it up, heard the dial tone, and looked at her in confusion.
"Downstairs," she said. "You and your telephone switch!"
He got out of bed with surprising alacrity and ran down the corridor. She heard the thumping and creaking of the stairs as he took them two at a time.
"McFadden," he said to the telephone.
"Sergeant Henderson, out at Bustleton and Bowler."
"Yes, sir?"
"You heard about Officer Magnella being shot last night?"
"Yeah."
"We're trying to put as many men on it as we can. Any reason you can't do some overtime? Specifically, any reason you can't come in at noon instead of four?"
"I'll be there."
Sergeant Henderson hung up.
Charley had two immediate thoughts as he put the phone in its cradle: Jesus, what time is it? and, an instant later, Jesus, I feel like death warmed over. I've got to start cutting it short at the FOP.
"What was that all about?" his mother asked from the foot of the stairs, and then, without waiting for a reply, "Put some clothes on. This isn't a nudist colony."
"I gotta go to work. You hear about the cop who got shot?"
"It was on the TV. What's that got to do with you?"
"They're still trying to catch who did it."
Mrs. Agnes McFadden had been the only person in the neighborhood who had not been thrilled when her son had been called a police hero for his role in putting the killer of Captain Dutch Moffitt of the Highway Patrol out of circulation. She reasoned that if Gerald Vincent Gallagher was indeed a murderer, then obviously he could have done harm to her only son.
"I thought you were in training to be a Highway Patrolman. "
Charley McFadden had done nothing to correct his mother's misperception that Highway Patrol was primarily charged with removing speeding and/or drunk drivers from the streets.
"I am," he said. "It's overtime. I gotta go."
"I'll make you something to eat," she said.
"No time, Ma. Thanks, anyway."
"You have to eat."
"I'll get something after I report in."
He went up the stairs and to his bedroom and found his watch. It was quarter to ten. He had declined breakfast because he knew it would be accompanied by comments about his drinking, his late hours, and probably, since she had heard about Magnella getting himself shot, by reopening the subject of his being a cop at all.
But since he had announced he had to leave right away, he would have to leave right away, and even if he took his time getting something to eat and going by the dry cleaners to drop off and pick up a uniform, he still would have an hour or more to kill before he could sign in.
He took his time taking a shower, steeling himself several times for the shock turning off the hot water would mean, hoping that the cold would clear his mind, and then he shaved with care.
He didn't need a haircut, although getting one would have killed some time.
Fuck it, he decided finally. I'll just go get something to eat and go out to Bustleton and Bowler and just hang around until noon.
His mother was standing by the door when he came down the stairs, demanding her ritual kiss and delivering her ritual order for him to be careful.
He noticed two things when he got to the street: first, that the right front wheel of his Volkswagen was on the curb, which confirmed he had had a couple of beers more than he probably should have had at the FOP; and, second, that the redhead with the cute little ass he had noticed several times around the neighborhood was coming out of the McCarthys', across the street and two houses down.
He smiled at her shyly and, when she smiled back, equally shyly, gave her a little wave. She didn't wave back. Just smiled. But that was a step in the right direction, he decided. Tomorrow morning he would ask around and see who she was. He could not ask his mother. She would know, of course; she knew when anybody in the neighborhood burped, but if he asked her about the girl, the next thing he knew, she would be trying to pair him off with her.
Charley knew that his mother devoutly believed that what he needed in his life was a nice, decent Catholic girl. If the redhead with the cute little ass had anything to do with the McCarthys, she met that definition. Mrs. McCarthy was a Mass-every-morning Catholic, and Mr. McCarthy was a big deal in the Knights of Columbus.
Still, it was worth looking into.
He got into the Volkswagen, started it up, and drove around the block, eventually turning onto South Broad Street, heading north. And there was the redhead, obviously waiting for a bus.
