City of the Dead

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City of the Dead Page 28

by Herbert Lieberman


  For a while the two men are silent, listening to each other’s breathing.

  “Good God.” Konig stirs finally out of his stupor, a man waking from sleep. “How’d they catch that?”

  “Like I said. They checked the prints we sent down against those in this Sergeant Browder’s file and they didn’t jibe.”

  “So?”

  “So then they checked them against this Ussery’s and they were the same. Right on the button.”

  “But what made them check this Ussery’s prints?”

  Flynn chuckles again. “Therein lies the tale.”

  Konig puts the guttering flame of the Bunsen burner to his cigar and draws deeply. “Yeah? Tell me.”

  “Well, ’member I told you this Browder guy went over the hill about sixteen months ago?”

  “Right.” Konig puffs deeply at his cigar. “Night before the unit was supposed to ship out to Vietnam.”

  “Right. Well, anyway, the night Browder disappeared so did this Ussery.”

  “Ah.” Konig tilts far back in his chair, his eyes rolling ceilingward through a mist of curling blue smoke. “I see.”

  “Seems Browder and Ussery were close friends.”

  “I see. How close?”

  “Very close, if you get my meanin’.” Flynn snickers. “I get it. Just get on with it, please?”

  “I am, I am—hold your water. Anyway, this Browder and Ussery got to be so buddy-buddy, so goddamned palsy-walsy, it got to be a helluva embarrassment for the other guys. I mean the Airborne don’t like that kind of thing. Not good for their image, if you get my meanin’.”

  “I get it. I get it.”

  “So they decided to separate them. Browder was to be shipped out to ’Nam. Ussery was to stay on at Bragg.”

  “I see,” Konig muses through a loop of curling smoke. “So they decided to bust out together.”

  “Right. Night before the unit shipped, they split. That was sixteen months ago. Right around Christmas of ’72. Haven’t been heard from since.”

  “Who told you all this?”

  “CO down there. A Captain DiLorenzo. ’Member I said this guy was very tight-lipped, cagey—first time I talked to him?”

  “Yeah?”

  “Well, he was this time too. Just gave me the general details. But I could read between the lines.”

  “You could?”

  “Well, I don’t have to be no Sherlock Holmes to know I’m dealin’ with a pair of queens.”

  “You’re brilliant,” says Konig acidly.

  “Beg pardon?”

  “Never mind. They give you any details on this Ussery chap?”

  “Just general stuff. Enlisted in the Army on his eighteenth birthday. Was in less than a year. Make him about twenty years old now. Height, five feet six. Weight, about a hundred and thirty. Little guy.”

  “Sounds about right for Ferde,” Konig mutters half aloud.

  “Ferde? Who’s Ferde?”

  “Never mind. What about Browder? Anything on him?”

  “Same kind of thing. Age, thirty-six. Height, six feet three. Weight, about a hundred and eighty.”

  “Looks like we got him, too.”

  “No kiddin’.” Flynn whistles. “You boys work fast, don’t cha? Well, we won’t know for sure till I get a set of his prints. They’re sendin’ them up from Bragg today.”

  “What about dental records? Medical records? They sending them too?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “You don’t know?” Konig snarls. “What the hell am I supposed to do without records?”

  “I told you this DiLorenzo guy was very cagey. Ordinarily they’d send these records right out. They’re as anxious to clear their books on these things as we are. But this—like I said—is pretty sticky stuff.”

  “Sticky?” Konig nearly shouts. “What the hell’s so sticky about a couple of queens? Grow up, will you.”

  “Well, for Chrissake, if it was your kid mixed up in a stink like that—”

  Lolly’s laughing face flashes before his eyes, and suddenly the old ache, the old grief, are back upon him.

  “—would you want all the goddamned private records made available to a public agency? First they gotta notify the next of kin. Then see if the records can be released.”

  “I see,” Konig murmurs, the great ache, the great tiredness taking hold.

  “Hey,” Flynn snaps into the phone, “you still there?”

  “I’m here.”

  “Oh. Thought you’d hung up.”

  “No—I’m here,” Konig says again.

  Knowing nothing about Lauren Konig and the raw nerve he’d just struck, Flynn pauses, perplexed by the abrupt shift in the Chief’s tone. “You okay?”

