Dean was unsure what Ken was referring to. “I think so. I'm doing my best, at any rate, to—'
Ken cut him short, shouting, “To Jackie, goddamn you. She's not doing well alone, Dean. She needs you.'
'Ken, despite our friendship—yours and Jackie's as well as ours—it's really none of your blasted business.'
'The hell it isn't, Dean! Just tell me when you plan to get back home so I can give her that much.'
'I can't rightly say, Ken.'
Ken groaned at the other end.
'But you could speed up the process if you'd check on some information regarding a cop down here, name of Park.'
Ken was listening. Dean told him what he suspected, and the fact Carl Prather was supposedly looking into his background.
'I'll see if I can run down Sybil and see what they've got, but whether it pans out or not, I think you'd better get back home, if you're interested in your marriage, that is.'
'Thanks for the advice, Uncle Ken. You know I'll be home the minute I can.'
'You better, if you want a home to come home to. Hell, Dean, Jackie and I know you. You'll be there until someone's put away. Are you and this old pal of yours any closer to a mark than before?'
'All depends on what you find on Park, Kenny.'
Kelso took his number at the hotel as well as the lab. “Get back to you soon as I can. Meantime, take care of yourself.'
'Oh, Ken, anything in New York on Angel Rae's sister?'
'Yeah, I got a lead.'
This was exciting news but Ken sounded depressed about it. “So give,” said Dean.
'Could be a false trail, but if it's legit, Dean, the woman is here.'
'In Chicago?'
'Unless it was just a stopover.'
'Jesus...'
'Yeah, double-Jesus.'
'Any ... you know ...
'Not any more than usual, but I've got Sybil alerted. She's managing very well without you, pal.'
It was a dig and Dean knew it, but he let it go. News of the very real possibility of another epidemic of floating bodies didn't sit well. Suppose Angel Rae had sent word to her sister about Dean, about Jackie? Suppose another deadly and depraved mind was at this moment stalking Jackie? Suppose Jackie's paranoia of the past few months was not paranoia at all, suppose she really had been seeing someone following her to and from work?
'Ken,” Dean's voice took on an urgency, “you've got to do me another favor.'
'Name it.'
'Put a man on Jackie, just in case....'
'Already have, Dino ... already have.'
'For how long?'
'As long as it takes.'
'No, no—how long have you had a man watching her?” Dean wondered if this could be Jackie's problem. A cop had been shadowing her. “For how long?'
'On and off, I'd say one, one-and-a-half months, since we learned of the existence of the sister, and then I stepped it up when I learned she might be in Chicago.'
'Christ, Ken, why didn't you tell me all this time?'
'Didn't want to alarm—'
'
'My guy says he's never been spotted. Has she seen my guy? Have you?'
'She's felt him, damn it, and that's enough. Either tell her of his presence, or pull him off.'
'Will do.'
'Thank you.” They were about to hang up when Dean cried out, “Ken!'
'Yeah.'
'Tell ... say to Jackie ... tell her I love her, will you, partner?'
Ken coughed and answered slowly. “I'm sure she'll like that, coming second-hand from me. Christ, Dean, call her up and tell her yourself.'
They hung up, Dean wondering if he shouldn't do exactly as Ken suggested, and he started to, dialing the number of the hospital where Jackie was a nurse. But a noise far in the back of the lab disturbed Dean. He'd thought he was alone. In fact, he'd had to use the key Sid had given him to let himself into the lab. There had been some lights on in the lab, but the feeling had been one of aloneness, and now this odd sound, as if someone were lurking there.
The hair at the nape of his neck bristled. Was it Sid? Was it the Mr. Hyde side of the mild Dr. Jekyl lying in wait for Dean's return? Or might it be Park? Park and Dyer had been in and out of the pathology lab from the day of Dean's arrival. Park could have lifted Sid's scalpel from its resting place. Park could have placed it at the scene of the crime to throw suspicion onto Sid. The noise came again, louder this time.
Dean inched closer, wondering if he dare speak out to ask whoever was in the next room, where the slab and refrigerator compartments were, to come forward. But he didn't relish the idea of a tussel with a scalpel-wielding madman. Instead, he inched toward the light switch.
As he did so, he heard shuffling feet and a grunt. He heard someone tear open one of the refrigerated slabs, yank it out on its casters, then become silent.
Dean remembered now there was another entrance to the corpses on the other side. Whoever it was must have come from that direction. The slab room was in semi-darkness, but Dean could see the thin, tall form in dark clothes bending over the body of what Dean surmised to be the Jane Doe in the park. Had the damnable vulture returned for another section of skin, hair, or scalp?
With a sudden movement Dean snapped on the lights, causing a scream to come out of the police officer at the body, and when she turned, Dean saw it was Peggy Carson.
'Jesus, Peggy?” Dean held a hand over his heart, which was pounding so hard he was momentarily dazed.
Peggy, too, had been frightened, and she gasped for air, her hands at her breast and mouth, tears coming from her eyes. She'd been shedding tears for the dead girl, and now they came as a result of shock.
'You scared the hell out of me, Dean!'
'Hey, I heard someone come in, and it ... well, I'm sorry.'
'I ... I wanted to see her,” Peggy indicated the dead girl. “It's ... so awful, what they did to her.'
Then Dean saw Tom Warner, Sid's young, baby-faced assistant, in the corner, in shadow at the door. He'd been peering out, and he now looked stricken. It was obvious that Peggy had talked him into this against his better Judgment. Tom was one of those people no one took much notice of, and indeed, even now Dean saw little in him that might be lifted out to describe the man, say, for the benefit of a police sketch. He was of average height, with mousy brown hair, small of face, except for large glasses that bobbed up and down his nose in agitation. He had colorless, gray eyes, stood perhaps five-six, and weighed one-forty or -fifty, Dean guessed. In all the time Dean had spent in the lab, he'd been like a good butler, a gofer who did his job so superbly that Dean had forgotten of his existence until now.
'It's not what you think, Dr. Grant. Officer Carson has the permission of her superior to view the remains. She is ... on the case.'
'On the case?” asked Dean.
'Let's say I've got a personal stake in it, Dean.'
'Anyway,” said Mr. Thomas Warner, “if you will lock up, Dr. Grant.” He started to leave, “And I would very much appreciate this ... our being here ... to remain confidential.'
'I hope I can keep that confidence, Mr. Warner.'