Impulsively he pulled to the curb and stopped. First he started to lean across the seat and roll the window down, and then he decided it would be better to get out of the car. He did so, and leaned on the roof and smiled at her. He was suddenly absolutely sure that he was about to make a real horse's ass out of himself.
"You looking for a ride?" he blurted.
"I'm waiting for a bus," the redhead said.
"I didn't mean that the way it sounded," Charley said.
"How did you mean it?" the redhead said.
"Look," he said somewhat desperately, "I'm Charley McFadden-"
"I know who you are," she said. "My Uncle Bob and your father are friends."
"Yeah," he said.
"You don't remember me, do you?" she said.
"Yeah, sure I do."
"No you don't." She laughed. "I used to come here when I was a kid."
His mind was blank. "Look, I'm headed across town. Can I give you a ride?"
"I'm going to Temple," she said. "You going anywhere near there?"
"Right past it," he said.
"Then yes, thank you, I would like a ride," she said.
"Great," Charley said.
She walked to the car and got in. When he got behind the wheel and glanced at her, she had her hand out.
"Margaret McCarthy," she said. "Bob McCarthy is my uncle, my father's brother."
"I'm pleased to meet you," Charley said.
He turned the key, which resulted in a grinding of the starter gears, as the engine was already running. He winced.
"So what are you doing at Temple?" he asked a moment or so later.
"Going for my B.S. in nursing."
"Your what?"
"I'm already an RN," she said. "So I came here to get a degree. Bachelor of Science, in Nursing. I live in Baltimore."
"Oh," Charley said, digesting that. "How long will that take?"
"About eighteen months," she said. "I'm carrying a heavy load."
"Oh."
What the hell did she mean by that?
"I'm a cop," he said.
She giggled.
"I would never have guessed," she said.
"Oh, Christ!" he said.
"Uncle Bob sent us the clippings from the newspaper," Margaret McCarthy said, "when you caught that murderer "
"Really?"
"My father said he thought you would wind up on the other side of the bars," she said, laughing. And then she added, "Oh, I shouldn't have said that."
"It's all right," he said.
"You put a golf ball through his windshield," she said. "Do you remember that? Playing stickball?"
"Yeah," Charley said, remembering. "My old man beat hell out of me."
"So, do you like being a policeman?"
"I liked it better when I was plainclothes," he said. "But, yeah, I like it all right."
"I don't know what that means," she said.
"I used to work undercover Narcotics," Charley said. "Sort of like a detective."
"That was in the newspapers," she said.
"Yeah, well, after that, getting your picture in the newspapers, the drug people knew who I was. So that was the end of Narcotics for me."
"You liked that?"
"I liked Narcotics, yeah," Charley said.
"What are you doing now?"
"What I want to do is be a detective," Charley said. "So what I'm really doing now is killing time until I can take the examination."
"How are you 'killing time'?"
"Well, they transferred us, me and my partner, Hay-zus Martinez-"
"Hay-zus?"
"That's the way the Latin people say Jesus," Charley explained.
"Oh," she said.
"They transferred us to Special Operations," Charley said, "which is new. And then they made us probationary Highway Patrolmen. Which means if we don't screw up, after six months we get to be Highway Patrolmen."
"Is that something special?"
"They think it is. Like I said, I'd rather be a detective."
"I should think that after what you did, they'd want to make you a detective," Margaret McCarthy said.
"It don't work that way. You have to take the examination."
"Oh," she said.
I'm going to ask her if she wants to go to a movie or something. Maybe dinner and a movie.
He had difficulty framing in his mind the right way to pose the question, the result of that being that they rode in silence almost to the Temple campus without his saying a word.
Then he was surprised to hear himself say, "Right in there, two blocks down, is where Magnella got himself shot."
"You mean the police officer who was murdered?" Margaret asked, and when Charley nodded, she went on. "My Uncle Bob and his father are friends. They're in the Knights of Columbus together."
"Yeah. That's why I'm going to work now. They called up and asked me to come in early to work on that."
"Like a detective, you mean?"
