Grossbart did not seem amused. “You trying to make a mystery out of this thing?” he asked. Before Corman could answer, he waved his hand dismissively. “Forget it. This one’s not a mystery.”
Mystery was common police slang for a murder that would probably never be solved, but Corman knew Grossbart meant more than that. He meant something about the woman, the doll, the dark fifth-floor landing, all that must have finally gathered together in order to get them there. That was the greater mystery, the one that was always less dense and immediate than who did what to whom. It had a mood of aftermath which clung to it like a faint, dissolving odor. While the body lay fresh and soft, the mystery was solid, tense, compelling. But after it had been scooped up, after the blood had been washed away, the walls repainted, sheets changed and carpeting replaced, the intensity of it drained away, and the other mystery settled over the interior space of the room, the street, the mind. It was ghostly, intangible. No one could go at it anymore, drag it down, cuff it, toss it into the paddy wagon. It had become faceless, impossible to contemplate without disappearing into it yourself. Everybody knew that. In Corman’s estimation, it was perhaps the only thing on earth that absolutely everybody knew.
Grossbart’s right index finger shot out toward the pack of cigarettes on the table. “Mind if I have one?”
“No.”
Grossbart snapped up the pack, shook one out and lit it. “Had a hell of a mess on Essex Street this morning,” he said. “Guy strung a couple cats onto the clothesline of his building. Just let them dangle in the goddamn airshaft.” He looked at Corman. “Why would a guy do that?”
Corman shook his head.
“Something eating him, I guess,” Grossbart said. His eyes drifted down toward the pictures. “Some people go out a window, some string up a cat.” He shrugged. “The way it is,” he added, groaning slightly as he drifted back into his chair.
Corman leaned forward slightly. “I could use a little help, Harvey,” he said.
Grossbart looked surprised, as if he thought Corman was about to ask for a handout. He said nothing.
“I need to find out some things about this woman,” Corman told him.
“Why?”
“I’m trying to work up a story.”
Grossbart shrugged. “It’s not my case. You need to talk to Lang.”
Corman shook his head.
“You got something against him?”
“The way he is,” Corman said.
“The perfect combination,” Grossbart said with a slight sneering smile. “Stupidity and corruption.”
Corman nodded.
“But the way it is, you got to work with everybody,” Grossbart said. “Like a friend of mine said, ‘Birth ain’t a screening process.’”
Corman smiled.
Grossbart took a draw on the cigarette. “What are you after?”
“Just call it a gig,” Corman said. “I want to track her down a little.”
Grossbart shrugged. “So go ahead. It’s a free country.”
“How could I find out who she was?” Corman asked.
“Well, the only guy besides Lang who’d know about her ID right now would probably be Kellerman at the morgue. He’d have to have a confirmed ID before he could release the body.”
Corman nodded.
Grossbart looked at him curiously, with a hint of disappointment.
“You never struck me as the grab-for-the-brass-ring type,” he said.
Corman thought of Lucy. “Depends on the ring, I guess,” he said as he gathered up his things and headed for the subway and the morgue.
Sanford Kellerman was the assistant ME in charge of the morgue. He was just finishing up an autopsy when Corman walked into the dissecting room. Body parts were scattered here and there, some in jars, some in transparent plastic bags, and the smell, despite the heavy doses of disinfectant, was almost more than Corman could stand.
Kellerman nodded as Corman stepped up to the table. “What can I do for you?” he asked.
“There was a suicide last Thursday night,” Corman said. “In Hell’s Kitchen.”
“The one on 47th Street?” Kellerman asked. “Jumped out the window?”
Corman nodded.
“All the work’s been done already,” Kellerman said. He picked up a severed hand, dropped it into a transparent plastic bag. Then his eyes shot over to Corman. “You look familiar.”
“We’ve met before,” Corman told him.
“Oh yeah,” Kellerman said. “I remember now.” He sunk his hands deep into the meaty open cavity of the body on the table. “That’s right, you’re a … a …”
“Photographer,” Corman said. “Free-lance.”
“Yeah,” Kellerman said. “You came down about a year ago.”
“To shoot a few faces,” Corman reminded him. “I had a death-mask idea.”
Kellerman laughed. “Death mask, huh?” He shook his head. “Everybody’s interested in the morgue except the people who work in it.” He laughed again. “Sometimes I want to get one of them down here to clean out the condensation drains. That would give them a taste of what it’s really like. You have somebody crawl up a pipe and scoop out a handful of maggots, that’ll be the last of their interest in the morgue.” His eyes returned to the body. “So what are you interested in now, more death masks?”
“That woman I mentioned,” Corman said. “Did anyone come down to identify her?”
Kellerman nodded. “Surprising, too. Like they say on the street, a zip-top piece.”
“She was Jewish?”
Kellerman smiled. “Unless she was trying to pass,” he said.
“Name’s Rosen. Sarah Judith Rosen.” He shook his head at the thought of it. “You know, we don’t get many nice Jewish girls down here.”
“Maybe she wasn’t very nice,” Corman said. He took out his notebook, wrote down the name. “Know anything about her?”
Kellerman shrugged. “No. Why, is she somebody’s daughter?”
“She was a college graduate,” Corman said. “At least that’s what they say at Number One.”
Kellerman looked at Corman curiously. “So, not only a Jewish girl, but a college girl. The world is getting strange.”
“Do you know anything at all about her?”
“Just that somebody’s picking her up tomorrow.”
Corman felt the tip of his pen bear down on the open notebook. “Who?”
“A funeral home on the Upper East Side,” Kellerman said.
“They left a message on the machine. Tomlinson’s Chapel.” He watched Corman intently. “You think she was some big shot’s daughter?”
Corman let the question pass. “She was starving, wasn’t she?” he asked.
“Yeah, she was,” Kellerman replied. “Very severe malnutrition.”
“What was she hooked on?”
“Hooked?”
“The needle marks.”
Kellerman shook his head. “She wasn’t hooked on anything at all.”
“But there were needle marks,” Corman said. “I took some pictures of them.”
“Those were needle marks, all right,” Kellerman said. “But not from shooting dope. They were too big for that.”
“What’d they come from?”
“My guess is she’d been selling blood,” Kellerman said. “The puncture marks were very large. They looked like they came from the sort of needle they have at those blood-buying places down on the Bowery.”
Corman nodded and guessed that selling blood was the way she’d been able to afford the Similac. “When are they going to pick up tomorrow?” he asked.
“Message said one P.M.”
“Would you mind if I came by?” Corman asked.
Kellerman looked at him cautiously. “What for?”
“I just want to take some pictures,” Corman assured him. “I won’t bother anybody.”