Read Ed McBain_87th Precinct 47 Online
Authors: Romance
Tags: #Police Procedural, #Detective and Mystery Stories, #Police, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction, #87th Precinct (Imaginary Place) - Fiction, #Police - Fiction, #87th Precinct (Imaginary Place), #General
Black again, he noticed.
“… breaking into her apartment and killing her …”
Which wouldn’t have been a bad supposition, except that there’d been no signs of forcible entry, something they hadn’t reported
to the media, and something she could not possibly have known unless Michelle had unlocked the door for her and opened it
on a knife.
“Then who?” she asked.
Kling said nothing. Carella said nothing. They both knew when somebody more talented was taking the spot-light.
“Me?” she asked.
They still said nothing.
“Was
I
in Diamondback on Tuesday night at seven-thirty, eight o’clock? Was I on Carter and Stein?” she asked. “All the way uptown?”
They waited. Sometimes, if you waited long enough, they outsmarted themselves.
“Was I up there doing Michelle in her own bed?”
Michelle had been killed in the doorway to her apartment. Nowhere—not in the papers, not on television—had it even been
suggested
that she’d been killed in bed.
“Were you?” Kling asked.
“I was taking a singing lesson,” she said, and smiled. “All the way
downtown.“
“All the way downtown where?” he asked.
“In the Quarter. On Sampson Street,” she said. “My teacher’s name is Aida Renaldi, I’ve been taking from her for four years,
I go every Tuesday night at seven—unless there’s a performance or a rehearsal. On Tuesday, we quit rehearsing at five. I was
downtown at ten to seven. My lesson started at seven and ended at eight. I went directly home afterward. I’ll give you Aida’s
card if you like.”
“Thank you,” Kling said.
She searched in her purse, decided she didn’t have a card after all, and wrote down an address all the way downtown. Carella
had just come from all the way downtown. He did not feel like going all the way downtown again.
“Call her first,” Josie said. “She’s very busy.”
“I will,” he said.
“I didn’t kill Michelle,” Josie said. “In fact, I feel very sorry for her.”
She looked suddenly mournful.
“But at the same time,” she said, “I feel happy for myself.”
Aida Renaldi was delighted that one of the detectives visiting her was Italian She didn’t know that Carella thought of himself
as American, perhaps because he’d been born in the United States and had never been informed otherwise. Aida, on the other
hand, had been born in Milan, Italy, and rightfully considered herself Italian since she was still an Italian citizen here
in the country on a work visa. In fact, she planned to go
back
to Italy as soon as she’d saved enough money to finance an operatic career interrupted by marriage, childbirth and divorce,
not necessarily in that order.
Aida was forty-six years old and she weighed a hundred and eighty-seven pounds, which qualified her as a diva in at least
one respect. Her hair was dyed a midnight black and she was dressed like a Gypsy when Carella and Kling arrived at her studio
later that night. Both detectives figured she had just done a performance of
Carmen.
Instead, she had just given a lesson to a girl who did not know Verdi from Puccini, but who—like Aida—was hefty enough to
entertain operatic aspirations. The girl smiled at Kling on the way out. Carella noticed that a lot of girls smiled at Kling.
He wondered again who Sharyn might be.
During the interview with Aida, the teacher sat at the piano and sang an impromptu aria from
Butterfly,
discoursed mightily on the benefits of knowing both French
and
Italian if one desired to sing opera …
“German no matter too much, eh?” she said.
… told them she far preferred Domingo to Pavarotti, and incidentally confirmed that Josie Beales …
“Nize-a girl …”
… had been there for a singing lesson on Tuesday night between seven and eight o’clock.
“Nize-a voice,” she said.
“So what’s this all about?” Carella asked out of the blue.
This was now a little past ten that night, and they were eating what cops always ate whenever they had a chance, hamburgers
and fries, in a coffee shop on Avery and West, a block from Aida Renaldi’s studio apartment.
“What’s
what
all about?” Kling asked, and bit into a hamburger dripping with ketchup and mustard.
