'Where's that little girl who fingered this suspect?' the driver asked. 'We need her as a witness.'

The big cop looked about but didn't see her. 'Jesus Christ, why did you let her go?' he asked accusingly.

'Me let her go!' the driver exclaimed indignantly. 'You let her go as much as me.'

'I was occupied subduing this suspect,' the big cop said.

'Hell, what do you think I was doing?' the driver demanded. 'Here, look at my eye.'

'Okay, okay,' the big cop said.

They searched among the crowd for the little girl and inquired for her, but without success. So they took the woman to the station without the little witness.

Photographs had been taken of the body in the bush, and it had been dragged into the lavatory for further examination. Its clothes had been removed.

'I find nineteen stab wounds about the head, neck, shoulders and back,' the Medical Examiner said. 'We can more or less say that was the cause of death.'

The sergeant from the Homicide Bureau looked at the grim object laid out on the tiled floor and felt slightly nauseated.

'He looks as though he were beaten up, too,' he observed.

The two plain-clothes men and the uniformed cops gathered about stared silently.

The Medical Examiner wiped his hands with a cloth dampened with alcohol.

'Yes, that's the strange thing,' he admitted. 'He was severely beaten with some sort of blunt instrument at least half an hour before he was killed. But notice-all of the bruises are on the front of the body, but are not concentrated in any one area like the stab wounds. There are bruises from the shins to the forehead, as though he were beaten while lying on his back.'

'Somebody didn't like him,' the sergeant said.

'Offhand I would say that both the stab wounds and bruises were inflicted by more than one person,' the M.E. said. 'But we can judge better after the autopsy whether more than one knife was used.'

'You think it was a gang killing, then?' the sergeant asked.

'Either that, or the murderer was an exceedingly quick and powerful person.'

'Well, a woman has been found with a bloodstained knife,' the sergeant said. 'And from what I've heard of the report turned in by the arresting officers, she fills the bill as quick and powerful.'

The M.E. looked skeptical. 'In my experience with womenfolk, I've never come across any that quick and powerful,' he said.

'Well, we're going to see soon,' the sergeant said.

The M.E. went toward his car, shaking his head; the sergeant went toward his car, his head on tight as a nut.

7

The sergeant was named Frick. He was a lean, blackhaired man who suffered secretly from stomach ulcers. He looked now as though one of the ulcers had suddenly bitten him.

'Did you say your name was Alberta Wright?' he asked incredulously.

The woman, sitting on the stool in the cone of light that spilled from the 300-watt lamp, replied sullenly, 'Yassuh, that's what I said.'

The sergeant looked from the face of one of the colored detectives flanking him to the face of the other.

'Did you hear her?' he demanded.

'What about it?' Grave Digger Jones asked politely.

He stood like a farmer resting on his plow, his big, slack frame in the dark, wrinkled suit at a slouching ease.

'Yesterday around noon a call came into the bureau that she'd dropped dead at some kind of a religious festival,' the sergeant said.

'She looks alive enough now,' Coffin Ed Johnson remarked.

He stood on the other side of Sergeant Frick. In all but his face he was the counterpart of Grave Digger. But his acid-scarred face, the memento of an acid-throwing rumpus one night in a shanty on the Harlem River further uptown, looked like the mask of an African witch doctor.

They were both precinct detectives, but the Homicide sergeant had asked them to take part in the interrogation.

The sergeant looked down at the woman as though he expected her to take sudden flight. But she seemed attached to the stool, which was bolted to the middle of the bare floor in the sound-proof, windowless room in the Harlem precinct station known to the underworld as the Pigeon's Nest. She still wore the dirt-blackened white maid's uniform and white rubber bathing cap in which she had been baptized.

'You're giving the Homicide Bureau a hard way to go,' the sergeant said. 'Yesterday you were dead, and now here you are alive and killing someone else.'

'I ain't been dead, and I ain't killed nobody,' Alberta denied.

'All right, all right, start lying,' the sergeant said. 'Tell me all that happened.'

She talked in the flat, whining voice she reserved for white persons who questioned her.

When she had finished talking, the sergeant said, 'You took me at my word, didn't you?'

'Nawsuh, what I told you is the truth,' she maintained.

The sergeant looked again at the colored detectives. 'Do you believe that fairy tale?' he asked in the direction of the police stenographer, who had taken it all down, at his small desk in one corner.

The police stenographer said nothing.

'Some of it,' Grave Digger said.

Beneath a battered felt hat his dark, lumpy face flickered with secret amusement. He understood the art of lying.

'Take some, leave some,' Coffin Ed supplemented.

The sergeant looked as though he had been given a big dose of castor oil. He turned back to Alberta and demanded, 'Let me hear that again. Maybe I didn't hear it right the first time.'

'Hear what again?' Alberta asked. 'You mean tell you all over again what I just told you?'

'No, just tell me that part about your finding the knife,' the sergeant said. 'We'll get back to the rest when we get that clear.'

She took a deep breath and wiped the sweat out of her eyes. 'It ain't nothing to get clear,' she began apathetically. 'It were just like I said. I were sitting on a bench in Central Park-'

'Doing what?' the sergeant interrupted.

'I were resting.'

'By yourself?'

'Yassuh, by myself. And I seen this patrol car go past on a Hundred Tenth Street and turn into Manhattan Avenue.'

'What time was it?'

'I don't know. I didn't have no watch, and I weren't interested in the time. Why don't you ask them what was driving the car?'

'I have. Just answer my questions. What happened then?'

'I had a premonition.'

'Premonition of what?'

'I don't know of what. Just a premonition, is all.'

'How did you feel? Faint? In a daze? Clairvoyant? Or what?'

'I felt just like I always feel when I has a premonition-like something bad was going to happen.'

'To who?'

'I didn't have no feeling about who it was going to happen to.'

'Do you have them every time you see a police patrol car?'

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