The carpet around the corpse was saturated with blood, but the battle hadn't been confined to that small portion of the room. A trail of blood, weaving and erratic, led from one end of the parlor to the other, then back again; it was the route the panicked victim had taken in a futile attempt to escape from and slough off his attackers.
Jack felt sick.
“It's a damned slaughterhouse,” Rebecca said.
The dead man had been packing a gun. His shoulder holster was empty. A silencer-equipped.38 pistol was at his side.
Jack interrupted one of the lab technicians who was moving slowly around the parlor, collecting blood samples from various stains. “You didn't touch the gun? ”
“Of course not,” the technician said. “We'll take it back to the lab in a plastic bag, see if we can work up any prints.”
“I was wondering if it'd been fired,” Jack said.
“Well, that's almost a sure thing. We've found four expended shell casings.”
“Same caliber as this weapon?”
“Yep.”
“Find any of the loads?” Rebecca asked.
“All four,” the technician said. He pointed: “Two in that wall, one in the door frame over there, and one right through the upholstery button on the back of that armchair.”
“So it looks as if he didn't hit whatever he was shooting at,” Rebecca said.
“Probably not. Four shell casings, four slugs. Everything's been neatly accounted for.”
Jack said, “How could he have missed four times in such close quarters?”
“Damned if I know,” the technician said. He shrugged and went back to work.
The bedroom was even bloodier than the parlor. Two dead men shared it.
There were two living men, as well. A police photographer was snapping the bodies from every angle. An assistant medical examiner named Brendan Mulgrew, a tall, thin man with a prominent Adam's apple, was studying the positions of both corpses.
One of the victims was on the king-size bed, his head at the foot of it, his bare feet pointed toward the headboard, one hand at his torn throat, the other hand at his side, the palm turned up, open. He was wearing a bathrobe and a suit of blood.
“Dominick Carramazza,” Jack said.
Looking at the ruined face, Rebecca said, “How can you tell?”
“Just barely.”
The other dead man was on the floor, flat on his stomach, head turned to one side, face torn to ribbons. He was dressed like the one in the parlor: white shirt open at the neck, dark slacks, a shoulder holster.
Jack turned away from the gouged and oozing flesh. His stomach had gone sour; an acid burning etched its way up from his gut to a point under his heart. He fumbled in his coat pocket for a roll of Tums.
Both of the victims in the bedroom had been armed. But guns had been of no more help to them than to the man in the parlor.
The cadaver on the floor was still clutching a silencer equipped pistol, which was as illegal as a howitzer at a presidential press conference. It was like the gun on the floor in the first room.
The man on the bed hadn't been able to hold on to his weapon. It was lying on the tangled sheets and blankets.
“Smith & Wesson.357 Magnum,” Jack said. “Powerful enough to blow a hole as big as a fist right through anyone in its way.”
Being a revolver instead of a pistol, it wasn't fitted with a silencer, and Rebecca said, “Fired indoors, it'd sound like a cannon. They'd have heard it from one end of this floor to the other.”
To Mulgrew, Jack said, “Does it look as if both guns were fired?”
The M.E. nodded. “Yeah. Judging from the expended shell casings, the magazine of the pistol was completely emptied. Ten rounds. The guy with the.357 Magnum managed to get off five shots.”
“And didn't hit his assailant,” Rebecca said.
“Apparently not,” Mulgrew said, “although we're taking blood samples from all over the suite, hoping we'll come up with a type that doesn't belong to one of the three victims.”
They had to move to get out of the photographer's way.
Jack noticed two impressive holes in the wall to the left of the bed. “Those from the.357?”
“Yes,” Mulgrew said. He swallowed hard; his Adam's apple bobbled. “Both slugs went through the wall, into the next room.”
“Jesus. Anyone hurt over there?”
“No. But it was a close thing. The guy in the next room is mad as hell.”
“I don't blame him,” Jack said.
“Has anyone gotten his story yet?” Rebecca asked.
