Second floor.'
'I'm not looking for the restaurant,' the detective replied. 'I'm looking for Mr Chong Sing. Lives on the fourth floor. You know him?'
'No.' The Chinese man continued to bar Littlemore's way. 'No Chong Sing upstair.'
'You mean he's out, or he doesn't live here?'
'No Chong Sing upstair,' the Chinese man repeated. He pushed his fingertips against Littlemore's chest. 'You go way.'
Littlemore pushed past the man and continued up the narrow stairway, which creaked under his feet. The fatty smell of meat accompanied him. As he trod the smoky corridor of the fourth floor — windowless and dark, though it was a bright morning — he saw eyes watching him from doorways barely cracked open. No one answered at apartment 4C. Littlemore thought he heard someone hurrying down a back stairway. At first, the aroma of roasted meat had stimulated the detective's appetite; now, in the airless upper floors, mixing with curls of opium smoke, it nauseated him.
When the mayor arrived at City Hall, Mrs Neville informed him that Mr Banwell was calling. McClellan told her to put him through. 'George,' said George Banwell, 'it's George.'
'By George, it is,' said George McClellan, completing an exchange they had initiated almost twenty years ago as fledgling members of the Manhattan Club.
'Just wanted you to know I got through to Acton last night,' said Banwell. 'Told him the ghastly news. He's driving in post haste this morning. He should be at the hotel by noon. I'm meeting him there.'
'Excellent,' said McClellan. 'I'll join you.'
'Has Nora remembered anything?'
'No,' said the mayor. 'The coroner has a suspect, however. You.'
'Me?' exclaimed Banwell. 'I didn't like that little weasel the moment I saw him.'
'Apparently the feeling was mutual.'
'What did you tell him?'
'I told him you didn't do it,' said the mayor.
'What about Elizabeth's body?' asked Banwell. 'Riverford's wiring me about it every other minute.'
'The body has been stolen, George,' said the mayor.
'What?'
'You know the troubles I've had with the morgue. I hope to get it back. Can you put Riverford off for one more day?'
'Put him off?' repeated Banwell. 'His daughter's been murdered.'
'Can you try?' asked the mayor.
'The devil,' said Banwell. 'I'll see what I can do. By the way, who are these — these specialists looking at Nora?'
'Didn't I tell you?' answered the mayor. 'They are therapeutists. Apparently they can cure amnesia just by talking. Fascinating business, actually. They get the patient to tell them all kinds of things.'
'What kinds of things?' asked Banwell.
'All kinds,' answered McClellan.
Coroner Hugel, obeying the mayor's orders, went back to his home, the top two floors of a small wood-frame house on Warren Street. There he lay down on his lumpy bed but didn't sleep. The light was too bright, and the shouts of the teamsters were too loud, even with a pillow over his head.
The house in which Hugel lived was at the outer edge of the Market District in lower Manhattan. When he first rented his rooms, the district was a pleasant residential neighborhood; by 1909, it was overrun by produce warehouses and manufacturing buildings. Hugel had never moved. On a coroner's pay, he could not afford two full floors of a house in a more fashionable part of the city.
Hugel hated his rooms. The ceilings had the same disgusting brown-edged water stains he had to endure at his office. Hugel swore bitterly to himself. He was the coroner of New York City. Why did he have to live in such undignified quarters? Why did his suit have to be so shabby compared to the brushed and tailored cut of George Banwell's jacket?
The evidence against Banwell was easily sufficient to arrest him. Why couldn't the mayor see that? He wished he could arrest Banwell himself. The coroner had no power to make an arrest; he wished he did. Hugel went over everything again. There had to be something more. There had to be a way to make the whole story fit together. If Elizabeth Riverford's murderer had stolen her body from the morgue because there was evidence on that body, what could the evidence be? Suddenly he had an inspiration: he had forgotten the photographs he took in Miss Riverford's apartment. Wasn't it possible for one of his photographs to reveal the missing clue?
Hugel climbed out of bed and dressed hurriedly. He could develop them himself: although he rarely used it, he had his own darkroom adjacent to the morgue. No, it would be safer if Louis Riviere, the police department's photographic expert, did the work.
At nine I went to Miss Acton's room. No one was there. By chance I inquired at the front desk, where I found a message waiting for me, in which Miss Acton informed me that she would be back in her room at eleven: I might call on her then, if I wished.
This was all wrong, analytically. First, I was not 'calling' on Miss Acton. Second, it was not the patient, but the doctor, who ought to control the timing.
In the event, I did call on Miss Acton at eleven. She was perched comfortably on her sofa, just as she had been yesterday morning, taking tea, framed by the French doors opening out to the balcony. Without looking up, Miss Acton invited me to take a seat. This irritated me as well. She was too comfortable. The analytic setting ought to have been an office — my office — and I ought to have been in command of it.
Then she did look up, and I was entirely taken aback. She was tremulous and full of agitation. 'Whom did you tell?' she asked, not accusingly but anxiously. 'About what — what Mr Banwell did to me?'
'Only Dr Freud. Why? What's happened?'
She made eye contact with Mrs Biggs, who produced a piece of paper, folded in two, which the old woman handed to me. On the note was written, in pen, Hold your tongue.
'A boy,' said Miss Acton fretfully, 'out in the street — he put that in my hands and ran off. Do you think Mr Banwell attacked me?'
'Do you?'
'I don't know, I don't know. Why can't I remember? Can't you make me remember?' she beseeched me. 'What if he's out there, watching me? Please, Doctor, can't you help me?'
I had not seen Miss Acton like this. It was the first time she had actually asked for my help. It was also the first time since coming to the hotel that she seemed genuinely afraid. 'I can try,' I answered.
Mrs Biggs knew enough to leave the room of her own accord this time. I put the threatening messsage on the coffee table and made the girl lie down, although she plainly did not like it. She was so agitated she could hardly keep still.
'Miss Acton,' I resumed, 'think back to three years ago, before the incident on the rooftop. You were with your family, at the Banwells' country house.'
'Why are you asking me about that?' she burst out. 'I want to remember what happened two days ago, not three years ago.'
'You don't want to remember what happened three years ago?'
'That's not what I meant.'
'It's what you said. Dr Freud believes you may have seen something then — something you've forgotten — something that's keeping you from remembering now.'
'I have not forgotten anything,' she retorted.
'Then you did see something.'
She was silent.
'You have nothing to be ashamed of, Miss Acton.'
'Stop saying that!' the girl cried out, with a fury entirely unexpected. 'What would I have to be ashamed of?'
'I don't know.'
'Go away,' she said.
