Part Three
CHAPTER NINE
It was their seventh interview of the morning.
The old woman made Hutch think of a canary as she
bounced around the room in a bright yellow housedress, her eyes like two shining
black jewels; her gaze darted from his face, to Starsky's, and back again. It
made Hutch nervous to watch her.
The apartment was unbelievable. From the looks of the
place, she'd started collecting furniture and stuff in about 1900 and never
thrown a single thing away. Hutch shifted a little on the horsehair sofa; it was
almost as uncomfortable as Starsky's couch where he'd slept--fitfully--the night
before. He peered at his notes and tried to make some sense of what he'd
written. Most of it seemed to have something to do with a cop named Flannagan,
whom the old gal had known around 1920 and who had either shot Pretty Boy Floyd
or been shot by him or else retired to Arizona to paint pictures of the Indians.
Starsky, meanwhile, took another bite of the oatmeal
cookie the woman had insisted on serving them. He wondered idly whence came the
myth that all grandmotherly types were good cooks. The cookies were the worst
he'd ever eaten, worse even than the ones Hutch and he had concocted one
Christmas after over-indulging in some 90-proof eggnog.
In fact, the only thing worse than the cookies was
the sticky lemonade she'd poured for them. He took another sip and turned toward
Hutch, raising his brows questioningly. But his partner only shrugged and
started to close his notebook.
The old lady caught the exchange--Hutch doubted
whether she ever missed anything--and she began to backpedal a little
from her earlier vows of ignorance. "Now, boys," she said coyly,
"I'm not saying that I did see anything on the night this poor
officer was killed, mind you that. But if I did and if I should remember
it later . . . ."
"Yes, ma'am?" Hutch said politely,
watching Starsky reach for what had to be his fifth cookie and begin to eat it.
Hutch shuddered inside. Someday, he thought glumly, Starsk's stomach
really will fall out and I bet he'll expect me to pick up the pieces.
"Well, if I did see something and I remember it
later and call the police station, would you both come back?"
Hutch sighed, envisioning another visit to the
claustrophobic apartment and, undoubtedly, more cookies. "Yes, ma'am, we
sure would."
Starsky searched for one of his cards, couldn't find
any and gestured at Hutch. "Give Miss Corby a card," he said.
"Sure thing, Detective Starsky," Hutch said
sourly.
She took the card and studied it carefully.
"Detective Sergeant Kenneth Hutchinson."
''That's me."
"Gracious, you look so young to have such an
important job."
"Uh-huh. Look, ma'am, you can just call the
station and ask for that extension, if you remember anything."
A few minutes later they made their escape and headed
back to the car. Seven interviews and what did they have to show for it?
"Nothing," Hutch said glumly. "All that time, and we end up with
absolutely nothing."
"Not exactly nothing," Starsky said as he
slid behind the wheel.
"Oh?" Hutch thought quickly back over the
interviews, but he couldn't remember a single damned thing of any significance.
"What?"
"I've got a deluxe case of indigestion."
Hutch snorted unsympathetically. "I don't doubt
it."
Starsky started the car. "God, those were the
worst cookies I ever tasted."
"Really?"
"Yeah."
Hutch crossed his arms and stared at Starsky, shaking
his head hopelessly. "Then tell me something, partner. Why'd you eat five
of them?"
A look of total amazement crossed Starsky's face.
"I didn't!"
Hutch nodded smugly. "I was counting. Five
cookies. And two glasses of that horrible lemonade."
"Yeah, really? Jesus." Starsky shook his
head in dismay. "Why'd I do that?"
"Starsky, you'd eat anything put in front of
you. As long as you could be absolutely sure that there wasn't any nutritional
value in it at all."
Starsky scowled.
"We better head out to Riverview," Hutch
said after a moment.
Starsky glanced at his watch. "What time is the
service?"
"Eleven forty-five." Hutch took a black
armband out of his pocket and pulled it on.
They were going to the funeral for Patrolman
Anderson. Not to mourn, although they would, but to see who else turned up. It
was just possible that, along with family, friends, and other cops, his murderer
might appear. As macabre as it seemed, that sometimes happened.
"I hate funerals," Starsky muttered as he
turned into the drive of the cemetery some twenty minutes later.
"Everybody hates funerals, mushbrain."
"But I really hate them."
"Uh-huh. Drop me here," Hutch said.
"I'll walk through the crowd and meet you on the other side."
"'kay."
Hutch got out of the car and started across the grass
toward the gravesite. He could see a long line of blue uniforms and he tugged
self-consciously at the black armband that adorned his jacket. No one seemed to
pay him any attention as he strolled slowly through the crowd. A young woman,
probably Anderson's wife, stood next to the grave, holding a young boy by one
hand. Neither of them was crying. Hutch paused, watching the scene for a moment.
His eyes searched the faces of everyone there.
Not seeing anyone that he felt was the killer--how
the hell do I know? he thought wearily--he walked again, crossing the lawn
and reaching the curb just as the Torino slid up. Hutch got in.
"Anything?" Starsky asked.
Hutch shook his head. "You?"
"Nope."
They watched through the window as the service wound
to its conclusion. Starsky flinched and jumped when the gun salute was fired.
"I hate that," he said. "Don't you let them do any shooting when
they stick me in the ground, okay?"
Hutch was pulling off the mourning band. "That's
dumb, Starsk. We're going out in the same blaze of glory, remember? They'll be
planting us at the same time."
"Oh, yeah, I forgot." He grimaced.
"Jesus, I hope that doesn't mean they fire twice as many shots. What do you
think?"
"I think this whole conversation is morbid and
we ought to change the subject."
"Right."
"Let's get out of here," Hutch said.
"This has been a really rotten morning."
Things didn't get any better as the day went on,
unfortunately. Everybody on the force seemed on the one hand to be waiting for
something else to happen and on the other to be praying that nothing would.
It was after midnight before Starsky and Hutch quit
for the day. Too tired even for dinner, they drove out to Hutch's place in
almost total silence. Starsky pulled to a stop in front of the building but
didn't bother to turn off the car engine. "See you in the morning," he
said, his voice raspy with weariness.
"Eight o'clock," Hutch said, opening the
door.
"Eight?"
"Yeah, we have to go talk to Anderson's wife.
Try to be on time for a change, huh?" He slid out of the car, then stopped
and turned around, bending to look in at Starsky. There was a vaguely bewildered
expression in his blue eyes. "Hey, Starsk," he said.
Starsky looked at him blearily. "Huh?"
But Hutch just shook his head. "Nothing. I
guess. See you."
"Yeah, see you, hot shot."
Hutch slammed the door shut. "Be careful,"
he said through the window.
Starsky waved and drove off.
Hutch stood on the sidewalk and watched until the red
tail lights could no longer be seen. He tried to dismiss the vague but
persistent sense of unease that had nagged at him for days now. It was just
weariness, he knew, and the damned lack of progress on the two murders that made
him feel this way.
After a moment, he shoved both hands into his pockets
and went inside. A good night's sleep was all he needed. Everything would look
much better in the morning. Maybe he and Starsk would even break the case
tomorrow.
Starsky sometimes thought that he could have made the
drive between Hutch's place and home with his eyes closed. Although it was
tempting, he didn't test the theory this night.
Tired as his body was, his mind still raced. As he
drove, Starsky tried to sort through what they had on the case. No matter how he
added it up, though, it came to the same thing: a big fat zero. Somebody was
killing cops. Apparently randomly. Apparently. But Starsky had never liked pat
theories and he didn't like that one. More often than not, he'd discovered, a
pattern could be detected in any criminal activity. He had no doubt that one
could be detected here, given time.
Given time and enough dead cops.
He parked the car and got out. It felt good to get
home. As he climbed the steps, he started to pull his holster off, trying to
decide if he could stay awake long enough to drink a glass of chocolate milk. He
pulled some mail from his box and unlocked the door, struggling to keep
mail, gun, and holster all balanced.
The door swung open and he stepped in, reaching for
the light switch.
He didn't know what hit him first--whether it was the
slight movement in the darkness or the heavy, cloying odor of chloroform; but he
knew instantly that someone was there, waiting for him in the safety of his own
home.
