A man coming towards her paused and said something, but she didn't give him a glance, or slow down her pace.
When she crossed West End Avenue, heading towards the lighted garage, I hurried to catch up, staying on the other side of the street and moving about a half-block southward. I could see her waiting in the entrance of the garage.
I stopped the first empty cab that came along.
'Where to?' the driver asked, picking up his trip sheet clamped to a clipboard. He was a middle-aged black.
'Nowhere,' I said. 'Please start your clock and we'll just wait.'
He put the clipboard aside and turned to stare at me through the metal grille.
'What is this?' he said.
'See that woman over there? Across the street, ahead of us? In the fur coat?'
He peered.
'I see her,' he said.
I had learned from my previous experience.
'My wife,' I said. 'I want to see where she's going. I think someone's going to pick her up.'
'Uh-huh,' he said. 'There's not going to be any trouble, is there?'
'No,' I said, 'no trouble.'
'Good,' he said. 'I got all I can handle right now.'
We sat there, both of us staring at the figure of Glynis Stonehouse across the street. The meter ticked away.
Within three or four minutes Knurr arrived. I had expected him to pull up in a cab, then switch to the Mercedes, but instead he raced into the garage entrance, near where Glynis waited, and opened the passenger door of his old VW. As soon as she got in, he backed out fast, swung around, and headed northward again, shoving his way into traffic.
'Follow?' my driver said.
'Please,' I said.
'That guy is some cowboy. He drives like he don't give a damn.'
'I don't think he does,' I said.
We tailed them north. Knurr made a left on to 79th Street, then began to circle the block.
'Looking for a place to park,' the cabdriver commented knowledgeably. 'If he pulls in, what do you want me to do?'
'Go down to the next corner and wait.'
That's what happened. Knurr found a place to park on West 77th Street near Riverside Drive. We went past and pulled in close to the corner. Through the rear window, I watched them both get out and walk past. They passed by my parked cab, talking much too intently to notice me.
I let them turn north on the Drive before I paid and got out of the taxi.
'Thank you,' I said to the driver.
'Don't do anything foolish,' he said.
As I followed Glynis Stonehouse and Godfrey Knurr into Riverside Park. I noted with relief that a few joggers and groups of raucous teenagers still braved the darkened expanse. And yet my nervousness increased as we penetrated deeper along lonely, descending paths, heading westward. I lurked as best I could in the shadows of leafless trees, trying to tread lightly. But I was being overcautious, for the couple ahead of me walking arm-in-arm were so intent on their talk that they seemed innocent of the secret sharer padding along behind them.
They walked around the rotunda, a large circular fountain girdled by a walk that was in turn enclosed by a ring of archways vaguely Roman in feeling. The fountain had long since ceased to operate; the basin was dried and cracked.
All the white light globes were now shattered and dark.
The archways were sprayed with graffiti. Splintered glass and broken bits of masonry grated underfoot. The ground was crumbling.
I paused briefly, not wanting to follow Glynis and Godfrey into one of those echoing passages lest they hear my footfall. I waited until they were clear on the other side of the fountain before hurrying through.
Ahead was the molten river, a band of gently heaving mercury in the nightlight. Across were the flickering lights of the Jersey shore. Closer, the swell of black water. I searched frantically about until I spotted them again, approaching the boat basin at 79th Street. I kept well back in the shadows as Glynis and Knurr walked on to the planked pier. They stopped briefly to speak to someone who appeared to be a watchman. Then they continued along one of the slips until they stepped down carefully onto the foredeck of what looked like a houseboat.
Lights came on inside the craft. When I saw curtains drawn across the wide windows, I turned and hurried back the way I had come.
3
I arrived at the TORT building before 9.00 a.m. on Tuesday morning. The night security guard was still on duty, sitting at Yetta Apatoff's desk.
'There was a telephone call for you about fifteen minutes ago, Mr Bigg,' he said. 'The guy wouldn't leave a name or message, but said he'd call back.'
'Thank you,' I said, and went back to my office. My phone rang before I had chance to take off my coat. I picked it up and said, 'Hello?' A man's voice growled,
'You the guy who put up the posters?' I said I was. He 304
said, 'How much is the reward?'
I hadn't even considered that. Fifty dollars seemed insufficient; a hundred might tempt a lot of fraudulent claims. But rather, I reasoned, too many replies than too few.
'A hundred dollars,' I said.
'Shit,' he said, and hung up.
The second call came in ten minutes later. Once again the first question asked was: 'How much?'
'A hundred dollars,' I said firmly.
'Yeah, well, I carried the guy. Picked him up on Central Park West and 70th Street the night of January 10th.'
'What did he look like?'
'Well, you know, an average-sized guy. I didn't get a real good look at him, but I'd say he was average.'
'Kind of short, fat, dumpish?'
'Yeah, you could say that.'
'Wearing a sweater and jacket?'
'Yeah, that's the guy.'
'No, it isn't,' I said.
'Fuck you,' he said and hung up.
I sighed, finished my strawberry strudel and black coffee, and started mechanically answering some of the routine research and investigation requests. I wondered if I dared bother Percy Stilton with what I had discovered — the houseboat at 79th Street — and what I was beginning to guess about how Godfrey Knurr had murdered Sol Kipper.
Stilton solved the problem by calling me at about 10.00
a. m.
'Listen, Josh,' he said, speaking rapidly, 'I know you didn't want me to call you at your office, but this is important. I've only got a minute. Can you meet me in the lobby of the Newsweek building? 444 Madison? Between 49th and 50th?'
'Well, yes, sure,' I said. 'But I wanted — '
'About five minutes before four o'clock this afternoon.'
'I'll be there, Perce,' I said, making rapid notes on my scratchpad. 'But here are a few things I — '
'Got to run,' he said. 'See you then.'
The line went dead. I hung up slowly, bewildered. The phone rang again almost immediately and I plucked it up, hoping Stilton was calling back.
'Josh,' Yetta Apatoff said, giggling, 'you haven't forgotten our lunch today, have you?'
'Of course not,' I lied bravely. 'What time?'
'Noon,' she said. 'I've got a lot to tell you.'
'Good,' I said, my heart sinking.
Another calclass="underline"
'Yeah, I picked up the guy on that night. A tall, skinny gink, right?'
'Could be,' I said. 'And where did you take him — to the Eastern Airlines ticket office on Fifth Avenue?'
'Yeah,' he said, 'you're right.'
'Waited for him and then drove him back to Central Park West and 70th Street?'
'Uh. . yeah.'
'No,' I said, 'I don't think so.'
He suggested an anatomical impossibility.
Inwardly cursing the venality of mankind, I hung up, then phoned the Kipper house. Chester Heavens answered.
We exchanged polite greetings, inquired as to the state of each other's health, and spoke gravely about the weather, which we agreed was both pleasant and bracing for that time of year.
'Chester,' I said, 'Mr Kipper died on Wednesday, January 24th. Is that correct?'