Chapter One

A pile of manila folders landed with a thud in her inbox, startling Alice Grady out of a daydream. The cloud of dust they raised sparkled in the afternoon light, filtering in through the dirty windows. She sighed and opened the top folder. She was surprised the other officers hadn’t asked her to wash the windows too. They seemed to think that any act of cleanliness was the purview of women.

She squinted at the chicken scratch on the page in front of her.

“Hey, Piccolo,” she called to the lanky officer just taking his seat across the room. “Where did you learn to write? Mrs. Forest would be very upset if she saw this.”

“Mrs. Forest wouldn’t be the least bit surprised.” Mark Piccolo grinned at her. “She failed me in handwriting if I’m not mistaken.”

“And for good cause.” She’d known Mark since they were in school, tormenting teachers together with their antics. Now he was married to her best friend. It was nice to work with someone every day that she felt so comfortable with. She only wished they’d let her do more of the dirty work in the police department. She’d never particularly liked typing. She squinted at the writing again. “You should type up your own reports.”

“Can’t.” Mark took a quick swig of his coffee. “Got to go back out on patrol in a minute.”

Alice shoved a form into the typewriter. She hit the return bar with perhaps a little too much emphasis as she positioned the paper properly. Another case of shoplifting medicine from the pharmacy. People would do anything to get alcohol now that it couldn’t be bought legally. Prohibition had caused more problems than it had ever solved.

She didn’t have to be typing up reports. She could catch shoplifters as well as Mark or anyone else. But they kept her here, basically chained to her desk, and constantly told her how important her role was to the running of the department. And while she didn’t doubt it was important for paperwork to be filled out and filed properly, she was fairly certain that if everyone did their own, she could get a chance to do real police work.

They thought they were protecting her from the dirty streets. But this was Woodbridge, New Jersey. There was just as good a chance the crime was a runaway cow as it was a petty theft at the pharmacy or Christensen’s Department Store. She could handle either of those cases as easily as Mark. Maybe easier; he was afraid of cows.

They wanted to protect her because of her father. Officer Sean Grady had died eight years ago while on duty, shot during an arrest gone wrong.

The department had done what they could to help the family, hiring Alice, a serious nineteen-year-old, earning pennies doing piecework with her mother, to work in the department. And although two years ago they’d finally promoted her to the position of officer, she still mainly did the typing.

The other officers still thought of her as a little girl, as Grady’s baby. And since she was twenty-seven, she was beginning to despair of ever changing that.

The phone bell jangled, and through the door to his office, she could see the chief grab it. He sat straighter, as if sitting at attention, while he listened to what the caller said. His brows came together, and his lips puckered. Whatever this call was, it was more serious than a lost cow. He hung up the phone and grabbed his hat.

“Come on, Piccolo. There are reports of shots fired by the marina.” He barely paused as he hurried past Mark’s desk.

Alice stood too. Shots fired. That was real police work. Something she could sink her teeth into.

“No, Grady.” Chief Murphy shook his head even as he reached the door. “You stay here. There has to be someone available if there is another call.”

Of course, there had to be. But what would another call be? A fender bender on Main Street? A bored kid throwing rocks at windows? Routine stuff.

She sat back down. She hadn’t really expected to be able to go with them. After all, she was Grady’s baby.

She typed up Piccolo’s report. She could read his handwriting, despite the ribbing she gave him. She’d been reading his chicken scratch for too many years not to be able to decipher it. She pulled the form out of the typewriter and clipped it to the other papers and replaced it in the manila folder. Then she dropped the folder in the “out” box. One done. She stood and stretched and poured herself a cup of coffee.

The phone rang again and Officer Rawlson, who was working the dispatch desk, picked it up.

“Drunk and disorderly at the train station. You want to go get him and bring him in, or should I?” He asked after he replaced the receiver.

“Anything’s better than typing up reports all day.” She put her unfinished coffee on the desk and settled her stiff blue cap over her bobbed hair. She stepped out into the bright afternoon sun and glanced toward the train station, a block away.

It wasn’t hard to spot the problem. Two men were staggering around, poking and pushing at each other, heading toward Bitting’s Coal Depot.

She assessed the situation as she approached the two men. They didn’t seem overly aggressive. They might be shoving each other, but they were also reaching out to steady each other. She’d see if she could gentle them right into the holding tank. She’d done it before.

“Gentlemen.” She put on what she thought of as her schoolmarm voice. “Is there a problem?”

The taller of the two, his straw-colored hair falling into his eyes, stared at her as if trying to focus, then turned to his companion. “Ooh, Patsy, it’s a buttoned skirt. They sent a buttoned skirt for us.”