Quick as the realization was, however, it was still
too late. Something covered his face; the smell became overpowering and he began
the long descent to the floor. NO! his mind protested helplessly. His
body tried to respond, to struggle, but his arms wouldn't move the way he wanted
them to. He flailed wildly, but couldn't get a grasp on whoever was there.
As he fell, one thought came with crystal clarity out
of the fog that was enveloping him: ohchristhutchwillbemadwhenidontshowupontime.
The absurdity of that thought struck him at once.
Hell, he wasn't going to be late. Be was going to be dead. Getting dead didn't
hurt so much, he decided. But there was something that hurt a lot. Something . .
. As the floor collided with his knees, he had one final thought: I hope Hutch
doesn't find my body. That hurt Starsky. The thought of Hutch's pain.
oh hell oh hell "Hutch?" he
whispered just before the floor smashed into his face.
**
CHAPTER TEN
At 7:45 A.M. Hutch dialed Starsky's number. He
let the phone ring twelve times as he stood there drinking his breakfast.
Figuring that a dozen rings were more than enough to wake even Starsky, he hung
up. "Starsk must be on his way over," he said to the African violet.
"Who says there are no more miracles?"
He finished the rest of his healthy morning
concoction, rinsed the glass carefully, and went to finish dressing. By eight
o'clock he was standing down on the sidewalk, waiting to see the red tomato come
squealing around the corner. This day already threatened to be the hottest yet.
By 8:25 he was back upstairs. "Nobody could
sleep through twelve rings, could they?" he bitched to the violet.
"Except maybe David Starsky." As he spoke, he was dialing again. This
time he let the phone ring twenty-five times.
He hung up slowly and glanced at the clock. 8:28.
He walked over to the window and looked down into the
street. "All right," he said very quietly. "All right. Now
Starsky is not at home. So he must be on his way. Probably he stopped for
breakfast somewhere. Guess he didn't have any old pizza lying around."
The violet didn't even crack a smile.
Hutch waited fifteen more minutes, during which time
he drank two glasses of water and paced the room some twenty times. Hell, he
could've walked over and been here by now. He went to the phone again and
dialed Starsky's number. This time, he hung up after only one ring, suddenly
unable to bear the sound of that other phone not being answered.
He took a deep breath and dialed headquarters. Dobey
answered. "Captain, I need emergency transport," he said, skipping the
preliminaries.
"What's wrong?"
Hutch bit his lip, not wanting to say. He had an
irrational fear that by voicing his suspicion that something had happened to
Starsky, the suspicion would thus become fact. But Dobey was waiting.
"Starsky hasn't shown up at my place, and he doesn't answer the phone. I
need a black-and-white so I can go over there. He might be . . . sick or
something."
Dobey was silent for a moment. "I'll have a zone
car there in two minutes," he said. "And I'll meet you at
Starsky's."
Hutch stalked the sidewalk like a caged animal until
the squad car arrived. He jumped into the back seat and gave them Starsky's
address. Neither of the uniformed men spoke to him; apparently they knew what
was coming down.
Starsky's car was parked in its usual place. Hutch
got out of the squad car and walked over to the Torino. It was locked, of
course. It was just as it should have been. Except that it was very wrong. He
leaned against the car and wiped sweat from his face.
The two patrolmen were watching him. "Do you
want us to go up?" one of them asked.
He shook his head. "No. I'm going. You wait here
for Captain Dobey."
The entrance hall felt cool. He walked up the steps
slowly and deliberately, blocking his mind, not allowing thought. He simply
catalogued impressions; he'd been a cop long enough to do that without thinking
about it. Nothing seemed amiss. He passed no one on the stairs. A woman opened
the door to pick up her morning paper. She nodded at him. He only stared at her.
She disappeared back into her apartment.
The door to Starsky's apartment was not closed all
the way. He pushed it open slowly. "Starsk?" he said. "Hey,
Starsk?"
His voice echoed hollowly in the empty apartment.
Hutch had never known how empty a place could feel. Yesterday's mail was
scattered on the floor just inside the door. He wandered through each room,
still taking mental notes. Bed unslept in. The dishes he and Starsky had used
for yesterday's breakfast were still sitting on the cupboard. Coming back into
the living room, he noticed the smell. He sniffed a couple of times, following
the odor, and found a piece of cotton wadding next to the sofa, as if carelessly
tossed there. Not touching it, he leaned forward. Chloroform.
He slumped onto the couch and closed his eyes.
A thought crept in: Starsk is gone.
Instantly, he clamped his mind shut. No thinking. Not
yet. It was too dangerous. His hands were clenched. The worst part about it was
that he wasn't surprised. He had known. Somehow, since the beginning of
this case, he'd known. Even last night, saying good-bye to Starsky, he'd
known.
Good-bye . . . was it? God . . . he hadn't said enough. He hadn't said anything.
The floor creaked as somebody walked into the
apartment. "Hutchinson?" Dobey said tentatively.
"Starsky is gone."
Click on illo to see larger version
How simple it was, once the words were out. Hutch
straightened and opened his eyes. He gestured toward the mail still lying on the
floor. "Whoever it was must have been waiting for him when he came in last
night. They used chloroform to knock him out and . . . ." And what?
"Then they snatched him." That was as far as he could go right now.
Starsk was missing. Missing. A bad word, but not . . . final.
Dobey was making aimless circles in the middle of the
room. "Why?" he said tightly. "Why?"
Hutch picked up a pillow from the couch and punched
it once viciously. "Why?" He gripped the pillow tightly in both arms.
"It's simple. Because somebody is killing cops and Starsky is a cop."
That remark brought him a little too close to facing reality and he tightened
his hold on the pillow, trying to swallow down a rising nausea. It kept coming.
He jumped up. "'Scuse me," he mumbled,
walking quickly toward the bathroom. He slammed the door and leaned against it
for nearly five minutes until the sick feeling passed. Then he took a deep
breath, splashed cold water on his face, carefully and precisely dried it off,
and went back into the other room.
A Crime Lab team had arrived and started its work.
Hutch bent down to pick up the mail and glanced through it. A letter from New
York. A renewal form for a PLAYBOY subscription. The current issue of MODEL
RAILROADING. A lot of ads. Starsk must be on every damned mailing list in the
whole country, he thought.
Dobey appeared next to him. "Hutchinson,"
he said, "we'll find him."
Hutch tossed the mail down onto the couch.
"Uh-huh." He took out his wallet and dug one finger into the inside
compartment. A key tumbled out into his open palm. "I'm taking Starsky' s
car," he said.
"Just where do you think you're going?"
"To find Starsk."
"Wait," Dobey began, "you don't even
know where to start looking."
"I'll find him."
He shoved his way down the steps, going past more
cops coming up, and detectives already talking to Starsky's neighbors. Hutch
knew without asking that nobody had seen or heard anything out of the ordinary.
Nobody ever did.
As he was unlocking the Torino, one of the men from
the gathering crowd came up to him. "Detective Hutchinson?"
"Yeah?"
"Al Krause," he said, flashing a press
card. "Is this another dead cop?"
Hutch wanted to smash his fist into the guy's curious
face. But he didn't. "A police officer is missing," he said tightly.
"That's all."
"Yeah, well, two others were 'missing' already
and they both showed up dead. This Starky looks like three, right?"
"Starsky," Hutch said. "David
Starsky. Is that such a damned hard name to say?" He slammed the door shut,
just missing the reporter's fingers.
He drove two blocks before realizing that he had no
idea where he was going. It didn't matter. The important thing was to keep
moving. Just keep moving. Pretend that by working hard enough and long enough,
he would succeed. He would find Starsky if he wanted to badly enough. It was
like making a deal with the cosmic powers. By proving how much he cared, he
would earn the right to get his partner back.
Ken Hutchinson was scared. And he was mad. But most
of all, he was alone. God, was he alone.
**
CHAPTER ELEVEN
I'm alive.
That in itself was something of a surprise and it
took a little getting used to. Starsky had expected to wake up dead. Or
whatever. But here he was, indubitably alive--if somewhat cautiously so. Without
opening his eyes, he attempted to analyze the situation.
