Ben Wixler turned down a chance to remain in the army after VJ day, and was discharged with appropriate medals and recognition and a separation promotion to Major. He went back to Hancock in November of 1945, intending to re-enter college for his final year at mid-semester. His father was an officer and director of the Hancock Bank and Trust Company, and it had been Ben’s previous plan to finish his Business Administration course, get his degree, and go into the bank. He had not been awfully enthused by that program, even before the war. The years of command and responsibility made the prospect quite tasteless. He was very restless during his terminal leave, moody, drinking too much, dissatisfied with himself, and wondering if he would have done better to stay in.
His father, a man of much perception, introduced him at that critical juncture to Hank Striker, the Chief of Police. Ben’s father was one of the few men of prominence in the city who understood the dimensions of Striker’s problem, and respected his approach to it. They were close friends. Striker was impressed by Ben Wixler. Striker felt that one day, somehow, the strength of the Bouchards and the Kennedys would be smashed in Hancock. One day they would be stripped of the political power that made it necessary for the police force to embrace expediency rather than efficiency. If that day were to be hastened, and if the force were to be able to handle it when it did arrive, it was necessary to attract to the force now those young men of high purpose and intelligence exemplified by Ben Wixler.
Striker talked to Ben. He talked to him privately and at length and with utter frankness. He told him of the social disapproval he could expect, of the disappointments that would be his. And he lit a fire that did not go out. Wixler changed his major and finished in two years at North-western, and did clerical work at Hancock Police Headquarters during the summers. After graduation he was taken on as a rookie, received one citation during that period, and became a patrolman at the end of his probationary period. For the excellence of his work he was made detective after eleven months as a patrolman, and was reassigned to the Homicide Section, headed by Captain Roeber. He knew the extent of his good fortune in the assignment to Homicide. Of all the operating sections, that was the one least subject to outside influence. All other crimes and violations were subject to the fix. Not murder.
In 1950, six months after the death of Striker, and one month before the birth of their first child, Ben Wixler made sergeant. Beth was exactly right for him. It was the best of marriages. He was twenty-nine when they married, and she was twenty-one, a small girl with dark auburn hair and the complexion of a brunette. Her father, a prosperous building supply merchant, deplored the marriage. In addition to their happiness, there was one other factor which, though Ben resented it slightly at first, he later came to realize was most fortunate. Beth, by the terms of her grandfather’s will, came into a small inheritance when she was twenty-one. It provided an income of just under eleven hundred dollars a year. Once he was adjusted to that, he told her there should be an unlimited supply of lovely redheads with eleven hundred a year. And they should be reserved for the cops. It provided just enough cushion to make the meager wage palatable.
Soon the promotion to lieutenant would come along. It was inevitable that it should. At the time he had been assigned to Homicide, Captain Roeber had been tough, alert and competent, fully capable of running his section. But during the past two years there had been an unfortunate disintegration of the man, an early and progressive hardening of the arteries of the brain resulting in premature senility. Roeber had become erratic, confused, subject to curious emotional fixations and delusions of persecution.
As that had progressed, the burden of the section had fallen more heavily on the shoulders of the assistant section head, Lieutenant Gabby Grey, and on Ben Wixler. Gabby Grey was a frail reed indeed. He was nearly sixty, a political appointee of forty years ago, nephew of a mayor dead a quarter of a century. When Roeber had been his competent self, there was no burden on Gabby Grey. But with Roeber incapacitated, Gabby could not handle the section. He fluttered, jittered, perspired, and passed the buck to Wixler on nearly every decision.
The new chief was, fortunately, a man from the same mold as Striker. His name was James Purvis, a small, cold, brilliant, dictatorial man. When the confusion in the Homicide Section was pointed out to him, his investigation was quick and thorough. There were many ways it could have been handled, other men who could have been transferred in. But one of Purvis’s most valued possessions was the small private notebook kept by Striker, with his personal evaluation of all officers on the force. After checking the notebook, Purvis moved swiftly. He put Roeber on sick leave for the four months remaining before his retirement. He reassigned Gabby Grey to Central Records where it seemed that he could do the least harm. He made Ben Wixler acting head of the Homicide Section, and released Inspector Wendell Matthews from some of his other duties so that he could keep closer check on the performance of the section. All this had happened six months ago, and Ben had been assured that when his promotion came through he would be made head of the section. Until that time he had to move very gingerly insofar as personnel changes were concerned. He knew the ones he wanted to get rid of, and he also knew the young ones he wanted to bring in.
By twenty minutes of twelve that evening Ben had stifled so many yawns his jaw ached. Hank was in the middle of telling, in excruciating detail, the big addition he had made to his yard for the do-it-yourself addicts when the phone rang. Ben reached the hallway phone in five long strides and caught it at the end of the second ring.
“Wixler.”
“Cullin, Ben. We got one. Housewife in Brookton. Means is on the way. He ought to be there in three, four minutes.”
“Thanks, Shorty.”
He went back into the living room. “Sorry, people. I’ve got to go to work.” Beth gave a familiar sigh of resignation.
Eleanor said, “We should be going now anyway. I’m certainly grateful Hank keeps regular hours.”
“It’s so nice for you, dear,” Beth said.
Ben went to the bedroom, picked up gun and badge, then scooped coat and hat from the front hall closet, said good night, kissed Beth, and, as he went down the front steps, saw the sedan glide to a stop at the end of his walk. He ran the rest of the way, and the sedan started up again as he pulled the rear door shut. Detective Dan Means was in the back seat. Detective Al Spence was in the front beside the driver.
There was no time wasted in greetings. “Ten twenty-four Arcadia. Mrs. Lee Bronson. The husband phoned it in. Car 18 checked and confirmed. Looks like she was beaten to death in the kitchen.”
“Nice,” Ben said dryly. “How are we on schedule?”
“Got the original call at eleven twenty-eight, confirmed at eleven thirty-four. We ought to hit there about the same time as the lab truck.”
Ben leaned back in his seat. He knew the most probable pattern. Some heavy drinking, a family quarrel, a drunken blow that hit too hard. He hoped there weren’t any kids. That always made it worse. There would be a repentant slob, suddenly sober, too-late sober, tearing his hair and bellowing of his great sorrow, his terrible loss. How could he have done such a thing. And with luck Ben thought he could be in bed by one o’clock.
“Party at your house?” Dan asked.
“Just my brother-in-law.”
“He offer you a job again?”
“Not this time.”
“Maybe you ought to take it, Ben.”
Al Spence turned around, arm hooked over the back of the seat. “Ask him for one for me too, Sarge. Something interesting. Like counting boards or driving a lumber truck.”