Reich started. The clogged blood began pounding through his veins again. He reached the door in three strides, ran through and tore down the steps to the picture gallery. It was empty but the door to the overpass was just closing. And still no sound from her. Still no alarm. How long before she started screaming the house down?
He raced down the gallery and entered the overpass. It was still pitch dark. He blundered through, reached the head of the stairs that led down to the music room and paused again. Still no sound. No alarm.
He went down the steps. The dark silence was terrifying. Why didn't she scream? Where was she? Reich crossed toward the west arch and knew he was at the edge of the main hall by the quiet splash of the fountains. Where was the girl? In all that black silence, where was she? And the gun! Christ! The tricked gun!
A hand touched his arm. Reich jerked in alarm. Tate whispered: "I've been standing by. It took you exactly—"
"You son of a bitch!" Reich burst out. "There was a daughter. Why didn't you—"
"Be quiet," Tate snapped. "Let me peep it." After fifteen seconds of burning silence, he began to tremble. In a terrified voice he whined: "My God. Oh, my God..."
His terror was the catalyst. Reich's control returned. He began thinking again. "Shut up," he growled. "It isn't Demolition yet."
"You'll have to kill her too, Reich. You'll—"
"Shut up. Find her, first. Cover the house. You got her pattern from me. Locate her. I'll be waiting at the fountain. Jet!"
He flung Tate from him and staggered to the fountain. At the jasper rim he bent and bathed his burning face. It was burgundy. Reich wiped his face and ignored the muffled sounds that came from the other side of the basin. Evidently some other person or persons unknown were bathing in wine.
He considered swiftly. The girl must be located and killed. If she still had the gun when Tate found her, the gun would be used. If she didn't? What? Strangle her? No... The fountain. She was naked under that silk gown. It could be stripped off. She could be found drowned in the fountain... just another guest who had bathed in the wine too long. But it had to be soon... soon... soon... Before this damned Sardine game was ended. Where was Tate? Where was the girl?
Tate came blundering up through the darkness, his breath wheezing.
"Well?"
"She's gone."
"You weren't gone long enough to find a louse. If this is a double-cross—"
"Who could I cross? I'm on the same road you are. I tell you her pattern's nowhere in the house. She's gone."
"Anyone notice her leave?"
"No."
"Christ! Out of the house!"
"We'd better leave too."
"Yes, but we can't run. Once we get out of here, we'll have the rest of the night to find her, but we've got to leave as though nothing's happened. Where's The Guilt Corpse?"
"In the projection room."
"Watching a show?"
"No. Still playing Sardine. They're packed in there like fish in a can. We're almost the last out here in the house."
"Wandering alone in the dark, eh? Come on."
He gripped Tate's shaking elbow and marched him toward the projection room. As he walked he called plaintively: "Hey... Where is everybody? Maria! Ma-ri-aaa! Where's everybody?"
Tate emitted a hysterical sob. Reich shook him roughly. "Play up! We'll be out of here in five minutes. Then you can start worrying."
"But if we're trapped in here, we won't be able to get the girl.We'll—"
"We won't be trapped. ABC, Gus. Audacious, brave, and confident." Reich pushed open the door of the projection room. There was darkness in here, too, but the heat of many bodies. "Hey," he called. "Where is everybody? I'm all alone."
No answer.
"Maria. I'm all alone in the dark."
A muffled sputter, then a burst of laughter.
"Darling, darling, darling!" Maria called. "You've missed all the fun, poor dear."
"Where are you, Maria? I've come to say good night."
"Oh, you can't be leaving..."
"Sorry, dear. It's late. I've got to swindle a friend tomorrow. Where are you Maria?"
"Come up on the stage, darling."
Reich walked down the aisle, felt for the steps and mounted the stage. He felt the cool perimeter of the projection globe behind him. A voice called: "All right. Now we've got him. Lights!"
White light flooded the globe and blinded Reich. The guests seated in the chairs around the stage started to whoop with laughter, then howled in disappointment.
