by John Lutz
Dead as Cold Cat.
That whole thing was Edie’s fault. Nobody should ever trust that kind of bitch. Knee High knew now, when it was too late, that he’d made a horrible mistake. But damn! she was fine-looking that day she’d come to him and lifted her blouse, gave him a wide smile, and asked if he’d help her with the clasp on her brassiere. When she’d turned around, he saw her brassiere was fastened and told her so. She said she wanted him to help her unfasten it, then leaned back against him and kind of rubbed herself against him, rotating that tight little rump.
That had been it for Knee High. Whew! Woman like that…
The intercom buzzed, jolting Knee High out of his thoughts.
He went over and pressed the button, asked who was downstairs.
“Great Wall,” came the answer. Not the doorman, or the cop who was pretending to be the doorman, but a familiar voice. Hispanic guy.
Knee High buzzed him into the building.
In less than half a minute there was a knock on the door. Egg foo yung on his mind, Knee High absently reached into his pocket for the three tens as he worked the dead bolt then jingle-jangled the chain lock with his free hand and opened the door.
“You fast tonight,” he said.
And was shot between his widening eyes.
61
“Who found him?” Beam asked.
“Delivery man with takeout from a restaurant a block over,” said the uniform who’d been first on the scene. He was a tall, thin man with a weathered face and the long fingers of a concert pianist. Beam had seen him around; his name was Alfonse something.
“That what’s all over the hall floor?” Beam asked.
“Yes, sir. Chinese.”
That explained the peculiar, pungent scent in the hall that Beam had noticed when he stepped out of the elevator.
That, the aftermath of gunfire, and what was left of the back of Knee High’s head.
Beam had almost stepped on the food mess when he’d first approached the apartment’s open door. His gaze had been fixed on Knee High lying on his back just beyond the doorway, staring up at the ceiling in something like wonderment at having obtained a third round, dark eye just above the bridge of his nose. On his very still chest lay a neatly cut out red cloth letter J.
The crime scene unit had arrived shortly before Beam and was crawling all over the apartment beyond the body. The halls were quiet, guarded now by men and women in blue and made off limits except for tenants. On a small, ornate iron bench halfway to the elevators, next to a brass ashtray and a stalwart looking uniform standing with his arms crossed, sat a glum Hispanic man in his thirties. He had on jeans and a white shirt, worn down Nikes, and was wearing a white baseball cap lettered GW. His arms were heavily tattooed.
“Delivery man?” Beam asked Alfonse.
“Him. Says his name’s Raymond Carerra.”
Beam walked toward the man, who kept his head bowed and refused to acknowledge that anyone was approaching. Beam saw that the tattoos were mostly of snakes and flowers. “Raymond?”
Carerra nodded without looking up at him. Beam thought he appeared a little sick to his stomach. He showed Carerra his shield and introduced himself as police.
“I already told what happened,” Carerra said, with a slight Spanish accent.
“You watch TV, Raymond. You know I need to hear it again.”
“I did nothing but come here as usual and deliver Mr. Knee High’s egg foo yung.”
“From?”
“Great Wall. Place where I work just a block away. Mr. Knee High’s regular order.”
“That all he ever orders, egg foo yung?”
“Always, that’s all. Because ours is very good.”
Beam didn’t know whether Raymond was being a smart ass, so he let it pass. He got out his notepad and pen. “So tell me how it went, Raymond.”
“I came to deliver the food, got off the elevator, walked down the hall to that apartment, and that’s what I found. The door was open, and Mr. Knee High was laying there like that. I was so surprised I dropped my take-out boxes, then I got scared. At first I thought I might be in trouble and figured maybe I should get out fast. Then I remembered I was sent here by the restaurant, and I knew there were cops all over the building, guarding Mr. Knee High. Where was I gonna go?”
Raymond looked at Beam as if he might actually answer his question. Beam shrugged.
