man, and not a particularly philosophical one, but he intuitively understood that the deaf man (who had once signed a note L. Sordo, very comical, El Sordo meaning “The Deaf One” in Spanish) was capable of manipulating odds with computer accuracy, of spreading confusion and fear, of juggling permutations and combinations in a manner calculated to upset the strict and somewhat bureaucratic efficiency of a police precinct, making law enforcers behave like bumbling Keystone cops in a yellowing ancient film, knew instinctively and with certainty that if the commissioner’s murderer was indeed the deaf man, they had not yet heard the end of all this. And because the very thought of what the deaf man might and
could
do was too staggering to contemplate, Kling involuntarily shuddered, and he knew it was not from the cold.
“I hope it isn’t him,” he said, and his words were carried away on the wind.
“Kiss me,” Cindy said suddenly, “and then buy me a hot chocolate, you cheapskate.”
The boy who came into the muster room that Wednesday afternoon was about twelve years old.
He was wearing his older brother’s hand-me-down ski parka which was blue and three sizes too large for him. He had pulled the hood of the parka up over his head, and had tightened the drawstrings around his neck, but the hood was still too big, and it kept falling off. He kept trying to pull it back over his head as he came into the station house carrying an envelope in the same hand with which he wiped his runny nose. He was wearing high-topped sneakers with the authority of all slum kids who wear sneakers winter and summer, all year round, despite the warnings of podiatrists. He walked to the muster desk with a sneaker-inspired bounce, tried to adjust the parka hood again, wiped his dripping nose again, and then looked up at Sergeant Murchison and said, “You the desk sergeant?”
“I’m the desk sergeant,” Murchison answered without looking up from the absentee slips he was filling out fromthat morning’s muster sheet. It was 2:10 P.M ., and in an hour and thirty-five minutes the afternoon shift of uniformed cops would be coming in, and there’d be a new roll call to take, and new absentee slips to fill out, a regular rat race, he should have become a fireman or a postman.
“I’m supposed to give you this,” the kid said, and reached up to hand Murchison the sealed envelope.
“Thanks,” Murchison said, and accepted the envelope without looking at the kid, and then suddenly raised his head and said, “Hold it just a second.”
“Why, what’s the matter?”
“Just hold it right there a second,” Murchison said, and opened the envelope. He unfolded the single sheet of white paper that had been neatly folded in three equal parts, and he read what was on the sheet, and then he looked down at the kid again and said, “Where’d you get this?”
“Outside.”
“Where?”
“A guy gave it to me.”
“What guy?”
“A tall guy outside.”
“Outside where?”
“Near the park there. Across the street.”
“Gave you this?”
“Yeah.”
“What’d he say?”
“Said I should bring it in here and give it to the desk sergeant.”
“You know the guy?”
“No, he gave me five bucks to bring it over here.”
“What’d he look like?”
“A tall guy with blond hair. He had a thing in his ear.”
“What kind of a thing?”
“Like he was deaf,” the kid said, and wiped his hand across his nose again.
That was what the note read.
So they studied the note, being careful not to get any more fingerprints on it than Sergeant Murchison had already put there, and then they stood around a runny-nosed twelve-year-old-kid wearing a blue ski parka three sizes too large for him, and fired questions at him as though they had captured Jack the Ripper over from London for the weekend.
They got nothing from the kid except perhaps his cold.
He repeated essentially what he had told Sergeant Murchison, that a tall blond
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