Two uniformed officers took a shoulder each and firmly lifted Dorsey, wet and limp, from the yard’s brick floor. Grabbing him by the belt, one officer turned him to face the cinder blocks while his partner forced Dorsey’s hands to the wall and kicked his feet out wide. Each took a turn at frisking him, apparently disappointed when they came up with only a wallet and key ring. Even in his state of near collapse, emotional and physical, Dorsey was sufficiently coherent to critique the officers’ performance. Lazy and in a hurry, he decided; they never checked the small of the back, right along the spine, where a bright guy could dangle a razor blade or even a small flat knife along a thin thread looped around the shirt label. Probably disappointed with the night’s catch. Hoped for more than a scared and bloody and sopping mess.
Again taking Dorsey by the arms, the officers led him across the backyard fences and through the walkway. The street was alive with porch and stoop lights where old men and women watched the flickering red and blue lights of four prowl cars. Stepping out of one of the cars was a burly officer in his mid-fifties, as far as Dorsey could figure, wearing a white cap with a plastic cover and a white uniform blouse. Another officer draped a black slicker over his shoulders. Dorsey recognized the uniform and manner of a precinct inspector. In command at the scene, Dorsey was certain, and politically attuned.
The inspector gave Dorsey a quick look, then examined the wallet handed to him by the officer on Dorsey’s left. He flipped through some cards and passed the wallet back to the officer. “He’s your old man, am I right?” the inspector asked.
“Yeah,” Dorsey said, seizing one of the few moments in which he was glad of Martin Dorsey’s pull.
“Give it to me slow,” the inspector said. “I warn you, no bullshit, or maybe the old man don’t mean shit to me.”
Dorsey gave it to him quick and dirty, a simple chase story. After hearing him out, the inspector stepped away, buttonholed one of the officers, and towed him along. Dorsey trained an ear at the hushed conversation, only able to overhear one phrase, the inspector saying, “No dead bodies this time around, right?” The inspector motioned for two other officers on the scene to join him, listened for a few minutes, and dismissed them to their cars. He then returned and spent a few moments examining Dorsey’s cut.
“That’ll need stitches.” The inspector took a nightstick from one of the officers. “Which is yours?” he asked, indicating the line of parked cars. Dorsey motioned toward the Buick.
The two officers moved Dorsey along, trailing the inspector to the Buick. Approaching the driver’s side of the windshield, the inspector took a firm grip on the baton, his knuckles four inches from the business end. With the index finger of his free hand he sighted a spot directly over the steering wheel, reared back, and jammed the end of the baton into the glass, sending spider webs from the point of contact. He regarded his work, looked satisfied, and walked back to Dorsey, returning the officer’s baton.
“And that,” the inspector said, “is how you came to cut your head. Accidentally.” He instructed the two officers holding Dorsey to get him and his car to the emergency room at Allegheny General, far across town.
“Inspector,” Dorsey called, as one of the officers moved him into the Buick’s front passenger seat. “The guy with the rifle did us both a favor when you think about it. I’m alive, and you’re saved the bother of cleaning up a messy dead body. Go easy on him, okay?”
“Never saw him, never heard anything,” the inspector said. “Not a noise or a word.”
One officer drove the Buick while the other followed in the prowl car. At the hospital they took him directly to an examination room over the protests of the triage nurse. Dorsey’s key ring was slipped into his hip pocket as he was placed on the examination table, and after one of the officers checked him in they both left.
The cut took three butterfly stitches. Flat on his back and looking up at a ceiling light fixture, Dorsey listened to the resident assure him that he was the ER’s best stitchman. “The fingers,” the resident said. “These fingers are very limber. From piano. I play, or used to play, at a couple of local clubs.”
Dorsey considered asking the resident which clubs these were, but his mind was already too deep into the plan he was hatching. It was pulling together, each segment of equal importance. The gun, the knife, the phone call, and the meeting. And the acting job, he reminded himself. Sell it to Damjani. The naked fear, the absolute fear of God. Sell that, sell it hard, or the rest is of no consequence. And it won’t all be acting, this fear, will it?
At a few minutes past ten the next morning, in a light snow that had just begun to fall, Dorsey crossed the intersection of Carson and Twelfth streets, and entered the Iron and Glass Bank. His head ached with tension and the butterfly stitches nipped at his skin, but he managed to keep his composure when the assistant manager, a young man in a gray suit, asked for two forms of identification and a signature sample to check against the one on file. The assistant manager asked Dorsey to remain seated as he went to a file cabinet to check the signature. While he sat, Dorsey cut through the pain and anxiety to admire the bank building itself, classifying it with the Wheel Café. The floors and counters were white marble and the tellers’ windows were framed in copper that gleamed in the light coming through long high windows. And the vault, Dorsey thought: good as any, even without an electronic timer. The way you like it, he told himself, old and maybe just a little older yet.