Alice rolled her eyes. She’d been called worse, but she rather wished they would see her as a police officer first, and a woman second.

The other one resembled nothing less than a leprechaun, if the leprechaun was five foot five and smelled like a fisherman. “We must be considered weak sisters, Snake, if they sent a skirt for us.”

“Well, we’re no goons.” The one called Snake made a move as if to put his arms around her, but she sidestepped him. “How about a kiss?”

“I know what you gentlemen would like.” She ignored the comment about the kiss. If she didn’t, she’d end up thinking half the town was in love with her or get so frustrated she’d never get any work done.

“Do you now?” Patsy wagged his eyebrows at her, and she sighed.

“You’d like a place to sit down. A chance to get off your feet.”

“Oh, a place to sit would be nice. We could sit right here.” Snake started to sit down on the curb. She grabbed his arm.

“Not here.” She kept her voice even and calm. These two were lit brighter than a Christmas tree. “I’ve a better spot. And coffee as well.”

“You know what would be better than a cup of coffee? A spot of gin. You got that for me?” Patsy said with a wistful sigh.

“Afraid not. That’s illegal.”

“Not if it’s medicinal.” Patsy gave a small cough. “Got a cold, I have.”

His nose was red enough to make it look like he had a cold, but Alice was fairly certain it wasn’t illness that caused it.

“Coffee will do nicely, I’m sure.” She already had Snake by one arm. Now she took hold of Patsy’s upper arm as well. “Come along with me, then. We’ll get you all situated. You can put your feet up, have a bit of coffee, and maybe even tell me what you were arguing about just now.”

They smelled of fish and saltwater and sweat as well as whatever alcohol was seeping through their pores.

“Coffee would be nice.” Snake turned and winked. “You taking us home with you, sweet cheeks?”

“Not quite. This is closer.” Home was only a few blocks away, but they certainly didn’t need to know that. When she was little her father would sometimes bring vagrants or drunks to their house to get them sorted out. “It’s more comfortable than that cold jail cell,” he’d say, “and they’re no danger to anyone but themselves. It’s our duty to help out our fellow man.” All of that still held true, but times were different, and she certainly wasn’t running a halfway house for drunks. Sometimes it was all she could do to keep her sister in line.

“And a place to put up my feet. I think I need to sit down.” Snake started to sit right there on the sidewalk, but she jerked on his arm.

“Just a little further, there, Snake.”

“Do I know you?” he asked, a befuddled look in his eye. “I’d remember a lively skirt like you.”

“I’m Officer Grady,” Alice said. “Come on, we’ll make you comfortable.”

“Officer, is it?” Patsy asked. “But you’re a girl. I’m not so drunk that I don’t know that.”

“Yes, Patsy.” Alice sighed. Mark never had to have these conversations. “I’m a girl. And you’re pretty drunk.”

“Aye. That’s so.” He nodded, and then put his free hand up to his head, as if afraid it would fall off.

They reached the town hall. And she led them around to the police department. Rawlson saw her coming and hurried to open the door for her.

“They give you any trouble?”

“None at all. Is their room ready?” She steered them toward the holding cell.

“Fresh linens and all,” Rawlson answered, a hint of a laugh in his voice.

“Not exactly the Ritz.” Snake sniffed and looked around the cell.

“Where’s our coffee?” Patsy asked as Alice locked the door behind them.

“Coming right up,” she promised.

“I like two lumps in mine,” Snake called after her.

“I’ll give you two lumps,” she muttered to herself.

Rawlson laughed out loud. “At least they’re congenial drunks.”

“Oh, yes, charm school graduates to be sure.”

“Fishermen?”

“Smells like it. I’ll give them some coffee before getting their particulars.”

She poured two cups from the percolator they kept going all day long. “Cream?” she called over her shoulder to the men in the cell.

“Black,” Patsy answered.

That was probably best. It would sober him up faster.

“A touch,” Snake said, sounding as if he were in a fancy drawing room, and not a man who smelled of fish and spirits and was locked up in a holding cell.

Alice handed the men their porcelain cups. “Now…” She grabbed a clipboard from her desk. “I’m going to need a little information from you fellows.”

“Anything for a looker like you.” Snake winked at her again.

“Okay, that’s enough of that, Snake.” She tried to keep her tone light but firm. “I’m not susceptible to flattery, and no one is knocking down my door to put me on the next pin-up poster. So let’s cut the crap and get on with it, shall we?”

From his desk, she could hear Rawlson try to stifle another laugh.