He was lying on a narrow, exceedingly lumpy cot. His
arms and legs were bound with tape of some kind. And, except for his underwear,
he was naked. Even his watch, ring, and medallion were gone. Apart from a
headache and some very cramped muscles, though, he seemed to be okay.
Click on illo to see larger version
"I know you're awake, David, so you might as
well open your eyes."
Starsky considered for a moment what the best
response to that unexpected comment might be and finally decided to just open
his eyes.
"There. That's better, isn't it?" The
speaker was a stocky, bespectacled man about his own age. "I've been
waiting a very long time for you to wake up." There was a hint of reproval
in the voice.
"Yeah?" Starsky said. His cotton-dry mouth
made talking difficult. "Could . . . could I have a drink?"
"Sure." The man rummaged in a grocery sack
for a moment. "I'm sorry there's no ice, but I have your favorite."
Proudly, he held up a can of Dr. Pepper. "See?"
Trying to ignore a faint chill of apprehension that
swept through him, Starsky nodded. "Thanks, uh . . . ?"
"My name is Louis," he said, popping
the can open. Soda sprayed high in the air. "I can't cut you loose from the
tape right now, David, so we'll just have to manage as best we can." He
crouched next to the cot and slid one arm beneath Starsky, lifting him.
"Don't drink too fast," he admonished.
Ignoring the warning, Starsky gulped the warm soda
eagerly. His stomach, already queasy, rebelled, but he fought back the nausea.
"Enough," he said and Louis lowered him carefully.
"Are you hungry?"
"No." Starsky's head was beginning to clear
now and he was better able to survey the room they were in. There wasn't much to
see. It was small and cramped, dominated by a huge old generator. Besides the
cot on which he was lying, the only furnishings were a rickety wooden table and
two chairs. There was one window, a small one up close to the ceiling. Sunlight
streamed in through a large hole in the roof. Louis stood quietly, apparently
willing to let Starsky satisfy his curiosity. "What's going on?"
Starsky asked finally.
Louis sighed. "That's very . . . complicated,
David. Later I'll tell you. Right now, I don't have time to explain it."
"Oh? Why? Are we going somewhere?"
"Just me. I have an important errand to run. But
I'll be back."
"Terrific," Starsky muttered. Then:
"Did you kill the two cops?" Bluntly. Hoping to throw him off.
"Yes, I did," came the calm reply.
"But they don't matter."
Starsky stared at him, simultaneously realizing and
accepting the fact that he was in the company of madness. "Don't matter?"
he said, still trying to reason with the man. "Louis, two dead men have to
matter."
Louis looked at him blankly.
Starsky gave up. "Are you going to kill me,
too?"
"I hope not, David." Louis picked up a
bundle from the table. "You won't try anything foolish while I'm gone, will
you?"
Starsky ignored that, shifting slightly so that he
could see better. ''Those are my clothes.''
"Yes." Louis was putting the clothes into a
bag. As Starsky watched, he saw his gun, I.D., and cuffs go in as well. Finally,
carefully, Louis added his watch, ring, and medallion.
"Why are you taking all my things?"
Louis smiled gently. "It's necessary." He
came back to the cot and knelt down. Still smiling, he checked Starsky's
bindings. It was a most effective job of taping. Starsky couldn't move his arms
to any purpose, or move his legs to walk.
"Why is it necessary?"
Satisfied that his captive was secure, Louis rested
back on his heels for a moment. "Oh, David, you ask so many questions. I
guess it's because you're a cop."
"I guess."
"But, see, I just don't have the time right now
to answer all of your questions. Later, later everything will be clear." He
got to his feet. "But I don't want you to lie here worrying while I'm gone.
Worrying is counter-productive, you know." The phrase was obviously a
quote. "I have to take all of your things, so that when they find the
body--"
"What body?"
"That doesn't matter, David. Don't interrupt,
please. It's very rude."
"Sorry."
"I'm not angry," Louis said quickly,
reassuringly. "You haven't learned the rules yet. It's just a body, that's
all." He laughed softly. "After all, they're expecting a body, aren't
they? They know you're missing and so they're expecting to find a body. I'll
give them one."
"But--"
Louis raised a finger to his lips. "Shh, David,
no more now. I have to go." He gave Starsky's shoulder a pat, picked up the
paper bag, and was gone.
Alone, Starsky immediately struggled to get free, all
the while knowing that it was useless. There was simply no way to get out of the
tape. Panting from the exertion, he gave up the struggle and tried to figure out
what the hell was going on.
Suddenly, with a peculiar sense of triumph, he
recognized the pattern. What was Louis had said? "Just a body." No,
not just a body. A body wearing his clothes. A body carrying his wallet
and I.D. His gun.
But what was the point?
Anyone who knew him would recognize immediately . . .
of course, there were ways of making a corpse difficult to identify, at
least until the lab tests could be done. Most of the ways were too gruesome to
think about. And if, as Louis had said, they were expecting to find his
body--the pattern, the damned pattern--well, the phony corpse could keep them
guessing for a little while.
Still, ultimately, what was the point? Because,
Starsky felt sure, there was a point. Louis was certainly crazy, but there was
a point.
Starsky sighed. So everybody would think he was dead.
Everybody. Even Hutch. He caught his breath. Oh god. Hutch would think he was
dead. Not for long, maybe, but even an instant with that knowledge was almost
too painful to bear. He remembered how he'd felt, thinking that the body in the
ravine was Hutch.
And he remembered another time. When the Haymes girl
was snatched. He shivered again as he recalled seeing the rifle slugs hit Hutch
and send him crashing through the storefront. Afterwards, Starsky could not
really remember chasing the car, dismounting from the cycle, firing.
"That's for Hutch," he'd muttered as the car exploded in flames. An
act of vengeance, pure and simple. A stupid act that might have cost the girl
her life. But he didn't think of that at the time. Just of Hutch lying dead in
the shattered glass. The worst feeling in the world. The desolation. The
emptiness.
Now, this time, Hutch would think he was dead.
Don't go getting blown away without me.
Hutch's words.
And I promised. I promised.
The frustration built within him. No longer able to
just lie there thinking of the pain his partner was going to feel, Starsky
suddenly turned his body slightly and rolled off the cot. He hit the floor with
a grunt.
Now what? he thought.
With much groaning and scraping of his skin against
the rough wooden floor, he managed to move a few inches. The door was still at
least six feet away. He realized that even if he could traverse the distance,
there was no way he would able to open the door. All he could do was wait for
that nut Louis to come back.
He sighed and rested his face against the floor. Ahh,
Hutch . . . I'm sorry. But I'm not dead yet. I'll get back. Please, believe me.
~~!!~
Louis stepped through the curtain of beads that
covered the entrance to the Blue Gull Cocktail Lounge. At this hour only a few
afternoon drinkers sat at the bar, listening as the jukebox ground out a
country song. Several people glanced up as Louis entered, but after a week and a
half, he was considered a regular and everyone went back to his own business.
Louis walked to the end of the bar and sat next to a young man dressed in
cut-off Levis and a Mickey Mouse T-shirt. "Hi, Joey," he said.
"Lou."
"How's it going?"
Joey made a thumbs-down gesture. "Shitty. That
asshole agent of mine couldn't get me booked into a supermarket opening."
Louis sipped at the beer that the bartender had
automatically set in front of him. "That's too bad." The tale of woe
was the same one he'd listened to Joey recite everyday since they'd met.
"Yeah, too bad." Joey ran one hand through
his tangled dark curls. "If I don't earn some bread pretty soon, it's back
to Cleveland and a job in the fucking steel mill."
"Hey, that'd be a shame." Louis drank more
beer. "Hey, Joey," he said, as if a thought had just occurred to him.
"Would you like to earn twenty-five dollars this afternoon?"
"Is the pope Catholic?" Joey's forehead
creased. "It's legal, right?"
Louis smiled. "Oh, sure. And moral and
non-fattening."
"What do I have to do?"
"Act. You're an actor, aren't you?"
"That's what I keep telling my agent." Joey
sipped beer thoughtfully. "What kind of acting?"
Louis shrugged. "I got this friend I want to
play a joke on. You gotta play like you're my brother . . . Eddie. My brother
Eddie. Just for an hour."
