The Roundhouse is a public building, but it is not open to the public to the degree, for example, that City Hall is. It is the nerve center of the police department, and while there are always a number of ordinary, decent, law- abiding citizens in the building, the overwhelming majority of private citizens in the Roundhouse are there as nonvoluntary guests of the police, or are relatives and friends of the nonvoluntary guests who have come to see what can be done about getting them out, either by posting bail, or in some other way.

There are almost always a number of people in this latter category standing just outside, or just inside, the door leading into the Roundhouse from the parking lot out back. Immediately inside the door is a small foyer. To the right a corridor leads to an area from which the friends and relatives of those arrested can watch preliminary arraignments before a magistrate, who either sets bail or orders the accused confined until trial.

To the left is a door leading to the main lobby of the building, which is not open to the general public. It is operated by a solenoid controlled by a police officer who sits behind a shatterproof plastic window directly across the corridor from the door to the parking lot.

Hobbs didn't want anyone with whom McFadden might now, or eventually, have a professional relationship to remember later having seen the large young man with the forehead band walking into the place and being passed without question, as if he was cop, into the main lobby.

Still holding on to Officer McFadden's arm, Hobbs flashed his badge at the corporal on duty behind the window, who took a good look at it, and then pushed the button operating the solenoid. The door lock buzzed as Hobbs reached it. He pushed it open, and went through it, and marched McFadden to the elevator doors.

There was a sign on the gray steel first-floor door readingCRIMINAL

RECORDS, AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY.

Hobbs pushed it open, and eventually the door opened. A corporal looked at Officer McFadden very dubiously.

'This is McFadden, Narcotics,' Hobbs said. The room held half a dozen enormous gray rotary files, each twelve feet long. Electric motors rotated rows of files, thousands of them, each containing the arrest and criminal records of one individual who had at one time come to the official attention of the police. The files were tended by civilian employees, mostly women, under the supervision of sworn officers.

Hobbs saw the sergeant on duty, Salvatore V. DeConti, a short, balding, plump, very natty man in his middle thirties, in a crisply starched shirt and perfectly creased uniform trousers, sitting at his desk. He saw that DeConti was unable to keep from examining, and finding wanting, the fat bearded large young man he had brought with him into records.

Amused, Hobbs walked McFadden over to him and introduced him: ' Sergeant DeConti, this is Officer McFadden. He's identified the woman who shot Captain Moffitt.'

It was an effort, but DeConti managed it, to offer his hand to the fat, bearded young man with the leather band around his forehead.

'How are you?' he said, then freed his hand, and called to the corporal. When he came over, he said, 'Officer McFadden's got a name on the girl Captain Moffitt shot.'

'I guess the fingerprint guy from Identification ought to be back from the medical examiner's about now with her prints,' the corporal said. 'What's the name?'

'Schmeltzer, Dorothy Ann,' McFadden said. 'And I got a name, Sergeant, for the guy who got away from the diner.' He gestured with his hand, a circular movement near his head, indicating that he didn't actually have a name, for sure, but that he knew there was one floating around somewhere in his head. That he was, in other words, working intuitively.

'Florian will help you, if he can,' Sergeant DeConti said.

'Gallagher, Grady, something Irish,' McFadden said. 'There's only three or four thousand Gallaghers in there, I'm sure,' Corporal Florian said. 'But we can look.'

'Help yourself to some coffee, Sergeant,' DeConti said. Then, 'Damned shame about Dutch.'

'A rotten shame,' Hobbs agreed. 'Three kids.' Then he looked at DeConti. 'I'm sure McFadden is right,' he said. 'Lieutenant Pekach said he's smart, a good cop. Even if he doesn't look much like one.'

'I'm just glad I never got an assignment like that,' DeConti said. ' Some of it has to rub off. The scum he has to be with, I mean.'

Hobbs had the unkind thought that Sergeant DeConti would never be asked to undertake an undercover assignment unless it became necessary to infiltrate a group of hotel desk clerks, or maybe the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. If you put a white collar on DeConti, Hobbs thought, he could easily pass for a priest.

Across the room, McFadden, a look of satisfaction on his face, was writing on a yellow, lined pad. He ripped off a sheet and handed it to Corporal Florian. Then he walked across the room to Hobbs and DeConti.

'Gerald Vincent Gallagher,' he announced. 'I remembered the moment I saw her sheet. He got ripped off about six months ago by some AfroAmerican gentlemen, near the East Park Reservoir in Fairmount Park. They really did a job on him. She came to see him in the hospital.'

'Good man, McFadden,' DeConti said. 'Florian's getting his record?'

'Yes, sir. Her family lives in Holmesburg,' McFadden went on. 'I went looking for her there one time. Her father runs a grocery store around Lincoln High School. Nice people.'

'This ought to brighten their day,' Hobbs said.

Corporal Florian walked over with a card, and handed it, a little uneasily, to McFadden. DeConti and Hobbs leaned over to get a look.

'That's him. He's just out on parole, too,' McFadden said.

'He fits the description,' Hobbs said, and then went on: 'If you were Gerald Vincent Gallagher, McFadden, where do you think you would be right now?'

McFadden's heavily bearded face screwed up in thought.

'I don't think I'd have any money, since I didn't get to pull off the robbery,' he said. 'So I don't think I would be on a bus or train out of town. And I wouldn't go back where I lived, in case I had been recognized, so I would probably be holed up someplace, probably in North Philly, if I got that far. Maybe downtown. I can think of a couple of places.'

'Make up a list,' Hobbs ordered.

'I'd sort of like to look for this guy myself, Sergeant,' McFadden said.

Hobbs looked at him dubiously.

'I don't want to blow my cover, Sergeant,' McFadden went on. 'I could look for him without doing that.'

'You can tell Lieutenant Pekach that I said that if he thinks you could be spared from your regular job for a while, that you could probably be useful to Detective Washington,' Hobbs said. 'IfWashington wants you.'

'Thank you,' McFadden said. 'I'll ask him as soon as I get back to the office.'

'Jason Washington's got the job?' Sergeant DeConti asked.

'Uh-huh,' Hobbs said. He picked up the telephone and dialed it.

'Detention Unit, Corporal Delzinski.'

'This is Sergeant Hobbs, Homicide, Corporal. The next time a wagon from the Sixth District-'

'There's one just come in, Sergeant,' Delzinski interrupted.

'As soon as they drop off their prisoner, send them up to Criminal Records,' Hobbs said. 'I've got a prisoner that has to be transported to Narcotics. They'll probably have to fumigate the wagon, afterward, but that can't be helped.'

DeConti laughed.

'We have a lot of time and money invested in making you a credible turd, McFadden,' Hobbs said. 'I would hate to see it all wasted.'

'I understand, sir,' McFadden said. 'Thank you.' A civilian employee from the photo lab, a very thin woman, walked up with three four-byfive photographs of Gerald Vincent Gallagher.

'I wiped them,' she said. 'But they're still wet. I don't know about putting them in an envelope.'

'I'll just carry them the way they are,' Hobbs said.

'McFadden, you make up your list. When the Sixth District wagon gets here, Sergeant DeConti will tell them

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