"No, not at all. As a matter of fact, we've checked all the mental institutions in the area for people who were recently released who might possibly have had a history of ..." He
shook his head. "You know, we figured perhaps a paranoiac, somebody who'd go berserk at the sight of a uniform. Except these men weren't in uniform." "No, they weren't. What'd you get?"
"We thought we had one lead. Not anyone with a history of dislike for policemen, but a young man who had a lot of officer trouble in the Army. He was recently released from Bramlook as cured, but that doesn't mean a goddamned thing. We checked with the psychiatrists there, and they felt his illness would never break out in an act of violence, no less a prolonged rampage of violence."
"And you let it drop?"
"No, we looked the kid up. Harmless. Alibis a mile long."
"Who else have you checked?"
"We've got feelers out to all our underworld contacts. We thought this might be a gang thing, where some hood has an alleged grievance against something we've done to hamper him, and so he's trying to show us we're not so high and mighty. He hires a torpedo and begins methodically putting us in our places. But there's been no rumble so far, and underworld revenge is not something you can keep very quiet."
"What else?"
"I've been wading through F.B I. photos all morning. Jesus, you'd never realize how many men there are who fit the possible description we have." He sipped at the scotch. He was beginning to feel a little more comfortable with Alice. Maybe she wasn't so female, after all. Or maybe her femaleness simply enveloped you after a while, causing you to lose all perspective. Whatever it was, the room wasn't as oppressive now.
'Turn up anything? From the photos?"
"Not yet. Half of them are in jail, and the rest are scattered all over the country. You see, the hell of this thing is ... well..."
"What?"
"How'd the killer know that these men were cops? They were all in plainclothes. Unless he'd had contact with them before, how could he know?"
"Yes, I see what you mean."
"Maybe he sat in a parked car across from the house and watched everyone who went in and out. If he did that for a while, he'd get to know who worked there and who didn't."
"He could have done that," Alice said thoughtfully. "Yes,
he could have." She crossed her legs unconsciously. Carella looked away.
"Several things against that theory, though," Carella said. "That's what makes this case such a bitch." The word had sneaked out, and he glanced up apprehensively. Alice Bush seemed not to mind the profanity. She had probably heard enough of it from Hank. Her legs were still crossed. They were very good legs. Her skirt had fallen into a funny position. He looked away again.
"You see, if somebody had been watching the house, we'd have noticed him. That is, if he'd been watching it long enough to know who worked there and who was visiting ... that would take time. We'd surely have spotted him."
"Not if he were hidden."
"There are no buildings opposite the house. Only the park."
"He could have been somewhere in the park . . . with binoculars, maybe."
"Sure. But how could he tell the detectives from the patrolmen, then?"
"What?"
"He killed three detectives. Maybe it was chance. I don't think so. All right, how the hell could he tell the patrolmen from the detectives?"
"Very simply," Alice said. "Assuming he was watching, he'd see the men when they arrived, and he'd see them after muster when they went out to their beats. They'd be in uniform then. I'm talking about the patrolmen."
"Yes, I suppose." He took a deep swallow of the drink. Alice moved on the love seat.
"I'm hot," she said.
He did not look at her. He knew that his eyes would have been drawn downward if he did, and he did not want to see what Alice was unconsciously, obliviously showing.
"I don't suppose this heat has helped the investigation any," she said.
"This heat hasn't helped anything any."
"I'm changing to shorts and a halter as soon as you get out of here."
"There's a hint if ever I heard one," Carella said.
"No, I didn't mean . . oh hell, Steve, I'd change to them now if I thought you were going to stay longer. I just thought you were leaving soon. I mean . . ." She made a vague motion with one hand. "Oh, nuts."
"I am leaving, Alice. Lots of photos to look through back there." He rose. "Thanks for the drink." He started for the door, not looking back when she got up, not wanting to look at her legs again.
She took his hand at the door. Her grip was firm and warm. Her hand was fleshy. She squeezed his hand.
"Good luck, Steve. If there's anything I can do to help ..."
"We'll let you know. Thanks again."
He left the apartment and walked down to the street It was very hot in the street.
Curiously, he felt like going to bed with somebody.
Anybody.
Chapter NINETEEN
"Now here's what I call a real handsome one," Hal Willis said. Hal Willis was the only really small detective Carella had ever known. He passed the minimum height requirement of five/eight, of course, but just barely. And contrasted against the imposing bulk of the other bulls in the division, he looked more like a soft shoe dancer than a tough cop. That he was a tough cop, there was no doubt. His bones were slight, and his face was thin, and he looked as if he would have trouble swatting a fly, but anyone who'd ever tangled with Hal Willis did not want the dubious pleasure again. Hal Willis was a Judo expert.
Hal Willis could shake your hand and break your backbone in one and the same motion. Were you not careful with Hal Willis, you might find yourself enwrapped in the excruciating pain of a Thumb Grip. Were you even less careful, you might discover yourself hurtling through space in the fury of either a Rugby or a Far-Eastern Capsize. Ankle Throws, Flying Mares, Back Wheels, all were as much a part of Hal Willis' personality as the sparkling brown eyes in his face.
Those eyes were amusedly turned now toward the F.B.I, photo which he shoved across the desk toward Carella.
The photo was of a man who was indeed a "real handsome one." His nose had been fractured in at least four places. A scar ran the length of his left cheek. Scar tissue hooded his eyes. He owned cauliflower ears and hardly any teeth. His name, of course, was "Pretty-Boy Krajak."
"A doll," Carella said. "Why'd they send him to us?"
"Dark hair, six feet two, weighing one-eighty-five. How'd you like to run across him some dark and lonely night?"
"I wouldn't. Is he in the city?"
"He's in L.A.," Willis said.
"Then we'll leave him to Joe Friday," Carella cracked.
"Have another Chesterfield," Willis countered. "The only living cigarette with 60,000 filter dragnets."
Carella laughed. The phone rang. Willis picked it up.
"87th Squad," he said. "Detective Willis."
Carella looked up.
"What?" Willis said. "Give me the address." He scribbled something hastily on his pad. "Hold him there, we'll be right over." He hung up, opened the desk drawer and removed his holster and service revolver.
"What is it?" Carella asked.
"Doctor on 35th North. Has a man in his office with a bullet wound in his left shoulder."
A squad car was parked in front of the brownstone on 35th North when Carella and Willis arrived.
"The rookies beat us here," Willis said.
"So long as they've got him," Carella answered, and he made it sound like a prayer. A sign on the door read, "DOCTOR IS IN. RING BELL AND PLEASE BE SEATED."
"Where?" Willis asked. "On the doorstep?"
They rang the bell, opened the door, and entered the office. The office was situated off the small courtyard on the street level of the brownstone. A patrolman was seated on the long leather couch, reading a copy of Esquire. He closed the magazine when the detectives entered and said, "Patrolman Curtis, sir."