"An hour? And I'll get twenty-five
dollars?"
"Sure."
Joey was obviously tempted. Just as obviously, the
deal struck him as a little too good to be true. "But what do I have to
do?"
"Oh, I'll explain all that to you on the way. Do
you want the job or not?"
For just one more moment, Joey hesitated. Then he
nodded. "Okay, Lou, sure."
"Great." Louis reached down and picked up
the brown sack that sat at his feet. "There're some clothes in here. Go
into the john and change."
"I gotta change clothes?" Joey sounded
skeptical again.
"Look, for twenty-five bucks, I don't think it's
asking too much for you to change clothes, huh? Don't actors wear
costumes?"
Joey took the sack, slid off the stool, and headed
toward the bathroom. Louis finished his beer, paid the bar tab for both of them,
and went over to the door to wait. The sack he'd given Joey held only David's
clothes; the gun and other things were still in the car. He stood patiently by
the entrance.
A few minutes later, Joey emerged. Now he was wearing
faded blue jeans, a too-much washed red T-shirt, bright red socks, and beat-up
Adidas. He was scowling as he walked over to Louis. "This crap is worse
than my own stuff," he muttered.
Louis took the sack that now held Joey's clothes.
"How's the fit?"
"Almost perfect. The jeans are a little tight,
but it's okay."
"Good."
They left the bar and got into the VW. Louis
headed toward the warehouse district. He had already scouted the area thoroughly
and knew exactly where he was going. Joey seemed a little nervous, perching on
the seat as if he might take flight at any moment. He didn't ask any more
questions during the twenty-minute drive.
Louis finally pulled to a stop behind an abandoned
nut and bolt factory. Joey looked around skeptically. "What are we doing
here?"
"Well, this is where it's going to happen,"
Louis said kindly.
"Where what's going to happen?" Joey' s
hand was edging toward the door handle.
Louis pulled his gun out. "I have to kill you,
Joey."
The young man's face went white. "Hey, man, you
crazy? Put that fucking gun away. What are you, anyway? Some kind of nut? I got
no money, if that's what you want."
"I don't want your money, Joey. Close your
eyes."
"No, I won't." But he did. As the gun came
closer, he screwed his eyes closed tight, like a child trying to shut out a
scary sight. "Ohchristdontplease . . . please . . . no . . . please, Lou,
don't." Crying, he scrabbled for the door handle. "Please . . . "
Louis grabbed him by one arm, holding him with a
vise-like grip. People didn't realize how strong Louis was. It amused him that
they usually thought he was a weakling, because he wore glasses and didn't go
around showing off. "Don't be scared, Joey," he murmured tenderly. He
felt very close to Joey at that moment. It had been the same with the others.
The people he killed were not his enemies. They were his friends. More than
friends, even. They were almost like . . . lovers. There was a spiritual bond
uniting them. All of the people he killed belonged to him and they would always
belong to him. No one else could ever possess them as he did. For a moment, he
pulled Joey so close that he could smell the lime-scented aftershave he wore.
"Ahh, Joey," he said.
The shot reverberated within the car and Louis
cringed a little. The body that had been Joey slumped back against the door.
Louis carefully put the gun away. He reached behind the seat and brought out the
rest of David's things. He slipped the watch onto Joey's wrist and the ring onto
his finger. Pulling him forward a little, he dropped the chained medallion
around his neck.
He got out of the car and, walking around to the
passenger side, opened the door carefully. Joey fell into his arms. Louis pulled
him out and rested him gently on the ground. The cuffs were next. Everything had
to be just so.
When he had the body just the way it needed to be,
Louis reached into the car again and pulled out a length of steel pipe. For a
moment, he hesitated. This part he didn't like. But he recognized that it had to
be done. That was a sign of mental health, he had been told, learning to
recognize the inevitable. "Forgive me, Joey," he whispered. "But
it's necessary." Joey understood.
The first blow of the pipe into Joey's face made a
sickening noise, crunchy and squishy at the same time, and Louis almost quit
right then. But he forced himself to raise the pipe and swing it again, sending
it crashing into flesh and bone. It got easier. When the task was finally
finished, Louis wrapped the bloody pipe in some newspaper and put it back in the
car. He took out the gun, still in its holster, David's wallet, and I. D., and
put them carefully beside the body.
He stopped for a moment to survey the scene. Looked
fine. Everything was fine. If he didn't know better, he'd swear that was David's
body lying there. Now he had only to wait.
But he didn't want to go back out to the park yet.
Not yet. He felt peculiarly excited by what had happened. This had been even
better than the other times. This had been the best of all.
He slid behind the wheel. Hot blood coursed through
him and he felt as if he had to find some release for the raging emotions or he
would explode. He pressed back against the seat, panting, sweating, not knowing
whether to laugh or cry.
If he closed his eyes, he could see Joey's face just
before the shot was fired. A face transfigured by fear. The scent of lime
mingling with the stench of terror. The image seemed so real that he almost
wanted to reach out and clasp Joey to him again. Then the face grew hazy.
Changed. It became Kenny. Or David. He couldn't tell.
Louis finally drove out of the parking lot, leaving
behind the body, taking with him the excitement, the memory of the exquisitely
painful pleasure. There was a theatre he knew about that showed movies all day
and all night. It would be cool in there and he could sit and remember.
**
CHAPTER TWELVE
There came a time when he couldn't think of anyplace
else to go or anyone else to talk to. He couldn't think of one more damned thing
to do. So he went back to the office and slumped at his desk. Just sat, staring
everywhere but at the next desk. Occasionally, he checked his watch. It had been
just over twelve hours since he'd walked into Starsky' s empty apartment and he
knew not one iota more than he'd known then.
Someone dropped a file on his desk. The name typed
neatly on the front was STARSKY, DAVID MICHAEL. Hutch looked up. "Thanks,
Minnie," he said heavily.
"Any word?" the policewoman asked.
Hutch shook his head.
"Don't worry," she said with an attempt at
cheerfulness. "Starsky will be fine."
He toyed with the file folder. "You think
so?"
"Sure." She looked as if she had more to
say, but then she only patted Hutch's shoulder and left.
Hutch opened the folder and began to read. There was
a complete description of Starsky's apartment. Copies of the interviews with all
the neighbors. As Hutch had known would be the case, no one had seen or heard
anything. The general feeling seemed to be that since Starsky was a cop, they
were accustomed to his coming and going at strange hours and had learned to
ignore the attendant sounds.
He skipped quickly over the bio sheet; he knew the
facts of Starsky's life as well as he knew his own. The photo attached to the
bio wasn't very good; it looked more like the mugshot on a wanted sheet than
anything else. Still, he stared at it for a long time.
He became aware, finally, that Dobey was standing
next to his desk. "Yeah, Cap?" he said, still looking at the photo.
"Have you eaten today, Hutchinson?"
He thought. "I had breakfast." He carefully
replaced all the papers in the folder and closed it.
"You better get out of here for a while. Go have
a couple of beers and some food and then try to get some sleep. Tomorrow . . .
."
"Yeah? What about tomorrow? Everything will look
better in the morning, right?" His voice was bitter; then he felt guilty
for taking it out on Dobey. He got to his feet. "All right, Cap. I'm going
over to the Pits. Huggy was going to check out some names for me. Some people
who don't like cops."
"Maybe he's come up with something," Dobey
said hopefully.
Hutch shrugged. "No, I don't think so. He just
wanted to do something. For Starsk."
Dobey only nodded.
Hutch put the file into the drawer and left the
office. He knew that people were watching him as he walked out of the station. What
do they expect me to do? he wondered. Am I supposed to react? Or not
react? He didn't know what they wanted of him, so he did nothing. Just
straightened his back and kept his face expressionless. Let them think whatever
they wanted. It didn't matter if some of them thought he was an emotionless
bastard who didn't care that his partner was missing and the rest figured him to
be hovering on the edge of a screaming fit. Didn't matter.