  “I’m fine.”

  “You sure?”

  “I’m fine, I said. Just a toothache.”

  “Oh,” Flynn says, still perplexed. “Anyway, this CO, this DiLorenzo guy, knows we need dental and medical records to establish, identities. So he said if you call a Colonel McCormick down there—he’s the chief medic—they’ll try and furnish you with most of the pertinent stuff right over the phone.“This way they get around havin’ to release the records.”

  “Colonel McCormick,” Konig mutters aloud and scribbles on a desk pad, “Med Corps, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. When’s he want me to call?”

  “Today if you can.”

  “Okay.”

  “Soon as I’ve got Browder’s prints checked, I’ll call you.”

  “Fine. Got any more leads?”

  “On what?”

  “On what?” Konig gnashes on his cigar. “What the hell have we been talking about the past quarter-hour?”

  “Oh, that?” Flynn laughs. “Nothin’ really.”

  “What about the Salvation Army guy?”

  “Nothin’. Not a thing on him. Just a couple of dead ends. Listen—gotta run now. Goin’ down to look at some real estate.”

  “Real estate?”

  “An old warehouse. Downtown.”

  “Warehouse? What the ‘hell you want with a warehouse?”

  “Oh, just business speculation.” Flynn chuckles slyly. “You don’t think I’m gonna be a dumb cop all my life, do you?”

  “You’re gonna be walking a beat out in Staten Island if you don’t get on the stick pretty fast,” Konig snarls into the phone. “Now you’ve got the identity of these two fellows. Forget about the goddamned real estate. Find that Salvation Army guy. He’s out there somewhere. You get that bastard for me, Flynn.”

  »46«

  11:45 A.M. VICINITY OF WASHINGTON SQUARE PARK.

  Mouth slung open, lips slack, still numb from Novocaine, Konig plods eastward from the dentist’s office. Already a dull pain has begun to creep back into his jaw where he’d been drilled and chiseled and gouged for the past hour and a half, a temporary cap now fitted to a badly shattered molar. His heavy, slightly lurching footsteps take him eastward now, back to the office, through Washington Square Park.

  Though the torch of sciatica rages up and down his leg, nevertheless he’s chosen to walk rather than take a bus or cab. It is a warm, bright morning, people gliding lazily through the prenoon hour in the park. Already the quotidian lunch-hour spectacle is being staged there. That curious amalgam of park people are slowly taking up their chosen positions—the unconscious players in this daily Village pageant.

  The chess players are already out at the tables. The folk singers and the bongo players. Governesses from cushy town houses out pushing carriages. Septuagenarians drowsing on benches. Miscegenate lovers doing their thing in the grass. The resident winos stumbling and lurching. The young panhandlers, sullen, vaguely menacing. Secretaries with bag lunches, cartons of milk. The bearded young students around the fountain, posed in carefully studies disarray, copies of Sartre, Kierkegaard, Marcus Garvey conspicuously displayed.

  Konig wanders through this bazaar trying to forget himself in it, lose himself in the spectacle there. Anything rather than return to the
office with all its attendant grief. There wait the daily complement of battered and slaughtered, the endless protocols to be written, phone calls to be answered, intriguing colleagues, clamoring reporters buzzing all about the place, the Mayor’s mounting wrath fanned by a press bent on conjuring up the requisite media event. And then, of course, Lolly. Perhaps a phone call awaits him) a message from Haggard. He must get back.

  He moves out through the park, going east on 4th Street toward the river, his lagging steps leading him inexorably through those very ghettos he somehow associates with his lost child.

  The street is a feast of sights and smells, an intaglio of ethnic mix, layers of diverse, antipathetic cultures. It throbs with a kind of vitality, and amid it all a distinct air of imminent violence. Always, he walks these streets with,, a sense that suddenly she will be there.

  “Daddy, can we—”

  “Not now, honey. I’m busy.”

