The late Ella Raines. You can almost hear the lonely, late night trumpet in the distance.
A
couple of weeks went by without any leads.
June Knorr Ph. D. had blown town.
All I’d heard from her was a short note saying she wasn’t ready for
anything serious. Had to figure things
out while she was at some archive overseas. No explanation. No expectations. No apologies.
Some guys have all the luck.
It was pushing 11pm, and I was
getting tired of driving around thinking about it. Mr. and Mrs. Goad seemed more interesting by
comparison than my apparent inability in the romance department. Seemed like a better idea to head for home
and get some sleep. Maybe things would
look better in the morning? Nah. Who am I kidding? They wouldn’t. I’d be just as much in the dark about it later. Certainly in a darker place. What difference would six or seven hours
make?
A breaking news bulletin
came on the car radio. I turned it up
and pulled to the side of the road to hear better. An accident over on campus. Some kids up on the roof of a ten story
dorm. One of ‘em made a wrong step and
took the express elevator down. Police
and fire rescue on the scene. University
officials trying to locate family. No
further details at this time. Stay tuned
for further updates.
Well hell. Just about 15 minutes away that time of
night. Might as well drop by and see
what’s what.
When
I pulled up, the cops had the street and sidewalks on both sides blocked off
for about 50 yards in both directions. Onlookers and rubberneckers all over the place.
Students, neighborhood residents who lived nearby, cops in vests,
firemen, half a dozen emergency rescue personnel. Their blue and red lights made things seem
more like a street carnival or a dance club than the scene of an accidental
death. Jumpers, though, never make a favorable impression.
I backed the car up and double-parked down the
street. Figured everybody had bigger
things to worry about than a minor traffic violation all things considered. There wasn’t any through traffic just then
either. For obvious reasons.
I slammed the car door and hoofed it the rest of the way, nodding at a few beat reporters I recognized from The Dispatch and its rival The
Bulletin. The snow squeaked underfoot as I got closer to
the scene. When I reached the yellow tape
and tried to duck under it, a young cop who I didn’t recognize blocked my way
with his arms, and I heard a familiar voice off to my left shout,
“Just where the hell ya think you’re goin?”
It was my old buddy Mulvaney. We’d been in high school together 20 or so
years ago but lost touch after graduation.
Never quite friends even then.
Our families moved in different circles.
Our lives took us in different directions afterwards. He joined the army. Married his sweetheart. Then joined the cops when he got out. Made detective not too long after that. Me? My
soft skills needed work.
“What’s going on, Tom?” I asked, pushing by the young
cop and locking eyes with him as I did.
Time to establish the pecking order. He backed off.
“Damned if I know.
Bunch of college kids partying up on the roof over there. Too much to drink, probably some pills, and
one of ‘em took a swan dive over the side at some point.
Ten stories down. What’s left is
over there under that sheet. Dead at the
scene. Ambulance guys are about ready to
haul ‘im away. My guys are talking to
the other 10 or so who were up there now trying to piece together what really
happened. Some are still kinda wasted
though and everybody’s upset, so it’ll be a while.” I pulled out my lighter, lit a cigarette, and
took a drag. Exhaled.
“You don’t say?
Victim got a name?”
“Come on!” Mulvaney answered. “You know I can’t tell you that before the
kid’s parents have been notified. “But
off the record,” he lowered his voice, paused, stuffed his hand into a coat
pocket, and pulled out a pad of paper. Glanced at it. “Um,
Wierzbicki. Connor Wierzbicki. 21 years old.
We’re trying to get a phone number for his parents in Chicago now. Now, scram, and keep your nose outta
this! Keep your damn mouth shut anyway!”
We shook hands. He stuffed his back in his pockets, turned, and stalked off toward several of his
underlings standing near the side of beef on someone’s mangled car, barking
orders at them like the Irish Wolf Hound he was.
I headed back toward my car. Managed to get it started on the third try. So, it was Dr. Knorr’s friend Connor who was
out of the picture. Guess going to high
school with Mulvaney all those years ago had its benefits. So did the odd fifty spot. When I could spare it.
On the way back to my place, I went over what I knew
so far. Wasn’t much to go on. Mr. and Mrs. Goad. Carlton and Babs. Dr. Knorr and Connor. Was there any connection between ‘em? Or was it all a coincidence? I knew more than I wanted to already about
The Goads and their extra curriculars, but how were the professor and her dead
student mixed up in it? Hell if I
knew. Made up my mind to see what the
word was on the street before I called it a night and made a detour to The
Gateway where it was a pretty safe bet I’d come across one set of my two ears on the ground.
I found her without too much trouble. Julie held up her usual wall just around a
corner and down a darker, less traveled side street from a taproom on Lasalle
downtown not far the Northern Union Depot.
Don’t ask how I knew her. Just
did. She’d fallen on hard times several
years back. Didn’t like to see her out
here, but that’s the way Julie seemed to want it. No strings.
Still, I made sure she got a square meal from time to time and palmed
her some spare change now and again too. She smiled
when she saw me coming and adjusted the wool blanket draped around her
shoulders like it was a mink stole. I
had the feeling that she’d known better at one time. Call it intuition.
“Well, look what the cat dragged in,” she kicked
off. Pulled a cigarette from her
handbag, and I gave her a light. “What
brings you out on a night like this, stranger?” she
cooed. I dropped my lighter back in
my pocket.
“Not much,” I answered. “How about you? Been ok?”
I could just make out a black eye she’d tried carefully to hide with
makeup.
“Minding my own business,” she parried.
“How is business?” I asked before thinking.
“Easy come.
Easy go,” pulling the blanket tighter around her upper body. “Now, you didn’t come all the way over here
just to ask that, did you? What’s on your
mind Sam Spade?” That’s one of the
things I liked about Julie. She always
managed to keep her sense of humor. Even
now on an evening like this.
“You hear anything ‘bout that jumper tonight over
on campus?”
“Now what could I possibly know about that?” Her eyes narrowed a bit, and she shifted her
weight from one foot to the other. I
could tell she was chilled almost to the bone.
We bantered back and forth for a few more
minutes until I thanked Julie, told to watch herself, and tucked a five spot into
the pocket of her coat before she could stop me.
“Listen, Julie.
Get yourself something hot to eat.
Maybe some soup. Call it a night,
and get yourself a better coat or some shoes tomorrow. It’s the middle of January.”
“My knight in shining armor,” she snapped. “Now beat it, ya dumb mug! You've got no curb appeal.”
Sensing I wasn't wanted, I turned back toward the neon lights
of Lasalle just as I caught sight of a lumbering shadow approaching her from
the other direction further down the street.
Almost turned back in the end, but didn't. Stay out of
it advised a little voice inside my head. I could just make out the details of their transaction as I reached the
intersection and turned left back to where I’d parked the car. Damn. Why didn't I go back?
-- Heinz-Ulrich
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-- Heinz-Ulrich