All the same, it was the only explanation Malone had, and he cherished it deeply. He put the papers back in his brief case when the train pulled into Penn Station, handed his suitcases to a redcap and punched the buttons for the waiting room. Now, he thought as he strolled slowly along behind the robot, there was an invention that made sense. And nobody had to get killed for it, or hit over the head or smashed up, had they?
So what was all this nonsense about robot-controlled red Cadillacs?
Driving these unwelcome reflections from his mind, he paused to light a cigarette. He had barely taken the first puff when a familiar voice said, “Hey, buddy, hold the light, will you?”
Malone looked up, blinked and grinned happily. “Boyd!” he said. “What are you doing here? I haven’t seen you since—”
“Sure haven’t,” Boyd said. “I’ve been out West on a couple of cases. Must be a year since we worked together.”
“Just about,” Malone said. “But what are you doing in New York? Vacationing?”
“Not exactly,” Boyd said. “The chief called it sort of a vacation, but—”
“Oh,” Malone said. “You re working with me.”
Boyd nodded. “The chief sent me up. When I got back from the West, he suddenly decided you might need a good assistant, so I took the plane down, and got here ahead of you.”
“Great,” Malone said. “But I want to warn you about the vacation—”
“Never mind,” Boyd said; just a shade sadly. “I know. It isn’t.” He seemed deep in thought, as if he were deciding whether or not to get rid of Anne Boleyn. It was, Malone thought, an unusually apt simile. Boyd, six feet tall and weighing about two hundred and twenty-five pounds, had a large square face and a broad-beamed figure that might have made him a dead ringer for Henry VIII of England even without his Henry-like fringe of beard and his mustache. With them—thanks to the recent FBI rule that agents could wear “facial hair, at the discretion of the director or such board as he may appoint”—the resemblance to the Tudor monarch was uncanny.
But, like his famous double, Boyd didn’t stay sad for long. “I thought I’d meet you at the station,” he said, cheering up, “and maybe talk over old times for a while, on the way to the hotel, anyhow. So long as there wasn’t anything else to do.”
“Sure,” Malone said. “It’s good to see you again. And when did you get pulled out of the Frisco office?”
Boyd grimaced. “You know,” he said, “I had a good thing going for me out there. Agent-in-Charge of the entire office. But right after that job we did together—the Queen Elizabeth affair—Burris decided I was too good a man to waste my fragrance on the desert air. Or whatever it is. So he recalled me, assigned me from the home office, and I’ve been on one case after another ever since.”
“You’re a home-office agent now?” Malone said.
“I’m a Roving Reporter,” Boyd said, and struck a pose. “I’m a General Trouble-shooter and a Mr. Fix-It. Just like you, Hero.”
“Thanks,” Malone said. “How about the local office here? Seen the boys yet?”
Boyd shook his head. “Not yet,” he said. “I was waiting for you to show up. But I did manage hotel rooms—a couple of rooms with a connecting bath over at the Hotel New Yorker. Nice place. You’ll like it, Ken.”
“I’ll love it,” Malone said. “Especially that connecting bath. It would have been terrible to have an unconnecting bath. Sort of distracting.”
“Okay,” Boyd said. “Okay. You know what I mean.” He stared down at Malone’s hand. “You know you’ve still got your lighter on?” he added.
Malone looked down at it and shut it off. “You asked me to hold it,” he said.
“I didn’t mean indefinitely,” Boyd said. “Anyhow, how about grabbing a cab and heading on down to the hotel to get your stuff away, before we check in at 69th Street?”
“Good idea,” Malone said. “And besides, I could do with a clean shirt. Not to mention a bath.”
“Trains get worse and worse,” Boyd said absently.
Malone punched the redcap’s buttons again, and he and Boyd followed it through the crowded station to the taxi stand. The robot piled the suitcases into the cab, and somehow Malone and Boyd found room for themselves.
“Hotel New Yorker,” Boyd said grandly.