“I always thought we could talk about …”
“We can … ”
“… anything together. I always felt … ”
“So do I … ”
“Like a goddamn older
brother
to you …”
“Yes, me, too, but … ”
“So what’s this about you’re dating a
black
girl and you can’t tell me about her? I mean,
goddamn
it, Bert, what the hell is
that
about, you can’t tell me about a
black
girl you’re dating, you have to tell
Artie
about her, you can
’t
tell
me
about her? What the hell do you think I am, some kind of racist
.
jackass?
What the hell is this, Bert?”
“Wow!” Kling said.
“Yeah, wow,
shit!
” Carella said.
“I just didn’t know how you’d feel,” Kling said.
“Oh, terrific!” Carella said. “Compound the felony, tell me you don’t know how I’d feel about a black-white relationship,
tell me … ”
“I’m sorry.”
“Sure, kid, terrific!”
“I just don’t know how I feel
myself!”
Kling said, and both men looked at each other in startled surprise, and just then the bigot of the universe walked in.
“I’ve been tracking you all over this fuckin city,” Fat Ollie Weeks said, and shoved his way into the booth. “Hey, miss!”
he yelled, and ordered three hamburgers and a side of fries. “My lieutenant says if it turns out Johnny Milton done the girl,
the Eight-Eight definitely wants the homicide collar.”
“So take it,” Carella said. “
If
it turns out that way.”
“Sure. Meanwhile, when Nellie indicts next Tuesday … ”
“If
she indicts.”
“She’ll indict. And by then we’ll have a strong case to back her up.”
“What do you mean?”
“My loot wants me to keep digging.”
“
Forget
it!” Carella snapped.
“What’s wrong with you?” Ollie asked, looking offended. “If Milton done this, you should be
glad
we’re lendin a hand here.”
“No, we’ve got two different agendas here,” Carella said.
“We
want to catch whoever killed Michelle Cassidy. All
you
want to do is nail Milton.”
“That’s one and the same person, pal.”
“We don’t think so.”
“Who
don’t think so? Your lieutenant? Nellie? I was there, remember?
You’re
the only one don’t think so. They’d both be
grateful
if I came up with something makes the case stronger. If I can get people who’ll testify … ”
“What people? What are you talking about?”
“People who knew both Milton and the girl. People who can say … ”
“Ollie, stay away from this! The people who knew them are the people we’re already talking to. If you screw this up …
“Hey, come on, screw it up! What’s the
matter
with you?”
“You hear me, Ollie? Keep out of it. Come on, Bert.”
“Where you going? What’s the matter with you?”
“Enjoy your hamburgers,” Kling said.
Whenever Mark Riganti played a detective, which was often, he prepped for the role by wearing a fake pistol in a shoulder
holster day and night. The gun was weighted to give it heft and it had come from the factory in the same bluish-black color
as a real .38 Smith & Wesson. Riganti had purchased it before toy manufacturers realized that somebody shoving a fake gun
into a shop owner’s face could cause him to wet his pants and open his cash register as easily as a real gun could. This gun
looked
real and it
felt
real and it made Riganti feel like a real cop. Truth was, even without the gun, he’d played so many detectives in his lifetime
that sometimes he felt more like a cop than he did an actor.
Riganti had played a detective in the movie
Fuzz
which had been about policemen in Boston, and he had played a detective in the movie
Without Apparent Motive
which had been about policemen on the French Riviera, and he had played a detective in the movie
Blood Relatives
which had been about policemen in Toronto, and he had played a detective, albeit in Asian disguise, in the movie
High and Low,
which was about policemen in Yokohama. In the play
Romance,
which was about policemen in New York, he played a detective investigating the stabbing of an actress performing in a
play
called
Romance,
go figure it.
A fake
play called
Romance
in
a real
play called
Romance
, where nobody gets to kiss the girl.
At eleven o’clock that night, he was sitting barefooted at his kitchen table, wearing his fake gun in a real leather shoulder
holster, and real faded blue jeans, and a white long-sleeved shirt with the sleeves rolled up, the way detectives everywhere
rolled them up, he supposed. Open on the table before him was his script for
Romance,
which now included several new scenes typed on blue paper by their illustrious playwright and handed to the cast at rehearsal
this afternoon. If anything, the new stuff made the play even worse than it had been. Riganti figured they were all lucky
Michelle had been killed.
