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Page 24


  “Hard to tell, you know? It was at night, just for a couple of minutes, and he was wearing a shitload of clothes. He must have been sweating like a pig.” There was something in his eyes—a great sense of enjoyment. He knew what we were after.

  I tried to indulge him. “Do we have to ask for your theory on why he was wearing so many clothes?”

  His pleasure burst forth. He grinned broadly. “Could have been the hunchback.”

  Kunkle muttered, “You asshole.”

  I held up my hand. “You sure it was a hump? It might have been a disguise.”

  “No, no. I’m sure. I mean, this guy freaked me out. He was so weird, you know? I couldn’t resist it. After we did the deal and he started to leave, I slapped him on the back, real friendly, just to check it out. He wasn’t too pleased, but it was a real hump, all right. I felt it.” He shook his head and chuckled. “That one really made the rounds.”

  He started for the stairs.

  “You leaving?”

  “Yup.”

  “You may not live through the day.”

  He smiled again, but this time I sensed little pleasure. “Yeah, well, the story of my life. Stay out of trouble, guys.”

  We listened to his footsteps. When he reached the top, I turned to Kunkle. “Follow him. As soon as he settles down, call in and we’ll send reinforcements. If we’re lucky, we’ll keep him alive and grab Ski Mask at the same time.”

  Kunkle left. Powers took the hint and followed suit after I thanked him for coming over. Brandt pulled out his pipe and began filling it. “You think Ski Mask’ll bite?”

  “I’m hoping for anything; he’s under more pressure now. Maybe the best we can shoot for is just to keep them apart. The longer Ski Mask doesn’t know about the hump, the better.”

  “You think this guy is still running around looking like Quasimodo?”

  “Hell, I don’t know. Why don’t you call Danvers back and tell him to contact his DEA connection. It looks like we can rule out the short-term, low-dosage prednisone prescriptions—maybe that’ll speed things up a bit.” I hesitated before resuming. What I was about to say represented a major hurdle I wasn’t sure Brandt would be willing to take.

  “I also think it’s time to bring in the state police.”

  He busied himself lighting the pipe and setting up a smoke screen that totally obliterated his face. I’d never thought of pipes being that strategically handy.

  When the smog cleared, I saw him nod his head impassively. “How do you want to use them?”

  “Mostly to back up Kunkle. We could use them other places too, though.”

  “Like where?”

  “Like putting more pressure on Ski Mask. So far, we’ve been combing the motels and increasing patrols and talking to damn near everybody over the age of six, but he’s still been able to sit and watch, and to pop up at will. Kunkle suggested putting tails on some of us, trying to either catch him or dissuade him. It didn’t work this morning, but it was a good idea. Also, if the DEA comes through with a huge list, we’ll have that paper trail to track. The backlog of our normal work is starting to strain every desk in the department. We just need more help, period—for everything.”

  Brandt nodded again. “All right, I’ll see what I can do. I might start with the sheriff ’s department, though.”

  “All right. Sheriff ’s men for the noncombat stuff and state troopers to help cover Lew Hill.”

  He took the pipe from his mouth and looked at me. “He really has you worked up, doesn’t he?”

  “You didn’t see him with Haffner. This bastard’s a real number—a man who loves his work.”

  Brandt nodded a third time. “I’ll make some phone calls.”

  He led the way upstairs. At the top, looking his usual bird-dog best, was Stan Katz.

  “Conspiring in the basement?”

  “Be nice, Stanley. We might be nice back.”

  Brandt shot me a questioning look.

  “Oh?” said Katz.

  “Yeah. Give me a few minutes and I’ll let you know.”

  “What about the dope dealer being killed in his trailer this morning? Is is true you and Kunkle were witnesses?”

  “It was a heart attack, Stan, and just hold your horses. I’ll be right back.”

  I escorted Brandt to his office and shut the door behind me. He parked on the edge of his desk. “As the man said: ‘Oh?’”