  He turns. A small girl on skates rolls past him on the pavement, chasing after the sauntering figure of her father up ahead. On a street corner he passes a man in black tights, black cutaway coat, a top hat, commedia dell’arte face of white grease paint, red swirling Cupid lips, black pencil-line eyebrows and lashes limned sharply against the white. A small rhesus monkey in a red velvet jacket clings wretchedly to his shoulder, and the man wears a placard on his chest that reads: “HELP ME TO HELP THE TINY CHILDREN.” He does not move. He does not speak. His expression is disquietingly blank. He holds a tambourine out straight-armed before him, and when someone passes he jingles it with a rather quick, peremptory motion. The physique under the black tights ripples with a sleek, powerful musculature. There is something profoundly unnerving in the clown figure—its white expressionless mask; its blank, curiously unseeing eyes; its sudden, monitory movements. Konig passes quickly on, with the sound of the tambourine jingling faintly behind him.

  Somewhere around Tompkins Square, he pauses to rest momentarily on a bench. Sitting there are more people, jackets off, shirt-sleeved, pale, winter-worn faces thrust upward at the bright, benevolent April sun. The young are lolling on the grass. Hero sandwiches, guitars, Orange Juliuses. On the ground beside his bench a young girl with dazed eyes plays a reed pipe—no more than a toy, really. She plays for no one. Not even for herself. Indeed, she seems scarcely aware of where she is or what she is doing. The tune she plays is aimless and a little mournful. For a moment Konig thinks of Heather Harwell, nee Molly Sully, the small pretty face with the avid eyes, the pathetic little packet of picture postcards concealing pornographic views of herself.

  The ache in his jaw grows sharper as the Novocaine wears off. He rises stiffly, and in that moment a young girl passes. He sees her fleetingly in profile, a woozy specter, not so much a person as a presence, an aura of something sharply, achingly familiar. Suddenly his heart bounds in his chest and he lurches out after her, following the back of her head, some fifty feet ahead.

  She is a young girl, late teens to early twenties. The configuration of back and head acutely familiar. That stride, hurried but aimless, he has seen before. That certain slouch, not slovenly, but dispirited—the sad slump of shoulders. Even from the back, he can intuit a certain prettiness.

  She’s no more than a few paces ahead now, easily overtaken. Still, he hangs back, without any intention of ever closing the gap. Knowing this illusion, having experienced it many times before, he wants only to linger in its wake, savoring it a while. For the time being, it is Lolly up there walking in the jacket and paint-spattered jeans. Must be a painter, he reasons, the illusion growing sharper in his drugged, slightly disoriented mind. “Oh, Lolly—Lolly.”

  He follows the figure through a narrow street to a luncheonette, loitering outside while she has a cup of coffee and scans a magazine. Then she’s outside and once again he’s following her, north, up Avenue B.

  . Quite a picture he makes, this untidy, fitful-looking man with the tousled hair, the tie askew, the soiled raincoat open, flying behind him. The girl goes into a small grocery : store on 12th Street while once again he hovers outside in the doorway of a shoe repair shop with its door open to the balmy spring day. Inside, two diminutive Italian cobblers bark back and forth at each other over the repetitive banging of a compressor.

  Out she comes again, this time with a small bag of groceries. He waits for her to move up the street, then moves out directly behind her. After twenty or so paces, she stops short, glances into the window of a small Japanese gift shop featuring incense and cheap bric-a-brac. He stops short too, botches his attempt to make it appear casual, and in that moment she darts a backward glance at him, then starts quickly north again.

  In the instant of that backward glance, she’d turned her face to him. But so ephemeral was the impression that the features remain only a blur in his mind. Still, he fancies now that in that fleeting second when their eyes met, he detected a familiar frown—Lolly’s frown—and that was Lolly’s look of mild displeasure.

  On she goes, north to 14th Street, west for a few blocks along 14th, then north again on First Avenue, he trailing behind, trying not to appear conspicuous. He feels a vague sense of loathing in himself for this furtive lunatic indulgence. It’s not Lolly. He knows that. That’s perfectly clear. Turn off, he tells himself. Go back. Go back. Back to the office. Needed there. Things to do. Questions to answer. Why this madness? Still, that is the back of Lolly’s head up there. He holds his breath lest the vision pass.

  Somewhere near 16th Street the girls halts and waves at someone across the street. He halts too, turning frantically to gaze into the window of a hardware store. In the next moment a young man in jeans and navy turtleneck crosses the street and joins her. He’s a big, burly youth; like the girl, in his early twenties.

