Lawrence Block - A Walk Among the Tombstones

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A new breed of entrepreneurial monster has set up shop in the big city. Ruthless, ingenious murderers, they prey on the loved ones of those who live outside the law, knowing that criminals will never run to the police, no matter how brutal the threat. So other avenues for justice must be explored, which is where ex-cop turned p.i. Matthew Scudder comes in.
Scudder has no love for the drug dealers and poison peddlers who now need his help. Nevertheless, he is determined to do whatever it takes to put an elusive pair of thrill-kill extortionists out of business — for they are using the innocent to fuel their terrible enterprise.

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The lock wasn’t working on the rooming-house door. Kenan drew it open and said, “Great security here. Great place altogether.” We entered and climbed two flights of stairs through that flophouse smell of mice and soiled linen. Kenan walked to a door and listened for a moment, knocked on it, called out his brother’s name. There was no response. He repeated the process with the same result, tried the door and found it locked.

“I’m afraid what I’ll find in there,” he said, “and at the same time I’m afraid to walk away.”

I found an expired Visa card in my wallet and loided the door with it. Kenan glanced at me with new respect.

The room was empty, and a mess. The bed linen was half on the floor, and clothing was piled in disarray on a wooden chair. I spotted the Big Book and a couple of AA pamphlets on the oak bureau. I didn’t see any bottles or drug paraphernalia, but there was a water tumbler on the bedside table and Kenan picked it up and sniffed at it.

“I don’t know,” he said. “What do you think?”

The glass was dry inside, but I thought I could smell a residue of alcohol. Still, suggestion would account for it. It wouldn’t be the first time I’d smelled alcohol when there wasn’t any there.

“I don’t like poking around his things,” Kenan said. “What little he’s got, he’s entitled to his privacy. I just had this vision of him turning blue with the needle still in his arm, you know what I mean?”

Out on the street he said, “Well, he’s got money. He won’t have to steal. ‘Less he gets into cocaine, that’ll take whatever you got, but he never liked coke much. Petey likes the bass notes, likes to get down as deep as you can go.”

“I can identify with that.”

“Yeah. He runs out of dough, he can always sell Francey’s Camry. He hasn’t got the title, but it Blue Books at eight or nine grand, so he can probably find somebody’ll give him a few hundred for it without papers. That’s junkie economics, makes perfect sense.”

I told him Peter’s joke about the difference between a drunk and a junkie. They’d both steal your wallet, but the junkie would help you look for it.

“Yeah,” he said, nodding. “Says it all.”

Chapter 17

Several things happened over the course of the next week or so.

I made three trips to Sunset Park, two of them alone, the third in the company of TJ. At loose ends one afternoon, I beeped him and got a call back almost immediately. We met in the Times Square subway station and rode out to Brooklyn together. We had lunch at a deli and café con leche at the Cuban place and walked around some. We talked a lot, and while I didn’t learn a great deal about him, he learned a few things about me, assuming he was listening.

While we waited for our train back to the city he said, “Say, you don’t have to pay me nothin’ for today. On account of we didn’t do nothin’.”

“Your time has to be worth something.”

“If I be workin’, but all I was doin’ was hangin’ around. Man, I been doin’ that for free all my life.”

Another night I was just about to leave the house and head for a meeting when a call from Danny Boy sent me chasing out to an Italian restaurant in Corona, where three small-time louts had recently blossomed as big spenders. It seemed unlikely — Corona is in northern Queens, and light-years from Sunset Park — but I went anyway and drank San Pellegrino water at the bar and waited for three guys in silk suits to come in and throw their money around.

The TV was on, and at ten o’clock the Channel 5 newscast included a shot of three men who’d just been arrested for the recent robbing and pistol-whipping of a Forty-seventh Street diamond merchant. The bartender said, “Hey, would you look at that! Those assholes were in here the past three nights, spending money like they couldn’t get rid of it fast enough. I had a kind of a feeling where it came from.”

“They made it the old-fashioned way,” the man next to me said. “They stole it.”

I was only a few blocks from Shea Stadium, but that still left me hundreds of miles from the Mets, who had lost a close one to the Cubs that afternoon at Wrigley. The Yankees were at home against the Indians. I walked to the subway and went home.

Another time I got a call from Drew Kaplan, who said that Kelly and his colleagues at Brooklyn Homicide wanted Pam to go down to Washington and pay a call at the FBI’s National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime at Quantico. I asked when she was going.

“She’s not,” he said.

“She refused?”

“At her attorney’s suggestion.”

“I don’t know about that,” I said. “The public-relations department was always where the Feebies were strongest, but what I’ve heard about their division that profiles serial killers is fairly impressive. I think she should go.”

“Well,” he said, “it’s too bad you’re not her lawyer. It’s her interests I’ve been engaged to protect, my friend. Anyway, the mountain’s coming to Mohammed. They’re sending a guy up tomorrow.”

“Let me know how it goes,” I said, “insofar as that coincides with what you deem to be the best interests of your client.”

He laughed. “Don’t get hinky, Matt. Why should she have to schlep down to DC? Let him come here.”

After the meeting with the profiler he called again to say he was not blown away by the session. “He seemed a little nonchalant to me,” Drew said. “Like someone who’s only killed two women and slashed a third isn’t worth his time. I gather the more of a string a killer puts together, the more it gives them to work with.”

“That figures.”

“Yeah, but it’s small consolation to the people at the end of the string. They’d probably just as soon the cops caught the guy early on instead of letting him provide such interesting items for their data base. He was telling Kelly they’ve put together a really solid profile of some yutz out on the West Coast. They could tell you he collected stamps as a boy and how old he was when he got his first tattoo. But they still haven’t apprehended the son of a bitch and I think he said the current count is forty-two, with four more probables.”

“I can see why Ray and his friend seem small-time.”

“He wasn’t wild about the frequency, either. He said serial killers generally manifest a higher level of activity. That means they don’t wait months between crimes. He said either they hadn’t hit their stride yet or they were infrequent visitors to New York and did the bulk of their killing elsewhere.”

“No,” I said. “They know the city too well for that.”

“Why do you say that?”

“Huh?”

“How do you know how well they knew the city?”

Because they had sent the Khourys chasing all over Brooklyn, but I couldn’t mention that. “They used two different outer-borough cemeteries for dumping grounds,” I said, “and Forest Park. Who did you ever hear of from out of town who could pick up a girl on Lexington Avenue and wind up in a cemetery in Queens?”

“Anybody could,” he said, “if he picked up the wrong girl. Let me think what else he said. He said they were probably in their early thirties, probably abused as children. He came up with a lot of very general stuff. There was one other thing he said that gave me a chill.”

“What’s that?”

“Well, this particular guy’s been with the division twenty years, just about since they started it up. He’s coming up on retirement pretty soon and he said he’s just as glad.”

“Because he’s burned out?”

“More than that. He said the rate at which these incidents are occurring has been increasing all along in a really nasty way. But the way the curve’s shaping up now, they think these cases are really going to spike between now and the end of the century. Sport-killing, he called it. Says they’re looking for it to be the leisure craze of the nineties.”

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