Pearce tapped the tip of his cigarette against the ashtray, his eyebrows knitted. "Where did he work in the hospital?"
"The loony bin. Why?"
Pearce laid down his cigarette. "You're sure about that?"
"Yeah, I'm sure. What's your point?"
"I don't have a point," Pearce said, turning his eyes away and staring at a fixed point on the wall. "But it would not surprise me to learn that this killer had spent time in a psychiatric ward."
"You suspect some freak who can't even think straight could pull off these crimes and get away with it? I'm not even sure the mob's top man could commit these crimes and get away with it!"
Pearce sighed heavily, then retook his cigarette and inhaled deeply. "Detective Merylo. Have you ever heard of a man known as Jack the Ripper?"
Merylo searched his mind. "Think so. Some kind of murderer, right? In England?"
"What do you know about him?"
"I-don't really remember."
"Jack the Ripper stalked the streets of London in the 1880s," Pearce explained, "in Whitechapel, one of the poorest and most decadent parts of the city-not unlike Kingsbury Run. Took at least five victims. Taunted the police with cryptic messages. Used a knife. But he wasn't content to simply kill his victims. He destroyed them. With such anatomical accuracy that some people suspected he might be a doctor. Or a butcher. He seemed particularly interested in destroying female reproductive systems. Ripped them to shreds. Hence the name."
"Was he ever caught?"
"Never."
Merylo squinted. "And you're saying this... Jack the Ripper might be the one who's killing people in Cleveland?"
Pearce's eyes drifted heavenward. "No, that is not what I'm saying. Detective, have you considered the possibility of consulting an alienist?"
Merylo blinked twice. "A what?"
"A doctor of the mind."
"How's he supposed to catch a killer?"
"By understanding how he thinks."
"How's that going to help?"
"If the killer is not behaving rationally, traditional methods of crime solving will be of no avail. You must develop new approaches."
"Sounds like a load of hogwash to me."
"If you understand how the killer thinks, you might be able to anticipate his next move."
"I don't want a next move! I want to catch him before he strikes again."
Pearce blew a dense cloud of smoke into the air. "Have either of you gentlemen heard of a Viennese doctor called Sigmund Freud?"
"No," Merylo said gruffly. "We haven't."
"Um, actually..." Zalewski shuffled his feet. "I have."
Merylo stared at him as if he were some kind of bug.
"What do you know about him?"
Zalewski's face flushed. "A few years ago, I was having these really bad dreams. Nightmares, you know? I'd dream I woke up in the morning and parts of my body were missing. Or I'd be coming to work, except with no clothes on."
"That's just weird," Merylo grumbled.
"Not really," Pearce said. "Those are universal fears. Haven't you ever had dreams like that?"
Merylo's face hardened. "No. Never."
"Anyway," Zalewski continued, "my ma was worried about me. So she got me this book by that guy you were talking about, that Freud.
The Interpretation of Dreams.
Turns out this guy thinks your dreams are like symbols, and by examining your dreams you can learn about yourself."
"What did you learn about yourself from the book?" Pearce asked.
Zalewski stared at the floor. "Tell you the truth-I thought it was kinda tough goin'."
Pearce smiled slightly, possibly for the first time Merylo had ever seen. "You're not the first to think so. Doctor Freud is perhaps a greater doctor than a writer. And there have been questions about the accuracy of his English translator." Pearce paused, taking another drag on his cigarette. "If you're interested, I could put you in touch with an alienist of my acquaintance. He lives in New York but for a case of this significance, I'm sure-"
"Thanks very much, Doctor," Merylo said abruptly, "but I don't think we need any newfangled college-boy nonsense. We'll solve this case the old-fashioned way. By beating the streets and doing good solid detective work."
"As you wish. But if you change your mind-"
"Thanks, Doc, but I won't. Andrassy may have been a punk, but he was still a criminal and he hung with criminals. If we sniff around long enough, we'll find out who wanted him dead bad enough to-"
All at once, the door to the coroner's office flew open. "Detective Merylo!"