“I decided I’d go back downstairs,” Raymond said, “and find a cop, tell him what I saw, then come back up here with him.”
“Who’d you find?”
“That man.” Raymond pointed to Alfonse.
“Was the letter J already on Mr. Knee High’s chest?”
“Yes. Everything was just as it is now. Exactly.”
“There are some ten-dollar bills in his right hand.”
“They were there, to pay for the egg foo yung and my tip. Always the same amount. Mr. Knee High was a big tipper.”
“You call upstairs on the intercom before entering the main lobby?”
“Yes, sir. I said hello to the doorman, too. He told me go ahead and use the intercom instead of calling up himself and announcing me, like they sometimes do.”
Beam was surprised. The doorman was actually an undercover cop.
“Ever seen the doorman before?”
“Sure. Last three nights. Never before that. I been delivering to this building for two years. Doormen here, they come and go. Lots of picky tenants, I guess.”
So he was familiar to the cop-doorman, deemed safe.
Beam pointed toward the mess on the floor down the hall. “I see the egg foo yung that spilled on the carpet when you dropped the order, but what’s in that other, smaller box that didn’t open when it was dropped?
“That’s Mr. Knee High’s fortune cookie,” Raymond said. “I guess maybe I should have delivered that first, by itself.”
Beam decided Raymond was okay, a guy with a sense of humor poking through his apprehension. “Did you see anyone else down in the lobby, somebody who might have overheard what you were doing here, where you were going?”
“There was nobody else in the lobby. And I didn’t say into the intercom where I was going, just that I was here from Great Wall.”
“Was anyone else in the elevator?”
“No.”
“See anyone else in the halls?”
“No one. And I saw no one after I got in the elevator until I saw Mr. Knee High…like he is.”
Beam scribbled, then put away his notepad and clipped his pen back in his pocket.
“You guys aren’t gonna take me in, are you?” Raymond asked.
“Maybe, just to make a statement. Recorded, signed, that kind of thing. To make it official.” See if there are any contradictions.
“You mean I’m gonna have to tell my story again?” Raymond asked.
“No doubt about it.”
“You mind if I borrow your notes?”
Beam smiled. Raymond was tuned in, all right.
So simple, the Justice Killer thought, sitting in the back of the cab speeding through the neon and sodium-lit night. He’d simply waited for the inevitable food delivery from the Chinese restaurant, and made his way to Knee High’s apartment just ahead of the deliveryman. Knee High, hungry for his supper but not his death, had eagerly opened the door and received death.
Justice.
It had gone precisely as planned. The police profiler, who kept telling lies about him on TV and in the newspapers, was proved wrong again. Justice wasn’t coming unraveled. He wasn’t increasingly burdened by the deaths he’d caused-the executions. Why should he be? He was simply setting right what the city let go so very wrong.
Those who’d died by his hand deserved death.
Except for Richard Simms. Cold Cat. Pathetic sociopath who thought he had talent.
Who didn’t deserve to die young.
Damn it! The crime is in the intent! And the intent remains pure.
It’s Beam and his fellow
hunters who are coming unraveled, not me. Surely public opinion must be convincing them they’re wrong and I’m right. Look at the polls. They have only to look at the polls. The people want the city to be a place of peace and order and justice. Justice. The people-The cab struck a series of jolting potholes and for a moment was airborne, landing with a thud that caused the driver’s sun visor to flip down and jarred the Justice Killer’s teeth.
He’d bitten his tongue and almost slid off the worn-smooth back seat.
Christ! Whoever’s responsible for patching these potholes deserves to be shot!
62
Beam noticed movement down the hall and saw three figures approaching. Nell, Looper, da Vinci.
“I caught these two hard at work,” da Vinci said.
When they’d arrived at Knee High’s address, Beam had instructed Nell and Looper to talk to the doorman or any of the other cops stationed in or around the building, and find out if they saw anything suspicious in the time frame of the shooting.
