Hanging Time awm-2
Page 15
“This is the problem with my profession,” Jason said gently. “I have to go by clock time. People don’t live by clock time.”
“I need to see you again. Can I come on Monday?” Milicia leaned forward for a tiny instant, as if to show her cleavage, then sat back.
Jason shook his head. Monday was Labor Day. He’d still be in California. “Next week is bad for me. How about the week after?”
“What? You don’t have an hour in the whole week for me?” She looked appalled at the insult, crushed. How could this be?
“I’ll be out of town.” He opened his book. “I can see you Tuesday of the following week. Three o’clock.”
Her face crumpled, then reddened with fury. “I hope for your sake it won’t be too late.”
She rose in a single motion and strode out of the office, her new skirt swinging back and forth across the tops of her knees. Jason didn’t want the session to end this way, but she gave him no other option. He had been trained not to apologize or explain, especially with manipulative and controlling people who had problems accepting limits. He knew Milicia was deeply angry at him, but there was nothing appropriate he could do about it. His patients were either in love with him or in hate with him all the time. It was an occupational hazard. Their love and their fury had mostly to do with them. He was never the principal actor, only the stand-in for others who weren’t there.
He heard the door slam, and took a moment to write up his notes on the session. His diagnosis of the situation and the subject was still deferred.
29
After weeks of relentless summer heat, the rains finally came on the worst possible day of the year, Saturday of Labor Day weekend. Rachel Stark thought everyone who had fled the city the day before had to be miserable now. Rachel could picture the couple who’d invited her for the weekend: sitting in their cramped, moldy house, drinking too much, playing board games, and quarreling ever more bitterly as the hours went by. She was glad she hadn’t asked Ari for Saturday off, after all. Sitting inside at the beach would not have been as much fun as watching rain batter Second Avenue from the cozy safety of European Imports, where she had been working for more than three years and was very happy. Everything about the tiny store suited her. It was a relaxed place just this side of shabby, neither trendy nor uptight. Second Avenue in the Fifties was like that. Restaurants that tried to be Irish or English pubs lined the street, dishing out middling to awful food in underlit, dreary settings. The occasional little store was nestled between them in unrenovated buildings. The new office towers all had Gaps and Strawberrys and Benettons and Banana Republics in their huge downstairs spaces.
Rachel much preferred her funky environment, where there wasn’t so much customer traffic and glass, and she didn’t have to live in a fishbowl. At European Imports the clothes were well constructed and stylish, and she enjoyed being the only salesperson. Sometimes business was slow. She didn’t mind that either. She had a favorite place behind the curtain that separated the display window from the selling space. Back in the corner there was a carpeted step where she sat when things were quiet. From there she could see the street through a gap in the fabric without being seen from outside.
Today she had spent many hours watching the water sheet down at impossible angles, driven, so the radio said, by forty- and fifty-mile-an-hour winds. At times during the day the storm had been so ferocious that people were dragged along by their umbrellas, shoved right out into the traffic or slammed into the sides of buildings. By late afternoon the tempest had worked itself up to such a wild frenzy, it almost looked like the second flood that would end the world.
At every corner the gutters had overflowed into an impassable lake. The awning of the chandelier shop across the street had ripped open and begun flapping in the wind. Three broken and twisted umbrellas, as well as a lot of other loose garbage, had caught in the drain in front of the Korean market. The workers were very conscientious there. Rachel waited for someone to venture out to clear it, but the weather was so bad, no one did.
Since early morning the plastic sides of the Korean market had been rolled down to protect the flowers and produce. Eventually the unpainted wood stands were cleared of their decorative displays of fruits and vegetables. Now the stands were all barricaded up in front of the window.
