Read The 1st Deadly Sin Online

Authors: Lawrence Sanders

The 1st Deadly Sin (61 page)

“I see.”

“If I hear anything more tonight, I’ll let you know.”

“Thank you.”

“How are you coming?”

“So-so.”

“Got a name?”

“Yes.”

“Good. Hang in there. Things are beginning to break.”

“All right. Thank you for calling.”

He hung up, turned back to Handry. “I asked how you’d like to go talk to Daniel Blank in his office.”

“Oh sure,” Handry nodded. “Just waltz in and say, ‘Mr. Blank, Captain Edward X. Delaney of the New York Police Department thinks you axed four men to death on the east side. Would you care to make a statement?’”

“No, not like that,” Delaney said seriously. “Javis-Bircham will have a publicity or public relations department, won’t they?”

“Bound to.”

“I’d do this myself, but you have a press card and identifications man. Identify yourself. Make an appointment. The
top
man. When you go see him, flash your buzzer. Say that your paper is planning a series of personality profiles on young, up-and-coming executives, the—”

“Hey, wait a minute!”

“The new breed of young executives who are familiar with computers, market sampling, demographic percentages and all that shit. Ask the public relations man to suggest four or five young, progressive Javis-Bircham executives who might fit the type your paper is looking for.”

“Now see here—”

“Don’t—repeat,
do not
—ask for Blank by name. Just come down hard on the fact that you’re looking for a young executive familiar with the current use and future value of computers in business operations. Blank is certain to be one of the four or five men he suggests to you. Ask a few questions about each man he suggests. Then you pick Blank. See how easy it is?”

“Easy?” Handry' shook his head. “Madness! And what if the Javis-Bircham PR man checks back with the finance editor of my paper and finds out no such series of articles is planned?”

“Chances are he won’t. He’ll be happy to get the publicity for Javis-Bircham, won’t he?”

“But what if he does check? Then I’ll be out on my ass.”

“So what? You’re thinking of quitting anyway, aren’t you? So one of your problems is solved right there.”

Handry stared at him, shaking his head. “You really are a special kind of bastard,” he said in wonderment.

“Or,” Delaney went on imperturbably, “if you like, you can give the finance editor on your paper a cover story. Tell him it’s a police case—which it is—and if he asks questions, tell him it involves a big embezzlement or fraud or something like that. Don’t mention the Lombard case. He’d probably cover for you if the Javis-Bircham PR man called and say, yes, the paper was planning a series of articles on young, progressive executives. He’d do that for you, wouldn’t he?”

“Maybe.”

“So you’ll do it?”

“Just one question: why the fuck should I?”

“Two answers to that. One, if Blank turns out to be the killer, you’ll be the only reporter in the world who had a personal interview with him. That’s worth something, isn’t it? Two, you want to be a poet, don’t you? Or some kind of writer other than a reporter or a rewrite man. How can you expect to be a good writer if you don’t understand people, if you don’t know what makes them tick? You’ve got to learn to get inside people, to penetrate their minds, their hearts, their souls. What an opportunity this is—to meet and talk to a man who might have slaughtered four human beings!”

Handry drained his drink in a gulp. He rose, poured himself another, stood with his back to Delaney.

“You really know how to go for the jugular, don’t you?”

“Yes.”

“Aren’t you ever ashamed of the way you manipulate people?”

“I don’t manipulate people. Sometimes I give them the chance to do what they want to do and never had the opportunity. Will you do it, Handry?”

There was silence. The reporter took a deep breath, then blew it out. He turned to face Delaney.

“All right,” he said.

“Good,” the Captain nodded. “Set up the appointment with Blank the way I’ve outlined it. Use your brains. I know you’ve got a good brain. The day before your interview is scheduled, give me a call. We’ll have a meet and I’ll tell you what questions to ask him. Then we’ll have a rehearsal.”

“A rehearsal?”

“That’s right. I’ll play Blank, to give you an idea of how he might react to your questions and how you can follow up on things he might or might not say.”

“I’ve interviewed before,” Handry protested. “Hundreds of times.”

“None as important as this. Handry, you’re an amateur liar. I’m going to make you a professional.”

The reporter nodded grimly. “If anyone can, you can. You don’t miss a trick, do you?”

“I try not to.”

“I hope to Christ if I ever commit a crime you don’t come after me, Iron Balls.”

He sounded bitter.