The assistant manager returned to the desk with a white index card and, while Dorsey watched, compared the signatures. “Will you be taking the contents with you?” The assistant manager asked. “If you’re only interested in viewing the contents, we do have a private office you can use. You won’t be disturbed.”
“There’s no need.” Dorsey absentmindedly ran a finger across his cut, following the contours of the stitching. “I’ll be taking it with me.”
Both men rose and took key rings from their pockets. Dorsey followed the assistant manager into the vault, which was lined from floor to ceiling with numbered boxes; Box 487 was near the ceiling in the far left corner. The assistant manager inserted his and Dorsey’s keys, turned them, and handed the box and his key to Dorsey.
Dorsey set the long thin metal box on a nearby stepstool and flipped open its hinged lid. Inside were three blue flannel bags that had once clothed fifths of Crown Royal. They were gifts from Al when Dorsey had mentioned that he wanted something soft, nonabrasive, in which to store his goods. While the assistant manager stood by, Dorsey took a plastic grocery bag from his pants pocket, shook out its folds, and put the three flannel sacks inside. The manager slipped the safety deposit box back into its perch and inserted the keys, closing both locks. Taking his key back, Dorsey put the bag under his arm and left the bank.
The snowfall began to pick up in intensity, and a stiff wind funneled along the row of cramped storefronts on Carson causing a near white-out. Dorsey hurried along with his chin tucked to his chest against the weather, assuring himself that no one following him could keep him in view. Winter’s early, he thought. Autumn is all done in and so nearly are you. But if you pull this off, you’ll at least last long enough to finish your Christmas shopping.
At Seventeenth Street, Dorsey turned right, walked half a block, and crossed the mouth of the alley where Russie had been killed. It came full circle, he realized: one dead last week and another, Damjani, very soon. And if it doesn’t happen soon, there will be more deaths.
Dorsey covered the rest of the block and knocked firmly at the barroom door, knowing Al never opened before eleven o’clock. He waited a moment, knocked again, and heard Al hustling down from the second floor. Seconds later he heard the deadbolt slide free.
“Sorry, sorry.” Al motioned Dorsey inside and started for the back room. “The apartment, Russie’s place, I was up there. Gettin’ it ready, in case anybody wants to look at it. Not that Russie was anything but army barracks clean, but things need freshenin’ up.”
Heading for the back room with Dorsey in tow, Al stopped for a moment and took a white canvas bank deposit bag from behind the bar. He directed Dorsey to the last of the booths and slipped in across from him, placing the deposit bag on the table.
“How much did it come to after all?” Dorsey asked.
“Three thousand.”
Dorsey worked open the bag and pulled out a wrapped stack of twenties.
“That’s good, real good. You only figured on two.”
“Checked the accounts after we talked,” Al said, sounding distracted. “Kind of surprising to see how well Rose and me been doing. I figured I could pull out three and get it back in tomorrow without much notice.”
Dorsey shoved the wad of bills back into the bag and yanked the cord, cinching it closed. “Thanks, Al. I figure it’ll find its way back to you tomorrow; next day, tops.”
Al ran a hand across his bald head and rubbed at his eyes. “Slept bad last night. Kept Rose up too. First time in years I didn’t drop off soon as my head hit the pillow. This thing, I guess I had to run through it a few more times. Well, maybe more than a few.”
“Don’t like it any more than you.” Dorsey met Al’s eyes and spoke softly. “If it could go otherwise, I’d try it.”
“It’s a bad thing,” Al said, “but it’s not the first time. You ever hear about a guy named Joey Nikita? His real name was Nikowicz, something like that, but everybody called him Nikita. Like the Russian guy.”
“Maybe once,” Dorsey said. “Must’ve been one of the older guys mentioned it. One of the guys you get in here.”
“That sounds about right,” Al said. “Had to be one of the older guys. After all, it happened in ’sixty-one, maybe ’sixty-two. The mill was going good again, just after Kennedy fixed the strike. Anyways, this Nikita, he was a lot like this guy you’re tellin’ me about. He worked at the mill, at J and L, and he thought he was a big mountain man, wore these bib overalls all the time. Maybe he was from West Virginia originally, who knows?”
“What about him?”
“Looked for trouble. All the time.”
“Did he find some?” Dorsey asked.
