“Did you meet the Van Allen kids?” Mathesson asked.
“One of them.”
“Twins,” Mathesson said.
“Yes, I know,” Reardon said indifferently. He stared at the pictures of the Van Allen family.
“That Melinda’s not a bad-looking girl,” Mathesson said.
Reardon remembered the rather tall, slightly overweight, generally unattractive young woman who had so annoyed and befuddled him a week before. “Not bad,” he said. He looked at Mathesson. “She has a kind face.”
Reardon’s first act after being reinstated on the case was to visit Petrakis at the Tombs, even though he dreaded seeing him there. If the precinct house had reduced Petrakis to a kind of gelatinous inactivity, he could only imagine what the grinding oppressiveness of the Tombs would do to him. It had been well named, Reardon thought, this prison of the City of New York; it was a place for the dead.
Petrakis was led out by a guard and seated at a table opposite Reardon. He had not changed much, Reardon saw instantly. The face retained its motionless, stony aspect, the eyes staring rigidly ahead but seeming to comprehend nothing beyond them – not movement or person or meaning.
“Have you contacted your family?” Reardon asked.
“No,” Petrakis said dully. He did not seem to see Reardon at all, but only to look through him, as if he were a ghost.
“Why not? Won’t they worry about you, about where you are?”
“I tell them I not come back,” Petrakis said in the same granite monotone of the precinct house.
“When?”
“Before I come to police.”
All around them there was sound and movement. Prisoners and their visitors were filing in and out amid a humming welter of hellos and good-byes, but Petrakis did not seem to be aware of any of it. It was as if he had closed himself up in a box of his own making and had sealed all its cracks from light and sound.
“Mr. Petrakis, did you kill those deer in the Children’s Zoo?”
“I will die for it,” Petrakis said.
“Killing animals is not a capital offense in New York State,” Reardon said, “or any place else I know of. You can’t be executed for that.”
“Then something else,” Petrakis said.
Instantly Reardon thought of the Village murders. “Have you ever heard the names Karen Ortovsky or Lee McDonald?” he asked.
“No.”
“Do you ever go to Greenwich Village?”
“No.”
Reardon could never remember having felt such exasperation. There was life all around them, even in the intolerable hurt and confinement of the Tombs. But Petrakis’ heart seemed to beat beneath a breast of stone.
“Have you done anything that is punishable by death in this state?” Reardon asked.
Petrakis stared straight ahead. “I do not obey my mother.”
“Besides that.”
“That is enough.”
“But besides that,” Reardon insisted.
“No.”
Reardon stood up. “I think you should call your family and let them know where you are. If you want, I will call them for you.”
“They know where I am,” Petrakis said.
“They know where you are?”
“Dead,” Petrakis said.
Reardon took one of his cards and placed it carefully on the table in front of Petrakis. “Call me if you need anything, or if anything comes to you that can shed some light on this case.”
Petrakis said nothing.
“Will you call me?” Reardon asked.
“I am dead,” Petrakis said.
“Not yet, Mr. Petrakis,” Reardon said, “not yet.”
When he reached the door Reardon turned to watch Petrakis disappear behind the door that led to the cells. He glanced at the table where he and Petrakis had talked. His card rested face up on the table like a corpse on a mortuary slab.
Driving back to the precinct house, Reardon felt the case of the fallow deer plummeting toward him like a bird of prey. He believed Petrakis could be convicted for the killing of the deer on the evidence already assembled. He knew how it would go in the courtroom. Witnesses could place Petrakis at the deer cage with an ax in his hand only moments before they were killed. Bryant would testify that Petrakis was highly agitated, even furious, when he had met him in the coffee shop the morning the fallow deer were killed. On the witness stand Daniels would paint a sinister portrait of Petrakis, one which would doubtless chill the nerves of the jury; the district attorney’s office might even give Daniels a break on the cocaine bust if his testimony was convincing enough. The ax itself would be displayed before the jury, complete with bloodstains. It would be pointed out that Petrakis’ fingerprints were all over it. Worst of all, Reardon knew, Petrakis would probably confess. He had seen far stronger suspects crumble under grueling interrogation. And Petrakis already seemed beyond caring whether he was guilty or not.
But there were still the murders of Lee McDonald and Karen Ortovsky. So far the only thing that could connect Petrakis with their deaths was Mathesson’s revenge theory. Reardon knew that still left a lot to be explained. Why were the deer and the women killed in exactly the same way with fifty-seven blows on one body and only one on the other? And what did the roman numeral “two” and “dos” mean?
Reardon was certain that the deer and the women had been killed by the same person. The deer investigation seemed at a dead end. But the case of McDonald and Ortovsky still had one line of investigation open: Jamie O’Rourke.
Reardon stopped for a traffic light and glanced through his notebook for O’Rourke’s address. When he had found it he turned his car around and headed toward the Brooklyn Bridge.
Time was what he did not have much of, and he felt its movement like an enormous wave thundering toward shore.
Jamie O’Rourke lived in a Brooklyn row house on a street of Brooklyn row houses, drab, featureless, decaying like a dead body in a warm room. Reardon had seen these neighborhoods before, always feeling that somehow an immense and secret crime had been committed against the residents. They lived like citizens of a besieged city, in constant dread of invasion by any people different from themselves – non-Catholics, nonwhites, both, anything.
He climbed the steps to the door of O’Rourke’s house and rang the bell. He heard slight movements within the house but no one came to the door. He rang again.
This time the door opened. “If you’re a Jehovah’s Witness selling God, I ain’t buying none,” said a man dressed in dark-blue pants and a T-shirt, a bathroom towel wrapped loosely around his neck.
Reardon showed his gold shield. “My name is Reardon,” he said.
“What do you want?” the man asked harshly. He swabbed the back of his neck with the towel and looked suspiciously at Reardon.
“Are you Jamie O’Rourke?” Reardon asked.
“That’s right.”
“I understand you were married to Patty McDonald.”
The man pulled the towel from around his neck and wiped his hands. “You think I killed her?”
“I’m trying to find out who did,” Reardon said.
“I don’t know nothing about her,” O’Rourke said sharply. “She run out on me a long time ago. I ain’t seen her.”
“You were at her funeral.”
O’Rourke looked at Reardon warily. “Well, I got a right to go to her funeral, don’t I? She was my wife.”
“I’m not here to cause you trouble,” Reardon said.
“I’m not afraid of trouble.”
“Well, maybe you wouldn’t mind talking to me about her then.”
O’Rourke wiped his face with the towel. “I was just shaving,” he said. “I got to go to work tonight.”
“It won’t take long.”
O’Rourke studied Reardon’s face, came to some conclusion about him, and opened the door wider. “Come on in then.”
Inside Reardon quietly viewed the disarray around him. The room was furnished with an overstuffed sofa and two chairs, a heavy coffee table and matching end table. The stuffing of the couch was easily visible through gaping rents in the fabric. The coffee table was spotted with water stains and scarred as if raked with a fork. Sheets of floral wallpaper barely hung from the walls, and leaks had caused yellowed paint to peel halfway across the ceiling. There were no curtains; the Venetian blinds which afforded some privacy hung askew from dirty windows. The only signs of habitation were old copies of the Daily News piled on chairs and the floor and four or five crushed Schlitz cans.