After Handry left, Delaney sat at his study desk, staring again at the photo of Daniel Blank. The man was handsome, no doubt about it: dark and lean. His face seemed honed; beneath the thin flesh cover the bones of brow, cheeks and jaw were undeniably there. But the Captain could read nothing from that face: neither greed, passion, evil nor weakness. It was a closed-off mask, hiding its secrets.

On impulse, not bothering to analyze his own motive, he took out the Daniel G. Blank file, flipped through it until he found Blank’s phone number and dialed it. It rang four times, then:

“Hello?”

“Lou?” Delaney asked. “Lou Jackson?”

“No, I’m afraid you’ve got the wrong number,” the voice said pleasantly.

“Oh. Sorry.”

Delaney hung up. It was an agreeable voice, somewhat musical, words clearly enunciated, tone deep, a good resonance. He stared at the photo again, matching what his eyes saw to what his ears had heard. He was beginning, just beginning, to penetrate Daniel Blank.

He worked on his records and files till almost 11:00 p.m., then judged the time was right to call Charles Lipsky. He looked up the apartment house number and called from his study phone.

“Lobby,” a whiny voice answered.

“Charles Lipsky, please.”

“Yeah. Talking. Who’s this?” Delaney caught the caution, the suspicion in that thin, nasal voice. He wondered what doom the doorman expected from a phone call at this hour.

“Mr. Lipsky, my name is Miller, Ward M. Miller. Did your brother-in-law speak to you about me?”

“Oh. Yeah. He called.” Now Delaney caught a note of relief, of catastrophe averted or at least postponed.

“I was hoping we might get together, Mr. Lipsky. Just for a short talk.”

“Yeah. Well, listen…” Now the voice became low, conspiratorial. “You know I ain’t supposed to talk to anyone about the tenants. We got a very strict rule against that.”

Delaney recognized this virtuous reminder for what it was: a ploy to drive the price up.

“I realize that, Mr. Lipsky, and believe me, you don’t have to tell me a thing you feel you shouldn’t. But a short talk would be to our mutual advantage. You understand?”

“Well…yeah.”

“I have an expense account.”

“Oh, well, okay then.”

“And your name will be kept out of it.”

“You’re sure?”

“Absolutely. When and where?”

“Well, how soon do you want to make it?”

“As soon as possible. Wherever you say.”

“Well, I get off tomorrow morning at four. I usually stop by this luncheonette on Second and Eighty-fifth for coffee before I go home. It’s open twenty-four hours a day, but it’s usually empty at that hour except for some hackies and hookers.”

Delaney knew the place Lipsky referred to, but didn’t mention he knew it.

“Second Avenue and Eighty-fifth,” he repeated. “About four-fifteen, four-thirty tomorrow morning?”

“Yeah. Around there.”

“Fine. I’ll be wearing a black Homburg and a double-breasted black overcoat.”

“Yeah. All right.”

“See you then.”

Delaney hung up, satisfied. Lipsky sounded like a grifter, and penny ante at that. He jotted a note to have Thorsen check Department records to see if there was a sheet on Charles Lipsky. Delaney would almost bet there was.

He went immediately to bed, setting his alarm for 3:30 a.m. Thankfully, he fell asleep within half an hour, even as he was rehearsing in his mind how to handle Lipsky and what questions to ask.

The luncheonette had all the charm and ambience of a subway station. The walls and counter were white linoleum tiles, dulled with grease. Counter and table tops were plastic, scarred with cigarette burns. Chairs and counter stools were molded plastic, unpadded to reduce the possibility of vandalism. Rancid grease hung in the air like a wet sheet, and signs taped to the walls would have delighted a linguist: “Turky and all the tremens: $2.25.”

“Fryed Shrims—$1.85 with French pots and cold slaw.”

“Our eggs are strickly fresh.”

Down at the end of the counter, two hookers, one white, one black, both in orange wigs, were working on plates of steak and eggs, conversing in low voices as fast as they were eating. Closer to the door, three cabbies were drinking coffee, trading wisecracks with the counterman and the black short order cook who was scraping thick rolls of grease off the wide griddle.

Delaney was early, a few minutes after four. When he entered, talk ceased, heads swivelled to inspect him. Apparently he didn’t look like a holdup man; when he ordered black coffee and two sugared doughnuts, the other customers went back to their food and talk.

The Captain carried his coffee and doughnuts to a rear table for two. He sat where he could watch the door and the plate glass window. He didn’t remove his hat but he unbuttoned his overcoat. He sat patiently, sipping the bitter coffee that had a film of oil glinting on the surface. He ate half a doughnut, then gave up.