“We came up together in the elevator,” da Vinci explained. Beam figured Knee High’s death had to have hit him hard. And he wouldn’t be feeling kindly toward Beam, who’d talked him into using Knee High as “the cheese.” He looked quietly angry, and frustrated. His usual smooth, tanned complexion was mottled and flushed.
Nell started to speak, but da Vinci held up a hand to quiet her.
“I wanna take a look at this debacle before I hear more about it,” he said.
He walked to the door, careful to avoid the spilled egg foo yung, and looked down at the body, then peered into the apartment where the crime scene unit was working.
“Take-out food?” he asked Beam.
Beam nodded. “Chinese. Neighborhood restaurant. Delivery guy’s over there.” He motioned with his head toward the patient and stricken Raymond, still seated on the bench. “He made his usual delivery to Knee High, only difference was, when he got here the door was open and Knee High was the way you see him.”
“He the one raised the alarm?”
“Yeah. Name’s Raymond Carerra. He went down in the elevator and alerted a uniform. Alfonse, over there.”
“Good man, Alfonse,” da Vinci said. Ignoring Nell and Looper, he looked piercingly at Beam. “This wasn’t supposed to happen, not unless there were two bodies-Knee High’s, and the Justice Killer’s.”
Beam didn’t have an answer, or offer one.
“There’s a god-awful smell in here,” Looper said. “Anybody mind if I smoke a cigarette?”
“Everybody in this city minds,” da Vinci said. “From the mayor on down.”
Nell gave Looper a cautioning look, tempered by a slight smile.
“How do you figure all this?” da Vinci asked Beam, making a swinging motion with his arm to take in the entire crime scene.
“The killer somehow found out Knee High was going to get take-out delivery,” Beam said, “and either beat the delivery here or was already in the building. He knew Knee High was expecting dinner and would open the door because of the call-up on the intercom-then pop. Killer got here to knock on Knee High’s door before the deliveryman. Must’ve used a silencer. Nobody else on this floor, or above or below, heard a gunshot.”
“Looks like he used a thirty-two,” da Vinci said, glancing over at Knee High.
“Could be,” Beam agreed. “Once he shot Knee High, the killer must have moved fast to get away before word of the shooting spread. Probably he was going down on one elevator while the deliveryman was coming up on the other. He’d have no more than a few minutes to get clear of the building.”
“Or get back inside an apartment on this floor, or maybe even one of the other floors.”
“We’re covering that,” Beam said. “I have uniforms making inquiries. I think it’s more likely the killer’s miles away from here by now. That’s been the pattern.”
“You’re probably right,” da Vinci said. He looked at Nell and Looper, who’d been standing quietly by, respecting rank. “Let’s hear what Frick an’ Frack have to say.”
Beam hoped one or the other would have something. So far, Knee High’s death was simply another clean job by the Justice Killer. That he’d managed to outsmart and elude so much security, what amounted to a police trap, would make the bastard that much more of a hero. Odd how the public rooted for the underdog, even if it was a jackal.
“The doorman was one of ours, undercover,” Nell said. “He’d seen Raymond the deliveryman here before, had checked him out, and knew he was genuine, so he told him to use the intercom and go on up with the take-out order.”
“At this point the killer must’ve already been in the building,” da Vinci said. “On his way to do Knee High.”
“Question is,” Beam said, “how did he know Knee High had a delivery coming?”
“Maybe found out at the restaurant,” da Vinci said. “He knew Knee High got take-out from there, so he hung around the place till he heard a delivery was on the way. Got himself in gear and left the restaurant before Raymond.”
“Except that no one entered the building for ten minutes or so before Raymond got here with the food,” Looper said.
“Doorman tell you that?”
“Yeah. Our guy and the other one.”
“Other one?” Beam asked.
“Working at the building across the street. Name’s, believe it or not, Dorchester. He saw Raymond enter the building. Then he saw a uniformed cop leaving the building just after the time Knee High got shot.”
