"I recommend you don't for now," said Bolan. "See if anybody acts surprised. I'll direct Lieutenant Fawcett to your visitors when I see him."
And with that he left her, passing back into the early-morning darkness that was already tinged with fault traces of gray on the eastern horizon. He had spent more time with the lady cop than he had planned — but he felt that the time had been well spent.
Even so, he had damned little to work with and, possibly, even less time to seek his handle on the situation. If Fran Traynor's theory proved out... and if there was a smoke-screen being laid downtown...
Too damned many if's, yeah.
Still, he could project areas of caution and concern, even with the small amount of solid data available.
Item: Someone had definitely called out the guns, and unless they played industrial espionage for keeps in the Twin Cities, that meant someone was vitally interested in Toni's case.
Item: By logical extension, and if Fran was right about Toni being the only living witness to a mass killer's identity, then the shadowy someone just might want Blancanales's sister taken out of the picture permanently.
And finally, Item: By all indications, the human savage that Bolan had come to St. Paul to eliminate was still out there, hungry and waiting for his next chance to strike. And if the lady cop was correct in her surmising, he was not only a rapist, but a five-time murderer as well.
7
Lieutenant Jack Fawcett was tired and exasperated, and he didn't care who knew it.
He didn't like being roused from sleep in the predawn hours to drive across town and stand above the remains of two leaking stiffs, even though the assignment was nothing new or extraordinary for a lieutenant in homicide division. It was still a drag, even after fourteen years on the job. It would always be a drag.
He watched the uniformed officers moving listlessly as they herded the little clutch of sleepy residents back from the crime scene and onto the sidewalk. All around the little cul-de-sac, people in bathrobes and slippers were sprinkled across lawns and sidewalks, gawking morbidly at the silent residue of violent death.
Behind Fawcett, to the east, the sky was showing the faintest line of pink along the horizon. On the little residential street it was still dark, however, the scene lit eerily by the flashing lights of black and white police units and the city tow truck he had ordered up.
If Jack Fawcett couldn't sleep, hell, nobody would sleep.
The tow truck had just finished winching the long sedan over and onto its tires again from its previous inverted position. The medical examiner's two orderlies were removing a limp body from the driver's seat, laying it out on the street for preliminary examination. To Fawcett's right, in the middle of the street, a second prone figure lay shrouded in linen.
A young junior-grade detective approached Fawcett. His youthful face was already hardened around the eyes and mouth from exposure to violent death. He carried a large manila envelope, the contents jingling, and popped it open to show Fawcett a glittering pile of shell casings inside.
"Nine millimeter," the young detective said. "We picked up a couple dozen back there." He jerked his thumb over one shoulder to indicate the middle of the cul-de-sac.
Fawcett grunted in reply, unwilling to waste words on the obvious.
The young detective wouldn't be put off. He was anxious to display his knowledge and professionalism for the ranking officer on the scene.
"Probably an Uzi," he began, "or a Smith and Wesson M-79. Of course, it could have been..."
"What about the D.O.A.'s?" Fawcett interrupted gruffly. "Were they packing?''
The young cop faltered, breaking his verbal stride, finally nodding.
"Uh, that's affirmative," he said. "We found a silenced .380 back where the vehicle started its roll, and the driver's wearing a .45. The .380's been fired recently."
Fawcett allowed himself a small, sardonic grin.
"Turkey shoot," he said softly to himself.
"How's that?"
Fawcett scowled, scanning the crime scene with narrowed eyes and a pointing index finger.
"See for yourself," he said. "These cocks came barreling in here, hell for leather and ready to rip. Only they weren't ready enough."
"A mob hit?" the younger man asked, sounding excited.
Fawcett shrugged wearily. "What else?"
It was the young cop's turn to frown.
"Well... maybe radicals... or..."
Fawcett snorted. "When was the last time you saw radicals riding around after midnight in fancy suits? Jesus."
The young man's face reddened; he half turned away from the lieutenant, trying to hide his embarrassment from his superior officer. Fawcett sensed that he was on the verge of making an enemy and pulled back, his tone softening.
"Listen," he said more gently, "why don't you finish inspecting the scene and get started on your report. You know how to handle it?"
The young detective brightened immediately as he realized he was being placed in temporary charge of the investigation.
"Yes, sir," he snapped, almost standing at attention. "I'll get right on it."
He hurried off, barking orders at a pair of uniformed patrolmen and bustling around personally to examine the ruined hulk of an automobile.
Fawcett ambled over to where the middle-aged coroner's assistant, an old acquaintance and sometime friend, was crouched beside the dead man from the car. As he approached, the M.E. glanced up and shot him a sarcastic grin of welcome.
"Well, now," he said, "I thought you were working days."
Fawcett treated the guy to one of his best scowls.
"I'm working when they call me. Somebody thinks this one's special, I guess."
The medical examiner cocked an eyebrow.
"Somebody could be right. I haven't seen one like this in... oh, two, three years."
"Do I need to ask the cause of death?" Fawcett inquired listlessly.
The M. E. straightened up, knee joints popping like small-arms fire.
"Take your pick," he said amiably. "Multiple bullet wounds to head and chest, obvious internal injuries from the crash. They had a rough night, Jack."
"You read this as an organization thing?" Fawcett asked, lowering his voice slightly.
The medical examiner nodded. "Gotta be. Who else plays these kinds of games?"
"Nobody," Fawcett answered wearily. "I'll need a copy of that report."
The examiner smiled and lit a cigarette, blowing the smoke in Fawcett's direction.
"Right now, or just immediately?"
"Everybody's a comedian," the homicide lieutenant growled, turning away and walking back to his unmarked cruiser.
He had reached the vehicle and had one hand on the door when a big man dressed with expensive good taste materialized beside him, as if out of thin air. Fawcett blinked twice, glancing rapidly around the scene and wondering where in hell the guy had come from.
"Jack Fawcett?" the big guy asked, smiling thinly.
The lieutenant's eyes narrowed with instinctive suspicion.
"Who's asking?"
The big guy flashed an official-looking card, then pocketed it again before Fawcett could focus on it.
"La Mancha, Justice Department," he said, smile fading. "We need to talk."
Fawcett exhaled heavily. "It figures."
The big guy raised a curious eyebrow. "How's that?"
"Sure, whenever the wise guys start to burn each other, the federates are never far behind."
The man called La Mancha nodded toward the cluster of officers and rubberneckers around the battered crew wagon.
"You're calling this a syndicate hit?" he asked.
"Hell, yes," Fawcett snapped. "It's got all the signs."
The big guy was circling Fawcett's cruiser, already climbing in on the passenger side as he said, "Let's take a ride. I'm parked around the corner."