Detective Bentley had been right; the Osborne wasn't much of a hotel. It could have been called the Seedy Grandeur. Located on 46th Street east of Seventh Avenue, it had a stone facade so gray and crumbled that it seemed bearded.
It was the type of Times Square hotel that had once hosted Enrico Caruso, Lillian Russell, and Diamond Jim Brady. Now it sheltered Sammy the Wop, Gage Sullivan, Dirty Sally, and others of hazy pasts and no futures.
Standing in the center of that chipped and peeling lobby, Delaney decided the odor was compounded of CN, pot, and ancient urinals. But the place seemed bustling enough, all the men equipped with toothpicks and all the women with orange hair. Tout sheets were everywhere.
Eddie Holzer was studying one, marking his choices. His feet were parked atop his splintered desk and he was wearing a greasy fedora. He held a cracked coffee cup in one trembling hand. Delaney guessed it didn't contain coffee.
Holzer glanced up when Delaney paused in the opened door.
"Chrissake," he said, lurching to his feet, "look what the cat drug in. Harya, Chief."
They shook hands, and Holzer brushed magazines and old newspapers off a straight chair. Delaney sat down cautiously. He looked at the other man with what he hoped was a friendly smile.
He knew Holzer's record, and it wasn't a happy one. The ex-detective had worked out of the Narcotics Division, and eventually the big money had bedazzled him. He had been allowed to retire before the DA moved in, but everyone in the Department knew he was tainted.
Now here he was, Chief of Security in a sleazy Times Square hotel, marking up a tipsheet and sipping cheap booze from a coffee cup. For all that, Delaney knew the man had been a clever cop, and he hoped enough remained.
They gossiped of this and that, remembering old times, talking of who was retired, who was dead. The Department put its mark on a man. He might be out for years and years, but he'd be in for the rest of his life.
Finally the chatter stopped.
Holzer looked at the Chief shrewdly. "I don't figure you stopped in by accident. How'd you find me?"
"Bentley," Delaney said.
"Dapper Dan?" Holzer said, laughing. "Good cop."
He was a florid, puffy man, rapidly going to flab. His face was a road map of capillaries, nose swollen, cheeks bloomy. Delaney had noted the early-morning shakes; Holzer made no effort to conceal them. If he was a man on the way down, it didn't seem to faze him.
The Chief wasn't sure how to get started, how much to reveal. But Holzer made it easy for him.
He said: "I hear you're helping out on the Hotel Ripper thing."
Delaney looked at him with astonishment. "Where did you hear that?"
Holzer flipped a palm back and forth. "Here and there. The grapevine. You know how things get around."
"They surely do," Delaney said. "Yes, I'm helping out. Deputy Commissioner Thorsen is an old friend of mine. I hunted you down because I-because we need your help."
He had pushed the right button. Holzer straightened up, his shoulders went back. Light came into his dulled eyes.
"You need my help?" he said, not believing. "On the case?"
Delaney nodded. "I think you're the man. You're a hotel security chief."
"Some hotel," Holzer said wanly. "Some security chief."
"Still…" Delaney said.
He explained that all the Ripper slayings had occurred at hotels in which conventions were being held. He was convinced the killer had prior knowledge of exactly where and when conventions and sales meetings and large gatherings were taking place.
Eddie Holzer listened intently, pulling at his slack lower lip.
"Yeah," he said, "that washes. I'll buy it. So?"
"So how would someone know the convention schedule in midtown Manhattan? It's not published in the papers."
Holzer thought a moment.
"These things are planned months ahead," he said. "Sometimes years ahead. To reserve the rooms, you understand. Someone in the Mayor's office would know. The outfit trying to bring new business to the city. The tourist bureau. Maybe there's a convention bureau. The Chamber of Commerce. Like that."
"Good," Delaney said, not mentioning that he had already thought of those sources. "Anyone else?"
"The hotel associations-they'd know."
"And…?"
"Oh," Holzer said, "here…"
He bent over with some effort, rooted through the stack of magazines and newspapers he had swept off Delaney's chair. He came up with a thin, slick-paper magazine, skidded it across the desk to the Chief.
"New York hotel trade magazine," he said. "Comes out every week. It lists all the conventions in town."
"This goes to every hotel?" Delaney asked, flipping through the pages.
"I guess so," Holzer said. "It's a freebie. The ads pay for it. I think it goes to travel agencies, too. Maybe they send it out of town to big corporations-who knows? You'll have to check."
"Uh-huh," Delaney said. "Well, it's a place to start. Eddie, can I take this copy with me?"
"Be my guest," Holzer said. "I never look at the goddamned thing."
The Chief stood, held out his hand. The other man managed to get to his feet. They shook hands. Holzer didn't want to let go.
"Thank you, Eddie," Delaney said, pulling his hand away. "You've been a big help."
"Yeah?" Holzer said vaguely. "Well… you know. Anything I can do…"
"Take care of yourself," Delaney said gently.
"What? Me? Sure. You bet. I'm on top of the world."
Delaney nodded and got out of there. In the rancid lobby, a man and a woman were having a snarling argument. As the Chief passed, the woman spat in the man's face.
"Aw, honey," he said sadly, "now why did you want to go and do that for?"
Pierre au Tunnel was Delaney's favorite French restaurant on the West Side. And because it was Friday, he knew they would be serving bouillabaisse. The thought of that savory fish stew demolished the memory of Monica's scrumptious breakfast.
He walked uptown through Times Square, not at all offended by the flashy squalor. For all its ugliness, it had a strident vitality that stirred him. This section was quintessential New York. If you couldn't endure Times Square, you couldn't endure change.
But there were some things that didn't change; Pierre au Tunnel was just as he remembered it. The entrance was down a flight of stairs from the sidewalk. There was a long, narrow front room, bar on the right, a row of small tables on the left. In the rear was the main dining room, low-ceilinged, walls painted to simulate those of a tunnel or grotto.
It was a relaxed, reasonably priced restaurant, with good bread and a palatable house wine. Most of the patrons were habitues. It was the kind of neighborhood bistro where old customers kissed old waitresses.
The luncheon crowd had thinned out; Delaney was able to get his favorite table in the corner of the front room. He ordered the bouillabaisse and a small bottle of chilled muscadet. He tucked the corner of his napkin into his collar and spread the cloth across his chest.
He ate his stew slowly, dipping chunks of crusty French bread into the sauce. It was as good as he remembered it, as flavorful,; and the hard, flinty wine was a perfect complement. He ordered espresso and a lemon ice for dessert and then, a little later, a pony of Armagnac.
Ordinarily, lunching alone at this restaurant, he would have amused himself by observing his fellow diners and the activity at the bar. But today, with the hotel trade magazine tucked carefully at his side, he had other matters to occupy him.
His original intention had been to take a more active role in the investigation. He had hoped that he alone might handle the search for persons with access to a list of current conventions in New York.
He saw now that such an inquiry was beyond his capabilities, or those of any other single detective. It would take a squad of ten, twenty, perhaps thirty men to track down all the sources, to make a list of all New Yorkers who might have access to a schedule of conventions.
It was a dull, routine, interminable task. And in the end, it might lead to nothing. But, he reflected grimly, it had to be done. Sipping his Armagnac, he began to plan how the men selected for the job should be organized and assigned.