“I’m sure you do. Mr. Dobbins, your father drove a morgue truck during the Urban Wars?”
“Dead wagon. I rode with him most days. Loaded up corpses right, left, and sideways. Got a live one now and again somebody took for dead. I want to sit down.”
He simply turned around and shuffled through the doorway to the right. After exchanging glances, Eve and Peabody followed.
The living area was stuffed with worn furniture. The walls might once have been some variation of white, but were now the dingy yellow of bad teeth.
Dobbins sat, took a cigarette from a tarnished silver tray, and lighted it. “A man can still smoke in his own damn house. You people haven’t taken that away. A man’s home is his damn castle.”
“You have a lovely home, Mr. Dobbins,” Peabody commented. “I love the brownstones in this area. We’re lucky so many of them survived the Urbans. That must’ve been a terrible time.”
“Not so bad. Got through it. Toughened me up, too.” He jabbed the air with the cigarette as if to prove it. “Seen more by the time I was twenty than most see in a hundred twenty.”
“I can’t even imagine. Is it true that there were so many dead in some areas, the only way to keep a record of them was to write an identification number right on the bodies?”
“That’s the way it was.” He blew out a stream of smoke, shook his finger. “Looters get to them first, they’d take everything, strip them right down. I’d write the sector we found them on the body so we could keep track. Haul them in, and the dead house doc would write the number after that, record it in a book. Waste of time mostly. Just meat by then anyway.”
“Do you keep in touch with anybody from back then? People who worked like you did, or the doctors, the medics?”
“What for? They find out you’ve got a little money, they just want a handout.” He shrugged it off. “Saw Earl Wallace a few years back. He’d ride shotgun on the wagon sometimes. Stirred myself to go to Doc Yumecki’s funeral, I guess five, six years back. Paid my respects. He was worth respecting, and there aren’t many. Gave him a nice send-off. Grandson did it. Waked him in the parlor instead of the main house, but it was a nice send-off all the same.”
“Would you know how to reach Mr. Wallace, or Dr. Yumecki’s grandson?”
“How the hell should I know? I check the obits. I see somebody I know who’s worth the time, I go to their send-off. Said we would back then, so I do.”
“What did you say back then?” Eve prompted.
“Dead everywhere.” His eyes blurred, and Eve imagined he could see it-still see it. “No send-off. Ya burned them up, or you buried them, and mostly with company, you could say. So, those of us that carted them in, ID’d and disposed, we said how when it was our time, we’d have a send-off, and those of us still living and able would come. So that’s what I do.”
“Who else does it? From the Urbans?”
Dobbins took one more drag. “Don’t remember names. See a few now and again.”
“How about this one?” Eve took out the sketch. “Have you seen this man?”
“No. Looks a little bit like Taker maybe. A little.”
“Taker?”
“We picked up the bodies, dropped them off. He took them, so he was Taker. Went to his send-off twenty years back, maybe more. Big one for Taker.” He sucked wetly on the cigarette. “Good food. Long time dead.”
Out in the car again, Eve sat a moment to think. “Could be an act-bitter, slightly tipped old man. But that’s reaching.”
“He could’ve worn a disguise when Trina saw him.”
“Could’ve,” Eve agreed, “but I’d say Trina would have spotted any major face work. It’s what she does. Let’s run down the two names he remembered.”
H er next stop was a Hugh Klok off Washington Square Park. The victim Dobbins had seen “coming and going” had been dumped there. Gil Newkirk’s notes stated that Klok had been questioned, as were the other neighbors. Klok was listed as an antiquities dealer who had purchased and renovated the property several years before the murders.
He was listed as cooperative and unilluminating.
Antiquities turned a good profit if you knew what you were doing. Eve assumed Klok did as the property was impressive. What had originally been a pair of town houses had been merged into one large home, set back from the street by a wide courtyard.
“Pretty spruce,” Peabody commented as they approached the courtyard’s ornamental iron gate.
Eve pressed the button on the gate and was momentarily ordered by a computerized voice to state her business.
“Police. We’d like to speak with Mr. Hugh Klok.” She held up her badge for scanning.
Mr. Klok is not in residence at this time. You may leave your message at this security point or-if you choose-pass through and leave same with a member of the household staff.
“Option two. Might as well get a closer look,” she said to Peabody.
The gate chinked open. They crossed the bricked courtyard, climbed a short flight of steps to the main level. The door opened immediately. This, too, was a droid, but fashioned to represent a dignified middle-aged man.
“I’m authorized to take your message for Mr. Klok.”
“Where’s Mr. Klok?”
“Mr. Klok is away on business.”
“Where?”
“I’m not authorized to relay that information. If this is an emergency or the business you have with him of great import, I will contact Mr. Klok immediately so that he can, in turn, contact you. He is, however, expected home within the next day or two.”
Behind the dignified droid was a large, dignified entrance hall. And surrounding it Eve sensed a great deal of uninhabited space. “Tell Mr. Klok to contact Lieutenant Eve Dallas, NYPSD, Cop Central, upon his return.”
“Of course.”
“How long has he been gone?”
“Mr. Klok has been out of residence these past two weeks.”
“Does Mr. Klok live alone?”
“He does.”
“Any houseguests in his absence?”
“There are no guests in residence.”
“Okay.” She’d have preferred to get inside, snoop around a little. But without warrant or cause, there was no legal way past the threshold.
She left the Klok house for a bustling section of Little Italy.
One of the victims had been a waitress in a restaurant owned by Tomas Pella. Pella had served on the Home Force during the Urbans, and in them had lost a brother, a sister, and his bride of two months. His young, doomed wife had served as a medic.
He’d never remarried, had instead opened and owned three successful restaurants before selling out eight years before.
“Reclusive, according to Newkirk’s notes,” Eve said. “Also listed as hot-tempered and angry.”
He lived in a trim whitewashed home within shouting distance of bakeries, markets, cafés.
When she was greeted for the third time by a droid-female again, but of the comfortable domestic style-Eve concluded that men of that generation preferred electronic to human.
“Lieutenant Dallas, Detective Peabody. We’d like to speak to Mr. Tomas Pella.”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Pella is very ill.”
“Oh, yeah? How’s that?”
“I’m afraid I can’t discuss his medical condition with you without his authorization. Is there any other way I can be of help?”
“Is he lucid? Conscious? Able to speak?”
“Yes, but he requires rest and quiet.”
Droids were tougher than humans on some levels, but could still be bullied and intimidated. “I require an interview with him.” Eve tapped her badge, kept her eyes keen and level. “I think it would disturb his rest and quiet a great deal more if I had to get a warrant and bring police medicals in here to evaluate his condition. Is there a medical with him?”
“Yes. There’s a medical with him at all times.”
“Then inform the medical that if Mr. Pella is awake and lucid, we need to speak with him. Got that?”