But when he walked into the Pits a few minutes later,
his carefully constructed facade of control almost shattered. It had been a
mistake to come here; this place was too much identified with Starsk. It made
the hurt even worse, the absence of companionship even more real. He wondered,
fearfully, if it would always be this way. If Starsky was gone forever, would he
ever get over the sense of loss? Or would he spend the rest of his life looking
around for somebody who wasn't there?
He walked straight to the back and slumped into a
booth. Huggy came over, put a beer in front of him, and sat down.
"Well?"
Hutch took a long swallow of the beer before
answering. "Nothing."
"Me, neither," the black man said glumly.
"Nobody knows nothing." He studied Hutch shrewdly. "How you
hanging, man?"
"Ahh." Hutch spread his hands helplessly.
"You're doing fine." Huggy's usually lively
face was solemn. "If it was the other way around--"
"Christ, I wish it was," Hutch broke in.
Huggy shook his head. "No, man, don't lay that
trip on Starsk. If it was you snatched . . . the man would go bananas. He'd be
tearing the city apart." He smiled faintly. "Starsky ain't got your
cool, buddy."
"Maybe he has the right idea."
''Wouldn't help."
"Nothing helps."
Huggy stood. "Let me make one of Huggerino' s
Special Burgers."
"I'm not hungry."
"Don't recall asking if you was." He walked
away.
Hutch took another swallow of beer. That didn't help
either. He wondered how much beer it would take to blur the sharp edges of his
pain. More than he could drink, probably. He'd pass out before he stopped
hurting. And when he came to, nothing would have changed.
He almost wished he could react like Starsk. Tear the
goddamned place apart. Yell. Smash somebody's face in. But he couldn't. All he
could do was sit here and drink beer and . . . and nothing. Except hurt. They
were just different that way. Probably that was why they made such a good team.
Balance. They balanced each other. It had always been that way. He had foolishly
convinced himself that it always would be that way.
Above the noise of the bar, he couldn't hear the
phone ring. However, he did see Huggy move to answer it and then look quickly in
his direction. He was on his feet and across the room before Huggy could summon
him.
Huggy held out the receiver. "Your
captain," he said.
Hutch took the phone. "Yeah?" he said
quietly. He stared down the length of the bar, watching a pick-up in progress,
watching all the other people in the world go about their lives. He watched, but
he didn't really see any of it.
"Ken?" Dobey's voice came reluctantly over
the wire.
"Uh-huh."
"Corner of DeWitt and Franklin."
Hutch nodded.
"Hutchinson?"
"Yeah, I heard you. Corner of DeWitt and
Franklin. What about it?"
"A body. That's all I have now."
"Okay."
"Hutchinson? You all right?"
"Fine. Sure, sure. I'll meet you there." He
hung up slowly and looked at Huggy. "They have a body."
"Is it--?" Huggy didn't finish the
question.
Hutch shrugged. "Don't know."
He left the Pits and climbed back into Starsky's car.
Although the temperature was still almost eighty, Hutch couldn't seem to stop
shivering. He drove with care, observing all of the traffic laws. After all, it
wasn't his car, and he didn't want to take a chance on scratching or denting
anything. Starsky would never forgive him.
He could see the flashing lights of the zone cars
before he reached the corner of DeWitt and Franklin. Parking behind one of the
black-and whites, he turned the car off and sat there for a moment. Just sat
there. The sense of panic hit him suddenly. He fumbled for the door handle,
shoved it open, and nearly fell flat in his headlong plunge out of the car and
across the grass.
The crowd parted to let him through. He reached the
parking lot behind the factory and started across the asphalt surface. Suddenly
Dobey appeared in front of him. The heavyset black man caught Hutch by one arm.
"Ken," he said quietly, "don't go over there."
Hutch stopped short and stared at Dobey. He
didn't--couldn't--speak, but the anguished plea was clear in his eyes.
Dobey sighed, nodding. "It's Dave."
"No. . . ." Hutch said vaguely. He
promised me . . . the itinerary . . . the damned itinerary . . . he promised . .
. .
"Yes, Ken. It's Dave. I'm . . . I'm so very
sorry." Dobey looked as if he might cry at any moment.
"No. It can't be him," Hutch mumbled,
trying to pull his arm free. Dobey's grip, however, was unrelenting. "I
have to see him," Hutch said.
"Ken, this is worse than the others."
"Worse?" Hutch laughed a little.
"What's worse than dead?"
Dobey swallowed hard, trying to forget what he had
just seen and knowing that it would come back to haunt him as long as he lived.
"His face, Ken . . . his face is . . . smashed in . . . a brutal
beating."
Hutch shook his head. "That doesn't make any
sense. It's not the M.O." He gave an abrupt, violent jerk and broke free of
Dobey. "That's not the goddamned M.O.!" he yelled.
Before the other man could respond, Hutch was gone,
pushing by the Crime Lab team and several uniformed officers gathered there. The
body lay on the parking lot, just under the glare of a streetlight. Hutch
stopped, frozen.
He inventoried. Blue tennis shoes with white stripes.
Red socks. Faded jeans. Washed-out red T-shirt. He felt his legs go and he fell
to his knees next to the body. "Oh god," he whispered. "Starsk .
. . " Hands cuffed. Gun, wallet, and I.D. all stacked neatly. The M.O. He
picked up the I.D. and flipped it open. Starsky. ohstarsk
His eyes went automatically from the I.D. photo to
Starsky's face.
Except that there was no face.
There was only a bloody pulp where the face should
have been. Ravaged features were topped by a mass of blood-soaked curls.
Hutch had to get away. Half-crawling, half-running,
he crossed the parking lot to the cover of the bushes. Crouching there, he gave
in to the waves of nausea. Again and again his stomach heaved. After an
eternity, he sat up, wiping his mouth with the back of one hand.
Click on illo to see larger version
Dobey stood nearby. "Ken?" he asked
quietly. "Are you okay?"
Hutch was shivering again; he wrapped both arms
around his legs and rocked hack and forth, trying to get warm. "Yes,
sir," he said dully. "I'm okay."
Dobey reached to help him up. "Come on, let's
go." He wanted Hutch away before they started to remove the body.
"No," Hutch said. "Not yet." He
was on his feet, still shaky, moving toward the body again.
"Ken," Dobey protested, "don't do this
to yourself."
Hutch didn't answer. He knelt on the ground, staring
at the body. Starting at the shoes, he studied the dead man again. He put one
hand on the right shoe for a moment. Touched one leg thoughtfully. Noticed the
watch. Lifted the hand and looked at the ring. This time he didn't look away
when he reached the shattered face. He stared intensely at it, not allowing
himself to react. The truth dawned on him slowly. He lifted the hand again, held
it between both of his, studied the fingers, replaced it gently. At last, he
nodded to himself.
It was nearly five minutes before he gathered up
Starsky' s things and got slowly to his feet. He gave the body a long last look
and then turned away.
Dobey was waiting; he gestured to the men there to
take the body away. "Ready, Ken?"
Hutch seemed to notice him for the first time. He
tightened his grip on Starsky's things. It was a moment before he spoke, but
when he did, his voice was calm. "Cap, that isn't Starsk."
Dobey, trying to urge him away, only half-heard.
"What?"
Hutch was allowing Dobey to lead him across the
parking lot. "Captain Dobey," he said firmly, "that is not David
Starsky."
Now Dobey heard. "Ken, please. Don't. I know how
you feel. Hell, I don't want to believe it, either, but--"
Hutch could feel himself growing angry. His voice
turned sharp. "Damnit, man, I know Dave Starsky as well as I know myself
and that's not him."
"Hutchinson, the I.D . . . the clothes . . .
Ken, I know you don't want to face it, but . . . Dave is dead." Dobey
stopped in front of Hutch and gripped him firmly by both arms, meeting his gaze.
"Ken, Dave is dead. I know how much that hurts you."
"Do you?" Hutch asked with real curiosity.
"I cared about him, too."
"Yes, I know." Hutch sighed and shook his
head. He pulled away from Dobey and plodded toward the Torino. As he went past
the group of reporters gathered there, a flashbulb exploded in his face. Behind
him he could hear Dobey answering questions. He reached the car and opened the
door. Someone in the crowd asked how to spell Starsky's name. Hutch spun around.
"That's not Starsky!" he yelled.
