“That’s right,” Karl said.
“And they didn’t do it to destroy the business,” Scanlon went on, “since Calabrese doesn’t use the place to make money.”
“Seems that way,” I said.
Scanlon looked at me, then at Karl, then back at me again. “Then why the fuck did the Delatassos do it?”
“That’s a hell of a good question,” I said. “But I’ve got one that might be even better.”
“Which is…?”
“What if the Delatassos didn’t do it?”
As Scanlon walked away, I noticed Dennehy from the State Police bomb squad standing a couple of hundred feet away, giving orders to some of his people.
“Come on,” I said to Karl, and we made our slow, careful way over to where Dennehy was standing. I stumbled once and Karl tried to take my arm, but once I’d glared at him, he let go again. We came up on Dennehy just as he was finished deploying his troops – four guys and a woman, all dressed in identical blue jackets that read “State Police BDU” on the back.
“Don’t forget to check for fragments buried in the sides of buildings.” He practically had to yell to be heard over the noise from all the other people and vehicles in the area. “You see anything unusual, dig it out and bag it. We’ll figure out if it’s relevant later. OK, get to work.”
As the four bomb techs trotted away, Dennehy turned toward Karl and me. “I wish I could say it was good to see you fellas again, but under the circumstances…”
“Yeah, I know what you mean,” I said.
Dennehy looked at me for a few moments, his head tilted a little to one side. “Christ, what happened to you, Stan?.”
“It looks worse than it is,” I said. “I just got jumped by some guys early this morning. One of them whacked my head with something hard, probably a gun barrel. But I’ve got that thick Polack skull. I’m OK. But we came over to ask you about this bomb.”
“What d’you want to know about it?”
“Anything you can tell us,” I said. “I realize you haven’t had much time to investigate yet.”
Dennehy sneezed a couple of times, then blew his nose on a big bandana handkerchief. “It’s the dust,” he said. “Always irritates my sinuses at these scenes. I tried wearing a respirator once, but the other guys kept asking me if I was still beating up on Batman, so I gave it up.”
“The bomb, Chris,” I said. “What about the bomb?”
“OK, well, for starters – it had a lot more juice than the one that did in what’s-his-name…”
“Castle,” Karl said. “Victor Castle.”
“Yeah, him. You can see by the amount of damage that it was a much more powerful explosion this time – not the kind of charge you could fit in a trash can, that’s for damn sure.”
“What was it in, then?” I asked him. “Any ideas?”
“Car bomb, most likely.” Dennehy pointed up the street in the direction of what had once been Ricardo’s Ristorante. “That car there, specifically.”
A couple of hundred feet from the restaurant’s entrance was something that might once have been an automobile. It was lying on its roof – at least, I think it was. Looking at that twisted, burned pile of metal, it was hard to say for sure.
“You figure plastic explosive, like the last time?” I asked.
“Most likely,” he said. “Big difference between this bomb and the last one, though – I mean, apart from the amount of explosive used.”
“How do you mean?” I said.
“That other one – very precise. You can’t use words like ‘surgical’ when talking about bombs, but the one outside the rug store had a very specific objective – to take out that one man. The other damage was incidental. But this….” Dennehy waved his arm in a gesture that took in the whole scene. “This is more like the kind of stuff you see in the Middle East. The fuckers who set it off don’t really have a specific target in mind. They just want to cause as much damage – to people and structures both – as they can.”
Karl and I glanced at each other. “That’s very interesting,” I said.
“The first time, it was a hit, pure and simple,” Dennehy said. “But what we had here tonight was fucking terrorism.”
“You think so?” I just wanted something to say while I tried to get my mind around what I’d heard.
“Goddamn right it was,” Dennehy said. “And you know what Lenin wrote about terrorism?”
“The Russian revolution guy?” Karl asked him.
“That’s the one. Lenin said, ‘The purpose of terrorism is to terrify.’”
“Sounds about right, but a little obvious,” I said. “What’s your point?”
“My point,” Dennehy said, “is this: just who were these fuckers trying to scare?”
An hour or so later, we were back at the car. The trip to the crime scene hadn’t given me a lot of useful information, but it sure had been a rich source of questions.
“Where to?” Karl asked. “Back to Mercy?”
“No, fuck that. If I was gonna drop dead from that whack on my head, I’d have done it by now. Take me home, will you?”
“Home it is, then,” he said, and started the engine.
“Wait,” I said. “Where’s my car, anyway?”
“Should be in your driveway. One of the guys from the squad drove it over to your place from Jerry’s earlier today.”
The route Karl followed to my place took us past Saint Peter’s Cathedral. Karl averted his eyes from the large crosses on the front door, but did it without a lot of drama. I didn’t say anything – I’ve seen him do that a hundred times since he joined the ranks of the undead.
We’d gone a block past the cathedral when Karl said, “Remember what Victor Castle told us a while back – that he thought a vampire’s aversion to religious symbols was just psychological? We believe we’re supposed to be scared of crosses, and so we are.”
“Yeah, I remember.”
“Think it’s true? Or is it because we really are spawn of the devil?”
I shifted in my seat, which didn’t help my head any. The issue Karl had raised was one I tried not to think about too much.
There was a time when I was wary of vampires, because the popular culture said they were monsters – a view that the Vampire Anti-Defamation League has been fighting for decades. Then a vampire killed my wife, and I came to hate the creatures. That was why I’d requested a transfer to the Occult Crimes Unit – I figured it would give me the chance to kill a few vampires in the line of duty and thus get away with it.
But now my partner and best friend, as well as my daughter Christine, were vampires. More than that – each of them was undead because I had made it happen. It was either that or stand by helplessly and watch them die.
Karl and Christine weren’t evil – I was convinced of that. But I also knew that if you waved a cross – or a Star of David, or some other religious symbol – in the direction of a vampire, he’d run from it. Or she would. And if religious symbols represent God, vampires being afraid of them meant… what?
The academic types have a name for my current attitude towards vampires: cognitive dissonance. That’s a fancy way of saying that somebody holds conflicting attitudes toward something – or somebody.
“I don’t know if Castle was right or not,” I said to Karl. “But that spawn of the devil stuff is bullshit.”
Another couple of blocks went by before Karl said, “I’ve been spending some time with Doc Watson, talking about all that shit.”
I didn’t know what to say about that, so I settled for “Uh-huh.”
Terence Watson, MD, is a local psychiatrist who’s been a lot of help to the Scranton PD over the years. I’d last run into him about a month ago, in the frozen foods section of Wegmans. Doc and I had chatted briefly, but he didn’t say anything about having Karl as a patient. Of course, he wouldn’t. Doc Watson’s very big on preserving confidentiality – maybe that’s why so many people trust him.
“Doc seems inclined toward Victor’s Castle’s opinion on the cross issue,” Karl said.