"Sure."
"I live on Rittenhouse Square-"
"That's right by the church?"
"Yeah. I live on the top floor of the Delaware Cancer So-ciety Building-"
"Where?" she asked, chuckling.
"You can't miss it. Anyway, there's a parking garage in the back. Just drive in. There's two parking spaces with my name on them. And there's a rent-a-cop on duty. He'll call you a cab."
He started to hand her money. She waved it away. "Nice girls don't take cab fare," she said. "Haven't you ever heard of women's lib?"
"This has been one hell of a date, hasn't it?" he said.
"It lends an entirely new meaning to the word memora-ble," Amanda said.
"I'm sorry."
"Don't be an ass," she said, and stretched upward to kiss him.
Whatever her intentions, either to kiss his cheek or, chastely, his lips, it somehow didn't turn out that way. It was not a passionate embrace ending with Amanda semi-swooning in his arms, but when their lips broke contact, there seemed to be some sort of current flowing between them.
"Jesus!" Matt said softly.
She put her hand up and laid it for a moment on his cheek. Then she ran across the street and got in the Porsche.
Matt got in Wohl's Jaguar and drove north to Vine Street, then left to North Broad, and then turned right onto Broad Street. There was not much traffic, and understandably reasoning that he was not going to get ticketed for speeding while driving Inspector Wohl's car to a crime scene, he stepped hard on the gas.
A minute or two later there was the growl of a siren behind him, and he pulled toward the right. An Oldsmobile, its red lights flashing from their concealed position under the grill, raced past him. After a moment he realized that the car be-longed to Chief Inspector Dennis V. Coughlin. He wondered if Denny Coughlin, or Sergeant Tom Lenihan, who was driv-ing, had recognized him or Wohl's car or both.
Just south of Temple University he saw that Captain Pekach was right; he would have no trouble finding Colombia and Clarion. There were two RPCs, warning lights flashing, on Broad Street and Colombia, and two uniformed cops in the street.
When he signaled to turn right, one of them emphatically signaled for him to continue up Broad Street. Matt stopped.
"I'm Payne. Special Operations. I'm to meet Inspector Wohl here."
The cop looked at him doubtfully but waved him on.
Clarion is the second street in from Broad. There was barely room for Matt to make it past all the police cars, marked and unmarked, lining both sides of Colombia. There was a black Cadillac limousine nearly blocking the intersec-tion of Clarion and Colombia. Matt had seen it before. It was the mayoral limousine.
Then he saw two familiar faces, Officer Jesus Martinez and the Highway sergeant who had almost made him piss his pants on the roof of the Penn Services Parking Garage by suggest-ing that the price for moving a fucking muscle would be having his fucking brains blown out, and who had seemed wholly prepared to make good the threat.
They were directing traffic. The sergeant first began-impatiently, even angrily-to gesture for him to turn right, south, on Clarion, and then he apparently recognized Wohl's car, for he signaled him to park it on the sidewalk.
Matt got out of the car and looked around for Wohl. He was standing with Police Commissioner Thaddeus Czernick, Chief Inspector Dennis V. Coughlin, half a dozen uniformed senior supervisors, none of whom looked familiar, two other men in civilian clothing, and His Honor, Mayor Jerry Carlucci.
Twenty feet away, Matt saw Sergeant Tom Lenihan stand-ing with three men Matt supposed were both policemen and probably drivers. He walked over to them.
And then he saw the body. It was in the gutter, facedown, curled up beside a 22nd District RPC. There were a half dozen detectives, or crime-lab technicians, around it, two of them on their hands and knees with powerful, square-bodied searchlights, one of them holding a measuring tape, the oth-ers doing something Matt didn't quite understand.
"Hello, Matt," Tom Lenihan said, offering his hand. "I thought that was you in Wohl's Jag."
"Sergeant," Matt said politely.
"This is Matt Payne, Special Operations-" Lenihan said, beginning the introductions, but he stopped when Mayor Carlucci's angry voice filled the street.
"I don't give a good goddamn if Matt Lowenstein, or any-one else, likes it or not," the mayor said. "The way it's going to be, Tad, is that Special Operations is going to take this job and get whatever sons of bitches shot this poor bastard in cold blood. And you're going to see personally that the De-partment gives Wohl everything he thinks he needs to get the job done. Clear?"
"Yes, sir," Commissioner Czernick said.
"And now, Commissioner, I think that you and I and Chief Coughlin should go express our condolences to Officer Magnella's family, don't you?"
"Yes, sir," Commissioner Czernick and Chief Coughlin said, almost in unison.
The mayor marched toward the small knot of drivers, head-ing for his limousine. He smiled absently, perhaps automat-ically, at them, and then spotted Matt Payne. The expression on his face changed. He walked up to Matt.
"Were you at the Union League tonight?"
"I didn't quite make it there, Mr. Mayor," Matt said.
