sidewalk ahead, and then lost them.

'Go call up a car,' panted Mendoza. 'God damn the little-'

She was gone. He stood there waiting for the car, to start the futile block-by-block hunt. She'd be diving into whatever cheap rented room she called home, bundling her few possessions together to run on-maybe out of L.A.- thinking of her own skin, Rosie. The Rosies did that. And, being Rosie, she'd know how to go to ground, anonymous, in some other Skid Row.

Damn her, damn her. She might have given them a very damn definite description-if that was the Slasher-and he knew they'd never pick her up.

But he set up the routine hunt. You had to try.

***

That night he didn't sleep much. He lay and stared into the darkness and, senselessly, his mind went back over every detail of every case he and Art had worked together. A lot of cases. You got to know a man pretty well in that length of time.

No way to be certain… permanent brain damage…

He was still lying there at five-thirty when light out-lined the window, and El Senor got up, yawned and stretched, trampled over Bast and went to sit on the window seat and make chattering noises at the early sparrows in the tree outside. Bast sent a disgusted glare after him, wrapped her tail round her nose, and went to sleep again. Alison was heavily asleep still, lying motionless. He got up, shaved, and dressed. Went out to the living room. Hospitals were always awake. At six-fifteen he called. No change. They had said it could be days. And no way to be certain…

When he heard faint sounds from the kitchen he wandered out there, and the brisk little Scotswoman smiled at him. 'Coffee in five minutes. And it's a senseless sort of thing to be saying to you, but it's never any bit of good worrying over a thing that's out of your hands entirely.'

'I know, Mairi,', he said. 'I know that.'

'It's a great pity you've no religion to depend on. I don't know,' said Mrs. MacTaggart, 'but what I haven't stayed in this heathen household with the hope of reconverting you, my gallant man. And I'm making a novena for the sergeant, so you'll have to find your own breakfast if you want any… I've taken the wee boy into his mother, and our two are fast asleep still and likely'll stay so until I'm home.'

'Yes,' said Mendoza… He drank the coffee too hot. He watched her hurry off to the garage for Alison's car. Damned ridiculous, he thought. Superstitious… On her knees at the nearest one, the Church of Our Lady of Good Counsel, obeying the ancient meaningless ritual. What happened or didn't happen, to Art or Luis Mendoza or anybody else, it was just according to how the hands got dealt round.

***

They hadn't picked up Rosie.

The reproduced signature had made the front page of the Times, blown up twice life size. It was certainly an odd signature, almost totally illegible. Fred, Frank, something like that, and whether the second name started with a T or an L was hard to say, or what the rest of it might be. Anyway, there it was. See if anybody recognized it. It'd be in the afternoon and evening papers too.

Routine was chuming out background information, the kind of thing you collected automatically; none of it was at all suggestive.

William Marlowe was fifty-nine, and a Harvard graduate. He'd inherited an estimated ten or twelve million from his father; there'd been money in the family for some time. Oil money and other interests. They came originally from Connecticut, where the family had been since preRevolutionary days. He was married-his wife was a D.A.R. member-and had one son and two daughters. Andrea Nestor's father had been a self-made man. Self-made by gambling on the stock market. He'd died broke six and a half years ago. She had attended local private schools. No close friends had shown up; the neighbors hadn't known much about the Nestors. She seemed to be a neutral sort of woman-nothing to get hold of, good or bad.

Frank Nestor had come here from New Jersey about ten years back. No background showed at all before that; he never mentioned any relations, wrote no letters back home.

The only interesting thing turned up overnight was Larry Webster. Corliss had met him at a bar and grill on Grand Avenue for dinner, and they'd gone back to her apartment. The tail had got his name and address from the registration in his car, and called in.

Webster had a record. Mendoza rather liked the record. Lawrence Richard Webster, forty-four, Caucasian, six feet one, one ninety-five, complexion medium, eyes blue, no distinguishing marks. He'd served six months for aggravated assault in 1947, been picked up three times on a D.-and-D., and done a one-to-three for burglary.

Very nice, thought Mendoza. Just the boy friend for Corliss. And she said he'd been at her apartment on Friday night… He thought he'd like to have a little talk with Larry Webster. He put out a call on him.

He phoned down to Vice. Lieutenant Andrews had been out on a stake-out last night and wasn't expected in until about eleven. 'O.K., tell him I want to see him-I'll be there.'

That damned-that Goddamned stupid lush Rosie.

Who could have given them a description.

A description… You just had to try everywhere. Mendoza stood up abruptly. Palliser was a good man, but… He said to Lake, 'If they pick up Webster, hold him for me. I probably won't be long.'

***

'I know it was almost dark,' he said to Miguel Garcia. It was nine-thirty. Miguel was attending summer school; he'd talked to the public-school principal, who had called Miguel out of class for him. They sat here in an empty classroom, Mendoza uncomfortably perched on the edge of a too small desk, and Miguel looked at him with round solemn eyes. 'Maybe it's easier for you to tell it better in the Spanish, Miguel? I-”

'It doesn't matter, sir.' They were speaking English. 'My dad says we got to know English real good, to get on, see. So we do good at school and all. Well, I mean. Get a good kind of job, see. My dad works for the city, for the parks department, keeping it all nice and the grass watered, see.'

'WelI, I suppose you could say I work for the city too,' said Mendoza.

Miguel gave him an uncertain grin. 'Yes, sir. You carry a gun?'

'Well, no,' said Mendoza. 'I'm afraid not. Now look, Miguel. You saw this man-the one who probably killed Roberto. He's killed other people too, and we'd like to catch him.'

'I sure hope you do, sir. That was just an awful thing, Roberto. My dad said I should help the cops-oh, gee, excuse me, he said you shouldn't say cops, you don't like it-the policemen all I can, and I told that other one-'

'Well, we're cops, like it or not,' said Mendoza, smiling.

'I told him all I knew, sir. All I remembered.'

'Try again, Miguel. Think back, hard. He said something to you, and for some reason you felt seared of him, and walked on past-'

'Yes, sir. I don't know why I got scared. He just stood so kind of still-and then stepped out and said something like, ‘Hey, kids.' Like that. I-'

'You told the other officer he was thin and had on clothes that looked too big for him, and had a red face.'

'Yes, sir.'

'How did you see that, Miguel? It was nearly dark, and the man had a hat on. You said there wasn't a street- light near. And what exactly did you mean, his face was red? Like a drunk?' Miguel, living down here, would know about that: the broken red veins of a lush.

'No, it was-gee,' said the boy, 'I don't know how to say about it, sir. It wasn't very light, almost dark, sure, but there was some light, from the drugstore on the corner-and he- Well, I guess it was that sort of scared me. It was silly. I could see-it was red all over his face, and-sort of puckered, like. Like Pokey.'

'Pokey?' said Mendoza softly.

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