  Konig fumbles about, stalling there in front of the window, his eyes riveted madly to power saws, claw hammers, gallon cans of Dutch Boy and Sapolin. They are only about fifty feet up ahead of him now, and without having to look, he knows they’re both staring back at him and laughing.

  He flushes, hot and mortified at the idiocy of his situation. He wants desperately to bolt, to get away from there fast. But he can’t move now without incriminating himself. Suddenly the girl is laughing louder. It’s a rather high, shrill laugh, with a spiteful edge to it. The sound of it compels him to turn and gaze at her. Instead of Lolly’s quiet, contemplative prettiness, he is staring now at a rather gaudy, pinched face twisted into harpy indignation.

  “What the hell you want?” she screams. “What the hell you looking at?”

  He gapes, paralyzed, unable to reply. But she’s still screaming. “Beat it, creep. Fucking old creep.” Suddenly she whips open her jacket and thrusts jutting breasts out toward him. Howls of laughter from the boy. People passing by stop to stare.

  Flushed with shame, he wheels quickly and bolts, limping, out into the heavily trafficked avenue. Horns blow. Tires squeal. Cabdrivers shout oaths from quickly rolled down windows. But behind him the shrill cries, the gales of laughter, still ring in his ears. “Creep. Fucking creep.” Feeling soiled, like a molester caught red-handed at his vile work, he reaches the other side of the avenue, mortified at the sight of gaping faces staring at him—nasty smirks, frowns of disgust, glares of loathing, outraged self-righteousness, and he fleeing the awful place, the girl’s cries still ringing on the air.

  “Creep... creep... creep.”

  »47«

  A shaft of sunlight streaming through a barred window. The floor beneath it strewn with rubble. The sound of water dripping somewhere, and, all about, the damp, rather moldy odor of a building long shut up.

  12:00 NOON. THE OLD SALVATION ARMY SHELTER, SOUTH STREET.

  Sergeant Edward Flynn wanders through a labyrinth of empty rooms, the slow but regular clicking of his footsteps ringing upward through the four stories of dusty halls and furniture-crammed corridors above him. The building is an old one, built sometime in the final decades of the last century. Four stories. Red brick. Old pipes, festooned wit
h cobwebs, traveling the length of the ceilings. Joists exposed. Paint peeling down the walls.

  Beyond the dust-blown iron grating of a window, Flynn can see a jagged sprawl of skyline, a broad brown swatch of river, people rushing headlong about their business. Here, on the first floor, it is quite easy to hear the din of traffic, gulls shrieking and wheeling above the water, the great clanking sound of steamships, tied up in berths, being off-loaded onto the barnacle-encrusted piers all along the Lower East Side waterfront.

  Flynn is standing now in what was once a recreation room. Broken furniture, one piece atop another, is stacked all along the walls. Here is a large, ancient console-model television, its wires disconnected, innards eviscerated and pillaged. There, in the center of the floor, is a Ping-Pong table, net sprung, listing precariously on three legs. Stacks of old magazines are tied up in cords and stashed all along the walls—Life, Look, Collier’s, Saturday Evening Post—publications long-extinct, out of whose faded covers peer glossy portraits of celebrated people, long since dead.

  Flynn’s lagging footsteps take him out into another long corridor. More furniture stacked in the cool, dusty, mote-filled shadows. Steel desks, file cabinets, swivel chairs, water coolers, wastebaskets stored one inside the other.

  Another turn, a twist, and then a long, greenish dining hall veers suddenly into view, rows and aisles of refectory tables, wood benches piled upside down upon them. At the head of the room, serving tables, steam tables, glass display cases, huge aluminum coffee urns, the scene, Flynn imagines, of many a Christmas past. The long lines of derelict and outcast, shaggy and unwashed, shuffling quietly past the steam tables, cup and plate outstretched. A bit of turkey and cider, a slice of mince pie, some warmth and companionship, a brief furlough from the cold, mean streets.

  Flynn moves on slowly, almost dreamily, through the room. It is full of that musty forlorn air of places long deserted and fallen into desuetude. But the hushed gloom of it all is strangely comforting. His footsteps lead him nowhere in particular. What he’s looking for he cannot say.

 

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