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"Have there been others like Leopold and Loeb since nineteen twenty-four?" Preduski asked.
"Not that I know of. Not in a pure sense, anyway.
The Manson family killed for murky political and religious reasons. They thought Manson was Christ. Thought killing the rich would help the downtrodden. Unmitigated crazies, in my book. Think of some other killers, especially ma.s.s murderers. Charles Starkweather. Richard Speck. Albert DeSalvo. All of them were psychotic. All of them were driven by psychoses that had grown and festered in them, that had slowly corrupted them since childhood. In Leopold and Loeb, there were apparently no serious childhood traumas that could have led to psychotic behavior. No black seed to bear fruit later."
"So if the Butcher is two men," Preduski said forlornly, "we've got a new Leopold and Loeb. Killing to prove their superiority."
Enderby began to pace. "Maybe. But then again, maybe it's more than that. Something more complex than that."
"Like what?"
"I don't know. But I feel it's not exactly exactly a Leopold and Loeb sort of thing." He went to the table and stared at the remains of the meal that had never been eaten. "Have you called Harris?" a Leopold and Loeb sort of thing." He went to the table and stared at the remains of the meal that had never been eaten. "Have you called Harris?"
Preduski said, "No."
"You should. He's been trying to get an image of the killer. Hasn't had any luck. Maybe that's because he's focusing on a single image, trying to envision just one face. Tell him there are two two killers. Maybe that'll break it open for him. Maybe he'll finally get a handle on the case." killers. Maybe that'll break it open for him. Maybe he'll finally get a handle on the case."
"We don't know know there are two. That's just a theory." there are two. That's just a theory."
"Tell him anyway," Enderby said. "What harm can it do?"
"I should tell him tonight. I really should. But I just can't," Preduski said. "He's gotten behind in his work because of this case. That's my fault. I'm always calling him, talking to him, pressuring him about it. He's working late, trying to get caught up. I don't want to disturb him."
In the foyer by the front door, the grandfather clock chimed the half hour, five minutes late again.
Preduski glanced at his wrist.w.a.tch and said, "It'll soon be ten o'clock. I've got to be going."
"Going? There's work to do here."
"I'm not on duty yet."
"Graveyard?"
"Yeah."
"I never knew you to hesitate about a bit of overtime."
"Well, I just got out of bed. I was cooking spaghetti when Headquarters called me about this. Never got a chance to eat any of it. I'm starving."
Enderby shook his head. "As long as I've known you, I don't believe I've ever seen you eat a square meal. You're always grabbing sandwiches so you don't have to stop working to eat. And at home you're cooking spaghetti. You need a wife, Ira."
"A wife?"
"Other men have them."
"But me? Are you kidding?"
"Be good for you."
"Andy, look at me."
"I'm looking."
"Look closer."
"So?"
"You must be blind."
"What should I see?"
"What woman in her right mind would marry me?"
"Don't give me your usual c.r.a.p, Ira," Enderby said with a smile. "I know that under all of that self-deprecating chatter, you've got a healthy and proper respect for yourself."
"You're the psychiatrist."
"That's right. I'm not a suspect or a witness; you can't charm me with that blather." you can't charm me with that blather."
Preduski grinned.
"I'll bet there have been more than a few women who've fallen for that calculated little-boy look of yours."
"A few," Preduski admitted uncomfortably. "But never the right woman."
"Who said anything about the right one? Most men are happy to settle for half-right."
"Not me." Preduski looked at his watch again. "I really have to be going. I'll come back around midnight. Martin probably won't even have finished questioning the other tenants by then. It's a big building."
Dr. Enderby sighed as if the troubles of the world were on his shoulders alone. "We'll be here too. Dusting the furniture for prints, vacuuming the carpets for hairs and threads, finding nothing, but working hard. The same old circus."
28.
Graham's foot slipped off the rung.
Although he was still holding tightly with both hands, he panicked. He struck out at the ladder with his feet, scrabbling wildly, as if the ladder were alive, as if he had to kick it into submission before he could regain his foothold on it.
"Graham, what's wrong?" Connie asked from her position on the ladder above him. "Graham?"
Her voice sobered him. He stopped kicking. He hung by his hands until he was breathing almost normally, until the vivid memories of Everest had faded.
"Graham?"
With his feet he probed for a rung, found one after several seconds that seemed like hours. "I'm all right. My foot slipped. I'm okay now."
"Don't look down."
"I didn't. I won't."
He sought the next rung, stepped to it, continued the descent.