“More than expected,” Al said, nodding his head. Dorsey picked up the signal. This was solemn truth. “Like most guys,” Al said, “guys like Nikita, he got a hard-on for one particular guy, a little guy named Danny Kelso. One of those real quiet guys, you know the type?”
“I’m followin’ so far.”
“Kelso was at the mill too, and Nikita rode him all shift and then picked it up again afterward at the bar—not here, they drank at one of the places on Carson. Nikita got physical when he was drunk, and one night he started slappin’ Danny around. And Danny was on the light side so he couldn’t put up much of a defense, not right away. So he left, or so Nikita thought. An hour later Nikita is climbing into his car and Danny catches him over the head with a piece of pipe, or maybe a rod of rolled steel. Nobody knows for sure and nobody knows how many times he hit Nikita, but it was a closed casket funeral.”
“How many years did Kelso do?”
“Not a day,” Al said. “Never questioned. Nikita was not popular, so no one who had been in the bar that night could remember anything about him, except he drank quietly and left when he was finished. And the cops, they had little interest in finding the killer. They knew what Nikita was like too.”
“So you’re saying nobody’ll care if all goes well?”
“Well, yeah,” Al said, “but there’s more to it. More than how people felt about Nikita, you have to take a look at Nikita himself. See, and this may sound stupid, but there are guys out there lookin’ for people to kill them. Nikita was one, without a doubt. It had to happen. If not Kelso, somebody else would have done it, sooner or later. Fate, whatever they call it these days. And this sounds like the same thing.”
Dorsey looked away for a moment, staring at the far wall. “Thanks, Al,” he said, turning back to him. “But it’s hard.”
“Like I said, this is a bad thing.” Al reached across the table and put his hand on Dorsey’s. “But I agree, Damjani won’t stop. I’m gonna feel bad for a long while. You’re gonna feel a lot worse. But remember three people. Gretchen, you, and Russie. You and her have to be safe. And Russie, he has to be put to rest.”
Dorsey placed both the deposit bag and the grocery sack on the desktop and slipped a tape into the tape player. As he took the three flannel bags from the sack, Dinah Washington began to sing “September in the Rain.”
Sitting at the desk, his fingers loosened the gold cord of the first bag. The cord came free and, tilting the bag, Dorsey allowed a black-handled switchblade to tumble out onto the blotter. He picked it up, resting it loosely across his palm. With his thumb he moved the release slide near the top, and the spring loader shot five inches of steel blade out of the handle. Dorsey was pleased to see it working despite years of disuse, but couldn’t help but smile and think back to his boyhood. They had all held it to be solemn law that any knife with a blade longer than your palm was illegal. Even then, Dorsey recalled, he had wondered whose palm they had in mind.
Dorsey released the slide and, pointing the blade at the blotter, gently allowed the blade to retract. He worked the slide again, and the blade sprang true. After again retracting the blade, he set the knife aside and took a cartridge box from the second flannel bag. With the box open he counted twelve .32-caliber shells, examining each to be sure it was clean and intact. Satisfied, he placed the box next to the knife and turned his attention to the third bag.
He didn’t lift this one but instead allowed it to sit flat on the blotter as he worked the cord open. Inserting three fingers, he took hold and pulled the bag away, revealing the barrel, cylinder, and trigger loop and finally the hand grip. Dorsey took the gun in his right hand and hefted it, estimating the weight, and recalled the specifications. Meridian Arms break-top revolver, .32 caliber and nickel-plated. The contents of all three bags had been lifted from the sheriff’s evidence property room four years earlier.
“A couple of throwaways” is what Mindes, his last partner, had called them. Dorsey had been saddled with fat sixty-three-year-old Carl Mindes. Because Carl was coasting toward retirement, he and Dorsey were assigned to easy duty, mostly following up on leads developed by other detectives, allowing plenty of down time for Mindes to lecture Dorsey on inside politics and to tell war stories of his thirty years of duty. Around noon one day, as Dorsey was stepping out to grab some lunch and a stretch of peace of mind, Mindes buttonholed him and suggested that they meet at the property room in the courthouse basement.
Dorsey arrived first, never sure of his read on Mindes. The property room attendant, an elderly sheriff’s deputy, peered out through the wire mesh, a quick nod his only acknowledgment of Dorsey’s presence. When Mindes arrived, the attendant opened the security door and ushered them both inside, exchanging greetings with Mindes.
“The box,” Mindes said. “It’s in the back, am I right?” He led Dorsey past shelves of evidence: guns, knives, TV sets, stereo equipment, and a complete set of Norton anthologies.
