"I'll be fine."
Another silence. "I know how much you loved him," Susan said.
"I did, Mom."
"I know, I know."
Another sigh.
"All right, honey, I'll talk to you later. I'll try to get a plane tonight if I can. You're not alone, Marie. Dolores will be right there, and I'll be up as soon as I can."
"Thank you, Mom."
"All right now," Susan said, "I have to go now. Call me if you need me."
"Yes, Mom."
"Good night now, honey."
"Good night, Mom."
There was a small click on the line. Marie put the receiver back on the cradle. She looked up at the clock on the kitchen wall. Only forty minutes left to what had been the longest day of her life.
The clock ticked noisily into the stillness of the empty house.
The clock on the hospital wall read twenty-five minutes past eleven.
Lieutenant Peter Byrnes had not yet called the wives. He would have to call the wives. Speak to Teddy and Sarah, tell them what had happened. He was standing in the corridor with Deputy Police Commissioner Howard Brill, who'd come uptown when he'd heard that two detectives had been shot in a liquor-store stakeout. Brill was a black man in his early fifties; Byrnes had known him when they were both walking beats in River-head. About the same size as Byrnes, same compact head and intelligent eyes; the men could have been cast from the identical bullet mold, except that one was black and the other was white. Brill was upset; Byrnes could understand why.
"The media's gonna have a ball," Brill said. "Did you see this?"
He showed Byrnes the front page of one of the morning tabloids. The headline looked as if it had been written for a sensational rag that sold at the local supermarket. But instead of
MARTIAN IMPREGNATES CAMEL or HITLER REINCARNATED AS IOWA HOUSEWIFE, this one read:
MIDGETS 2 mdash;COPS 0
POLICE CAUGHT SHORT
"Very funny," Byrnes said. "I got one cop in intensive care, and another one in surgery, and they're making jokes."
"How are they?" Brill asked.
"Meyer's okay. Carella hellip;" He shook his head. "The bullet's still inside him. They're digging for it now."
"What caliber?"
"Twenty-two. That's according to the slugs we recovered in the store. Meyer took two hits, but the bullets passed through."
"He was lucky," Brill said. "They're worse than a goddamn forty-five, those low-caliber guns. Hit a man where there's real meat, the bullet hasn't got the force to exit. Ricochets around inside there like it's bouncing off furniture."
"Yeah," Byrnes said, and nodded bleakly.
"Lot of shooting tonight," Brill said. "You'd think it was the Fourth of July, 'stead of Halloween. Your man clean on that other one?"
"I hope so," Byrnes said.
"Four teenagers, Pete, the medialoves kids getting shot. What's the report on their condition?"
I haven't checked it. I ran over here the minute hellip;"
"Sure, I understand."
Byrnes guessed he should have checked on those kids before he'd come over here mdash;not that he really caredhow they were, except as their condition reflected on his squad. On his block, if you were looking for trouble with a cop, you should be happy you found it. But if Genero had pulled his gun without prudent care and reasonable cause, and if one of those punks died, or worse yet ended up a vegetable hellip;
"How smart is he?" Brill asked.
"Not very."
" 'Cause they'll be coming at him, you know."
"I realize that."
"Where is he now?"
"Still downtown. I think. I really don't know, Howie. I'm sorry, but when I heard about Meyer and Carella hellip;"
"Sure, I understand," Brill said again.
He was wondering which of the incidents would cause the Department the biggest headache. A dumb cop shooting four kids, or two dumb cops getting shot by midgets.
"Midgets," he said aloud.
"Yeah," Byrnes said.
Tricky, he thought.
I know that.
Coming back to the same bar a fourth time.
But that's part of the fun.
Look the same, act the same, makes it more exciting that way. Big blond guy is who they're looking for, so Heeeeeere'sJohnny , folks! No description in the newspapers yet, but that's the cops playing it tricky, too.
Tricks all around, he thought.
Suits me fine.
By now they're thinking psycho.
Some guy who once had a traumatic experience with a hooker. Hates all hookers, is systematically eliminating them. They ought to boot up their computer, check with Kansas City. In Kansas City, it was only two of them. Well, when you're just starting, you start small, right? In Chicago, it was three. Good night, folks! Do my little song and dance in each city, listen to the newspaper and television applause, take my bow, and shuffle off to Buffalo. Slit their throats, carve up their pussies, the copshave to be thinking psycho. I'll do four of them here, he thought, and then move on. Two, three, four, a nice gradual escalation.