He felt feverish. The hair was damp at the back of his neck. Perspiration beaded his forehead, jeweled his eyebrows, stung the corners of his eyes, filmed his cheeks, brought a salty taste to his lips. In spite of the perspiration, he was cold. He shivered as he moved down the long ladder.
He was as much aware of the void at his back as he would have been of a knife pressed between his shoulder blades.
On the thirty-first floor, Frank Bollinger entered the maintenance supply room.
He saw the red door. Someone had put down the doorstop that was fixed to it, so that it was open an inch or two. He knew immediately that Harris and the woman had gone through there.
But why was the door ajar?
It was like a signpost. Beckoning him.
Alert for a trap, he advanced cautiously. He held the Walther PPK in his right hand. He kept his left hand out in front of him, arm extended all the way, to stop the door in case they tried to throw it open in his face. He held his breath for those few steps, listening for the slightest sound other than the soft squeak of his own shoes.
Nothing. Silence.
He used the toe of his shoe to push up the doorstop; then he pulled open the door and walked onto the small platform. He had just enough time to realize where he was, when the door closed behind him and all the lights in the shaft went out. then he pulled open the door and walked onto the small platform. He had just enough time to realize where he was, when the door closed behind him and all the lights in the shaft went out.
At first he thought Harris had come into the maintenance room after him. But when he tried the door, it was not locked. And when he opened it, all the lights came on. The emergency lighting didn't burn twenty-four hours a day; it came on only when one of the service entrances was open it came on only when one of the service entrances was open; and that was why Harris had left the door ajar. and that was why Harris had left the door ajar.
Bollinger was impressed by the system of lights and platforms and ladders. Not every building erected in the 1920s would have been designed with an eye toward emergencies. In fact, d.a.m.ned few skysc.r.a.pers built since the war could boast any safety provisions. These days, they expected you to wait in a stalled elevator until it was repaired, no matter if that took ten hours or ten days; and if the lift couldn't be repaired, you could risk a manually cranked descent, or you could rot in it. and if the lift couldn't be repaired, you could risk a manually cranked descent, or you could rot in it.
The more time he spent in the building, the deeper he penetrated it, the more fascinating he found it to be. It was not on the scale of those truly gargantuan stadiums and museums and highrises that Hitler had designed for the "super race" just prior to and during the first days of World War Two. But then Hitler's magnificent edifices had never been realized in stone and mortar, whereas this place had risen. He began to feel that the men who had designed and constructed it were Olympians. He found his appreciation strange, for he knew that had he been restricted to the halls and offices during the day, when the building was full of people and buzzing with commerce, he would not have noticed the great size and high style of the structure. One took for granted that which was commonplace; and to New Yorkers, there was nothing unusual about a forty-two-story office building. Now, however, abandoned for the night, the tower seemed incredibly huge and complex and to New Yorkers, there was nothing unusual about a forty-two-story office building. Now, however, abandoned for the night, the tower seemed incredibly huge and complex; in solitude and silence one had time to contemplate it and see how magnificent and extraordinary it was. He was like a microbe wandering through the veins and bowels of a living creature, a behemoth almost beyond measurement. in solitude and silence one had time to contemplate it and see how magnificent and extraordinary it was. He was like a microbe wandering through the veins and bowels of a living creature, a behemoth almost beyond measurement.
He felt in league with the minds that could conceive of a monument-like this. He was one of them, a mover and shaker, a superior man. The Olympian nature of the building-and of the architects responsible for it-struck a responsive chord in him, made him reverberate with the knowledge of his own special G.o.dlike stature. Br.i.m.m.i.n.g with a sense of glory, he was more determined than ever to kill Harris and the woman. They were animals. Lice. Parasites. Because of Harris's freakish psychic gift, they posed a threat to Bollinger. They were trying to deny him his rightful place in this new and forceful current of history: the at first gradual but ever-quickening rise of the new men.
He pushed the doorstop against the floor to keep the door open and the lights burning. Then he went to the edge of the platform and peered down the ladder.
They were three floors under him. The woman on top, nearest by a few rungs. Harris below her, going first. Neither of them looked up. They certainly were aware of the momentary loss of light and understood the significance of it. They were hurrying toward the next platform, where they could get out of the shaft.
Bollinger knelt, tested the railing. It was strong. He leaned against it, using it like a safety harness to keep him from tumbling to his death.