The driver swung around to stare at them, blinked, and finally said, “Okay, Mac. You said it.” He started with a terrific grinding of gears, drove out of the Penn Station arch and went two blocks.
“Here you are, Mac,” he said, stopping the cab.
Malone stared at Boyd with a reproachful expression.
“So how was I to know?” Boyd said.
“I didn’t look. If I’d known it was so close we could’ve walked.”
“And saved half a buck,” Malone said. “But don’t let it bother you—this is expense-account money.”
“That’s right,” Boyd said. He beamed and tipped the driver heavily. The cab drove off and Malone hailed the New Yorker doorman, who equipped them with a robot bellhop and sent them upstairs to their rooms.
Three-quarters of an hour later, Boyd and Malone were in the offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on East 69th Street. There they picked up a lot of nice, new, shiny facts. It was unfortunate, if not particularly surprising, that the facts did not seem to make any sense.
In the first place, only red 1972 Cadillacs seemed to be involved. Anybody who owned such a car was likely to find it missing at any time; there had been a lot of thefts reported, including some that hadn’t had time to get into Burris’ reports. New Jersey now claimed two victims, and New York had three of its own.
And all the cars weren’t turning up in New York, by any means. Some of the New York cars had turned up in New Jersey. Some had turned up in Connecticut—including one of the New Jersey cars. So far, there had been neither thefts nor discoveries in Pennsylvania, but Malone couldn’t see why.
There was absolutely no pattern that he, Boyd, or anyone else could find. The list of thefts and recoveries had been fed into an electronic calculator, which had neatly regurgitated them without being in the least helpful. It had remarked that the square of seven was forty-nine, but this was traced to a defect in the mechanism.
Whoever was borrowing the red Caddies exhibited a peculiar combination of burglarious genius and what looked to Malone like outright idiocy. This was plainly impossible.
Unfortunately, it had happened.
Locking the car doors didn’t do a bit of good. The thief, or thieves, got in without so much as scratching the lock. This obviously proved that the criminal was either an extremely good lock-pick or else knew where to get duplicate keys.
However, the ignition was invariably shorted across.
This proved neatly that the criminal was not a very good lock-pick, and did not know where to get duplicate keys.
Query: Why work so hard on the doors, and not work at all on the ignition?
That was the first place. The second place was just what had been bothering Malone all along. There didn’t seem to be any purpose to the car thefts. They hadn’t been sold, or used as getaway cars. True, teenage delinquents sometimes stole cars just to use them joy-riding, or as some sort of prank.
But a car or two every night? How many joy-rides can one gang take? Malone thought. And how long does it take to get tired of the same prank?
And why, Malone asked himself wearily for what was beginning to feel like the ten thousandth time, why only red Cadillacs?
Burris, he told himself, must have been right all along. The red Cadillacs were only a smoke screen for something else. Perhaps it was the robot car, perhaps not; but whatever it was, Burris’ general answer was the only one that made any sense at all.
That should have been a comforting thought, Malone reflected. Somehow, though, it wasn’t.
After they’d finished with the files and personnel at 69th Street, Malone and Boyd started downtown on what turned out to be a sort of unguided tour o
f the New York Police Department. They spoke to some of the eyewitnesses, and ended up in Centre Street asking a lot of reasonably useless questions in the Bureau of Motor Vehicles. In general, they spent nearly six hours on the Affair of the Self-Propelled Cadillac, picking up a whole bundle of facts. Some of the facts they had already known. Some were new, but unhelpful.
Somehow, nobody felt much like going out for a night on the town. Instead both agents climbed wearily into bed, thinking morose and disillusioned thoughts.
And, after that, a week passed. It was filled with ennui.
Only one new thing became clear. In spite of the almost identical modus operandi used in all the car thefts, they were obviously the work of a gang rather than a single person. This required the assumption that there was not one insane man at work, but a crew of them, all identically unbalanced.