This was a shame in one respect, though, since before her death Riganti had considered her a likely prospect for a bedmate
if the play enjoyed a long run. One of the reasons Riganti had become an actor was that you got to meet a lot of good-looking
women and in some plays you got to kiss them and in some instances you got to lay them. Offstage. In
many
instances, in fact. In fact, Riganti was willing to give two-to-one odds that actors in plays got laid more often than detectives
in police stations. Which was neither here nor there. What was here at the moment was this terrible play with its rotten new
scenes Riganti had to memorize before tomorrow’s rehearsal at nine A. M. Usually, Riganti got this or that aspiring young
actress to run lines with him, the better to entice her into the bedroom. But there was no time for fooling around tonight.
Tonight, there was only the drudgery of having to learn all this uninspired crap from Freddie.
THE DETECTIVE
Did you ever once think
you
might get
the part?
THE UNDERSTUDY
No, I didn’t .
THE DETECTIVE
It never occurred to you that if the
actress in the
leading,
role …
Riganti hated speeches with underlined words in them.
THE UNDERSTUDY
Never.
THE DETECTIVE
… got
killed.
…
He also hated
interrupted
speeches. The hardest thing to do onstage was to interrupt another actor and make the interruption seem convincing.
THE UNDERSTUDY
Never, never,
never!
THE DETECTIVE
… then
you
, as her understudy …
THE UNDERSTUDY
How many times do I …
THE DETECTIVE
… might inherit the role?
THE UNDERSTUDY
… have to tell you?
THE DETECTIVE
You as understudy might most
naturally
replace
her?
THE UNDERSTUDY
I never entertained such an
ambit …
A knock sounded on the door.
Startled, Riganti looked first at the locked door and next at the clock on the kitchen wall.
Ten minutes past eleven.
He had been burglarized twice since moving into this apartment eight months ago. Now some son of a bitch was at the door at
ten minutes past eleven.
“Who is it?” he yelled.
“Mr. Riganti?” a voice yelled back.
“Who is it?”
“Police,” the voice said.
Yeah, bullshit, Riganti thought.
He got up from the table, went to the door, and placed his ear to the wood, the way he had done many times before while playing
a cop. Simultaneously, he slipped the fake pistol from its shoulder holster, holding it alongside his free ear, the barrel
pointed up at the ceiling, the way cops did in plays and in movies. He could hear nothing but heavy breathing in the hallway
outside. Another knock sounded on the door, close to where his ear was pressed to it, causing him to jump back a step. His
heart was pounding.
“You hear me in there?” the voice said.
“I hear you. How do I know you’re a cop?”
“Open the door, I’ll show you my shield.”
Shield. That was a good sign. Riganti had been in many plays and movies where you could tell a fake cop because he called
his shield abadge. Only civilians called a police shield a badge. Riganti turned the thumb bolt, made sure the night chain
was in place, and opened the door a crack. He was looking out at a very fat man holding up a gold-and-blue-enameled detective’s
shield.
“Detective Oliver Weeks,” the man said, “Eighty-eighth Detective Squad. I’m investigating the murder of Michelle Cassidy,
would you please open the door?”
“Let me see your ID card,” Riganti said.
The fat man made an exasperated sound, and then took out his wallet and fished through it for a laminated card which he held
up to the crack in the door. The seal of the city’s police department was on the card, and so was a color photograph that
looked very much like the person holding up the card, and there was also the name he’d just given Riganti, typed across the
face of the card, DETECTIVE/FIRST GRADE OLIVER WEEKS, with a matching signature below it.
Riganti figured the guy was really a detective.
He took off the night chain, and opened the door wide, forgetting that the fake pistol was in his right hand and not back
in its holster. Ollie saw the gun and immediately reached for his own very real pistol in a clamshell holster on his right
hip. Riganti realized at once what was happening. He yelled, “It’s fake, I’m an actor, for Christ’s sake I’m an
actor!
” Ollie remembered that the man he was here to see was, in fact, an actor. But he’d been a cop for too long a time now, so
he immediately barked, “Drop the gun!” which Riganti was only too tickled to do. Ollie kicked it across the kitchen floor.