She shot him a dirty look. She would tell him he could come book these two, but that would put her back typing reports, and honestly, she’d rather be doing this.

“Now, Snake.” She turned to the taller of the two. “That’s a fascinating name.”

“It’s because I’m tall and skinny like a snake,” he volunteered.

Yes, she would have guessed that.

“Perfectly logical,” she answered. “But I seriously doubt it is what your mother named you.”

“Ah, no. And to this day she still calls me Willie. Won’t call me Snake. Says it’s not a name for a man, that’s what Mrs. Olsen says.”

“So she calls you by your proper name, William Olsen?”

“Aye. Well, she usually calls me Willie. But that’s my true name, that’s for sure.” He took a gulp of his coffee.

“And where do you live, Snake?” She’d rather call him Mr. Olsen, it seemed more respectful, but she figured he’d give her more information if she used the name he preferred.

“My mother lives in Newark.” He sat on the edge of the cot in the cell. “She’s a good woman. She says I don’t visit enough. I should visit her more.” He turned to his friend. “I should visit Mama more, don’t you think?”

“Ah, sure, Snake. Everyone should visit their mama.” The smaller man wrapped his arm around the other’s shoulders, giving him an encouraging squeeze. The two men seemed close to sentimental tears. If they started singing “Mammy” or some such nonsense she would lose it.

She stepped over to her desk for her now-cold cup of coffee and gulped a mouthful before returning to her drunks.

“And where do you live, Snake?”

Snake shrugged off the other man’s arm and sat up a bit straighter. “Patsy and I here, we live in Perth Amboy, when we’re not out on the boat.”

She felt the corners of her mouth twitch up slightly in a smile. Now they were getting somewhere. “Do you have an address?”

“It’s Mrs. Malone’s boarding house we stay at,” Patsy said. “On State Street.”

She’d get the street number later. For now, that was enough.

“And Patrick.” She turned to Patsy, figuring that was a safe bet. “What’s your full name?”

“The name my mama called me when she was angry?”

“Sure.” Alice tapped her pencil on the clip board. Whatever worked. These men were so pickled, she doubted they even realized they were in a cell.

“Patrick Xavier Joseph Finley.”

Patrick Finley it is. She wrote that on her sheet.

“And you say you spend time on a boat?” She was guessing it wasn’t a pleasure boat, but one could never be too sure.

“Our home away from home. Though even those bunks are more comfortable than here. You should do something about the accommodations, miss.”

“I’ll get right on that. What boat is that?”

“That would be the Katinka. Finest scalloping boat there is,” Snake said with pride, puffing out his chest.

“So you’re fishermen, are you?” she asked, filling in one more line on the form in front of her.

“Indeed, we are. And we’ve just gotten in from nearly two weeks at sea. We really should get better accommodations than this.” Patsy looked around disapprovingly.

“I’ll speak to someone about that,” she said briskly. “I have a few more questions for you. What were you arguing about?”

Patsy threw his arm around Snake. “Arguing, you say? There was never no argument between me and Snake here. We are tight as brothers. We love each other as if we came from the same mother.” He paused and considered what he said. Then a grin split his face. “Did you hear that? I made a rhyme. Pretty good, eh?”

Across the room Rawlson laughed, and Alice shot him a dirty look.

“So you weren’t arguing by the train station when I got to you?”

“Oh, that?” Snake pushed Patsy away from him. “Yeah, we were having a knock-down-drag-out.”

“Brothers do that, you know,” Patsy said and casually took a sip of his coffee. “You have any brothers, miss?”

“No,” she answered, “only a sister.”

“Then you might not know. Sisters are different.”

She’d had plenty of fights with her sister, but none of them resulted in having the police called in.

“So it was just a friendly argument between friends?” she asked to be sure.

“That’s all it was, nothing to concern your pretty little head about,” Snake said.

Okay then, that pretty much guaranteed she was going to dig a bit deeper on this one.

“Right, right.” She turned her attention to Patsy. “He wasn’t going after your girl or something?” Taking a stab in the dark here, but sometimes that led to the true information spilling out.

“He ain’t got no girl,” Snake answered with a snort. “Who would look twice at this little Irish runt?”

“I think he’s quite good looking, in a rugged sort of way.” If you liked windburned leprechauns.

“Eh, we weren’t fighting about a girl,” Patsy admitted. “We was fighting about Jiggy.”

Snake punched Patsy in the arm and Alice tried to hide her smile. The truth always comes out.

“And who, or what, is Jiggy?”

“He’s a customer.” Snake’s voice rang of feigned innocence. “That’s all.”

“What does he buy from you?”