  “I was thinking we could do worse than invite him to the stakeout. We’ve really got nothing to lose—or at least not much. If we pull it off, we’ve given him a scoop and made a few points; if we totally screw up, he’ll find out about it anyhow and only make it tougher on us for having been excluded. He might even show us doing our job instead of standing around with our thumbs up our asses.”

  Brandt shifted to sit properly at his desk and reached for the phone. “I somehow doubt that, but feel free.”

  I crossed over to Maxine’s cubicle to see if Kunkle had called in yet. He hadn’t. I then told Katz to hold on for a couple of more minutes and gathered DeFlorio and Tyler into my office and told them about the tail on Lew Hill.

  “Ski Mask is like nothing we’ve ever seen. We’ve got to think of him as a terrorist or something—a cold and careful killer. Don’t underestimate him and don’t make assumptions based on what you’ve learned over the years. This is a new ball game, all right? And keep in constant touch with each other, visually if possible.”

  “What about additional backup in case we need it?” DeFlorio asked.

  “I’m arranging for undercover state police, but I want you two ready to move as soon as Kunkle calls in. And I want Katz to go with you.”

  They both looked at me slack-jawed. I held up my hand. “He’ll write about this anyway, so let’s humor him for once. But keep him out of harm’s way, okay? And don’t get too chatty—just let him know what’s up.”

  Katz was waiting patiently by Maxine’s cubicle. “So, were you and Kunkle caught with your pants down or what?”

  “Don’t be rude, Stanley, we’re giving you a break. You can go on a stakeout for Ski Mask as long as you keep out of the way, capish?”

  “In return for what?”

  “Don’t be such a cynic.”

  · · ·

  At nine o’clock that night, Brandt dug under the paperwork we’d spread all over his desk and answered the phone. For hours we’d been sorting through the accumulated shreds of the case, uncertain whether we were looking for something new or just nervously killing time. He listened for a moment and silently handed the receiver to me. It was Kunkle. “You better get down here. We got problems.” He sounded even more dismal than usual.

  The Misery Hilton was actually a large, five-story, bunker-like apartment building on Birge Street. Butternut-colored by day, in the freezing dark it looked more like a cubic black hole, blotting out the stars with its mass. The only sign that it wasn’t as inert as the ground beneath it was a perpetual foul odor of human decay. Whenever calls for the police came from here, the men responding made sure they wore boots—preferably washable ones.

  There was an ambulance parked outside when I got there, along with a group of unemployed-looking plainclothes state police. I knew before entering that Ski Mask had somehow found his man.

  Kunkle was waiting for me on the third-floor landing. He was leaning against the wall, so turned in on himself he barely noticed I was there. I stepped past him into the room beyond.

  The bare bulb hanging from the ceiling made the whole scene look like an Edward Hopper nightmare. There were no soft angles, no single place where the eye could rest without offense. The walls were stained, peeling, cracked, and punctured. The toilet in the adjoining cubicle had overflowed so many times that concentric stains spread across the floor like geologic footprints. The single window had long since ceased to hold glass and was badly boarded up with splintered plywood. There was a three-legged armchair oozing stuffing in one corner, a scarred and mangled chest of drawers next to it, an
d a bare mattress on the floor along the opposite wall. On the mattress—tied down like a specimen on a lab table—lay Lew Hill. His dry eyes were wide open and his teeth bared against a pain long gone.

  There wasn’t much blood, just a few small holes where Ski Mask’s thin stiletto had done its work. I went back outside to the landing. Kunkle hadn’t moved.

  “Any theories?”

  “I fucked up.”

  “How do you figure that?”

  He looked at me incredulously.

  “No, I mean it. So far, one way or the other, he’s whacked Phillips and now Hill—and he sure as hell helped Haffner along. He’s run circles around us from the start, and the only times any of us have even set eyes on the guy was when I was gassed and when you and I were cuffed together. You might as well take the blame for all of it. It would sure as hell make the rest of us feel better, knowing it was all your fault.”

  “Fuck off.”