“But the jobs are just too scattered to be the work of one man,” Malone said. “To steal a car in Connecticut and drive it to the Bronx, and then steal another car in Westfield, New Jersey, fifteen minutes later takes more than talent. It takes an outright for-sure magician.”
This conclusion, while interesting, was not really helpful. The fact was that Malone needed more clues—or, anyhow, more facts—before he could do anything at all. And there just weren’t any new facts around. He spent the week wandering morosely from one place to another sometimes accompanied by Thomas Boyd and sometimes all alone. Time, he knew, was ticking by at its usual rate. But there wasn’t a thing he could do about it.
He did try to relax and have some fun, as Burris had suggested. But he didn’t seem to be able to get his mind off the case.
Boyd, after the first little while, had no such trouble. He entered the social life of the city with a whoop of joy and disappeared from sight. That was fine for Boyd, Malone reflected, but it did leave Malone himself just a little bit at loose ends.
Not that he begrudged Boyd his fun. It was nice that one of them was enjoying himself, anyway.
It was just that Malone was beginning to get fidgety. He needed to be doing something—even if it was only taking a walk.
So he took a walk and ended up, to his own surprise, downtown near Greenwich Village.
And then he’d been bopped on the head.
CHAPTER 3
The patrol car pulled up in front of St. Vincent’s Hospital, and one of the cops helped Malone into the emergency receiving room. He didn’t feel as bad as he had a few minutes before. The motion of the car hadn’t helped any, but his head seemed to be knitting a little, and his legs were a little steadier. True, he didn’t feel one hundred per cent healthy, but he was beginning to think he might live, after all. And while the doctor was bandaging his head, a spirit of new life began to fill the FBI agent.
He was no longer morose and undirected. He had a purpose in life, and the purpose filled him with cold determination. He was going to find the robot-operated car—or whatever it turned out to be.
The doctor, Malone noticed, was whistling Greensleeves under his breath as he worked. That, he supposed, was the influence of the Bohemian folk-singers of Greenwich Village. But he put the noise resolutely out of his mind and concentrated on the red Cadillac.
It was one thing to think about a robot car miles away, doing something or other to somebody you’d never heard of before. That was just theoretical, a case for solution, nothing but an ordinary job.
But when the car stepped up and bopped Malone himself on the head, it became a personal matter. Now Malone had more than a job to contend with. Now he was thinking about revenge.
By God, he told himself, no car in the world—not even a Cadillac—can get away with beaning Kenneth J. Malone!
Malone was not quite certain that he agreed with Burris’ idea of a self-operating car, but at least it was something to work on. A car that could reach out, crown an investigator, and then drive off humming something innocent under its breath was certainly a unique and dangerous machine within the meaning of the act. Of course, there were problems attendant on this view of things. For one thing, Malone couldn’t quite see how the car could have beaned him when he was ten feet away from it. But that was, he told himself uncomfortably, a minor point. He could deal with it when he felt a little better.
The important thing was the car itself. Malone jerked a little under the doctor’s calm hands, and swore subvocally.
“Hold still,” the doctor said. “Don’t go wiggling your head around that way. Just wait quietly until the dermijel sets.”
Obediently, Malone froze. There was a crick in his neck, but he decided he could stand it. “My head still hurts,” he said accusingly.
“Sure it still hurts,” the doctor agreed.
“But you—”
“What did you expect?” the doctor said. “Even an FBI agent isn’t immune to blackjacks, you know.” He resumed his work on Malone’s skull.
“Blackjacks?” Malone said. “What blackjacks?”
“The ones that hit you,” the doctor said. “Or the one, anyhow.”
Malone blinked. Somehow, though he could manage a fuzzy picture of a car reaching out to hit him, the introduction of a blackjack into this imaginative effort confused things a little. But he resolutely ignored it.
“The bruise is just the right size and shape,” the doctor said. “And that cut on your head comes from the seams on the leather casing.”