“He may have talked to the uniforms,” Mulgrew said, “but I don't think any detectives have formally questioned him.”
Rebecca looked at Jack. “Let's get to him while he's still fresh.”
“Okay. But just a second.” To Mulgrew, Jack said, “These three victims… were they bitten to death?”
“Looks that way.”
“Rat bites?”
“I'd rather wait for lab results, the autopsy—”
“I'm only asking for an unofficial opinion,” Jack said.
“Well… unofficially… not rats.”
“Dogs? Cats?”
“Highly unlikely.”
“Find any droppings?”
Mulgrew was surprised. “I thought of that, but it's funny you should. I looked everywhere. Couldn't find a single dropping.”
“Anything else strange?”
“You noticed the door, didn't you?”
“Besides that.”
“Isn't that enough?” Mulgrew said, astonished. “Listen, the first two bulls on the scene had to break down the door to get in. The suite was locked up tight — from the inside. The windows are locked from the inside, too, and in addition to that, I think they're probably painted shut. So… no matter whether they were men or animals, how did the killers get away? You have a locked room mystery on your hands. I think that's pretty strange, don't you?”
Jack sighed. “Actually, it's getting to be downright common.”
IX
Ted Gernsby, a telephone company repairman, was working on a junction box in a storm drain not far from Wellton School. He was bracketed by work lights that he and Andy Carnes had brought down from the truck, and the lights were focused on the box; otherwise, the man-high drainage pipe was filled with cool, stagnant darkness.
The lights threw off a small measure of heat, and the air was naturally warmer underground than on the windswept street, although not much warmer. Ted shivered. Because the job involved delicate work, he had removed his gloves. Now his hands were growing stiff from the cold.
Although the storm drains weren't connected to the sewer system, and although the concrete conduits were relatively dry after weeks of no precipitation, Ted occasionally got a whiff of a dark, rotten odor that, depending on its intensity, sometimes made him grimace and sometimes made him gag. He wished Andy would hurry back with the circuit board that was needed to finish the repair job.
He put down a pair of needle-nose pliers, cupped his hands over his mouth, and blew warm air into them. He leaned past the work lights in order to see beyond the glare and into the unilluminated length of the tunnel.
A flashlight bobbled in the darkness, coming this way. It was Andy, at last.
But why was he running?
Andy Carnes came out of the gloom, breathing fast. He was in his early twenties, about twenty years younger than Ted; they had been working together only a week.
Andy was a beachboy type with white-blond hair and a healthy complexion and freckles that were like waterspots on warm, dry sand. He would have looked more at home in Miami or California; in New York, he seemed misplaced. Now, however, he was so pale that, by contrast, his freckles looked like dark holes in his face. His eyes were wild. He was trembling.
“What's wrong?” Ted asked.
“Back there,” Andy said shakily. “In the branch tunnel. Just this side of the manhole.”
“Something there?
What?”
Andy glanced back. “They didn't follow me. Thank God. I was afraid they were after me.”
Ted Gernsby frowned. “What're you talking about?”
Andy started to speak, hesitated, shook his head. Looking sheepish, yet still frightened, he said, “You wouldn't believe it. Not in a million years. I don't believe it, and I'm the one who saw it!”
Impatient, Ted unclipped his own flashlight from the tool belt around his waist. He started back toward the branch drain.
“Wait!” Andy said. “It might be… dangerous to go back there.”
“Why?” Ted demanded, exasperated with him.
“Eyes.” Andy shivered. “That's what I saw first. A lot of eyes shining in the dark, there inside the mouth of the branch line.”
“Is that all? Listen, you saw a few rats. Nothing to worry about. When you've been on this job a while, you'll get used to them.”
“Not rats,” Andy said adamantly. “Rats have red eyes, don't they? These were white. Or… sort of silvery. Silvery-white eyes. Very bright. It wasn't that they reflected my flashlight. No. I didn't even have the flash on them when I first spotted them. They glowed. Glowing eyes, with their own light. I mean… like jack-o'-lantern eyes. Little spots of fire, flickering. So then I turned the flash on them, and they were right there, no more than six feet from me, the most incredible damned things. Right there!”