Perhaps they weren’t as drunk as they looked, because Snake narrowed his eyes at her.

“Fish. We’re fishermen. We sell fish. Scallops particularly.”

“Right then.” That was a dead end. “And who sold you alcohol?”

“No one sold it to us,” Patsy declared.

“Did you make it yourselves?”

“No.” Snake put one hand to his heart. “That would be illegal. You do know about prohibition, don’t you?”

Oh yes, she knew. It would be so much easier if it were repealed, far from reducing crime, as promised, it had increased it. But as long as it was illegal, she was going to do whatever she could to make sure the rules were followed.

“So where did you get the alcohol?”

“Alcohol? We’ve had nary a drink since we’ve stepped ashore.”

Her eyebrows shot up. They surely knew how pickled they were. Did they really expect her to believe them? “Nothing at all?”

“Nothing except some apple cider.” Patsy held up one hand as if taking a pledge. “It must have turned. That happens sometimes, you know. It’s quite a natural process. Can’t fault a man for drinking cider, if he doesn’t know it’s turned.”

“No, I suppose not.” She clearly wasn’t getting more out of these two. She’d just leave them here until they sobered up. Nothing illegal about drinking, after all, only against making, selling or buying the stuff. However, there were ordinances against drunk and disorderly, and they definitely had been both.

She sat at her desk and typed up her report before turning her attention back to Mark’s reports.

The sun slipped further through the sky and the two men in the holding cell sobered up enough to let them out. Patsy and Snake were digging in their pockets for the cash to pay their fine when the door opened and the Chief and Mark walked in.

Alice looked up from writing out the receipts to see the somber faces of her fellow officers.

“It was bad, then?”

“There’s a man dead.” Chief Murphy took off his hat and ran his hand through his thinning hair.

The men in front of her paled visibly and exchanged nervous glances.

“Who?” Snake asked, his voice cracking on the word.

“Tomas Nagy. Know him?” Murphy looked inquisitively at the two men.

Patsy’s face crumpled, and it looked like he was doing all he could to keep from bursting into tears.

“We work for him.” Snake’s shoulders slumped, and he shook his head slowly back and forth in disbelief. “What happened?”

The chief tossed his hat onto the desk. “He was shot. You say you worked for him?”

“Aye.” Patsy got himself together enough to answer. “He’s the skipper of the Katinka.”

“That’s right, he is. Or was.” Murphy ran his hand over his face, his eyes looked haunted. Murder was not common in their quiet town. He picked his hat back up. “And who are you gentlemen?”

“This is William Olsen and Patrick Finley,” Alice answered. “They’ve been enjoying our hospitality this afternoon.”

Murphy nodded with understanding. “When did you last see Nagy?”

Patsy rubbed his ear as he thought. The raw emotion on the man’s face was heartbreaking.

“Oh, man. We finished unloading around one or two?” He glanced at his companion for confirmation.

“Something like that,” Snake shrugged. “Didn’t quite check the time. Past noon for sure, but the sun was still pretty high.”

“So you unloaded and then what?” Murphy asked.

“Got our pay and headed into town,” Patsy answered. He was starting to get himself together now that the initial shock had passed.

“You didn’t stay around the marina?”

“No, sir. No point. We had no more work to do, and we had our pay.”

Murphy nodded, acknowledging the logic of that.

Snake cleared his throat. “He’s a good man, Tomas. He’s got a family. Little kids. Know who shot him?”

“Not yet,” Murphy answered. “But we will. We will. I want to ask you both a few more questions though, to try to get an idea where Nagy might have been heading after you left him.”

Patsy and Snake nodded and, heads hanging, went through the open door to the chief’s office and sat in the wooden visitor chairs there.

Mark sat back at his desk, looking defeated. It was always hard when they had to deal with a death. Most often it was death due to an accident of some sort. Then there was the time that she tried her best to forget, when a man had jumped to his death right in front of her. Luckily things like that weren’t commonplace. She reached for the next report to type up.

“Grady.” Murphy stood in his office doorway.

“Yes, sir?”

“Go on out to the Nagys’, will you? See what help the family is going to need and arrange for it.”

“Yes, sir.” She stood and put her hat on. This was not exactly crime investigation, but it was helping people, and her father had always said that was the most fulfilling aspect of police work. “Address?”

“Berry Street. Three Twenty-Nine.”

Just around the corner.

“And does she know, sir? About her husband?”

“Not yet.” Murphy shook his head. “You’ll be breaking the news gently, won’t you?”

“Yes, sir.”

She left the office, trying to think how she was going to break the news to the new widow. She knew from experience there wasn’t any good way.