I closed my eyes, letting the memory come back. 'She was one of the last victims. The fifth or sixth, she must have been.'
'The sixth.'
'And there were two more after her, and then he went out of business. Barbara Ettinger. She was a schoolteacher. No, but it was something like that. A day-care center. She worked at a day-care center.'
'You have a good memory.'
'It could be better. I just had the case long enough to determine it was the Icepick Prowler again. At that point we turned it over to whoever had been working that case all along. Midtown North, I think it was. In fact I think Frank Fitzroy was at Midtown North at the time.'
'That's correct.'
I had a sudden rush of sense memory. I remembered a kitchen inBrooklyn , cooking smells overladen with the reek of recent death. A young woman lay on the linoleum, her clothing disarrayed, innumerable wounds in her flesh. I had no memory of what she looked like, only that she was dead.
I finished my coffee, wishing it were straight bourbon. Across the table from me, Charles London was taking a small tentative sip of his scotch. I looked at the Masonic symbols on his gold ring and wondered what they were supposed to mean, and what they meant to him.
I said, 'He killed eight women within a period of a couple months.
Used the same M.O. throughout, attacked them in their own homes during daylight hours. Multiple stab wounds with an icepick. Struck eight times and then went out of business.'
He didn't say anything.
'Then nine years later they catch him. When was it? Two weeks ago?'
'Almost three weeks.'
I hadn't paid too much attention to the newspaper coverage. A couple of patrolmen on theUpper West Side had stopped a suspicious character on the streets, and a frisk turned up an icepick. They took him into the station house and ran a check on him, and it turned out he was back on the streets after an extended confinement inManhattanStateHospital . Somebody took the trouble to ask him why he was toting an icepick, and they got lucky the way you sometimes do.
Before anybody knew what was happening he'd confessed to a whole list of unsolved homicides.
'They ran his picture,' I said. 'A little guy, wasn't he? I don't remember the name.'
'Louis Pinell.'
I glanced at him. His hands rested on the table, fingertips just touching, and he was looking down at his hands. I said that he must have been greatly relieved that the man was in custody after all these years.
'No,' he said.
The music stopped. The radio announcer hawked subscriptions to a magazine published by the Audubon Society. I sat and waited.
'I almost wish they hadn't caught him,' Charles London said.
'Why?'
'Because he didn't kill Barbara.'
Later I went back and read all three papers, and there'd been something to the effect that Pinell had confessed to seven Icepick Prowler slayings while maintaining he was innocent of the eighth. If I'd even noted that information first time around, I hadn't paid it any mind.
Who knows what a psychotic killer's going to remember nine years after the fact?
According toLondon , Pinell had more of an alibi than his own memory. The night before Barbara Ettinger was murdered, Pinell had been picked up on the complaint of a counterman at a coffee shop in the east twenties. He was taken toBellevue for observation, held two days and released. Police and hospital records made it quite clear that he was in a locked ward when Barbara Ettinger was killed.
'I kept trying to tell myself there was a mistake,'London said. 'A clerk can make a mistake recording an admission or release date. But there was no mistake. And Pinell was very adamant on the subject.
He was perfectly willing to admit the other murders. I gather he was proud of them in some way or other. But he was genuinely angry at the idea that a murder he hadn't committed was being attributed to him.'
He picked up his glass but put it down without drinking from it. 'I gave up years ago,' he said. 'I took it for granted that Barbara's murderer would never be apprehended. When the series of killings stopped so abruptly, I assumed the killer had either died or moved away.
My fantasy was that he'd had a moment of awful clarity, realized what he'd done, and killed himself. It made it easier for me if I was able to believe that, and from what a police officer told me, I gathered that that sort of thing occasionally happens. I came to think of Barbara as having been the victim of a force of nature, as if she'd died in an earthquake or a flood. Her killing was impersonal and her killer unknown and unknowable. Do you see what I mean?'
'I think so.'
'Now everything's changed. Barbara wasn't killed by this force of nature. She was murdered by someone who tried to make it look as though her death was the work of the Icepick Prowler. Hers was a very cold and calculating murder.' He closed his eyes for a moment and a muscle worked in the side of his face. 'For years I thought she'd been killed for no reason at all,' he said, 'and that was horrible, and now I can see that she was killed for a reason, and that's worse.'
'Yes.'