The man’s mouth fell open.
The cop smiled. “Sorry. If you came in your car, why don’t you put it there and come back?”
The tourist left, shaking his head. I showed my badge and was waved through.
The receptionist beyond the advertised double doors gave me directions with a friendliness that quieted some of the “stranger in a strange land” qualms that had been nagging me, and set me off on my quest.
I found Donahue, or at least his secretary, four floors above; an hour later, I was ushered into his office. The wait hadn’t bothered me. The secretary, as pleasant as her colleague downstairs, told me it would be a long time and urged me to poke around discreetly. This I did, wandering the halls and studying the bulletin boards. What I came away with, and took with me into Donahue’s office, was an appreciation of the work load these people wrestled with. Never before had I seen such piles of case files, distributed among so many desks, being worked on by so many exhausted-looking people. Nor had I ever seen so many phones used simultaneously. By the time I was ushered over the chief ’s threshold, I was eternally grateful to be the small-town cop I was-despite the laughter and the familiar corridor high jinks that I’d also witnessed, the supposed allure of the “big time” just wasn’t there.
Chief of Detectives Donahue was a short, gray-haired, burly man who smoked a cigar and sported a large Marine Corps ring. He was seated at an overloaded desk in an office decorated with calendars, roster sheets, and a row of clipboards hanging from nails in the wall.
“Lieutenant Gunther.” It had been a statement of fact.
I nodded without speaking, which brought a thin smile to his lips. He stuck his hand out. “Glad to meet you. Have a seat. Your chief says you’re checking out a metal knee on a twenty-year-old skeleton.”
“That’s about it.”
“You got any more than that?”
“Nope. I don’t know who the skeleton is, I don’t know when the knee was put in, and I don’t know who might have put it in. I’m not even sure the procedure was done in Chicago, although I have been told the knee was sold here by the manufacturer.”
Donahue nodded. “You know where to look?”
“I figured I’d start asking around at the big hospitals.”
He frowned and shook his head, dropping the sheet of paper back onto his desk. “Well, good luck. You’ll need it. I’m assigning you to Area 6-that’s Commander Jeffers. You know the city at all?”
“I’ve got a good map.”
He handed me a small slip of note paper. “Belmont and Western. 2452 West Belmont, to be precise-that’s about twenty blocks west of Wrigley Field and a little south. I’ll tell him to expect you.”
He stood up and shook hands. The interview was over. I left without having the slightest idea what the system was I was obviously being plugged into or why my particular address within it was almost halfway back to the airport. Presumably, Commander Jeffers would be the enlightener on those subjects. As I crossed the street to get back to my car, I felt like a freshman on his first day on campus, being shuttled from office to office, accumulating scraps of information from a bureaucracy in full tilt that could just barely give me a few moments of its time. Still, I thought hopefully, he had known who I was.
According to the map, the quickest route to Area 6 was to retrace my way back up the Kennedy Expressway. But having already done that once, I decided to expand my horizons. I headed east toward the lake and took Lake Shore Drive north.
The contrast to my drive into Chicago was startling. Going up alongside Grant Park, by the Navy Pier, and through Lincoln Park above that, I was dazzled by how well the city met the shore. Paralleling a pristine, tree-filled no-man’s-land between the distant serried ranks of downtown’s elegant turn-of-the-century buildings and the enormous, dizzying, ocean-like emptiness of Lake Michigan, Lake Shore Drive affords a tourist’s-eye view of urban development at its most beautiful. The vague sense I’d had earlier at the airport of infiltrating fresh air-a hint of nature’s struggle against the spread of concrete-was here given full rein. The sky and water utterly dominated the scene, and yet the city-with its older, lower, more graceful buildings facing Grant Park and the taller, more futuristic obelisks of gleaming glass and metal just behind them and north of the river-held its own. From this theatrical angle, Chicago flaunted its own majesty. Unsheltered by the lee of a nearby friendly mountain range, as was Los Angeles, or tucked among the islands, rivers, and bays of New York, Chicago was merely there, on center stage, arrogantly exposed to the elements it had set out to challenge. It reminded me of Dallas-another city that existed solely because of the aggressive business drive of a country hell-bent on achievement.
I fought the allure of the many parking lots at the water’s edge, and leaving North Shore Drive, disappeared instead back into the city, impressed by how often, in such a short time span, Chicago had shown me some totally different aspect of its character.
Behind Lincoln Park, away from the lake, I found the process continuing. From traveling between high rises on one side and sailboats and yachts on the other, I was now surrounded by buildings that for the most part seemed plucked from another town entirely. Rarely over three or four stories high, many of them hovering near a hundred years old, the landmarks of this neighborhood looked complacently ignorant of being surrounded by a far larger city. The variety of shops and restaurants, movie theaters and bars all pointed to a self-sustaining, thriving independence.
I continued west, losing some of that isolated security. The buildings became coarser, newer, more functional, and less gentrified. At the corners of Belmont, Western, and Clybourn, I paused before a small confusion of roads, cement buildings, and a shopping mall parking lot. Looming overhead, ominously omnipotent, a red and white radio tower stared down on us all. Near its foot, its low-slung, bland, modern brick walls absurdly set off by a hulking red-white-and-blue metal monstrosity of a sculpture, was the address I was seeking: Police Headquarters, Area 6, 19th District.
For the second time today, I parked and prepared to meet my hosts. There was a better feeling to it this time, though. For one thing, the neighborhood seemed friendlier-at least alive if not aesthetic-and for another, I was hoping that this might become my surrogate office, the launching pad for what I’d come to do here. Driving around Chicago from police station to police station had been educational, but it did nothing to answer the questions posed by those two bodies in Vermont.
The entrance to 2452 West Belmont was a lot less imposing than its big brother downtown. The metal detector was still there, but the atmosphere was more pleasant, and there were no comments about skiing.
As befitted the newer building, Commander Jeffers’s office was also more user-friendly, as was its occupant, who actually came out to the reception area to greet me before I’d had a chance to sit down and who escorted me inside.
“Don’t think we’ve ever had a police officer from Vermont before. Want some coffee?”
“No thanks.”
He poured himself a cup from a counter behind his desk. “Donahue tells me you’re chasing down an old kneecap-that you got squat to go on.”
I laughed at the way my ambitions were being miniaturized and filled Jeffers in on the whole story, from Fuller’s blown aneurysm to the machine-gun nest above I-91.
But by the end of it, like his State Street boss, Jeffers wasn’t overly impressed. “So, you’re basically here for a name and an address, both of which may be history by now.”
“I’m also hoping to get a handle on what happened-the cash, the guns.”
“But only if you’re lucky.”
I conceded the point. “Right.”
That obviously pleased him, apparently settling some private, unvoiced question. He leaned forward and stabbed a button on his intercom. “Get me Norm Runnion.”