At European Imports, only one customer had been in the store since noon, and Rachel suspected the tall, red-haired woman in the silver raincoat had come in only to get out of the rain. She hadn’t said a single thing, not hello or good-bye, or thank you, hadn’t acknowledged Rachel at all. Rachel was a small, unassuming person whose most fervent wish as a child had been to grow to a normal size. It hadn’t happened. At four foot ten and a half inches, she couldn’t reach the overhead bars on the bus. Her feet didn’t touch the floor when she sat down in most chairs. Worst of all, at thirty-two she still looked like a child, and even in the store where she worked she was often ignored.
Today, after fifteen minutes of desultory pretense at working the racks, the woman in the silver raincoat left without buying a thing. All afternoon Rachel considered closing up and going home. For some reason she didn’t. She sat listening to the radio, happy to be surrounded by racks of lovely colorful clothes, even the smallest of which were too big for her. After five, only the deluge kept her there. She hated getting wet.
At two minutes to seven the rain was beginning to lessen, and Rachel had just started her routine of closing up. The front door was locked. She went into the tiny, crummy bathroom to pee, was just flushing the toilet when she heard the front doorbell ring. She took a second to wash her hands. Now the person outside was banging on the door as well as ringing the bell.
Rachel came out of the bathroom. It was the woman in the silver raincoat. The hood was up as before, but now the woman had a bag over her shoulder. Rachel did a double take as she realized there was something alive in it. A curly apricot head popped out and then two tiny paws. It was a poodle with winking black eyes and a pink tongue. In spite of the awning over the doorway, it was clear to Rachel that the dog was getting wet. She hurried to open the door.
“You’re lucky,” she said, letting the woman in. “I was just closing for the weekend.”
Instantly the woman filled the space. She swirled around to survey the scene, her voluminous raincoat spraying droplets of warm summer rain in all directions. She was taller than Rachel remembered, but to Rachel everyone was tall. Certain kinds of men picked her up without warning, treating her like a toy, a doll, and she felt so humiliated with her feet dangling off the floor, there was nothing she could do to recover her dignity. Height was never off her mind. Unconsciously, she stepped back from the tall stranger.
“Was there something special you wanted to see?” Rachel stared at the dog. It was the friendliest thing she’d ever seen, seemed to be struggling to get out of the bag and leap at her. The dog was tiny, just like her. She reached out to touch it.
“Don’t touch the dog,” the woman said angrily.
Rachel stepped back even farther, shocked by the first words her customer uttered. The woman’s voice had an edge, its tone jagged and harsh, as if she weren’t used to speaking. An inexplicable undertone of uncontained fury in the voice caused Rachel’s hair to rise on the back of her neck. She shivered. Prickles of fear shot down her arms and spine.
Something about the woman wasn’t right. Rachel couldn’t have described exactly what it was. She was dressed appropriately, didn’t look crazy the way the street people did, with their several layers of clothes on the hottest days, filthy hair and faces, odd gestures and gaits. Rachel didn’t open the door for people like that.
The front door had shut with a click. The woman towered over her. Now Rachel could see that there was something funny about her eyes. They were green eyes—cat’s eyes, cold, furious. The woman was enraged, and Rachel hadn’t done anything, didn’t understand what was wrong.
“We’re closed,” she said timorously, regretting her impulse to spare
the dog.
“You opened the door. You’re open. I want to try something on. Where’s the dressing room?”
Rachel’s eyes shifted quickly to the room opposite the toilet, then back to the woman.
“I’m, uh, late,” Rachel said. “We open at nine on Tuesday.” She had a bad feeling, really bad. The woman towering over her with the poodle in a bag didn’t look like a thief, couldn’t be a rapist. Yet, Rachel was suddenly afraid. She wanted her out.
“No. Tuesday’s too late. I’m getting on a plane. I need it now.”
The dog started to bark, little sharp cries, almost like a baby. The announcer on the radio said it was nine minutes past seven.
“It’s too late. I’m sorry, you’ll have to come back.”
“Shh, baby.” The woman put the bag down and let the dog out.
Immediately it began to run around, sniffing at everything. It ran over to Rachel and jumped up on her. Rachel crouched down to pat it.