“What?” Ted demanded. “You still haven't told me what you saw.”
In a tremulous voice, Andy told him.
It was the craziest story Ted had ever heard, but he listened without comment, and although he was sure it couldn't be true, he felt a quiver of fear pass through him. Then, in spite of Andy's protests, he went back to the branch tunnel to have a look for himself. He didn't find anything at all, let alone the monsters he'd heard described. He even went into the tributary for a short distance, probing with the beam of his flashlight. Nothing.
He returned to the work site.
Andy was waiting in the pool of light cast by the big lamps. He eyed the surrounding darkness with suspicion. He was still pale.
“Nothing there,” Ted said.
“A minute ago, there was.”
Ted switched off his flashlight, snapped it onto his tool belt. He jammed his hands into the fur-lined pockets of his quilted jacket.
He said, “This is the first time you've been sub-street with me.”
“So?”
“Ever been in a place like this before?”
Andy said, “You mean in a sewer?”
“It's not a sewer. Storm drain. You ever been underground? ”
“No. What's that got to do with it?”
“Ever been in a crowded theater and suddenly felt… closed in?”
“I'm not claustrophobic,” Andy said defensively.
“Nothing to be ashamed of, you know. I've seen it happen before. A guy is a little uncomfortable in small rooms, elevators, crowded places, though not so uncomfortable that you'd say he was claustrophobic. Then he comes down here on a repair job for the first time, and he starts feeling cramped up, starts to shake, gets short of breath, feels the walls closing in, starts hearing things, imagining things. If that's the case with you, don't worry about it. Doesn't mean you'll be fired or anything like that. Hell, no! They'll just make sure they don't give you another underground assignment; that's all.”
“I saw those things, Ted.”
“Nothing's there.”
“I saw them.”
X
Down the hall from the late Dominick Carramazza's hotel suite, the next room was large and pleasant, with a queen-size bed, a writing desk, a bureau, a chest of drawers, and two chairs. The color scheme was coral with turquoise accents.
Burt Wicke, the occupant, was in his late forties. He was about six feet tall, and at one time he'd been solid and strong, but now all the hard meat of him was sheathed with fat. His shoulders were big but round, and his chest was big, and his gut overhung his belt, and as he sat on the edge of the bed, his slacks were stretched tight around his hammy thighs. Jack found it hard to tell if Wicke had ever been good-looking. Too much rich food, too much booze, too many cigarettes, too much of everything had left him with a face that looked partly melted. His eyes protruded just a bit and were bloodshot. In that coral and turquoise room, Wicke looked like a toad on a birthday cake.
His voice was a surprise, higher pitched than Jack expected. He had figured Burt Wicke to be slow-moving, slow-talking, a weary and sedentary man, but Wicke spoke with considerable nervous energy He couldn't sit still, either. He got up from the bed, paced the room sat down in a chair, bolted up almost at once, paced, all; the while talking, answering questions — and complaining. He was a non-stop complainer.
“This won't take long, will it? I've already had to cancel one business meeting. If this takes long, I'll have to cancel another.”
“It shouldn't take long,” Jack said.
“I had breakfast here in the room. Not a very good breakfast. The orange juice was too warm, and the coffee wasn't warm enough. I asked for my eggs over well, and they came sunny-side up. You'd think a hotel like this, a hotel with this reputation, a hotel this expensive, would be able to give you a decent room service breakfast. Anyway, I shaved and got dressed. I was standing in the bathroom, combing my hair, when I heard somebody shouting. Then screaming. I stepped out of the bathroom and listened, and I was pretty sure it was all coming from next door there. More than one voice.”
“What were they shouting?” Rebecca asked.
“Sounded surprised, startled. Scared. Real scared.”