He didn't want to kill them here. The place and method of murder were extremely important tonight. Here, they would drop to the bottom of the well, and that would ruin the scheme that he and Billy had come up with this afternoon. He wasn't here just to kill them any way he could; he had to dispose of them in a certain manner. If he brought it off just right, the police would be confused, misled he had to dispose of them in a certain manner. If he brought it off just right, the police would be confused, misled; and the people of New York would begin to experience a spiraling reign of terror unlike anything in their worst nightmares. He and Billy had worked out a d.a.m.ned clever gambit, and he wouldn't abandon it so long as there was a chance of bringing it off as planned. and the people of New York would begin to experience a spiraling reign of terror unlike anything in their worst nightmares. He and Billy had worked out a d.a.m.ned clever gambit, and he wouldn't abandon it so long as there was a chance of bringing it off as planned.
It was a quarter of ten. In fifteen minutes Billy would be in the alleyway outside, and he would wait only until ten-thirty. Bollinger saw that he probably wouldn't have time for the woman, but he was pretty sure he'd be able to carry out the plan in forty-five minutes.
Besides, he didn't know what Harris looked like, and he felt there was something cowardly about killing a man whose face he'd never seen. It was akin to shooting someone in the back. That sort of killing-even of an animal, even of a louse like Harris-didn't fit Bollinger's image of a superman. He liked to meet his prey head-on, to get close, so that there was at least a hint of danger.
The trick was to force them out of the shaft without killing them; to herd them to other ground where the plan could be carried out. He pointed the pistol down, aimed wide of the woman's head and squeezed the trigger. to herd them to other ground where the plan could be carried out. He pointed the pistol down, aimed wide of the woman's head and squeezed the trigger.
The shot exploded; ear-splitting noise a.s.saulted Connie from every side. Over the diminishing echoes, she could hear the bullet ricocheting from one wall to the other, farther down the shaft. ear-splitting noise a.s.saulted Connie from every side. Over the diminishing echoes, she could hear the bullet ricocheting from one wall to the other, farther down the shaft.
The situation was so unreal that she had to wonder if it was transpiring in her mind. She supposed it was possible that she was in a hospital and that all of this was the product of a fevered imagination, the delusions of madness.
Descending the ladder, she repeatedly caught herself murmuring softly: sometimes it was jumbled phrases that made little sense, sometimes strings of utterly meaningless sounds. Her stomach rolled over like a fish on a wet boat dock. Her bowels quivered. She felt as if a bullet had already ripped into her, already had torn apart her vital organs.
Bollinger fired again.
The shot seemed less sharp than the one before it. Her ears were desensitized, still ringing from the first explosion.
For a woman who had experienced little emotional-and no physical-terror in her life, she was handling herself surprisingly well.
When she looked down, she saw Graham let go of the ladder with one hand. He grabbed the railing that ringed the platform. He took one foot off the ladder; hesitated, leaning at a precarious angle; started to bring his foot back hesitated, leaning at a precarious angle; started to bring his foot back; suddenly found the courage to put it on the edge of the platform. For a moment, fighting his own terror, he stayed that way, crucified between the two points of safety. She was about to call to him, urge him on, when he finally freed himself of the ladder altogether, wobbled on the brink of the platform as if he would fall, then got his balance and climbed over the railing. suddenly found the courage to put it on the edge of the platform. For a moment, fighting his own terror, he stayed that way, crucified between the two points of safety. She was about to call to him, urge him on, when he finally freed himself of the ladder altogether, wobbled on the brink of the platform as if he would fall, then got his balance and climbed over the railing.
She descended the last dozen rungs much too fast and reached the platform as Bollinger fired a third shot. She hurried through the red door that Graham held open for her, into the maintenance supply room on the twenty-seventh level.
The first thing she saw was the blood on his trousers. A bright spot of it. As big as a silver dollar. Glistening on the gray fabric. "What happened?"
"Had these in my pocket," he said, holding up the scissors. "A couple of floors back, when I almost fell, the blades tore through the lining and gouged my thigh."
"Is it bad?"
"No."
"Hurt?"
"Not much."
"Better get rid of them."
"Not just yet."
Bollinger watched until they left the shaft. They had gotten out two platforms down. Because there was only a service entrance at every second floor, that put them on the twenty-seventh level.
He got up, hurried toward the elevator.
"Come on," Graham said. "Let's make a run for the stairs."
"No. We've got to go back up the shaft." Incredulity showed on his face, anguish in his eyes. "That's crazy!"
"He won't be looking for us in the shaft. At least not for a couple of minutes. We can go up two floors, then use the stairs when he comes back to check the shaft." She opened the red door through which they'd come only seconds ago.
"I don't know if I can do it again," he said.
"Of course you can."
"You said up the shaft?"