"Yeah, well, sort of."
"That should be very rewarding," Margaret McCarthy said. "Working on something like that."
"Yeah," he said. "Look, you want to catch a movie, have dinner or something?"
"A movie or dinner sounds nice," she said. "I'm not so sure about something."
"I'll call you," he said. "Okay?"
"Sure," she said. "I'd like that. I get out at the next corner."
"How about in the morning?" Charley asked.
"You want to go to the movies in the morning?"
"Christ, I'm on the four-to-twelve," he said. "How are we going to
…"
"We could have coffee or something in the mornings," she said. "My first classes aren't until eleven."
He pulled to the curb and smiled at her. She smiled back.
A horn blew impatiently behind him.
Charley, at the last moment, did not shout, "Blow it out your ass, asshole!" at the horn blower. Instead he got out of the Volkswagen and stood on the curb with Margaret McCarthy for a moment.
"I have to go, Charley," she said. "I'll be late."
"Yeah," he said. "I'll call you."
"Call me," she said.
They shook hands. Margaret walked onto the campus.
Charley glowered at the horn blower, who was now smiling nervously, and then got in the Volkswagen and drove off. He remembered that he had not dropped off his dirty uniform at the dry cleaner. It didn't seem to matter. He felt better right now than he could remember feeling in a long time.
Things were looking up. Even things at work were looking up. It didn't make sense that they would call him, and probably Hay-zus, too, to go through that probationary bullshit and pay them overtime. The odds were that Captain Pekach was going to put them back on the street, doing what he knew they already knew how to do: grabbing scumbags.
"Is Inspector Wohl in his office?" the heavyset, balding man with a black, six-inch-long handmade long filler Costa Rican cigar clamped between his teeth demanded.
"I believe he is, sir," Sergeant Edward Frizell said politely as he picked up his telephone. "I'll see if he's free, sir."
By the time he had the telephone to his ear, Chief Inspector Matt Lowenstein was inside Staff Inspector Peter Wohl's office at the headquarters of the Special Operations Division at Bustleton and Bowler Streets.
Peter Wohl was not at his desk. He was sitting on his couch, his feet up on his coffee table. When he saw Lowenstein come through the door, he started to get up.
"Good morning, Chief," he said.
Lowenstein closed the door.
"I came to apologize," he said. "For what I said last night."
"No apology necessary, Chief."
"I didn't mean what I said, Peter, I was just pissed off."
"You had a right to be," Wohl said. "I would have been."
"At the dago I did. Do. Not at you.Goddamn him! If he wanted to run the Police Department, why didn't he just stay as commissioner?"
"Because when he was commissioner, the mayor could tell him how to run the Department. Now he answers only to God and the voters."
"I'm not so sure how much input he'd take from God," Lowenstein said. "The last I heard, God was never a captain in Highway."
Wohl chuckled. "Would you like some coffee?" he asked.
"Yes, I would, thank you," Lowenstein said.
When Wohl handed him the cup, Lowenstein said, "I want you to know that before I came out here, I called Homicide and Organized Crime and Narcotics and told them that I completely agreed with Czernick's decision and that they were to give cooperation with you their highest priority. Goddamn lie, of course, about me agreeing, but it wasn't your fault, and I want the people who shot that young cop. As far as the DeZego job goes, frankly you're welcome to that one. I don't want the Detweilers mad at me."
"Thanks a lot, Chief," Wohl said.
"What's this I hear that one of your guys is dirty?"
"No. I don't think so. The Narcotics sergeant went off the deep end."
"Is that so?"
"The cop he suspected of being dirty is Matt Payne."
"Dutch Moffitt's nephew? I thought that he was working for you."
"He is. Payne drove into the parking lot shortly after the Detweiler girl. The Narcotics sergeant was watching her. Right afterward Payne drove away, which the sergeant thought was suspicious. Payne drives a Porsche, which is the kind of a car a successful drug dealer would drive. And then, when the Narcotics guy found out Payne was a cop, he really put his nose in high gear."