  “Don’t beat yourself up. You’re a member of the club. Go home to bed; I’ll see you tomorrow morning.”

  He didn’t move. I went back downstairs and found the head of the state police detail. Stan Katz was standing slightly behind him. “So how did he get in?”

  “The question should be: ‘How did he get out?’ He was in all along, as near as we can figure. Of course, we were brought in late. It wasn’t our setup.”

  “Are you complaining?” He looked at me quietly for a moment. “Are you?”

  “No.”

  “Me neither. Kunkle laid it out okay. We were watching for comers, not goers. From what I can figure, your guy went straight from this morning’s killing to Hill’s apartment and camped out all day there. I still don’t know how he got out, but this place has a lot of traffic.”

  I asked him to send me a copy of his report the next day and returned to my car. I started the engine and kicked on the heater, but I didn’t drive off. Instead I sat there, much like Kunkle leaning against his wall, and gave in to a feeling of total hopelessness.

  Katz opened the passenger door and slid in. “Some mess, huh?” His voice was pleasantly muted and unaggressive. I looked over at him. He was just staring out the window at the “Hilton.” His face changed from white to red and back again in the flashing lights from the ambulance and patrol cars.

  “Did you go up?”

  He nodded. “What the hell is going on? What does Lew Hill have to do with Ski Mask or Kimberly Harris or Murphy’s death?” The question was almost philosophical in tone.

  I shook my head. “Don’t know, Stan. Sometimes I think we’ve almost got it, other times I’m afraid we’ll miss the boat entirely on this one. It’s a bitch. And,” I added, “none of that’s a quote.”

  “That’s okay.”

  He was silent a while more, and then he opened the door and swung his legs out. “I hope you get him. Good night.”

  I did too, but I wasn’t sure how realistic that was. All our progress had been toward finding Pam Stark’s killer, and in that area I felt pretty good. Things were falling into place; there was a momentum building that usually boded well. We might well succeed, maybe even soon, but somehow that didn’t seem to matter. In the end, I was convinced Ski Mask would do what he had set out to do—whatever that was—just as he had from the start. Maybe Bill Davis would end up free as a result, but I couldn’t stop thinking that if Ski Mask had a hand in it, that process would be perverted and corrupted, a variation on the one that had jailed him in the first place.

  24

  TONY BRANDT CAME OUT of his office with a large smile and met me as I entered from the side door off the parking lot. “Danvers called. The DEA report is on its way, but he gave me the top three contenders on the phone.” He handed me a sheet of note pad paper. “We also found out how Ski Mask got out. He had a rope strung between Hill’s building and the garage next door. Hand over hand and out he went, probably right over our heads.”

  “Christ.” I looked at the names. “Are these doctors or patients?”

  “The first names are doctors, the names after them are patients. By the way, Katz’s article on last night was a monument to restraint. Maybe you’re breaking through.”

  I waved the list. “You want to wait for the full DEA report before deciding what to do about this?”

  Brandt allowed an uncharacteristic grin. “Hell, no. In fact, I’d like to interview one of these guys myself.” He reached into his pocket. “Three duces tecums.”

  A duces tecum is a writ or subpoena ordering the person served to hand over specified materials. Unless every i is dotted and every t crossed, they are the legal equivalent of skating on thin ice, especially if you’re trying to breach the physician/patient privilege.

  Brandt read my thoughts. “They’re as tight as they can be. The patients are identified by name, as are the exact medical records we’re after. Even the dates are in there. If it’s specificity they’re after, I couldn’t get any better.”

  He kept one subpoena for himself and handed the other two to me. I laughed and shook my head. “Busy as a beaver aren’t you? Can I bring Kunkle in for the third one?”

  “You two courting or something? I didn’t think he was your type.”

  “He’s not. Any objections?”

  Brandt tilted his head slightly. “He wouldn’t be my first choice as an interviewer.” He paused for a moment and finally made an odd movement with his upper lip. “All right. I don’t suppose he’ll start slapping doctors around.”