“Don’t touch my dog.” The woman was shouting at her. “I told you, don’t touch my dog. Are you crazy? Are you deaf?”
As Rachel backed away in horror, the woman grabbed her shoulders and started to shake her. Rachel screamed as the storm outside picked up and a bolt of lightning flashed. Screamed again.
“Don’t—oh, God, don’t hurt me … don’t!” Rachel’s terror pierced the air of the tiny shop. Anguished, panicked, humiliated once again by her small size, she screamed, but in the storm no one could hear her.
The woman pushed her in the back, into the tiny dressing room hardly big enough for one. There was no space to move. Rachel kicked out shrieking as the woman hit her head against the mirror once, twice, three times. The little dog ran around, circling their feet in a frenzy. Rachel kicked again as the hands closed around her neck. She felt a sharp pain on her ankle before she blacked out. Her last conscious thought was that the dog had bitten her.
30
There was surveillance on Albert Block when April called him on Thursday with the PD’s request for a blood test. Word was he hadn’t left his apartment since his questioning at the precinct. He picked up the phone on the first ring. April told him who she was and what she wanted. His amazement at the request further convinced her that he had not done Maggie Wheeler.
“Blood? Was there blood?” he asked on the phone, clearly astounded. “Did I draw blood?”
Like they’d been in a duel or something. April didn’t reply for a second and let his panic come pouring out of the receiver. Albert Block was in way over his head.
“What do you need my blood for?” He couldn’t figure it out. “Where was blood? I didn’t see any blood.”
And then. “Yeah, maybe I hit her. Oh, I couldn’t have hit her. Did I hit her? But—why do you want my blood? I didn’t bleed. Jesus, what is this—a setup?” he demanded accusingly as if he hadn’t come in himself and confessed.
“No, it’s no setup, Mr. Block,” April told him. “We just need your blood type.”
“What for?” he wanted to know.
There was a long silence. April let him think it over to see if he could come up with any ideas. Why else would they need a blood type? Finally he got an idea.
“Oh, God,” he cried. “Was she raped?”
“He didn’t know,” April told Sanchez when she hung up. “He didn’t know anything.”
She gathered up her stuff, then wasted several hours escorting Block to his blood test. She took a female officer assigned to the case, a woman more muscular than the suspect, name of Goldie, with her to drive. April sat in the back seat with Block, hoping he might tell her something she didn’t already know. But he sat there in his jeans and green lizard boots and didn’t have a thing to say. He had shut down at the prospect of the needle.
It was still August hot. It hadn’t cooled down at all. The windows were rolled down, but the air that blew in gave no relief. Block was trembling all over.
“You all right?” she asked.
“I don’t like needles,” he muttered.
“No one does.”
“Yeah, but I really don’t. I don’t get this at all.”
Goldie stopped the car with a jerk that April wouldn’t forget. This wasn’t the time to tell him Maggie had been pregnant.
“We get out here.”
“I don’t get it,” Block muttered again. “Why the blood test? You can look at me. No cuts or bruises.”
Oh, so now he didn’t want to be the suspect. April shook her head. They already knew he didn’t have any cuts or bruises. Maggie had plenty of bruises, but her nails had been short. She either didn’t have an opportunity to use them, or they were too short to do any good. Still, Block was the wrong size to overpower her. Unless she had been totally out of it, Maggie could have done him some damage.
“You’re not going to tell me, are you?” It was a fact he accepted.
Block didn’t know why the police were doing what they were doing, but even though he was really scared, it didn’t seem to occur to him that he could object. April concluded from his passivity that he must have some sort of problem with authority. Lot of suspects objected to everything, their jailhouse lawyers forcing a new court order at every step of the way to an indictment. Block complied with everything, but he was so nervous, April thought he might wet his pants when the needle hit his vein. Some killer.
In the waiting room of the lab he wrinkled his nose at the smell of the place, the bite of ammonia cleaner with the undercurrent of iron from the metal chairs scattered around and, he insisted, from the faint smell of blood. He was afraid of getting AIDS.