Merylo recognized the kid as one of the boys from Bertillon, but he couldn't remember his name. "Yeah?"
"We've identified the new corpse."
Merylo's eyes ballooned. "Yeah?"
"Took awhile-the fingers were in such poor condition. But we managed it. Turns out we have her prints on file."
A smile spread from one end of Merylo's face to the other. "Because she has a criminal record?"
"Exactly."
"Swell." Merylo gave Zalewski a little shove toward the door. "We've identified two victims now. All we have to do now is figure out what-or who-they have in common."
He waved at Dr. Pearce as he passed through the door. "Thanks for nothing, Doctor. Turns out we don't need you after all."
19
Ness had been to The Thomas Club before. And he'd been thinking about it ever since.
Predictably, his failed raid had been all over the papers. He knew he couldn't afford another flop, not if he wanted to get the funding he needed for all his plans to make the city safer.
Chief Matowitz had opted not to join him tonight. Funny how quickly a man could go from camera-ready to camera-shy. He had at least loaned Ness some of his men. Ness would need them.
Chamberlin came to the front of the building after making his final inspection tour. He was efficient as ever, perhaps even more so now that he had a permanent assignment to the Office of the Safety Director.
"Everything in order?"
"Yes, everyone is where they should be. But I still don't understand-"
"Humor me."
If Ness weren't mistaken, the front facade of The Thomas Club had been gussied up in the short time since his last raid. It was looking not so much New Orleans as bordello. Was the gambling business that profitable? Or was this simply Frescone's way of thumbing his nose at the cops, and Ness in particular? You can't touch me, he was saying. I'll build an opulent, garish, neon-lit pleasure palace right under your nose, and there's nothing you can do about it.
Ness felt his jaw setting together. We'll see.
"Watches synchronized, sir."
"Excellent."
"Perhaps we should give them three more minutes. Just to be sure."
"Two will be enough."
"Sometimes people don't move too fast when they've been drinking."
"They moved pretty fast the other night."
Chamberlin almost smiled. "Threat of imprisonment is probably a decent motivator."
"Exactly. About time?"
"It is."
Ness knew Chamberlin hated being kept in the dark. Regrettable, but unavoidable.
"I'm moving to the east side of the building," Ness announced, buttoning up his camel-hair overcoat. It was still bitterly cold outside. "I want to be able to watch both sides of the operation."
Precisely two minutes later, every car parked in the lot facing The Thomas Club-all of them owned by police officers-turned on its headlights. The tacky gambling den was bathed in white.
"And as if that weren't enough..." Ness muttered quietly to himself.
The horns blared in every car, creating a fearful din. Ness reluctantly covered his ears with his hands. The combined trumpet of all those horns was head-splitting, even worse than he had imagined.
Ness could hear the migration begin. Someone opened the front door, peeked out, saw the array of cars, and slammed the door shut again.
Two minutes was too long, Ness thought. Next time go with one, unless they're moving from another city.
He waved his left arm, signaling Chamberlin to proceed. An instant later, another row of vehicles turned on their lights. These were trucks, heavy-duty freight vehicles. And in the bright, almost blinding light, it was clear that each had been fitted with a metal battering ram attached to the front grill. Chamberlin had gotten the idea from observing the cowcatcher on a train passing through Kingsbury Run.
An instant later, the trucks roared into action. They raced their engines for a few moments-a warning to anyone who hadn't already moved to the front lobby. Then the trucks lurched into action. They rushed forward, tires squealing, moving so fast Ness could feel the wind rush against his face. All pointed toward the rear of the building. The secret annex Chamberlin discovered on the blueprints.
They had pinpointed the room as best they could, but it was impossible to be one hundred percent accurate. The trucks that hit a steel-reinforced door didn't get as far. One truck had to back up and ram the plate three times before it broke through. The two on the ends sailed through the wooden frame like it was papier-mache.