The scene fell silent as everyone turned to look at
him. "That is not David Starsky," he said again, quietly this time.
Another flash went off. He could see Dobey coming toward him.
Hutch got into the car and slammed the door. No more
talking right now. He needed to think. The engine turned over with a roar and
the car squealed away.
Alone, he relaxed a little, taking several deep
breaths.
"That's not Starsk," he whispered.
But why? Who would dress a body in Starsky's clothes
and leave all of Starsky' s things there? Hutch didn't know. All he knew for
sure was that the body lying back there was not that of his partner.
Which proved nothing, not even that Starsky was still
alive.
He decided to go check out Starsky's apartment again.
Something might have been overlooked, something that no one else would find
significant, but that he would notice. After all, he knew Starsky better than
anyone else did. He knew Starsky.
Or maybe it was just that he wanted to be at
Starsky's place. Like driving the Torino. Being in the car made him feel a
little less alone; almost like Starsky was right there with him.
Or maybe, he thought, I'm just crazy. Maybe
that really was Starsk back there. Maybe.
He decided that if reality was Starsky being dead and
insanity meant thinking he was still alive, all things considered, he'd just as
soon be crazy.
And that, he concluded, sounded just like something
Starsky would say.
**
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
The night was endless.
He didn't even hurt anymore because his whole
body was numb. Sometimes he
managed to sleep a little, but then he would have some crazy dream that woke him
again. Once he even thought that his father was in the room with him.
"Pa?" he said, "Pa, help me, please . . . ." But his father
only vanished.
Hutch was there, too, talking to him, saying
things that Starsky could
just about hear. "Hutch? Help me . . . ." He tried to reach out and
get a grip on Hutch, but his bound hands closed on empty space.
It was morning before Louis came back.
Starsky heard the door being
unlocked and he rolled over to watch Louis come in; his captor held a newspaper
and several paper bags. He stood on the threshold, staring down at Starsky, a
strange expression crossing his face. "Are you all right, David?" he
asked finally, moving to set everything on the table.
"Just terrific," Starsky
muttered.
"Why are you on the floor?"
Starsky glared up at him, wanting to let all
the anger he was feeling
burst out, but unable to overcome the sick tiredness that filled him. "Why
am I . . . on the floor? 'Cause it's better for my back, you bastard."
Louis' mouth tightened. "Don't talk to
me like that, David."
"Sorry."
"I didn't mean to stay away so long, but
I fell asleep in the
movie."
"Dull picture?"
"Look, I brought your breakfast. I hope
you like Egg
McMuffins?"
"My favorite." Starsky tried to
move. "Louis, I gotta take
a leak."
"Oh." Louis seemed to view the
necessity with distaste.
"Oh, yes, all right." He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out
the gun. "All right, but please behave, David. I wouldn't like to shoot
you."
"I wouldn't like to get shot,"
Starsky replied.
Louis bent down and cut the surgical tape
with a razor-sharp scalpel that
Starsky hadn't even seen until that moment. Starsky managed to sit up, rubbing
his wrists and then his ankles. "The bathroom is through that door,"
Louis said. "There's no window."
Starsky accepted that news glumly and got to
his feet slowly.
Louis tossed a paper sack at him and Starsky
managed to catch it.
"There's some clothes. Put them on."
Starsky held the sack tentatively. "Are
they mine?"
"No, but they'll fit. When you come out,
I have a surprise to show
you in the paper."
"I can hardly wait," Starsky
mumbled, walking stiff-legged from
the room.
He lingered in the bathroom as long as he
dared, even though the place
was filthy and the smell sickened him. But he couldn't think of anything to do
except continue to humor Louis and wait for a chance to make a break. The
clothes fit, as Louis had promised, and Starsky finally left the bathroom
wearing cut-off Levis and a Mickey Mouse T-shirt.
Louis was waiting patiently, holding a length
of chain in his hand, the
other end of which was attached to the huge generator. He tossed the free end to
Starsky. "Put this around your ankle," he ordered.
Starsky held the padlock reluctantly.
"Ahh, Louis . . . ."
"I don't like to say things twice,
David."
Starsky sighed and bent to snap the lock
closed around his ankle.
"Not that link, David," Louis said sharply. "Tighter."
Starsky closed the lock firmly.
"Satisfied?"
"Yes, thank you. Sit down now and we'll
have breakfast." Louis
opened the bag and pulled out several paper-wrapped items and two paper cups of
coffee. "I hope black is all right?"
"Fine, thank you," Starsky said
with exaggerated politeness.
The gun was next to Louis' hand, just out of Starsky's reach. The scalpel was
nowhere in sight, but Starsky felt sure that it was close by. They ate in
silence for a moment and then Louis reached for the newspaper. "You got
your picture on the front page," he said.
The photo showed a body sprawled on the
ground with several
unidentifiable police officers standing around. Starsky glanced at the picture
briefly and recognized his clothes. Slowly, he set the food down onto the table,
suddenly sick. "These . . . these are his clothes, aren't
they?"
"Joey didn't need them anymore,"
Louis said calmly. Carefully,
precisely, he read the headline aloud: "THIRD COP KILLED."
"Except he wasn't a cop,
right?"
Louis smiled faintly. "No. Joey was an
actor. Let me read this now.
It says: 'Local Detective David Starsky is the apparent third victim of an
unknown assailant who has killed two other officers in the past week.'"
Louis paused and took a sip of coffee. "There are more pictures on page
five, it says." He turned quickly to the fifth page. "There."
Starsky looked at it. The picture was the
same one that had been in the
paper the previous week, showing Hutch and him leaving the hearing for Barney
Fields. "They caught my bad angle," he said.
Louis' fingers tightened on the edge of the
paper. "They put Kenny's
picture in, too."
"Kenny?" Starsky looked to the
bottom of the page. "You
mean Hutch?" he asked, seeing his partner's face looking back at him.
"Yeah."
"You know Hutch?"
Louis nodded sharply. "Kenny. His name
is Kenny."
Starsky stared at Louis for a moment, then
looked at the picture again.
Hutch was gazing directly into the camera, but his face looked strange . . .
sort of vague. He was carrying a gun and wallet clutched against his chest.
Starsky had a sudden, flashing memory of the two dead cops, with their guns and
wallets neatly beside them. He looked at Hutch's face again. "Oh,
god," he said softly.
Louis apparently read something that angered
him; the paper rattled.
"Damn. He knows. He knows."
"What?" Starsky said, finally
tearing his gaze from Hutch's
face.
Louis shoved the paper closer and Starsky
bent to read. "Detective
Starsky's long-time partner, Detective Sergeant Kenneth Hutchinson, claimed that
the body was not that of Starsky, who vanished without a trace after going
off-duty Tuesday night. Police spokesmen maintained, however, that the body was
almost certainly that of the missing officer. A positive identification could
not be made immediately because of the brutal beating inflicted on the face of
the victim." Starsky finished reading and closed his eyes briefly. Hutch
knew. Hutch knew he wasn't dead.
"Damn," Louis said again. "I
don't understand. How did he
know?"
"Hutch is my partner," Starsky
said. "He knows me. A phony
corpse might fool everybody else, but not Hutch. Not my partner."
Louis stared at him. For an instant, no more,
the madness was clearly
visible in his eyes. Then the mask of blandness returned. "Kenny is going
to suffer," he said, the quiet manner not quite able to conceal the
bitterness in his voice. "He has to pay for what he did. You can see that,
David, can't you? Kenny is evil and he has to pay. The wages of sin is death.
God wants me to punish him."
"Hutch is my friend," Starsky
said.
Louis' face was stony. He carefully picked up
the gun. "Kenny is
already dead," he murmured. "He only has to suffer a little more
first." He walked to the door and spoke without turning. "Kenny used
to be my friend," he said. "Before you ever knew him. He was mine
first." He left, slamming the door.
Starsky just sat there, looking at the
picture of Hutch in the paper.
God, he looked terrible. No sleep, probably, no food. Hope he's remembering to
take his damned vitamins. Starsky grimaced. That was kind of funny. Here he was,
in the clutches of a homicidal maniac, liable to have his head shot
off any moment, worrying about whether or not Kenneth Hutchinson was
taking his damned vitamins. "Well, I'd still hate like hell to get
blown away and not have you at your peak," he murmured.