His man came in about ten minutes later. Short, almost stunted, but heavy through the waist and hips, like an old jockey gone to seed. His eyes drifted, seemed to float around the room. The other customers glanced at him, but didn’t stop eating or talking. The newcorner ordered a cup of light coffee, a piece of apple pie, and brought them over to Delaney’s table.

“Miller?”

Delaney nodded. “Mr. Lipsky?”

“Yeah.”

The doorman sat down opposite the Captain. He was still wearing his doorman’s overcoat and uniform but, incongruously, he was wearing a beaked cap, a horseman’s cap, in an horrendous plaid. He looked at Delaney briefly, but then his yellowish eyes floated off, to his food, the floor, the walls, the ceiling.

A grifter. Delaney was sure of it now. And seedy. Always with the shorts. On the take. A sheet that might include gambling arrests, maybe some boosting, receiving stolen property, bad debts, perhaps even an attempted shakedown. Cheap, dirty stuff.

“I ain’t got much time,” Lipsky said in his low, whiny voice. “I start on days again at noon.” He shoveled pie into his surprisingly prim little mouth. “So I got to get home and catch a few hours of shuteye. Then back on the door again at twelve.”

“Rough,” Delaney said sympathetically. “Did your brother-in-law tell you what this is all about?”

“Yeah,” Lipsky nodded, gulping his hot coffee. “This Blank is after some young cunt and her father wants to break it up. Right?”

“That’s about it. What can you tell me about Blank?”

Lipsky scraped pie crust crumbs together on his plate with his fingers, picked them up, tossed them down his throat like a man downing a shot of liquor neat.

“Thought you was on an expense account.”

Delaney glanced at the other customers. No one was observing them. He took his wallet from his hip pocket, held it on the far side of the table where only Lipsky could see it. He opened it wide,/ watched Lipsky’s hungry eyes slide over and estimate the total. The Captain took out a ten, proferred it under the table edge. It was gone.

“Can’t you do better than that?” Lipsky whined. “I’m taking an awful chance.”

“Depends,” Delaney said. “How long has Blank been living there?”

“I don’t know exactly. I been working there four years, and he was living there when I started.”

“He was married then?”

“Yeah. A big
zoftig
blonde. A real piece of push. Then he got divorced.”

“Know where his ex-wife is living?”

“No.”

“Does he have any woman now? Anyone regular who visits him?”

“Yeah. What does this young cunt look like? The one her father doesn’t want her to see Blank?”

“About eighteen,” Delaney said smoothly. “Long blonde hair. About five-four or five. Maybe one-twenty. Blue eyes. Peaches-and-cream complexion. Big jugs.”

“Yum-yum,” the doorman said, licking his lips. “I ain’t seen anyone like that around.”

“Anyone else? Any woman?”

“Yeah. A rich bitch. Mink coat down to her feet. About thirty, thirty-five. No tits. Black hair. White face. No makeup. A weirdo.”

“Know her name?”

“No. She comes and she goes by cab.”

“Sleep over?”

“Sure. Sometimes. What do you think?”

“That’s interesting.”

“Yeah? How interesting?”

“You’re getting there,” Delaney said coldly. “Don’t get greedy. Anyone else?”

“No women. A boy.”

“A boy?”

“Yeah. About eleven, twelve. Around there. Pretty enough to be a girl. I heard Blank call him Tony.”

“What’s going on there?”

“What the hell do you think?”

“This Tony ever sleep over?”

“I never seen it. One of the other doors tells me yes. Once or twice.”

“This Blank got any close friends? In the building, I mean?”

“The Mortons.”

“A family?”

“Married couple. No children. You want a lot for your sawbuck, don’t you?”

Sighing, Delaney reached for his wallet again. But he looked up, saw a squad car roll to a stop just outside the luncheonette, and he paused. A uniformed cop got out of the car and came inside. The cabbies had gone, but the two hookers were picking their teeth, finishing their coffee. The cop glanced at them, then his eyes slid over Delaney’s table.

He recognized the Captain, and Delaney recognized him. Handrette. A good man. Maybe a little too fast with his stick, but a good, brave cop. And smart enough not to greet a plain-clothesman or superior officer out of uniform in public unless spoken to first. His eyes moved away from Delaney. He ordered two hamburgers with everything, two coffees, and two Danish to go. Delaney gave Charles Lipsky another ten. “Who are the Mortons?” he asked. “Blank’s friends.”

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