“Kid in college,” Mindes said, noticing Dorsey’s interest in the paperbacks. “Couldn’t pay for his own books, used his mom’s money for dope maybe, so he followed the kid sitting next to him in class to the bookstore. Once the kid buys his books, our boy kills him to get them. He was ready to compete for good grades, I’d say.”
Near the back wall Mindes stopped and lifted a hatbox from the middle shelf. Looking at the box, Dorsey thought he was about to be presented with Jack Webb’s fedora. Mindes pushed the box into Dorsey’s hands and lifted the lid.
“This is an old practice,” Mindes said, “and a damned good one. You need throwaways, you understand? Every cop, city or county, should have them, but the young ones, the smart shits, they don’t go for this. Some day they may end up wishing they had.”
“These some kind of backup?” Dorsey whispered conspiratorily. “Second gun and a knife, that’s a lot to carry. Really, when you think about it, if I don’t stop a guy by emptying my service revolver into him, the guy deserves to win.”
“Looking at it all wrong is what you’re doing.” Mindes replaced the lid, tapping it firmly in place. “Throwaways, not backup. Say you’re chasing a guy and it’s dark and all of a sudden the guy stops cold and turns on you. His hand goes up, so you figure he’s got a gun and you shoot him first. Dead. But when you search him there’s no gun, maybe a flashlight instead. The way it stands, you surrender your gun, face an internal hearing, a coroner’s inquest, and maybe even a manslaughter charge.”
“A plant,” Dorsey said. “Make the sides look a little more even.”
Mindes smiled, as if proud of a star pupil. “Exactly. These weapons, they’re cold, can’t be traced. Just lost in the shuffle. You put either one in the corpse’s hand, who’s gonna think it wasn’t his? And the worst that can happen to you is a coroner’s inquest that says it was self-defense.”
Dorsey tried to decline the gift, telling Mindes that he had no intention of chasing anyone, day or night, down an alley, let alone pulling his gun. But Mindes was adamant, as if he were giving a gift from father to son. “Some things I can teach you, explain to you,” Mindes said, “and some stuff you gotta take on faith. Listen to an old man for once. Do as I say, please?”
Dorsey accepted the hatbox, and later that same day he leased the safety deposit box to house the weapons, ensuring that he would never be tempted to pull his service revolver. There’ll be no way to hide a mistake, he had told himself, no way to rake the dirt and cover your tracks. Bad judgment and a pulled trigger will mean your ass.
Now, at the desk while the tape cycled through twice, Dorsey painstakingly cleaned and oiled the revolver until the break-top snapped smartly, the chamber, cylinder, and barrel slipping firmly into the firing position. Dinah Washington sang “Manhattan,” inviting someone to “go to Coney and eat baloney on a roll,” as Dorsey pointed the revolver at the television and pulled the trigger, the hammer making a metallic snap and the chambers rolling along for six phantom shots. Satisfied, he opened the break-top and loaded the chambers. From the left-side drawer he took a pair of ear guards stolen from the county firing range years ago and went down the hall to the basement door.
Dorsey flicked on the light, closed the door firmly behind him, and headed down the steps, keeping the revolver muzzle pointed upward. The basement walls were unfinished rock and at the far wall at the front of the house Dorsey had hung an old mattress, bound over double. Nine feet from the wall was an old wooden table left behind by the house’s former owner. Dorsey stood behind the table and placed the ear guards over his ears and worked loose the muscles of his neck and shoulders. Keeping his arm straight and his elbow loose, Dorsey lifted the revolver and sighted. He emptied the chamber into the mattress, and even with the ear guards he felt the six shots echo along four stone walls and become twenty-four blasts. He had hoped for the stone to contain the blasts, and his ears rang with the success of his plan. Massaging his ears, he hurried upstairs and returned to the office, putting the revolver and the ear guards on the desktop and dropping into the swivel.
So, Dorsey dryly concluded, the gun works. And your aim was good enough to hit a queen-sized mattress, which is a significant improvement. But it’s okay because the idea is to be inches from the guy when the gun goes pop. So a gun in working order is all that’s called for. And three thousand dollars strewn across the top of a roll bag loaded with paper wads will look like ten thousand. So you’re all set; only the phone call and the act itself remain. And the call has to sound like the real thing. Like you’re on the ragged edge with the fear of God Almighty in you. Nothing artificial will do; you’ve got to find the fear in you. That seam of ore may be easily mined.
He called directory assistance, area code eight-one-four, for the number. A computer-generated voice repeated the number and Dorsey hung up halfway through the second go round. He dialed again.
“Carl Radovic, please,” Dorsey said, after the call was answered on the fourth ring. He had a moment’s fear that the office was closed and his one sure contact to Damjani was out for the day—the day Gretchen returns.