He gave a frustrated tug to the chain.
Nothing happened. So what did I
expect? To move that generator and drag it behind me right out the door? He
smiled wryly and gulped down the rest of the cold coffee.
Sighing, he walked back to the cot and sat
down. For the moment, there
seemed to be nothing he could do except wait. Wait and hope for a chance to make
a break. One hand idly fumbled with the lock around his ankle. Already, the skin
was starting to look raw and red. The situation was far from hopeless, he
reasoned. Hutch knew he was alive and Starsky knew that Hutch would be looking
for him. Together they could handle this Louis creep. Hutch would find him. Many
people underestimated his partner. They thought that because he had his own
style, a quiet, methodical way of handling things, he lacked . . .
determination, or something. That mistake in judging Hutch sometimes made a lot
of trouble for people.
Starsky leaned against the wall and closed
his eyes. He just had to keep
thinking like that. No matter how bad things got. They had been in dicier spots
than this. He just had to believe that Hutch would come through. It was a matter
of keeping faith.
"All right, Hutch," he said aloud.
"I'm ready to be
rescued anytime now. I ain't proud. You can come charging in here on your white
horse anytime." He sighed. "Come on, buddy."
~~~
Louis smoked three cigarettes, one right
after the other, as he stalked
the park. He was furious. Counting to ten didn't help. Deep breathing didn't
help. The whole idea had somehow gone awry. Kenny had known that the dead body
wasn't David. The point of it all had failed.
Well, he would just have to come up with
something else. After all, the
odds were still with him. He still had the upper hand. He had David. That made
him the boss, not Kenny. He stared up into the cloudless blue sky. It was so
damned hot. Didn't it ever rain in Los Angeles? He wished there would be a good,
soaking, cleansing rain.
Finally, he went into the MAZES OF FUN and
lost himself in the twisting
hallways. That seemed to help ease the tension. He needed time alone to think
and plan again. He lit another cigarette and began to consider his next move.
**
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
"Hey!"
Hutch woke himself up yelling. The sudden
jerk into consciousness left
him groggy and disoriented and it took him several minutes to remember where he
was. The dream still seemed so vivid that he stayed huddled where he was for a
few minutes, trying to remember reality.
His body felt twisted and uncomfortable. The
last thing he could recall
was stretching out on the sofa with the newest copy of MODEL RAILROADING.
"Damn this couch," he muttered. "Why the hell don't you get
something comfortable, Starsk?" His words echoed bitterly in the empty
room.
Sighing, he finally got to his feet and did a
couple of quick
toe-touches; his joints cracked in protest. "Ouch." He went into the
kitchen and, bowing to the inevitable, popped open a can of Dr. Pepper. Drinking
it, he wandered into the spare room where Starsky had set up his model trains.
It was an elaborate arrangement. Starsky had
spent many hours and a
ridiculous number of dollars getting everything just the way he wanted it. Hutch
wondered where he got the patience. Absently, he touched the "on"
lever and the train began to move slowly around the circular track. Pulling the
cars was the gleaming locomotive he'd given Starsky last Christmas.
Hutch watched the train begin to gather speed
as it went past the
built-to-scale Hershey chocolate factory. He pressed the yellow button that
controlled the train whistle and its haunting sound filled the room. It blew
twice before Hutch viciously jerked the train to a stop. "Damn," he
said.
He turned around to leave the room and saw
Dobey standing in the doorway.
"You know," he said hoarsely, "I never realized before how
goddamned lonely a train whistle sounds. And Starsk listens to that all the
time. I don't see how he stands it."
Dobey turned and led the way from the room.
"Maybe he stands it
because he never really feels alone," he said carefully.
Hutch thought about that for a moment.
"Yeah," he said,
"maybe."
"I've been trying to reach
you."
"I spent the night here." He looked
at Dobey sharply.
"What?"
"You were right."
Hutch rubbed his eyes. "It wasn't
Starsk," he said flatly.
"No. We don't know yet who the guy was.
But it's not Starsky."
"Yeah." Hutch sat down on the
couch, stretching his legs out on
the coffee table. "So what the hell does it all mean?"
"I thought maybe you'd be able to tell
me."
Hutch looked surprised. "Me?"
Dobey perched uneasily in a too-small chair.
"Think about everything
that's happened, Hutchinson."
"I have. Several hundred times. I think
about it when I'm
sleeping."
Dobey shook his head. "No, man, you
haven't. Not clearly. At least,
not since Starsky disappeared. Forget that Starsky is your partner for a minute.
Think through everything that's happened, including the body we found last
night."
Hutch took a swallow of soda. He leaned his
head back against the couch
and closed his eyes. Maybe Dobey was right. Maybe he'd gotten too damned close
to the investigation. "Okay," he said slowly, using Dobey as a
sounding board the way he usually used Starsky. "First: McGowan disappears
and is later found shot. Apparently a random victim. Second: Anderson disappears
and is later found shot. Apparently a second random victim. Third: Starsky
disappears. Fourth: A body is found that we are supposed to think is Starsk."
He fell silent for a moment. Then, as a new thought dawned on him, he opened his
eyes. "That wasn't random," he said softly. "And if that wasn't,
maybe none of it was."
Dobey nodded. "Exactly. Someone wanted
us to find that body and
think it was Starsky. Because we were expecting to find Starsky's body. We had
been conditioned that way. And the plan worked. Except for you."
"Except for me." Hutch sighed.
"Great. But what does all
that prove? We're not any closer to finding either the killer or Starsky than we
were before."
"Maybe." Dobey got up from the
chair and began to pace.
"We can come to a couple of possible conclusions. One, that Starsky was the
object of all this. That everything that happened was made to happen so that
Starsky could be snatched and presumed dead."
Hutch considered that. "But what' s the
point?"
"Does there have to be a point? Starsky
has a lot of enemies."
"Yeah, I guess. But so do I. Most cops
do."
"Most good cops," Dobey amended.
"Okay. Let's look at the
second possible conclusion."
"Which is?"
"Who cares about one more dead
cop?" Dobey asked suddenly.
Hutch was startled. "What?"
"Face it, Hutchinson. To most of the
world, that's all it would be.
Just one more dead cop. Who would care if Starsky was dead?"
"A lot of people!" Hutch said,
stung.
"Oh, sure, Ken, I know. His family would
care. His friends. The
people he works with. Me and my family. We love him, too." Dobey spun
around and stared at Hutch, his gaze piercing. "But who would care the
most? Who would come stare at that body all dressed up in Starsky's clothes and
hurt the most?"
There was a long silence. Hutch's face was
white beneath the morning
whiskers. "I would," he said softly. "I would."
Dobey looked away, feeling somehow indecent
watching the naked anguish
that Hutch was suffering. "Yes, Ken," he said after a moment.
"You would."
Hutch upended the soda can and drained it.
Then he got up from the couch
and went into the kitchen to throw the can away. He didn't speak until he was
back in the living room. "My god, do you realize what you're saying,
Cap?" He walked over to the window and stared out; already heat rose in
waves from the sidewalk. "That makes me the center of it all. That means
that three people have died and god only knows what's happened to Starsk all
because of me." He felt sick to his stomach.
"I think we have to consider that
possibility."
"It's a rotten possibility," Hutch
said fiercely. "I hate
it."
Dobey didn't answer.
"All right," Hutch said finally.
"Then I guess we have . .
. I have to start all over again, don't I?"
"Yes."
Hutch sighed. "Yeah." He picked up
his gun and holster.
"This guy's gotta be crazy, right? To go around killing innocent people
just to get back at me?" He was pulling on his holster as he spoke.
"The question is, what's he gonna do next? His bluff is over."
Dobey pulled a copy of the morning paper from
his jacket pocket. "If
he read this, he already knows it didn't work."
Hutch skimmed the story and saw his own words
of denial quoted.
"Damn. Me and my big mouth."
"There's no telling how this might
affect him. To think that his
whole plan, all the other killings, went for nothing, because you weren't fooled
. . . ."
