“A young man, student at this university, was murdered. Another student, a young woman, was involved and stands accused. I think the two crimes are connected.”
“Why?”
“I have some slight evidence, but even if I didn’t, two major crimes committed at the same university among people belonging to the same end of the political spectrum, and probably the same organization, is at least an unusual occurrence, isn’t it?”
“Of course, but we’re on the edge of the ghetto here.…”
“Nobody involved was a ghetto resident. No one was black. The victim and the accused were upper-middle-class affluent.”
“Drugs?”
“Maybe, maybe not. To me it doesn’t look like a drug killing.”
“How does it look to the police?”
“The police don’t belabor the obvious, Dr. Vogel. The most obvious answer is the one they like best. Usually they’re right. They don’t have time to be subtle. They are very good at juggling five balls, but there are always six in the game, and the more they run the farther behind they get.”
“Thus you handle the difficult and intricate problems, Mr. Spenser?”
“I handle the problems I choose to; that’s why I’m free-lance. It gives me the luxury to worry about justice. The cops can’t. All they’re trying to do is keep that sixth ball in the air.”
“A fine figure of speech, Mr. Spenser, and doubtless excellent philosophy, but it has little relevance here. I do not want you snooping about my department, accusing my faculty of theft and murder.”
“What you want is not what I’m here to find out. I’ll snoop on your department and accuse your faculty of theft and murder as I find necessary. The question we’re discussing is whether it’s the easy way or the hard way. I wasn’t asking your permission.”
“By God, Spenser …”
“Listen, there’s a twenty-year-old girl who is a student in your university, has taken a course from your faculty, under the auspices no doubt of your department, who is now out on bail, charged with the murder of her boyfriend. I think she did not kill him. If I am right, it is quite important that we find out who did. Now, that may not rate in importance up as high as, say, the implications of homosexuality in Shakespeare’s sonnets, or whether he said solid or sullied, but it is important. I’m not going to shoot up the place. No rubber hose, no iron maiden. I won’t even curse loudly. If the student newspaper breaks the news that a private eye is ravaging the English Department, the hell with it. You can argue it’s an open campus and sit tight.”
“You don’t understand the situation in a university at this point in time. I cannot permit spying. I sympathize with your passion for justice, if that is in fact what it is, but my faculty would not accept your prying. Violation of academic freedom integral to such an investigation, sanctioned even implicitly by the chairman, would jeopardize liberal education in the university beyond any justification. If you persist I will have you removed from this department by the campus police.”
The campus police I had seen looked like they’d need to outnumber me considerably, but I let that go. Guile, I thought, guile before force. I had been thinking that more frequently as I got up toward forty.
“The freedom I’m worried about is not academic, it’s twenty and female. If you reconsider, my number’s on the card.”
“Good day, Mr. Spenser.”
I got even. I left without saying good-bye.
On the bulletin board in the corridor was a mimeographed list of faculty office numbers. I took it off as I went by and put it in my pocket. The mannish-looking secretary watched me all the way out the front door.
Chapter 9
I walked through the warm-for-early-winter sun of midafternoon across the campus back toward the library. In the quadrangle there was a girl in a fatigue jacket selling brown rice and pinto beans from a pushcart with a bright umbrella. Six dogs raced about barking and bowling one another over in their play. A kid in a cowboy hat and a pea jacket hawked copies of a local underground paper in a rhythmic monotone, a limp and wrinkled cigarette hanging from the corner of his mouth.
I went into the reading room of the library, took off my coat, sat down at a table, and took out my list of English professors. It didn’t get me far. There was no one named Sacco or Vanzetti; none had a skull and crossbones by his name. Nine of the names were women; the remaining thirty-three were men. Lowell Hayden’s name was right there after Gordon and before Herbert. Why him, I thought. I didn’t have a goddamn thing on him. Just his name came up twice, and he teaches medieval literature. Why not him? Why not Vogel, why not Tower, why not Forbes, or Tabor, or Iris Milford, why not Terry Orchard if you really get objective? Like a Saint Bernard, Tower had said. Woof. Why not go home and go to bed and never get up? Some things you just had to decide.