Beam felt a twinge of uneasiness.
A homicide investigation goes where it goes.
“This Dorchester’s a sharp guy,” Looper continued. “He said he’d gotten used to seeing all the cops on the block the last several days and nights. He wouldn’t have thought much of this cop, except at the time he was leaving, most of the other cops he saw were entering the building. Dorchester said cops were flooding in.”
“That would’ve been right after Raymond raised the alarm,” da Vinci said.
Beam looked at Looper. “You mean this cop stuck in Dorchester’s mind just because he was leaving while other cops were going in?”
“No, something else. He said this cop wasn’t dressed quite like the others. He couldn’t put his finger on it at first, then he figured it out. It’s a hot night, and the cop he saw was the only one wearing a jacket with his uniform, a kind of baggy blue or black jacket.”
“One large enough to conceal a gun with a silencer,” da Vinci said.
“Something else Dorchester said was the cop’s uniform cap was a little different. He couldn’t say why-like it didn’t quite fit him right, maybe, was all I could get out of him.”
“But he saw a uniformed cop?” da Vinci asked.
“Definitely,” Looper said. “No doubt in Dorchester’s mind about that.”
“He mention this cop’s description beyond the uniform?”
“Yes, sir. Average size, average weight.”
Da Vinci snorted in disappointment, as if most killers were giants or midgets and they’d caught a bad break.
“That’s it?” Beam asked.
“’Fraid so, sir.”
“Sounds like the cop’s uniform was a costume,” Nell said.
“I sure as hell hope so,” da Vinci said. He looked at Knee High’s body, Knee High with a neat. 32 caliber-size hole in his head, and shook his own head in frustration. “This psycho’s so smooth at what he does, we never seem to get any kind of traction.”
“I wouldn’t say that,” Beam told him. “We know how the Justice Killer managed to sidestep security to get to Knee High, and how he might have blended in to make his getaway. And maybe he also dressed as a cop to get to Cold Cat or some of the others.”
“It’s possible,” da Vinci said. “But we’ve got just one eyeball account from across the street. We’re not even sure he dressed as a cop at all.”
“It’s something, though,” Beam said. “We’ll canvass costume and used clothing stores in the city, find
out who sold or rented a cop uniform during the last several months.”
“What if he’s a real cop?” Nell asked.
“We’ll run through the costume and rental shops before going down that road,” Beam said.
“She’s right, though,” da Vinci said. “It’s a friggin’ appalling possibility, but the Justice Killer might actually be a cop. We have to admit it makes a certain kind of sense. There’s plenty of resentment in the department about the revolving-door nature of the city’s judicial system.”
“Ask Helen if she can think of a serial killer who was also a cop,” Beam suggested.
“Point taken,” da Vinci said.
Nell thought, Ask Helen if there’s ever a first time for everything.
63
“He wants more than ever to be caught,” Helen said.
She was standing near the photo of a discredited former police commissioner who’d displayed no such compulsion. But then, he hadn’t been a mass murderer. Something of a hero, in fact. Justice did have a way of catching up with the most wily.
They were in da Vinci’s office. It was too warm, and there was an unpleasant hint of stale sweat and desperation in the air, the kind of atmosphere Beam usually associated with interrogation rooms. Da Vinci was seated behind his desk. Beam and Nell were in the padded chairs angled toward the desk, Looper was standing near Helen, playing with the button on his shirt pocket that might have held a pack of cigarettes.
“You told us last week he was coming unraveled,” da Vinci said to Helen, “yet he managed to outsmart us and get to Knee High.”
“God rest his little soul,” Nell said sarcastically.
Da Vinci glared at her. “Not friggin’ funny, Nell.”
Nell nodded. Da Vinci was right, even though he was the boss.
“He’ll have to kill again soon,” Helen said. “He’s hooked on it. He’ll need it more and more often.”