"Yeah, and I know why," the mayor said. He turned to Commissioner Czernick. "And while I'm at it, Tad, I want you to assign Wohl to get to the bottom of what happened to Detweiler's daughter and that mafioso scumbag DeZego on the roof of the parking garage tonight."
Commissioner Czernick looked as if he were about to speak.
"You don't have anything to say about anyone not going to like that, do you, Commissioner?" the mayor asked icily.
"No, sir," Commissioner Czernick said.
"You hear that, Peter?" the mayor called.
"Yes, sir," Peter Wohl replied.
"Keep up the good work, Payne," the mayor said, then walked quickly to his limousine.
EIGHT
Staff Inspector Peter Wohl walked to where Officer Payne was standing. Matt saw Captain Pekach step out of the shadows and follow him.
"What did the mayor say to you?" Wohl asked.
"He asked me if I'd been at the Union League," Matt replied, "and then he turned and told the Commissioner he wanted us to handle what happened at the Penn Services Parking Garage."
Wohl shook his head.
"I had a strange feeling I should have driven myself up here," Wohl said to Pekach. "Jesus Christ!"
Matt added, chuckling, "And then he told me to keep up the good work."
"I'm beginning to wonder if I can afford you and all your good work, hotshot," Wohl said, and then he saw the look on Matt's face. "Relax. Only kidding."
"You think he might think it over and change his mind?" Captain Pekach asked.
"No. That would mean he made a mistake. We all know the mayor never makes a mistake. Where's Mike?"
"At home."
"And Jason Washington? You know where he is?"
"At the shore. He's got a place outside Atlantic City."
"When's he coming back?"
"Day after tomorrow."
"Get on the radio, Dave. Get word to Mike Sabara to meet me here. And get me a number on Washington. He'll have to come back tomorrow. What about Tony Harris?"
"He's probably at home this time of night."
"Get him over here-now," Wohl ordered. "Have Lucci tell him he and Washington have this job."
"Yes, sir," David Pekach said.
"Where's my car?" Wohl asked Matt.
Matt pointed.
"You might as well go home," Wohl said.
"I don't mind staying," Matt said.
"Go home," Wohl repeated. "I'm going to have enough trouble with Chief Lowenstein the way things are. I don't need his pungent observations about a cop in a tuxedo."
"You're going to stay here?"
"Until Lowenstein shows up and can vent his spleen at me," Wohl said, and then added, "Speaking of the devil..."
E
verybody followed his glance down Colombia Street, where a black, antenna-festooned car was approaching.
"I think that's Mickey O'Hara, Inspector," Pekach said. "He's driving a Buick these days."
"Yeah, so it is," Wohl said. "But if our Mickey is here, can Chief Lowenstein be far behind?'' He looked around the area, then turned to Pekach. "There's enough district cars here. Do we need Sergeant-What's-his-name?-anymore?"
Pekach found what Wohl had seen.
"DeBenedito, Inspector. No."
"Sergeant DeBenedito!" Wohl called.
DeBenedito trotted over.
"Yes, sir?"
"There's no point in you hanging around here, Sergeant," Wohl said. "Take Officer Payne home, and then take it to the barn."
"Yes, sir."
Matt looked at his watch. It was a quarter past one. DeBenedito and Martinez had already worked more than an hour past the end of their shift.
"I can catch the subway, Inspector," he said.
"If the mayor heard that a guy in a dinner jacket got prop-ositioned on the subway, Officer Payne, he would almost cer-tainly give the investigation of that affront to law and order to Special Operations too. Go with the sergeant."
Pekach laughed.
"Good night, Matt," Wohl said. "See you in the morning. Early in the morning."
"Good night, Inspector," Matt said. "Captain."
"Good night, Payne."
Matt got in the back of the Highway RPC.
"Where do you live, Payne?"
"Rittenhouse Square," Officer Jesus Martinez answered for Matt. "In the Delaware Valley Cancer Society Building."
"Yeah, that's right. You guys know each other, don't you?"
Matt knelt on the floor and put his elbows on the top of the front seat.
"What the hell happened here tonight?" he asked as they drove down Colombia to North Broad and then turned left toward downtown.
"A very nice young cop named Joe Magnella got himself shot," DeBenedito said.
"You knew him?" Matt asked.
"He was a second cousin once removed, or a first cousin twice removed, something like that. My mother's sister, Blanche, is married to his uncle. I didn't know him good, but I seen him at weddings and funerals, feast days, like that. Nice kid. Just come back from Veet-Nam. I don't think he was on the job six months. He was about to get married. Son of a bitch!"
"What happened?'' Matt asked softly.
"Nobody seems to know. He was working an RPC out of the 22nd. He didn't call in or anything, from what I hear. There was a call to Police Emergency, saying there was a cop shot on Clarion Street. Fucker didn't give his name, of course. Martinez and I were on Roosevelt Boulevard, not close, but it was a cop, so we went in on it. By the time we got there, the place was crawling with cops, so we found ourselves directing traffic. Anyway, the kid was in the gutter, dead. Shot at least twice. The door to his car was open, but he hadn't taken his gun out or anything. And he hadn't called in to say he was doing anything out of the ordinary. Some son of a bitch who didn't like cops or whatever just shot him."