"But he's clean?"
"Payne parked his car there because he was also headed for the Union League, and the reason he drove the car away was because the 9^ th District lieutenant, Foster Lewis…?"
"I know him. Just made lieutenant. Good cop."
"… on the scene sent him to tell the Detweiler family, at the Union League."
"Payne drives a Porsche?"
Wohl nodded.
"Nice to have a rich father."
"Obviously."
"I heard Denny Coughlin put him in your lap."
"Chief Coughlin and the gentleman with an interest in the Police Department we were discussing earlier," Wohl said. "After Payne shot the rapist the mayor told the newspapers that Payne is my special assistant, so I decided Payneis my special assistant."
"Good thinking," Lowenstein said, chuckling.
"I also got Foster H. Lewis, Jr., this morning," Wohl said.
"Lewis's son is a cop?"
"Just got out of the Academy."
"Why did they sent him here?"
"Just a routine assignment of a new police officer that the mayor just happened to announce in a speech at the First Abyssinian Baptist Church."
"Oh, I see." Lowenstein grunted. "The Afro-American voters. There' s two sides to being the mayor's fair-haired boy, aren't there?"
"Chief," Wohl said solemnly, "I have no idea what you're talking about."
"The hell you don't," Lowenstein growled. "What are you going to do with the Lewis boy?"
"1 gave him to Tony Harris, as a gofer. Harris has Lewis, and Jason Washington just borrowed Payne."
"To do what?"
"Whatever Jason tells him to. I think Washington likes him. I think they may have the same tailor."
"Well, you better hope Harris and Washington get lucky," Lowenstein said. "Your salami is on the chopping block with these two jobs, Peter."
"Chief, that thoughthas run through my mind," Wohl said.
Chief Lowenstein, who had not finished delivering his assessment of the situation, glowered at Peter Wohl for cutting him short and then went on.
"When the Payne kid got lucky and put down the serial rapist, that only made Arthur Nelson and his goddamnLedger pause for breath. It did not shut him up. Now he's got two things: drug-related gang warfare in the center city with a nice little rich girl lying in a pool of blood as a result of it; and a cop shot down in cold blood, the cops not having a clue who did it. Nelson would make a case against the Department, and Carlucci, if the doers were already in Central Lockup. With the doers still running around loose-"
"I know," Wohl said.
"I don't think you do, Peter," Lowenstein said as he hauled himself to his feet. "I was sitting at my kitchen table this morning wondering if I had the balls to come out here and apologize to you when Carlucci made up my mind for me."
"I'm sorry?" Wohl asked, confused.
Chief Lowenstein examined the glowing end of his cigar for a moment and then met Wohl's eyes.
"The dago called me at the house," he said. "He said he wanted me to come out here this morning and see how things were going. He said that he'd told Lucci to call him at least once a day, but that 'too much was at stake here to leave something like this to someone like Lucci.' "
"Jesus Christ!" Wohl said bitterly. "If he didn't think I could do the job, why did he give it to me?"
"Because if you do the job,he looks good. And if you don't,you look bad. They call that smart politics, Peter."
"Yeah," Wohl said.
"I think I can expect at least a daily call from the dago, Peter, asking me how I think you're handling this. I wouldn't worry about that. I don't want these jobs back, so all he's going to get from me is an expression of confidence in you, and the way you're doing things. On the other hand, whatever else I may think of him, your Lieutenant Lucciis smart enough to know which side of the bread has the butter-no telling what he's liable to tell the dago."
"Christ, my father warned me about crap like this. I didn't believe him."
"Give my regards to your dad, Peter," Lowenstein said. "I always have admired him."
Wohl stared at the phone on his coffee table for a moment. When he finally raised his eyes, Lowenstein was gone.