Ness closed his eyes. Please, let them find something. A poker chip. A playing card. Something.
As soon as the engines were shut off, twelve of Matowitz's men rushed into the now exposed rear room of The Thomas Club.
The boys laid off their horns, and for the first time, Ness could hear the cries of the patrons huddled at the front of the building, the distressed tumult of too many people crowded into too little space, the usual protestations and complaints encountered when the wealthy and privileged were inconvenienced. But this must have sounded as if an earthquake had hit Cleveland.
What he would do for a picture of that.
Ness headed toward the building. As he walked, he noticed a group of boys watching. They looked dirty and badly dressed, their clothes torn and ragged. They were obviously poor. He knew from the reports he'd read that they were probably living with one parent or had no parents at all. Living off scraps they could find in trash cans behind Automats and cafeterias. Street toughs, the kind that made Cleveland the worst city in the country for juvenile crime. Some of the reports he'd read talked about kids becoming hardened criminals before they hit puberty.
He waved. One of the boys shouted back at him. "Are you really
the Eliot Ness?"
"I suppose," he shouted back.
The boys whooped and shouted and cheered, throwing their hands up into the air. Interesting reaction, Ness mused, coming from hardened criminals.
He wished he could stop and talk to them. There were some details you just couldn't learn from reading reports. But that would have to wait for another time.
As Ness neared the building, he saw Chamberlin restraining someone by the shoulders. Frescone. He watched as Chamberlin slipped handcuffs over his wrists.
"He was trying to escape," Chamberlin said. This time his excitement had overcome his reserve. "It worked!"
"It wouldn't have worked without your investigative work."
"It wouldn't have worked if you hadn't gotten the rats off the force."
Ness tilted his head to one side. "Teamwork."
"Yeah."
"I haven't done anything," Frescone growled. "You've got nothing on me."
"He was carrying a concealed weapon," Chamberlin offered.
Ness nodded. "That's good enough for now. It'll get better."
"You won't get away with this!" Frescone bellowed.
Ness stopped, looking at the mobster calmly. "I already did." He took a step closer, then whispered. "You should've shut down when you had the chance. I told you I'd be back."
"I don't care what some stinking cop says."
"You should. I always keep my word."
Ness started to walk away, but Frescone jerked forward. Chamberlin pulled him back.
"You'll be sorry, Ness. Don't you know what this means? Me and my friends-we're declaring war on you."
"You're too late. I declared war on you the day I took the oath of my office. This was all inevitable." He winked at Chamberlin. "You were just too stupid to realize it."
By this time, he mused, the men inside should have things well under control. "Bob, you go in the rear, see what the boys have found."
"And you?"
"I'm going to the front door and knocking. Polite, like my sainted mother taught me. I'll meet you somewhere in the middle."
Ness passed through the line of officers, then knocked on the front door.
It was opened by Shimmy Patton, one of Frescone's co-owners.
"I'm Eliot Ness, Safety Director. I have a warrant to search the premises."
"We ain't doin' nothin' wrong."
"Then you have nothing to worry about."
"You can't come in and start bustin' up the place. It ain't legal."
"That's for the judges to decide. In the meantime, I have a warrant to search. I believe my colleagues have already begun the process. You may have heard them entering your secret gambling parlor."
Over Patton's shoulder, Ness saw Chamberlin waving at him, holding something up in the air.
A roulette wheel.
"May I come in?" Ness said, smiling.
Patton couldn't manage an answer.
"Are you feeling all right, Shimmy?" He grinned. "You look all shook up."
20
Merylo had never eaten in Pierre 's. In fact, he'd never been inside the place before and he didn't expect he ever would again. But it was a tenet of his profession that police work sometimes led one to unsavory locales. And that included this swanky eatery and nightclub, where in the midst of the darkest days of the Depression the fortunate few men who could afford to do so sat in tuxedos, sipped ten-buck bottles of champagne, and danced the night away.