While waiting for Lacey to arrive, Lepski decided, when Lacey interrogated him, to say as little as possible and to act as dumb as possible, then if the going got too hot, to pass the buck to Captain Terrell who most certainly would handle Lieutenant Lacey whereas Lepski as Detective 2nd Grade was in a hopeless tactical position.
Lepski, sweating, watched Lacey, followed by Weidman, get out of the Jaguar Lacey surveyed the crowd surrounding the entrance to the restaurant with cold, stony eyes. He told the four mobile cops to get them moving. He walked by Lepski as if he didn’t see him and went to view the bodies. He surveyed Do-Do’s mountainous body with a disgusted curl of his lip. He climbed the stairs and surveyed Mai Langley’s body with considerably more interest. He was glad that her head had been damaged and not her body. He allowed his eyes to dwell on her half nakedness until he became aware that Weidman too was staring with fascinated interest.
Lacey snarled: ‘What the hell are you staring at?’
Weidman blinked, dragged his eyes away and looked stupidly at the Lieutenant.
‘Sir?’
‘Haven’t you seen a dead woman before?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Well, stop behaving like a goddamn tourist!’
‘Yes, sir.’
Lacey took off his hat, smoothed down his hair and replaced his hat.
‘Did I see a creep from Paradise City’s headquarters out there?’
Weidman blinked. ‘I didn’t see anyone, sir.’
‘But then you never see anything, do you?’ Lacey looked around, saw a chair that looked reasonably comfortable and went over and sat in it. He took a sealskin cigar case from his pocket which his wife had given him for a Christmas present, selected a cigar and put it between his small, sharp teeth. ‘Bring him up!’
Weidman lumbered away. Five minutes later, he returned with Lepski. Knowing he was in dead trouble, Lepski stood at attention, his eyes fixed on the wall above the Lieutenant’s head.
‘Who is this man, Sergeant?’ Lacey asked as he lit his cigar.
‘Detective 2nd Grade Lepski, Paradise,’ Weidman said. He had checked as he had come up the stairs with Lepski.
Lacey shook his head.
‘I don’t believe it. No detective from Paradise would dream of coming onto my territory without permission.’ His bleak eyes surveyed Lepski who moved uneasily. ‘Or would he?’
‘Lieutenant, I was following up a tip,’ Lepski said, his expression wooden. ‘It was nothing important otherwise I would have reported to you first.’
‘Nothing important... just two stiffs. What do you call important... a goddamn massacre?’
‘It developed into this, Lieutenant. I was talking to this woman.’ Lepski paused to nod to Mai Langley’s body, then went on, ‘A man burst in and killed her.’
‘A man? Where is he?’ Lacey regarded his cigar to make sure it was burning evenly.
‘He got away.’
‘In my territory, a second grade Detective always calls a Lieutenant sir.’
‘He got away, sir.’
‘He got away?’ The exaggerated amazement in Lacey’s voice made Lepski wince. Lacey turned to Weidman. ‘Did you hear that, Sergeant? A vicious gunman came here, killed this woman and then killed another woman and then walked out while one of Paradise City’s so-called officers was right here on the spot.’
Weidman contorted his face to express outrage, but succeeded only in looking like a sow in labour.
Lacey turned back to Lepski.
‘How did he get away?’
‘In a car, sir.’
Lacey smiled: a frosty smile, but a smile.
‘Well, at least, that is something. Give Sergeant Weidman the number of the car and we will trace it. Weidman write down the number.’
Lepski controlled the urge to shuffle his feet.
‘I didn’t get the number, sir. By the time...’
‘Okay, okay, you don’t have to paint a picture. Wonderful! This gunman walks in here, kills two women and you let him drive away and don’t even take the number of the car. That’s really something. That’s really something for the record. Did you say you were Third or Second Grade, Lepski?’
‘Second Grade, sir.’
‘Still more wonderful. I always suspected that Paradise City had the worst cops on the coast, now I’m sure of it. Maybe you can give me a description of the man?’
‘He was around five foot five, squat, heavily built, around 160 lbs., masked. He was wearing a peppermint stripe suit, panama hat and carrying a Walther 7.65 automatic,’ Lepski said a little breathlessly. ‘He was wearing a handkerchief as a mask.’
‘You truly amaze me,’ Lacey sneered. ‘Where were you when you observed all this... lying on the floor?’
‘Yes, sir. He came in...’
‘When I want you to flap with your mouth I’ll ask you,’ Lacey snarled. He paused to draw on his cigar, savoured the smoke that rolled out of his mean little mouth, then he pointed the cigar at Mai Langley’s body. ‘What was she to you?’
‘I’m working on the Baldy Riccard case, sir. She was his girlfriend.’
Lacey flicked ash onto the threadbare carpet.
‘Who the hell cares about Baldy Riccard?’
‘There’s a report that he’s been knocked off. Captain Terrell ordered me to check,’ Lepski said, hoping he was playing a King to a Queen. By the sudden flicker that crossed Lacey’s face, he decided he had.
‘How is Captain Terrell?’ Lacey asked. He remembered that Terrell was a close friend of his own Chief. He also remembered his Chief had said only a week or so ago that Lacey was dragging his feet, and when his Chief passed a remark like that, red lights began flashing. Maybe, he thought, he had better go easy with this slob or there might be a boomerang in it. Lacey never placed himself in the path of any boomerang: one of the reasons why he still survived as Lieutenant Homicide.
‘He’s fine, sir.’
‘I’m surprised he could be fine with a poop like you working for him.’
Lepski swallowed the insult and said nothing.
‘So what did this woman have to tell you. Detective 2nd Grade Lepski?’ Lacey asked, rolling smoke around in his mouth before releasing it in Lepski’s direction.
This was something Lepski was determined not to impart. Had Lacey been cooperative, Lepski would have given him all the information he had, but he was now determined to give him nothing after this treatment.
‘I was just asking her, sir, where Baldy could be when this gunman arrived and killed her,’
‘So you learned nothing?’
Lepski shuffled his feet, looked hangdog and said nothing. He wasn’t going to be caught in a deliberate lie.
Lacey regarded him with distaste.
‘Go away, you horrible creep,’ he said. ‘If ever I find you on my territory without permission again, I’ll put you through my special wringer. I am going to put in a report about you, Lepski. It is my urgent hope and prayer that it will break you and one of these days when I visit your City, I will come across you, pounding a beat. Get the hell out of my sight!’
Lepski left. He went down the stairs, shoved his way through the crowd that still surged around the entrance to the restaurant, muttering profanities under his breath. He finally reached his car, got in and slammed the door. He sat for several minutes, trying to control his surging rage. Then as he started the engine, a dirty, ragged little boy with long, black hair and almond shaped eyes stuck his head through the open car window.
‘You Lepski?’ the boy asked, his worldly eyes searching Lepski’s face.
‘So I’m Lepski! So, what?’
‘She said you’d give me a buck when I gave you her message.’ The boy squinted at Lepski thoughtfully. ‘Do you have a buck?’
Lepski’s fingers like claws tapped on the steering wheel as he fought to control his temper. ‘Who said?’