Lieutenant Foster H. Lewis, Sr., who was wearing a light blue cotton bathrobe over his underwear, had just offered, aloud, although he was alone in the apartment, his somewhat less than flattering opinion of morning television programming and the even more appallingly stupid people who watched it, himself included, when the chimes sounded.
He went to the door and opened it.
"Good morning, sir," the uniformed policeman standing there said, "would you like to take a raffle ticket on a slightly used 1948 Buick?"
"What did you do, Foster, lose your key?"
He looks good in that uniform, even if I wish he weren't 't wearing it.
"So that I wouldn't lose it, I put it somewhere safe," Tiny Lewis said. "One of these days I'll remember where."
"I just made some coffee. You want some?"
"Please, Dad."
"What are you doing here?"
"I've got to get a suit," Tiny said. "Mom said she put them in a cedar bag."
"Probably in your room," Foster Lewis, Sr., said. "Am I permitted to ask why you need a suit?"
"Certainly," Tiny said. He followed his father into the kitchen and took a china mug from a cabinet.
"Well?" Foster Lewis asked.
"Well, what? Oh, do you want to know why I need a suit?"
"I asked. Where were you when I asked?"
"You asked if you were permitted to ask, and I said, 'Certainly,' but you didn't actually ask."
"Wiseass." His father chuckled. "There's a piece of cake in the refrigerator."
"Thank you," Tiny said, and helped himself to the cake.
"You know a Homicide-ex-Homicide-detective named Harris? Tony Harris?"
"Yeah. Not well. But he's supposed to be good."
"You are now looking, sir, at his official errand runner," Tiny said.
"What does that mean?"
"I suppose it means that if he says 'Go fetch,' I go fetch, happily wagging my tail."
"If you're being clever, stop it," his father said. "Tell me what' s going on."
"Well, I was told to report to a Captain Sabara at Highway. When I got there, he wasn't, but Inspector Wohl called me into his office-"
"You saw him?" Foster Lewis, Sr., asked.
"Yeah. Nice guy.Sharp dude.Nice threads."
I was on the job, Lieutenant Foster H. Lewis thought, for two or three years before I ever saw an inspector up close.
"Go on."
"Well, he said that Harris has the Magnella job, and that he needed a second pair of hands. He said it would involve a lot of overtime, and if I had any problem with that to say so; he didn't want any complaints later. So I told him the more overtime the better, and I asked him what I would be doing. He said-that's where I got thatthat if Harris said 'Go fetch,' I was to wag my tail and go fetch. He said the detail would last only until Harris got whoever shot Magnella, but it would be good experience for me."
"That's it?"
"Well, he gave me a speech about what not to do with the car-"
"What car?"
"A '71 Ford. Good shape."
"You have a Department car?"
"Yeah. Unmarked, naturally," Tiny said just a little smugly.
"My God!"
"What's wrong?"
Lieutenant Foster H. Lewis, Sr., thought,When I got out of the Academy, I was assigned to the 26^th District. A potbellied Polack sergeant named Grotski went out of his way to make it plain he didn't think there was any place in the Department for niggers and then handed me over to Bromley T. Wesley, a South Carolina redneck who had come north to work in the shipyards during the Second World War and had joined the cops because he didn't want to go back home to Tobacco Road.
I walked a beat with Bromley for a year. When he went into a candy store for a Coke or something, he made me wait outside. For six months he never used my name. I was either "Hey, You!" or worse, "Hey, Boy!" I was told that if I turned out okay, maybe after a year or so, I could work my way up to a wagon. The son of a bitch made it plain he thought all black people were born retarded.
Bromley T. Wesley was an ignorant bigot with a sixth-grade education, but he was a cop. He knew the streets and he knew people, and he taught me about them. Between Wesley and what I learned on the wagon, when I went out in an RPC by myself for the first time I was a cop.
What the hell is Peter Wohl thinking of, putting this rookie in civilian clothes instead of in a wagon, at least?
"Nothing, I suppose," Lieutenant Lewis said. "It's a little unusual, that's all. Eat your cake."