Hutch was staring at the picture of Starsky
and himself.
"Yeah," he murmured absently. "He might go over the edge
altogether and do the job for real this time."
Dobey nodded and stuffed the paper back into
his pocket.
"The first thing to do," Hutch
said, slamming the door of the
apartment and starting down the steps, "is to find out who the dead guy is.
That might give us a trail to the killer."
"All right, get to it. Keep in
touch," Dobey ordered.
Hutch's only reply was a back-handed wave as
he walked quickly toward the
Torino.
~~~
The morgue fit his mood perfectly.
Even the tiled lobby, adorned with plants
that looked more fake than
real, while not necessarily a gloomy place, was distinctly uninviting. He
perched in an orange plastic chair and waited to be summoned. After several
minutes, a young woman clad in a spotless white jacket opened the door and
smiled at him. Despite the air of antiseptic officialdom that hung over the
place, her smile was genuine. "Good morning," she said as if she meant
it. "This way, please."
Her trim figure leading the way, he followed
her down the stairs to where
death waited.
Death, even in these antiseptic, cool, tiled
surroundings, smelled. It is
an unmistakable odor, even if one has never smelled it before. Hutch had, too
many times. But he never got used to it; something deep inside, maybe a primal
instinct for self-preservation, made him want to turn and run the other way as
fast as he could.
He didn't run, of course.
They went into the body-storage room. The
stainless steel rectangle was
refrigerated, kept at a constant 38o. There were over a hundred
little square doors, each with its own number. The doors resembled the lockers
one would see at an airport or bus terminal. Except that in this case, behind
each door, there was a sliding slab and on some of the slabs rested a naked
body.
The woman walked to the door numbered 56
and pulled it open. "Here he is," she said cheerfully.
Hutch stared at the body. Unclothed, with
that terribly unrecognizable
face, the shell of a once-living being seemed painfully vulnerable. The thought
struck him that he might just as easily have been standing there looking at
Starsky. He still might be, before this damned case was over. If it was ever
over. It was beginning to feel like a nightmare that he wouldn't ever wake up
from. He cleared his throat. "What can you tell me?"
She consulted her clipboard. "As a
matter of fact, the I.D. came
down just a few minutes ago.
"Who?"
"Taylor, Joseph William. Age: 28.
Address: 1824
Grenway. The whole
M.E.'s report is on its way downtown now."
Hutch jotted the name and address down in his
notebook.
"Thanks."
She shoved the slab away again and closed the
door. "All part of the
job."
They started back upstairs. "You like
this job?" Hutch asked
curiously. "Being around dead people all the time?"
"Why not? You like your job, being
around bad people all the
time?"
"Usually." He shoved the notebook
into his pocket.
"Sometimes, like now, I hate it."
Her face was serene. "See, by the time I
get these people, there's
no more good or bad. There's only a body. Whatever that person was in life, now
he or she is . . . finished. The journey is over. I don't have to judge, like
you do."
He nodded and left her standing in the lobby,
still looking cheerful.
~~~
The apartment building at 1824 Grenway had
seen better days. It was in a
lower-middle-class neighborhood, populated by unpublished novelists,
undiscovered artists, and uncast actors. Everybody did something else to fill
the time and pay the bills until that one big break came along.
According to the landlady, Joseph Taylor
worked off and on as a waiter.
At the time of his death, he was in an off period and two months behind on his
rent. "But I didn't wanta throw the kid out on the street, you know?"
she said.
"That was charitable of you," Hutch
said, trying to stay out of
reach of both the whiskey fumes that filled the hallway every time the frowsy
blonde opened her mouth, and her hands, which she seemed inclined to place on
various portions of his anatomy as she spoke. Presumably to make a point more
effectively.
"Yeah, charitable, that's me. Old
Marlane Huff, easiest touch on the
block. Just ask anybody," she said, attempting to massage his left bicep.
"See, I usta be in the business. Even made a movie once with Tom Mix."
"Oh, really?" Hutch sidestepped a
grab at his thigh. At least,
he hoped it was a grab for his thigh. "So what about Joe Taylor?"
"A nice boy, real nice. Never minded
coming in to spend some time
with a lonely widow." It was fascinating the way her hands kept moving,
seemingly independent of her conversation.
"Well, when he wasn't here keeping you
company, where did Joe hang
out?"
She smiled and squeezed his hand intimately.
"Down at the Blue Gull.
Joey spent a lot of time in the Blue Gull."
"Well, uh, thanks for your
cooperation," he said.
"Anytime, blondie. Hey, by the way, you
wouldn't be looking to move,
would you? I mean, I've got an empty apartment now."
"I think the rent is too high,"
Hutch said.
"We could make an arrangement."
"No, thanks." He started to turn
around and go down the stairs,
thought of her predilection, and reconsidered, backing away instead. "Uh,
thank you."
He smiled to himself as he got back into the
car. Boy, it really took all
kinds. Wait till I tell Starsk about . . . . He bit his lower lip so hard
that the taste of blood filled his mouth. It was such an ordinary thought. So
ordinary and it hurt so damned much.
~~~
The bartender in the Blue Gull stopped drying
glasses when Hutch
flashed his badge. "You know a guy
named Joe Taylor?"
"Sure, Joey comes around a lot. Nearly
every day."
"Was he in yesterday?"
The man wiped the counter with a
none-too-clean towel. "Yesterday?
Uh, yeah. I think so . . .sure, he was in for a little while."
Hutch, watching himself in the mirror behind
the bar, realized for the
first time that day what he looked like. Unshaven. Clothes that looked like
they'd been slept in. Which they had. And a funny look in his eyes. Even he
wasn't sure what the look meant. It was part fear, part anger, and a large dose
of pure desperation. He blinked. "Was he alone?"
"This is a friendly bar. Everybody talks
to everybody."
"So who was Joey talking to
yesterday?"
The bartender was quiet. After a moment,
Hutch took a five dollar bill
from his pocket and slid it across the bar. "Maybe this will refresh your
memory," he said quietly. The man reached for the money. Hutch grabbed two
of his fingers and carefully bent them backwards. "I'm in no mood for
games," he said, still speaking softly. "My partner has been snatched
and if I find out later that you've been holding out on me, I will personally
come back here and take you apart piece by piece. Comprende?"
The man was turning pale. "Yeah,
yeah," he gasped, "but
for christ's sake, lemme go. You're busting my frigging fingers."
Hutch released him. Sometimes, he thought,
Starsky's methods worked quite
nicely. "So? Who was Joe talking to?"
"Ahh, some new guy," the barman
said, rubbing his hand.
"Been coming around the last week or so. He'd come in every day, sit
nursing one beer, and rap with Joey for awhile."
"This guy have a name?"
"Lou."
"Lou?"
"That's all I know. Except that Joey
left with him yesterday. Never
done that before. In fact, it was kinda strange."
"What was?"
"Well, Joey went into the head, changed
into some clothes this Lou
gave him, and then they left."
Hutch felt a small flame of hope kindled
within. "What kind of
clothes?"
"Just clothes. How should I know? I was
busy."
"Think about it," Hutch said
mildly.
The man backed away a little, his hands kept
out of Hutch's reach.
"All I remember is a red T-shirt."
"Very good. How'd they leave?"
"In Lou's car. A VW.
Green."
"Know the license?"
"Why the hell should I?"
Hutch got up from the barstool. "What
about Lou? Got a
description?"
"Early thirties. Stocky. Horn-rimmed
glasses. Longish hair."
All of which meant nothing to Hutch.
"I'm going to send the police
artist over," he said. "You tell him what you can."
"Yes, sir."
Hutch left the cool dimness of the bar and
walked back out into the
burning afternoon. So. He had a name. A description. A car. God, this more than
they'd had all along. This was a lot. He and Starsk had tracked down people with
a lot less information.
Only one thing worried him. If the theory
that Dobey and he were now
operating under was true, shouldn't this guy Lou sound familiar? The name and
description meant nothing at all to him. Still, at least he didn't feel like he
was chasing a ghost anymore.
"Hang in there, Starsk," he
muttered. "Just hang in there
a little longer, buddy."
**
Part
Four
Table of
Contents
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