I got up, put the list back in my pocket, put on my coat, and headed back out across campus, toward the English Department. Hayden’s office was listed as fourth floor Felton. I hoped I could slip past Mary Masculine, the super-secretary. I made it. There was an old elevator to the left of the foyer, out of sight of the English office. It was a cage affair, open shaft, enclosed with mesh. The stairs wound up around it. I took it to the fourth floor, feeling exposed as it crept up. Hayden’s office was room 405. On the door was a brown plastic plaque that said DR. HAYDEN. The door was half open and inside I could hear two people talking. One was apparently a student, sitting in a straight chair, back to the door, beside the desk, facing the teacher. I couldn’t see Hayden, but I could hear his voice.
“The problem,” he was saying in a deep, public voice, “with Kittredge’s theory of the marriage cycle is that the order of composition of The Canterbury Tales is unclear. We do not, in short, know that ‘The Clerk’s Tale’ precedes that of ‘The Wife of Bath,’ for instance.”
The girl mumbled something I couldn’t catch, and Hayden responded.
“No, you are responsible for what you quote. If you didn’t agree with Kittredge, you shouldn’t have cited him.”
Again the girl’s mumble. Again Hayden: “Yes, if you’d like to write another paper, I’ll read it and grade it. If it’s better than this one, it will bring your grade up. I’d like to see an outline or at least a thesis statement, though, before you write it. Okay?”
Mumble.
“Okay, thanks for coming by.”
The girl got up and walked out. She didn’t look pleased. As she got into the elevator I reached around and knocked on the open door.
“Come in,” Hayden said. “What can I do for you?”
It was a tiny office, just room for a desk, chair, file cabinet, bookcase, and teacher. No windows, Sheetrock partitions painted green. Hayden himself looked right at home in the office. He was small, with longish blond hair. Not long enough to be stylish; long enough to look as though he needed a haircut. He had on a light green dress shirt with a faint brown stripe in it, open at the neck, and what looked like Navy surplus dungarees. The shirt was too big for him, and the material bagged around his waist. He was wearing gold-rimmed glasses.
I gave him my card and said, “I’m working on a case involving a former student and I was wondering if you could tell me anything.”
He looked at my card carefully, then at me.
“Anyone may have a card printed up. Do you have more positive identification?”
I showed him the photostat of my license, complete with my picture. He looked at it very carefully, then handed it back.
“Who is the student?” he said.
“Terry Orchard,” I said.
He showed no expression. “I teach a great many students, Mr.”—he glanced down at my card lying on his desk—“Spenser. What class? What year? What semester?”
“Chaucer, this year, this semester.”
He reached into a desk drawer and pulled a yellow cardboard-covered grade book. He thumbed through it, stopped, ran his eyes down a list, and said, “Yes, I have Miss Orchard in my Chaucer course.”
/>
Looking at the grade book upside down, I could see he had the student’s last name and first initial. If he didn’t know her name or whether she was in his class or not without looking her up in his grade book, how, looking at the listing ORCHARD, T., did he know it was Miss Orchard? Like Tabor, the zinnia head, no one seemed willing to know old Terry.
“Don’t you know the names of your students, Dr. Hayden?” I asked, trying to say it neutrally, not as if I were critical. He took it as if it were critical.
“This is a very large university, Mr. Spenser.” He had to check the card again to get my name. I hope he remembered Chaucer better. “I have an English survey course of sixty-eight students, for instance. I cannot keep track of the names, much as I try to do so. One of this university’s serious problems is the absence of community. I am really able to remember only those students who respond to my efforts to personalize our relationship. Miss Orchard apparently is not one of those.” He looked again at the open grade book. “Nor do her grades indicate that she has been unusually interested and attentive.”
“How is she doing?” I asked, just to keep it going. I didn’t know where I was going. I was fishing and I had to keep the conversation going.
