"Course we'll be checking out your story with the restaurant and looking close at all the pictures you took. But I got to tell you now, there's one thing bothers me."
"What's that, Dave?" Scotto asked.
"Fact that Barnett here's even got these alibi photographs."
"I never called them that," I said.
"I'm a photographer. I take pictures. 'that's what I do."
"Maybe so," Ramos said.
"Iling is, if we're sure a guy did something, all the alibis in the world don't mean squat." He gave me a hard stare.
"See, most people, they don't have alibis. they aren't out conveniently photographing people carrying dated newspapers with a big clock in the background at A, the same time a car with a body in the trunk is being stashed in a parking lot at But What I want to know is why you think you needed these pictures."
"Now, wait just a minute!" I said.
"No. You wait!" Ramos rose from his chair.
"You wait, and see what happens. 'Cause I got to tell you, there's something weird I feel coming off of you, and it don't smell all that sweet."
"What are you saying?"
"I'm saying how I feel. First I see you striding down the hall holding a copy of Screw. Then you tell me your apartment's been broken in, even though there's a good ten grand's worth of cameras sitting around in here untouched. Then you say the only thing that's different is someone's scrawled 'cunt' on these strange cutups you made of your girlfriend. And all around the place what do I see? More photos of the broad. Everywhere I look, pictures, pictures, pictures, a fair percentage of them in the nude. Now, what does that tell me, Barnett?
Maybe that you're"-he snickered-"a sex pervert. Which isn't inconsistent with the pictures you show me of the homicide victim, strutting around here in her nifty black underwear. You think maybe I don't think that's a little strange? I'm not sure I believe a word of it. So let's leave it like this: Cheryl Devereux has been killed and her roommate is missing, and you've been involved with both of them in some kind of kinky way I haven't figured out yet. When I do figure it out I'll be back. Meantime my advice is get yourself a good attorney."
He motioned to Scotto that it was time to leave. Then he strutted out.
Scotto smiled weakly at me from the door, but this time he didn't roll his eyes. After they left I set to work on the murals, trying to clean them up. I couldn't. The spray paint was indelible. Then I lay down on my couch and started thinking about Shadow, about her bones being broken. Then I thought about Ramos and what he'd said, and I decided that though he was undoubtedly a slob, and his speech was uncouth, and he was definitely wrong in his assumptions, he could not be called a fool.
I was in my darkroom, making up a new print of the PietA. The smell of the chemicals relaxed me. I knew the exposure and dodging and burning program for that negative by heart. I got several requests for prints of it every month. It was my bread-and-butter negative, my sinecure, my capital. I had just finished the exposure and had put the paper in the developer when the telephone rang. Using one hand to agitate the solution, I picked up the darkroom extension.
"Like the damage, Barnett?" The male voice on the other end sounded tough.
"Who is this?"
" 'Who is this?… He mimicked me in a nasty falsetto.
"Who the fuck you think it is?"
I dropped my print into the solution.
"You're the bastard who broke in."
"Yeah, I'm the bastard, you're the pigshit, and youknow-who's the cunt."
There was someth ' ing horribly aggressive in his tone that scared the hell out of me.
"What do you want?" I asked.
There was a pause and then he spoke.
"Next time I come I hope you're there. Then instead of tearing up your shitty picture, I'll tear you up." The phone went dead.
I called Scotto, told him what had happened. He said I shouldn't worry about it, that it sounded like a freak acting big.
"One thing I'd suggest though-if you were really broken in."
I was incredulous.
"You still don't think I was?"
"What Dave and I think are two different things. Meantime my suggestion is get a locksmith up there and have him put in something unbreakable.
Like a good bar lock, something like that. Then you won't have to worry anymore."
"Fine. I'll do that," I said.
"But you're not getting my point. "
"Which is?"
"This creep's focused on Kimberly. He gets off calling her names. I say he's the guy who killed Shadow, now he's after Kim, and he thinks he can get to her through me.
"So who is he?"
"I think it's the super in their building," I said. "He's animal enough."
"You recognized his voice?"
"No. But it could have been him. He made the same kind of tough-guy grunts."
"Not enough, Geoffrey. Can't accuse just because of that."
"I'm not accusing. I'm suggesting you check him out. The guy's got some kind of macho complex. He reads Soldier of Fortune and keeps pin-ups on his wall." There was a pause. I could hear Scotto breathing on the other end.
"What's the matter, Sal?"
"Like Dave says, Geoffre@you read Screw and you keep pin-ups too."
"I don't believe I'm hearing this. Why are you looking at me? What about Kim's 'Powerful man'? What about the super and 'Mrs. Z'? Why don't you check on them."
"Let us worry about all of that. Just stay away from that super, and do something about your door."
I took his advice. I called in a locksmith and spent three hundred bucks on a bar lock. Then I ordered new prints of Kim, and, when they came, – set to work making up new serialized murals, using the damaged ones as my guide. This time the work went quickly. I finished the first mural at 11:00 P.m. I liked it even better than my original. It seemed sharper, more unified. I hung it, admired it awhile, then pulled out my tape of Touch of Evil and put it in my VCR.
I originally collected my film noir videos so I could study their brilliant photographic effects and their vision that extended beyond mere night photography into deeper "darknesses" of character. But as I watched them together with Kim, I began to appreciate their stories too.
Now, with her gone, I found myself playing them again and again, a kind of substitute, perhaps, for wandering the streets at night.
Touch of Evil is a special favorite for the way it seethes with an almost palpable corruption. I'd seen it half a dozen times, and was enjoying this latest screening when, just at the point where Janet Leigh was being terrorized by the motorcycle gang, my buzzer sounded from downstairs. I left the VCR on while I answered the intercom.
"Western Union. Telegram for Mr. Geoffrey Barnett."
I buzzed the messenger in, then checked the new lock on my door. I waited behind the peephole, still enjoying the screams issuing from my TV. A couple of minutes later a young black man appeared in the hall, a can of Pepsi in his hand. I watched him approach. He looked all right, dreamy and spaced-out, but I wanted to be sure.
"Show me the cable," I said through the door.
He shrugged and held a yellow envelope up to the hole.
"Okay… I slid open the bar lock and opened up.
As soon as I saw him I knew I'd made a mistake. He'd moved back against the far wall and now there was something bright and tense about his face. He was holding his Pepsi can in a strange way too, as if it were a weapon.
I started to shut the door. But I was too late. With a vigorous upward motion he thrust the can toward me, heaving out its contents. Then he turned and ran toward the stairway, so fast I'd have stood no chance of catching him. A moment after the attack I heard the fire door slam, and then my nostrils caught the smell of lye.
The fluid hadn't touched me, but it was a near miss. Noxious fumes was rising from the wall. The lye had hit at face level not a foot from where I'd stood. I watched, horrified, as the paint curled and peeled, then boiled off in a thick foul-smelling smoke. Then I heard my phone ringing, over the screams of Janet Leigh. I shut the door, barred it and picked up the receiver. I recognized the voice.