  There was an awkward pause. “Are you getting close to letting him go?” I asked.

  “Yes, I am.”

  “Does last night have anything to do with that?”

  “It didn’t help his career any.”

  “Would you have thought to check out Hill’s room before he got there?”

  He looked at me warily. “That’s not really the issue, is it?”

  “None of us are overly trained—not for this stuff.”

  Brandt took a deep breath and passed his hand across his mouth. “What’s on your mind, Joe?”

  “I just want to know if you’re going to let him see this case through to the end.”

  He smiled, just barely. “I can’t afford the loss of manpower just now.”

  “Thanks. Did you arrange with the sheriff to set up tails for us?”

  “They’re waiting in the parking lot. I’ll tell them who to follow.”

  “Thanks. See you later.” I crossed the hallway to Support Services. Kunkle was laboring over his typewriter. I knocked on the open door. “Report?”

  He looked up at me, his expression as sour as ever. “It’s not my resignation, if that’s what you were hoping.”

  “Well, whatever it is, I’ve got something else for you to do.” I put the subpoenas on his desk. “DEA just gave us three doctors who might have treated the guy with the hump. Brandt took Goldbaum; which one do you want?”

  He glanced at the papers and leaned back in his chair. “Why me?”

  “Why not?”

  “You’re doing me a favor, right? Keeping me involved, showing what a good leader of men you are?”

  I hesitated. There was always the option of crowning him with his typewriter. Instead I answered, “Yes.”

  He stared at me for a long minute and then glanced again at the subpoenas. “I’ll take Morris.”

  That left Duquesne—he had only one patient we were interested in. I headed out back to one of the unmarked cars. The lower the profile, the better.

  Dr. Duquesne worked on the top floor of the Professional Building adjacent to the hospital. It was a brick structure, cheaply made and minimally maintained, with a screeching front door, threadbare carpeting and the general look of a motel on the downward slide. There were already two people in his small, paneled waiting room, despite the early hour. I went to the nurse’s window and showed her my badge.

  “Is he available?”

  “You’ll have to make an appointment.”

  “I’m not here for treatment. This
is official.”

  “Will it take long?”

  I closed my eyes for a moment. “I don’t know.”

  She looked unsure. “I’ve only seen this happen on TV. Am I supposed to interrupt him now and tell him you’re here?”

  “Is he with a patient?”

  “Yes.”

  “Is he almost finished or just starting?”

  “He’s almost finished.”

  “Then I’ll wait here, and you can tell him about me between patients. How’s that sound?”

  She gave me a radiant smile. “That’s wonderful. That’s what I’ll do. Won’t you have a seat?”

  I had a seat. It was shaped for a body other than mine. After five minutes of staring at the paneling, the two pictures of ducks on the wall, the coffee table laden with ancient magazines, and my two far more ancient co-waiters, I was rewarded by the appearance of a small boy and his mother and a tall, white-haired man in a lab coat. The man crooked his finger at me and faded back to the interior hallway. I went after him.

  “What can I do for you?” His tone was meticulously neutral.

  “I need to ask you about a prescription you wrote three years ago for a patient named Steven Cioffi.”

  “I’m not sure I can tell you that.”

  I gave him the duces tecum, which he read slowly and carefully.

  “He’s a murder suspect,” I added when he’d finished.

  Duquesne pursed his lips and looked at the floor. “Maybe I ought to call my lawyer.”

  “You can. It’ll probably mean tying all this up long enough for Cioffi to get away, assuming he’s our man. If he’s not the one we’re after, he’ll never know about it.”

  Duquesne hesitated a little longer, tapping the subpoena against his thumbnail. Finally, he cracked open the door to the receptionist’s office. “Lisa, get me the file on Steven Cioffi.”

  His office was small and compulsively neat, which I suppose is a good sign in a specialist. I sat in one chair; he sat in the other. His desk lay between us like a dock.

  “So, who is this man suspected of killing?”

  “Kimberly Harris.”