“That is a matter concerning Miss Orchard and myself.” Nice conversation primer, Spenser, you really know how to touch the right buttons.
“Sorry,” I said. “I didn’t mean to pry, but when you think about it, prying is more or less my business.”
“Perhaps,” Hayden said. “It is not, however, my business; nor is it, quite frankly, a business for which I have much respect.”
“I know it’s not important like Kittredge’s marriage cycle, but it’s better than enlisting, I suppose.”
“I’m quite busy, Mr. Spenser.” He didn’t have to check this time. A quick study, I thought.
“I appreciate that, Dr. Hayden. Let me be brief. Terry Orchard is accused of the murder of her boyfriend, Dennis Powell.” No reaction. “I am working to clear her of suspicion. Is there anything you can tell me that would help?”
“No, I’m sorry, there isn’t.”
“Do you know Dennis Powell?”
“No, I do not. I can check through my grade books, but I don’t recall him.”
“That’s not necessary. The grade book won’t tell me anything. There’s nothing at all you can think of? About either?”
“Nothing. I’m sorry, but I don’t know the people involved.”
“Are you aware that the Godwulf Manuscript has been stolen?”
“Yes, I am.”
“Do you have any idea what might have happened to it?”
“Mr. Spenser, this is absurd. I assume your interest relates to the fact that I am a medievalist. I am not, however, a thief.”
“Well,” I said, “thanks anyway.” I got up.
“You’re welcome. I’m sorry I wasn’t more useful.” His voice was remarkable. Deep and resonant, it seemed incongruous with his slight frame. “Thanks for coming by.”
As I left the office, two students were waiting outside, sitting on the floor, coats and books in a pile beside them. They looked at me curiously as I entered the elevator. As it descended I could hear Hayden’s voice booming. “Come in, Mr. Vale. What can I do for you?”
On the ground floor were two campus policemen, and they wanted me. I hadn’t eluded Mary Masculine after all. She was hovering in the doorway to the English office. One of the cops was big and fat with a thick, pockmarked face and an enormous belly. The other was much smaller, a black man with a neat Sugar Ray mustache and a tailored uniform. They weren’t wearing guns, but each had a nightstick stuck in his hip pocket. The fat one took my arm above the elbow in what he must have felt was an iron grip.
“Start walking, trooper,” he said, barely moving his lips.
I was frustrated, and angry at Lowell Hayden and at Mary Masculine and the university. I said, “Let go of my arm or I’ll put a dent in your face.”
“You and who else?” he said. It broke my tension.
“Snappy,” I said. “On your days off could you come over and be my dialogue coach?”
The black cop laughed. The fat one looked puzzled and let go of my arm.
“What do you mean?” he said.
“Never mind, Lloyd,” the black cop said. “Come on, Jim, we got to walk you off campus.”
I nodded. “Okay, but not arm in arm. I don’t go for that kind of stuff.”
“Me neither, Jim. We’ll just stroll along.”
And we did. The fat cop had his nightstick out and tapped it against his leg as we went out of the building and toward the street. His eyes never left me. Alert, I thought, vigilant. When we got to my car, the black cop opened the door for me with a small, graceful flourish.
The fat one said, “Don’t come back. Next time you show up here you’ll be arrested.”
“For crissake,” I said. “I’m working for the university. Your boss hired me.”
“I don’t know nothing about that, but we got our orders. Get out and stay out.”
The black cop said, “I don’t know, Jim, but I think maybe you been canceled.” He closed the door and stepped back. I started the car and pulled away. They still stood there as I drove off, the fat one looking balefully after me, still slapping his nightstick against his leg.
Chapter 10
It was getting dark, and the commuter traffic was starting to thicken the streets. I drove slowly back to my office, parked my car, and went in.
When I unlocked my office door the first thing I noticed was the smell of cigarette smoke. I hadn’t smoked in ten years. I pushed it open hard and went in low with my gun out. There was someone sitting at my desk, and another man standing against the wall. In the half-light the tip of his cigarette glowed. Neither of them moved. I backed to the wall and felt for the light switch. I found it, and the room brightened.