Over the line, Dorsey heard approaching footsteps bring the curtain up on his act. “This is Carl. Who’s this?”
“Carl,” Dorsey said, “please don’t hang up, this is Dorsey. We need to talk.” Dorsey’s words were pressured, overlapping and running together. “Carl, this is really important.”
“Fuck you want, bastard? Heard you slipped by a couple of times. Felt real bad, wished you woulda died. You’re too lucky.”
Dorsey left his chair and paced in front of the desk holding the phone in his hand. His voice became even more pressured, and he realized it was no act. “Listen to me,” he said, “at least do that. This shit is too much for me. I never bargained for this kind of stuff. Man, I’m just a follower; trailing people and peeking into windows is my line. Believe me, I never meant to mess with you guys. It’s too fuckin’ much.”
“Tough shit,” Radovic said.
“No, no,” Dorsey said. “I have to get to your man, Damjani. I want him off my back and I know he ain’t gonna do it for nothing. I could make it worth your while. Know what I mean?”
There was a tense moment of silence for Dorsey before Radovic replied. “Scared shitless, aren’t you. I like you that way. Maybe things should just stay as they are, with you lookin’ over your shoulder all the time. Make you go fuckin’ nuts.”
“Listen,” Dorsey said. “Don’t tell me the priest looks at things that way. He’s in it to help people, even when it gets a little rough. And I said before, I could make it worth your while. Yours, Damjani’s, even the priest’s.”
“With what?”
“Money,” Dorsey said. “Heard you people could use some. Ten thousand. Damjani has an accomplice-to-murder rap hanging over his head from last week. So make it going-away money. Or give it to the priest and show him what a contribution you’ve made. Do what you want, just get Damjani off my back.”
Radovic laughed. “Want to make a contribution, send in a check. Then we’ll see.”
“I need some assurance from Damjani,” Dorsey said. “And payment is in cash. The guy could keep this shit up even after I sent the money. Look, there’s a bag here on my desk with the whole load inside. In twenties. All I got and all I can raise. Best I can do, now or ever.”
There was another silence on the line. Dorsey could picture the concentration on Radovic’s face as he weighed his options. C’mon, Carl, Dorsey thought. Ten thousand, for Christ’s sake. It’ll make you a hero, make you important. You’ll have the recognition that can get you away from sitting all day in that drafty office. Yeah, you sat on stage with Father Jancek, but that was a crumb you were thrown; the next day it was back in that meat locker of a storefront. C’mon, man, go for it.
“Get the money up here to me,” Radovic said. “Do it right away and I’ll see what I can do for you. I think I can fix it.”
“Carl, c’mon, man,” Dorsey said. “You know Damjani. You know him a hell of a lot better than I do. So you know I got good reason to be worried. The deal is the money for him laying off. The deal is between him and me. I’ll hand over the money to Damjani, and he can say it’s all off. That he’ll get off me.”
“Fuck is this shit?” Radovic screamed and Dorsey feared he had moved too quickly. “Got it in mind to set him up, right?” Radovic said. “He shows and the cops are waiting, right?”
“It’s not that way,” Dorsey said. “You can look at it that way, but that ain’t how it is. I’ll go anywhere to meet the guy; you name the place. Just so it’s him and me, and it’s got to be outdoors so I’ll feel safe. You don’t trust me? Jesus, I’m the one who almost died twice. Why I should trust you? To get this guy off me I’ll go anywhere.”
“What a bullshitter,” Radovic said, laughing. “And you never give up. What a bullshitter.”
The whole deal, Dorsey reminded himself, was to play on the egos of two men, Radovic and Damjani. Radovic, so his stock will go up in Movement Together. And Damjani, so he can get a real charge out of it at your expense. For destroying you. So he can take the money and laugh and call you a pussy. So he can get his psycho rocks off. You’ve got to get to Damjani.
“Carl, I’m under fucking siege here!” Dorsey shouted with a nervous crack to his voice. “You want to pass on this, okay, fine. I guess you got a right. But fuck, man, at least tell Damjani about it. See what he says. I’ll meet the guy anywhere. C’mon, Carl, you have to do that much. You have to.”
Dorsey dropped into the swivel chair and wiped the perspiration from his face with his sleeve. The line was silent. While he listened for Radovic’s response he extended his left arm out straight and checked for tremors; his hand fluttered in midair. Help me get him, Carl. It’ll put you in solid with the priest.
“Let me see what I can do,” Radovic said, sighing. “Stay by the phone while I put something together.”
“I’ll be here.”