"Jesus Christ!" Matt said.
"What was that shit going on between the mayor and them other big shots?" Sergeant DeBenedito asked.
"The mayor assigned the investigation to Special Opera-tions," Matt said.
"Can you guys handle something like that? This is a fuck-ing homicide, isn't it? Pure and simple?"
"When we were looking for the Northwest rapist," Matt said, "Inspector Wohl had two Homicide detectives trans-ferred in. The best. Jason Washington and Tony Harris. If anybody can find the man who shot... what was his name... ?"
"Magnella, Joseph Magnella," DeBenedito furnished.
"... Officer Magnella, those two can."
"Washington is that great big black guy?"
"Yeah."
"I seen him around," DeBenedito said. "And I heard about him."
"He's really good," Matt said. "I had the chance to be around him-"
"You're the guy who put down the rapist, ain't you?" DeBenedito asked, and then went on without waiting for an answer. "Martinez told me about that after I put you on the ground in the parking garage. I'm sorry about that. You didn't look like a cop."
"Forget it," Matt said.
"Talk about looking like a cop!" Martinez said. "Did you see the baby-blue pants and the hat on Inspector Wohl? It looked like he was going to play fucking golf or something! Jesus H. Christ!"
"Is he as good as they say he is?" DeBenedito asked, "or does he just have a lot of pull?''
"Both, I'd say," Matt said. His knees hurt. He pushed himself back onto the seat as DeBenedito drove around City Hall and then up Market Street.
The Highway Patrol pulled to the curb on the south side of Rittenhouse Square as a foot-patrol officer made his way down the sidewalk. He looked on curiously as the cop in the passenger seat jumped out and opened the rear door so that a civilian in a tuxedo could get out. (The inside handles on RPCs are often removed so that people put in the back can't get out before they're suppose to.)
"Good night, Hay-zus," Matt said, and raising his voice, called, "Thanks for the ride, Sergeant."
"Stay off parking garage roofs, Payne," Sergeant De-Benedito called back as Jesus Martinez got back in and slammed the door.
"Good morning," Matt said to the foot-patrol cop.
"Yeah," the cop responded, and then he watched as Matt let himself into the Delaware Valley Cancer Society Building. It was a renovated, turn-of-the-century brownstone. Renova-tions for a long-term lease as office space to the Cancer So-ciety had been just about completed when the architect told the owner he had found enough space in what had been the attic to make a small apartment.
Matt had found the apartment through his father's secretary and moved in when he'd gone on the job. A month ago he had learned that his father owned the building.
The elevator ended on the floor below the attic. He got out of the elevator, thinking it was a good thing Amanda had been willing to park his car for him before catching a cab to Merion; he would need his car tomorrow, for sure, and then walked up the narrow flight of stairs to the attic apartment.
The lights were on. He didn't remember leaving them on, but that wasn't at all unusual.
He walked to the fireplace, raised his left leg, and detached the Velcro fasteners that held his ankle holster in place on the inside of his leg and took it off. He took the pistol, a five-shot.38 caliber Smith & Wesson Chief's Special from it. He laid the holster on the fireplace mantel and then wiped off the pistol with a silicone-impregnated cloth.
Jason Washington had told him about doing that; that any-time you touched the metal of a pistol, the body left minute traces of acidic fluid on it. Eventually it would eat away the bluing. Habitually wiping it once a day would preserve the bluing.
He laid the pistol on the mantel and, starting to take off his dinner jacket, turned away from the fireplace.
Amanda Spencer was standing by the elbow-high bookcase that separated the "dining area" from the "kitchen." Both, in Matt's opinion, were too small to be thought of without quotation marks.
"Welcome home," Amanda said.
Matt dismissed the first thought that came to his mind: that Amanda was here because she wanted to make the beast with two backs as wishful-to-the-nth-degree thinking.
"No rent-a-cop downstairs?" he asked. "I should have told you to look in the outer lobby. They can usually be found there, asleep."
"He was there. He let me in," Amanda said.
"I don't understand," Matt said.
"Either do I," she said. "What happened where you went with Peter Wohl?"
"There was a dead cop," Matt said. "A young one. Now that I think about it, I saw him around the academy. Some-body shot him."
"Why?"
"No one seems to know," Matt said. "Somebody called it in, a dead cop in the gutter. When they got there, there he was."
"How terrible."
"He had been to Vietnam. He was about to ge
t married. He was a relative of Sergeant DeBenedito."
"Who?"
"He was at the garage," Matt said. "And then he was at Colombia and Clarion-where the dead cop was. Wohl had him drive me home."
"Oh."
"Amanda, I'll take you out to Merion. But first, would you mind if I made myself a drink?"
W E B Griffin - Badge of Honor 03 - The Victim Page 13