The man against the wall laughed, a thin sound, without humor.
“Look at that, Phil. Maybe if we give him money he’ll do that again.”
The man at my desk said nothing. He was sitting with his feet up, my chair tipped back, his hat still on, his overcoat still buttoned up, though it must have been ninety in there, wearing rose-colored gold-rimmed glasses. He looked at me without expression, a very tall man, narrow, with high shoulders, six foot four or five, probably. Behind the glasses one eye was blank and white and turned partly up. Along the right line of his jaw was a purple birthmark maybe two inches wide, running the whole length of the jaw from chin to ear. His hands were folded across his stomach. Big hands, long, square, thick fingers, the backs prominently veined, the knuckles lumpy. I could tell he was impressed with the gun in my hand. The only thing that would have scared him more would have been if I had threatened to flog him with a dandelion.
“Put that away,” he said. “If he was going to push you I wouldn’t have let Sonny smoke.” His voice was a harsh whisper, as if he had an artificial throat.
Sonny gave me a moon-faced smile. He was thick and round, running to fat, with mutton-chop sideburns that came to the corners of his mouth. His coat was off and his collar open, the tie at half-mast. Sweat soaked the big half-moon circles around his armpits, and his face was shiny with it. I put the gun away.
“A man wants to see you,” Phil said. I hadn’t seen him move since I came in. His voice was entirely without inflection.
“Joe Broz?” I said.
Sonny said, “What makes you think so?”
Phil said, “He knows me.”
“Yeah,” I said, “you walk around behind Broz.”
Phil said, “Let’s go,” and stood up. Six-five, at least. When he was standing you could see that his right shoulder was higher than his left.
I said, “What if I don’t want to?”
Phil just looked at me. Sonny snickered, “What if he don’t want to, Phil?”
Phil said, “Let’s go.”
We went. Outside, double-parked, was a Lincoln Continental. Sonny
drove; Phil sat in back with me.
It had started to snow again, softly, big flakes, and the windshield wipers made the only sound in the car. I looked at the back of Sonny’s neck as he drove. The hair was long and stylish and curled out over the collar of his white trench coat. Sonny seemed to be singing soundlessly to himself as he drove. His head bobbed, and he beat gentle time on the wheel with one suede-gloved hand. Phil was a silent and motionless shape in the corner of the back seat.
“Either of you guys seen The Godfather?” I asked.
Sonny snorted. Phil ignored me.
“Beat up any good candy store owners lately, Sonny?”
“Don’t ride me, Peep; you’ll find yourself looking up at the snow.”
“I’m heavy work, Sonny. College kids are about your upper limit, I think.”
“Goddammit,” Sonny started, and Phil stopped him.
“Shut up,” Phil said in his gear box voice, and we both knew he meant both of us.
“Just having a little snappy conversation, Phil, to pass the time,” I said.
Phil just looked at me, and the menace was like a physical force. I could feel anxiety pulse up and down the long muscles of my arms and legs. Going to see Joe Broz was not normally a soothing experience anyway. Not many people looked forward to it.
The ride was short. Sonny pulled to a stop in front of a building on the lower end of State Street. Phil and I got out. I stuck my head back in before I closed the back door.
“If a tough meter maid puts the arm on you, Sonny, just scream and I’ll come running.”
Sonny swore at me and burned rubber away from the curb.
I followed Phil into the building. We took the self-service elevator to the eleventh floor. The corridor was silent and empty, with marble wainscoting and frosted glass doors. At the far end we went through one marked CONTINENTAL CONSULTING CO. Inside was an empty stainless-steel and coral-vinyl reception room. There is little that is quieter than an office building after hours, and this one was no exception. The lights were all on, the receptionist’s desk was geometrically neat. On one wall were staggered prints by Maurice Utrillo.
Five Classic Spenser Mysteries Page 63