Cut off his ears and chop off head

Police come looking for Jimmy Jazz Jazz Jazz Jazz

'Who the hell is that?' DeClercq asked in astonishment. The Inspector shrugged. 'Damned if I know,' he said.

'Well let's find out fast.'

So go look all around, you can try your luck brother

And see what you found

But I guarantee you that it ain't your day

Chop! Chop!

Tuesday, November 2nd, 1:12 a.m.

'Rock music!' Scarlett exclaimed. 'Headquarters!' Spann replied.

The two of them looked at each other in total disbelief. It was now after 1:00 a.m. on a weekday morning, the empty hours of the day, a time when a cop might expect to find the squad room proceeding at half-speed, perhaps the occasional sound of a typewriter pounding or small talk among the members on night patrol, but certainly not the time or place for rock and roll to assail his or her astonished ears. This was just too much.

They had spent the afternoon and the entire evening on a pub-crawl of Vancouver's skid road beer parlors hoping to find John Lincoln Hardy or the Indian who might have contact with him. They were both dressed in grubby clothes, jeans and soiled T-shirts, Scarlett with the stubble of one day's beard shadowing his face. Over the past thirteen hours they had watched more scores of junk and grass and speed and acid and coke and angel dust go down than went through the courts in a year. They had seen the gypsy switch pulled more times than they could count. And they had overheard more blow jobs and around the worlds and just plain straight lays negotiated than went on at an accountants' convention — and that was saying a lot. They had felt the insidious sleaze of each successive hangout soil their expectations, but by the end of the day they had not seen hide nor hair of either hunted man.

Now they had called it a night.

They had driven back to Headhunter Headquarters, had parked the unmarked squad car outside the building, and had hauled their tired behinds up the front walk, through the doors, and come upon a rock and roll party in progress. Punk rock blared from the speakers:

Don't you bother me, not any more

I can't take this tale, oh no more

It's all around, Jimmy Jazz

J — A — Zee Zee J — A — Zed Zed Zee Zee…

The youth who sat directly in front of the speakers was maybe eighteen years old and a throwback to the fifties. He was dressed in black jeans, black winklepicker shoes, and a black leather jacket with several silver chains adorning it. His hair was greased and swept up in a ducktail. Scarlett looked for the rattail comb sticking out of his back pocket. Sure enough, it was there.

Around him, the other listeners were not quite so cool. Several of them were wearing the RCMP uniform, DeClercq and MacDougall excluded, and all had a short military cut to their hair. They all looked straight, while the bopper looked stoned. The bopper had the floor.

'The name of the cut is Jimmy Jazz. The name of the group is The Clash. Third cut. Side one. Off the double, London Calling. Great disc,' he said.

'When was it put out?' Robert DeClercq asked.

'1979. Epic Records.'

MacDougall asked: 'What's Jimmy Jazz?'

'I've no idea,' the youth said, shaking his head. 'Dope, I guess. Isn't that what you guys are usually looking for?'

'Not this time,' the Inspector replied. 'Where can we get the album?'

'Any record store. The Clash are very big time. If you want I'll lend you the copy we got at the radio station.'

'Please,' DeClercq said. 'And I'd like it tonight.'

Scarlett and Spann skirted one side of the group of music lovers and made their way to the second floor. The reason that they had come into the building was to take another look at the corkboard visual. As they reached the top of the stairs Rick Scarlett said: 'Punk rock, huh! Puke rock's more like it!'

'Well I happen to like The Clash,' Katherine Spann said.

'You would,' the man replied.

The woman cocked her head to one side and slightly raised one eyebrow. 'Chances are you don't even know where the band is from, you're so narrow-minded.'

'Don't put money on it, Kathy. I'm not Rabidowski. The Clash came out of England along with the Sex Pistols. Part of the first wave of New Wave music.'

'My my!' the woman said. 'And I thought you were stupid.'

The first thing they saw on entering DeClercq's office were the books scattered everywhere. They each picked up a volume and looked at the title. One was Murder for Sex and the other Psychopathic! Sexualis.

'You know why he's reading this stuff?' Rick Scarlett asked.

'Cause he's Jung at heart,' Spann replied.

All three walls of cork were now covered with information and in some areas the reports now overlapped. Spann immediately saw the pinned-up wiretap transcripts and crossed to them. She flipped through the pages while Scarlett read over her shoulder. When she was finished she walked to the bank of windows and stared out at the street, thinking.

Scarlett walked up behind her.

'I wonder what they're talking about in those wiretaps,' she asked. 'What's ahoodoo?'

'So now who's stupid?' the male Constable said. 'Seems your education is lacking when it comes to geography. 'Hoo-doos' are eroded pinnacles of rock that stick up out of the ground. The Indians used to believe that spirits lived in such sandstone towers. There are some of them in the Deadman Valley of BC — but most jut up out of the Alberta foothills of the Rockies.'

'Well now I know,' Spann said.

But that told them nothing.

The Splinter

5:15 a.m.

Robert DeClercq was up before dawn. He climbed out of bed and padded into the kitchen to put on a pot of coffee, then while it was dripping went into the spare bedroom to dress warmly for the weather. Returning to the kitchen to pour himself a cup, he then carried the steaming mug into the greenhouse and out through its back door down to the edge of the sea. It was dark outside and the air was brittle with the sharp chill of late autumn. He sat down in the driftwood chair, the sundial on his left, and began to think. The sea was wild this morning, spitting forth its spray. The Superintendent ignored it.

What bothered him more than anything else was the attitude of this killer. There had been psychotics and psychopaths before who had taunted the police — Jack the Ripper and Zodiac were two notorious examples — but never quite on this level. For this was almost personal. No sooner had the squad been

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