“No, what I mean is — do you remember any words they shouted?”
“No words.”
“Or maybe names.”
“They weren't shouting words or names; nothing like that.”
“What were they shouting?”
“Well, maybe it was words and names or both, but it didn't come through the wall all that distinctly. It was just noise. And I thought to myself: Christ, not something else gone wrong; this has been a rotten trip all the way.”
Wicke wasn't only a complainer; he was a whiner. His voice had the power to set Jack's teeth on edge.
“Then what?” Rebecca asked.
“Well, the shouting part didn't last long. Almost right away, the shooting started.”
“Those two slugs came through the wall?” Jack asked, pointing to the holes.
“Not right then. Maybe a minute later. And what the hell is this joint made of, anyway, if the walls can't stop a bullet?”
“It was a.357 Magnum,” Jack said. “Nothing'll stop that.”
“Walls like tissue paper,” Wicke said, not wanting to hear anything that might contribute to the hotel's exoneration. He went to the telephone that stood on a nightstand by the bed, and he put his hand on the receiver. “As soon as the shooting started, I scrambled over here, dialed the hotel operator, told her to get the cops. They were a very long time coming. Are you always such a long time coming in this city when someone needs help?”
“We do our best,” Jack said.
“So I put the phone down and hesitated, not sure what to do, just stood listening to them screaming and shooting over there, and then I realized I might be in the line of fire, so I started toward the bathroom, figuring to hole up in there until it all blew over, and then all of a sudden, Jesus, I was in the line of fire. The first shot came through the wall and missed my face by maybe six inches. The second one was even closer. I dropped to the floor and hugged the carpet, but those were the last two shots — and just a few seconds later, there wasn't any more screaming, either.”
“Then what?” Jack asked.
“Then I waited for the cops.”
“You didn't go into the hall?”
“Why would I?”
“To see what happened.”
“Are you crazy? How was I to know who might be out there in the hall? Maybe one of them with a gun was still out there.”
“So you didn't see anyone. Or hear anything important, like a name?”
“I already told you. No.”
Jack couldn't think of anything more to ask. He looked at Rebecca, and she seemed stymied, too. Another dead end.
They got up from their chairs, and Burt Wicke — still fidgety, still whining — said, “This has been a rotten trip from the beginning, absolutely rotten. First, I have to make the entire flight from Chicago sitting next to a little old lady from Peoria who wouldn't shut up. Boring old bitch. And the plane hit turbulence like you wouldn't believe. Then yesterday, two deals fall through, and I find out my hotel has rats, an expensive hotel like this—”
“Rats?” Jack asked.
“Huh?”
“You said the hotel has rats.”
“Well, it does.”
“You've seen them?” Rebecca asked.
“It's a disgrace,” Wicke said. “A place like this, with such an almighty reputation, but crawling with rats.”
“Have you seen them?” Rebecca repeated.
Wicke cocked his head, frowned. “Why're you so interested in rats? That's got nothing to do with the murders.”
“Have you seen them?” Rebecca repeated in a harsher voice.
“Not exactly. But I heard them. In the walls.”
“You heard rats in the walls?”
“Well, in the heating system, actually. They sounded close, like they were right here in these walls, but you know how those hollow metal heating ducts can carry sound. The rats might've been on another floor, even in another wing, but they sure sounded close. I got up on the desk there and put my ear to the vent, and I swear they couldn't've been inches away. Squeaking. A funny sort of squeaking. Chittering, twittering sounds. Maybe half a dozen rats, by the sound of it. I could hear their claws scraping on metal… a scratchy, rattly noise that gave me the creeps. I complained, but the management here doesn't bother attending to complaints. From the way they treat their guests, you'd never know this was supposed to be one of the finest hotels in the city.”
Jack figured Burt Wicke had lodged an unreasonable number of vociferous, petty complaints prior to hearing the rats. By that time, the management had tagged him as either a hopeless neurotic or a grifter who was trying to establish excuses for not paying his bill.
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