the door; they held typewriters, letter trays, vases full of artificial

flowers, and the detritus of a day's work. The two well-dressed

matronly women behind the desks were cheerful in spite of the drab

institutional atmosphere. There were five cafeteria tables lined up,

short end to short end, so that whoever sat at them would always be

sideways to the desks. The ten metal chairs were all on the same side

of the table row. Except for the relationship of the tables to the

desks, it might have been a schoolroom, a study hall monitored by two

teachers.

Frank Bollinger identified himself as Ben Frank and said he was an

employee of a major New York City firm of architects. He asked for the

complete file on the Bowerton Building, took off his coat and sat at the

first table.

The two women, as efficient as they appeared to be, quickly brought him

the Bowerton material from an adjacent storage ' room: original

blueprints, amendments . .

to the blueprints, cost estimates, applications for dozens of different

building permits, final cost sheets, remodeling plans, photographs,

letters ... Every form-and everything else required by law-that was

related to the Bowerton highrise and that had passed officially through

a city bureau or department was in that file. It was a formidable mound

of paper, even though each piece was carefully labeled and both

categorically and sequentially arranged.

The forty-two-story Bowerton Building, facing a busy block of Lexington

Avenue, had been completed in 1929 and stood essentially unchanged. It

was one of Manhattan's art deco masterpieces, even more effectively

designed than the justly acclaimed art deco Chanin Building which was

only a few blocks away. More than a year ago a group of concerned

citizens had launched a campaign to have the building declared a

landmark in order to keep its most spectacular art deco features from

being wiped away during sporadic flurries of 'modernization.' But the

most important fact, so far as Bollinger was concerned, was that Graham

Harris had his offices on the fortieth floor of the Bowerton Building.

For an hour and ten minutes, Bollinger studied the paper image of the

structure. Main entrances. Service entrances. One-way emergency

exits. The placement and operation of the bank of sixteen elevators.

The placement of the two stairwells. A minimal electronic security

system, primarily a closed-circuit television guard station, had been

installed in 1969; and he went over and over the paper on that until he

was certain that he had overlooked no detail of it.

At four forty-five he stood up, yawned and stretched. Smiling, humming

softly, he put on his overcoat.

Two blocks from City Hall he stepped into a telephone booth and called

Billy. 'I've checked it out.'

' Bowerton?

'Yeah.

'What do you think?' Billy asked anxiously.

'It can be done.'

'My God. You're sure?'

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