“You’re sure?” Malone said doubtfully. It did seem as if a car had a lot more dangerous weapons around, without resorting to blackjacks. If it had really wanted to damage him, why hadn’t it hit him with the engine block?
“I’m sure,” the doctor said. “I’ve worked in Emergency in this hospital long enough to recognize a blackjack wound.”
That was a disturbing idea, in a way. It gave a new color to Malone’s reflection on Greenwich Villagers. Maybe things had changed since he’d heard about them. Maybe the blackjack had supplanted the guitar.
But that wasn’t the important thing.
The fact that it had been a blackjack that had hit him was important. It was vital, as a matter of fact. Malone knew that perfectly well. It was a key fact in the case he was investigating.
The only trouble was that he didn’t see what, if anything, it meant.
The doctor stepped back and regarded Malone’s head with something like pride. “There,” he said. “You’ll be all right now.”
“A concussion?”
“Sure,” the doctor said. “But it isn’t serious. Just take these pills—one every two hours until they’re gone—and you’ll be rid of any effects within twenty-four hours.” He went to a cabinet, fiddled around for a minute, and came back with a small bottle containing six orange pills. They looked very large and threatening.
“Fine,” Malone said doubtfully.
“You’ll be all right,” the doctor said, giving Malone a cheerful, confident grin. “Nothing at all to worry about.” He loaded a hypojet and blasted something through the skin of Malone’s upper arm. Malone swallowed hard. He knew perfectly well that he hadn’t felt a thing but he couldn’t quite make himself believe it.
“That’ll take care of you for tonight,” the doctor said. “Get some sleep and start in on the pills when you wake up, okay?”
“Okay,” Malone said. It was going to make waking up something less than a pleasure, but he wanted to get well, didn’t he?
Of course he did. If that Cadillac thought it was going to beat him…
“You can stand up now,” the doctor said.
“Okay,” Malone said, trying it. “Thanks, Doctor. I—”
There was a knock at the door. The doctor jerked his head around.
“Who’s that?” he said.
“Me,” a bass voice said, unhelpfully.
The emergency-room door opened a crack and a face peered in. It took Malone a second to recognize Bill, the waffle-faced cop who had picked him up next to the lamp post three years or so before. “Long time no see,” Malone said at random.
&n
bsp; “What?” Bill said, and opened the door wider. He came in and closed it behind him. “It’s okay, Doc,” he said to the attendant. “I’m a cop.”
“Been hurt?” the doctor said.
Bill shook his head. “Not recently,” he said. “I came to see this guy.” He looked at Malone. “They told me you were still here,” he said.
“Who’s they?” Malone said.
“Outside,” Bill said. “The attendants out there. They said you were still getting stitched up.”
“And quite right, too,” Malone said solemnly.
“Oh,” Bill said. “Sure.” He fished in his pockets. “You dropped your notebook, though, and I came to give it back to you.” He located the object he was hunting for and brought it out with the triumphant gesture of a man displaying the head of a dragon he had slain. “Here,” he said, waving the book.
“Notebook?” Malone said. He stared at it. It was a small looseleaf book bound in cheap black plastic.
“We found it in the gutter,” Bill said.
Malone took a tentative step forward and managed not to fall. He stepped back again and looked at Bill scornfully. “I wasn’t even in the gutter,” he said. “There are limits.”
“Sure,” Bill said. “But the notebook was, so I brought it along to you. I thought you might need it or something.” He handed it over to Malone with a flourish.
It wasn’t Malone’s notebook. In the first place, he had never owned a notebook that looked anything like that, and in the second place he hadn’t had any notebooks on him when he went for his walk. Mine not to question why, Malone told himself with a shrug, and flipped the book open.
At once he saw why the cop had mistaken it for his.
It had his name in it.
On the very first page were two names, written out in a careful, semieducated scrawl:
Mr. Kenneth J. Malone, FBI Lt. Peter Lynch, NYPD
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