His eyes darted around. “Are we in the morgue?” He was obviously under a lot of stress.
“Nowhere near.”
During his long questioning he had hinted darkly that he had other information about the case. He said it again now.
“I’ve got the stuff.”
“What stuff?” Maggie’s missing clothes? The keys to the store? They were waiting on a worn plastic-covered sofa in the reception area of the lab, surrounded by a lot of people who apparently didn’t believe in soap and water. Block had said he had the stuff before and had come up with nothing. He turned toward the wall, did his usual, and clammed up.
Forty-five minutes went by before he was taken into a treatment room. At one point April saw that tears had formed big puddles in his eyes and threatened to spill out down his cheeks. The man was actually crying. He turned away and dabbed at his cheeks with a checkered handkerchief he dragged out of a pocket.
Later she took him back to his apartment, then returned to the precinct. She was certain little would come of the exercise.
31
It was Friday, the end of a frustrating week. Other than Block, they had no leads on Maggie Wheeler’s killer. April spent the morning dialing numbers in Maggie’s phone book of people who hadn’t answered before. Sanchez and Joyce had disappeared soon after roll call. A tall, thin-lipped, gum-chewing detective in a powder-blue jacket with a department tag proclaiming him Lieutenant Braun, Homicide, was using the phone at Sanchez’s desk. As the hours passed, the surface of Mike’s desk became ever more littered with green gum wrappers.
In between calls the Lieutenant sat there, staring at the ceiling, cracking his gum and ignoring everyone around him. April wondered where the hell Sanchez and Joyce were. She smoldered quietly. She could see where this was leading, and hated feeling left out.
Around midday she could smell Sanchez enter the squad room. His aftershave, or whatever it was, reached out and proclaimed his entrance.
“Ah, lover boy is here,” Aspirante said, loud enough for six detectives and Gina the secretary to hear over four phone conversations and the protests of an extremely well-dressed suspect in the pen who had tried to walk out of Charivari with a lot of stock he hadn’t paid for.
“This is so embarrassing. I didn’t do a thing,” he kept saying. “I don’t know why I’m here. Hey, let me out of here.”
“What’s with him?”
Sanchez tossed a file on April’s desk, cocking his head at Aspirante.
“I think the suspect came on to Sol in the car on the way over. Thing with this guy is he keeps ripping off the expensive stores, and then he tells his friends. And they rip the stores off.” She shrugged. “Sol caught the run.”
The waste of time had pissed Aspirante off. The suspect would be out in a few hours. April didn’t add that Aspirante, like herself, was maybe concerned that Sanchez might be moving up the department ladder on Captain Higgins’s discomfort with Sergeant Joyce.
“Who’s this?” Mike raised a crooked eyebrow at the man addicted to Wrigley’s spearmint who sat at his place.
“Papa bear?” April shrugged. “I thought you knew.”
“Not me. I’ve been in the field all morning. Look at this.”
April picked up the file he’d put on her desk without looking at him. She didn’t want him to read in her face the fact that Dr. George Dong had called her the night before. Now she had a date with a guy who wasn’t in the department and just happened to be Chinese. She wasn’t exactly sure how she felt about it, but she was certain she didn’t want Sanchez interfering.
After she’d gotten home, she had put aside her anxiety about Maggie Wheeler and started preparing her notes to study for her Sergeant’s exam. Tonight she was working on prioritized items, phone calls, and model responses.
Crime Pattern Bulletin must be read at roll call. Information is crime- and location-specific. Put special detail in area to work problem. Depending on procedures in your department, either implement special detail or recommend it to your Lieutenant or patrol officer. Prepare routing slips.
She was about to write up a few in-basket exercises, when the phone rang.
“Wei,” she said, thinking the caller was Lonely Skinny Dragon Mother on the first floor, too lazy to walk up the stairs.