"Oh Ben, you cheat," Maria screeched. "You're still dressed. That isn't fair. We've been catching everybody divinely flagrante."
"Some other time, Maria dear." Reich extended his hand before him and began the graceful bow of farewell. "Respectfully, Madame. I give you my thanks for—" He broke off in amazement. On the gloaming white lace of his cuff an angry red spot appeared.
In stunned silence, Reich saw a second, then a third red splotch appear on the lace. He snatched his hand back and a red drop spattered on the stage before him, to be followed by a slow, inexorable stream of gleaming crimson droplets.
"That's blood!" Maria screamed. "That's blood! There's someone upstairs bleeding. For God's sake, Ben... You can't leave me now. Lights! Lights! Lights!"
6
AT 12:30 A.M., THE EMERGENCY Patrol arrived at Beaumont House in response to precinct notification: "GZ. Beaumont. YLP-R" which, translated, meant: "An Act or Omission, forbidden by law has been reported at Beaumont House, 9 Park South."
At 12:40, the Park precinct Captain arrived in response to Patrol report: "Criminal Act possible Felony-AAA."
At 1:00 A.M, Lincoln Powell arrived at Beaumont House in response to a frantic call from a deputy inspector: "I tell you, Powell, it's Felony Triple-A. I'll swear it is. The wind's been knocked out of me. I don't know whether to be grateful or scared; but I know none of us is equipped to handle it."
"What can't you handle?"
"Look here, Powell. Murder's abnormal. Only a distorted TP pattern can produce death by violence. Right?"
"Yes."
"Which is why there hasn't been a successful Triple-A in over seventy years. A man can't walk around with a distorted pattern, maturing murder, and go unnoticed these days. He'd have as much chance of going unnoticed as a man with three heads. You peepers always pick 'em up before they go into action."
"We try to... when we contact them."
"And there are too many peeper screens to pass in normal living these days for you to be avoided. A man would have to be a hermit to do that. How can a hermit kill?"
"How indeed?"
"Now here's a killing that must have been carefully planned... and the killer was never noticed. Never reported. Even by Maria Beaumont's peeper secretaries. That means there couldn't have been anything to notice. He must have a passable pattern and yet be abnormal enough to murder. How the hell can we resolve a paradox like that?"
"I see. Any prospects?"
"We've got a pay-load of inconsistencies to iron out. One, we don't know what killed D'Courtney. Two, his daughter's disappeared. Three, somebody robbed D'Courtney's guards of one hour and we can't figure how. Four—"
"Don't count any higher. I'll be right over."
The great hall of Beaumont House blazed with harsh white light. Uniformed police were everywhere. The white-smocked technicians from Lab were scurrying like beetles. In the center of the hall, the party guests (dressed) were assembled in a rough corral, milling like a herd of terrified steers at a slaughter house.
As Powell came down the east ramp, tall and slender, black and white, he felt the wave of hostility that greeted him. He reached out quickly to Jackson Beck, police Inspector 2: "What's the situation Jax?"
"Scramble."
Switching to their informal police code of scrambled images, reversed meanings and personal symbols, Beck continued: "Peepers here. Play it safe." In a microsecond he brought Powell up to date.
"I see. Nasty.
What's everybody doing lumped out on the floor? You staging something?"
"The villain-friend act."
"Necessary?"
"It's a rotten crowd. Pampered. Corrupt. They'll never cooperate. You'll have to do some tricky coaxing to get anything out of them; and this case is going to need it. I'll be the villain. You be their friend."
"Right. Good work. Start recording."
Halfway down the ramp, Powell halted. The humor departed from his mouth. The friendliness disappeared from his deep dark eyes. An expression of shocked indignation appeared on his face.
"Beck," he snapped. His voice cracked through the echoing hall. There was dead silence. Every eye turned in his direction.
Inspector Beck faced Powell. In a brutal voice, he said: "Here, sir."
"Are you in charge. Beck?"
"I am, sir."
"And is this your concept of the proper conduct of an investigation? To herd a group of innocent people together like cattle?"
"They're not innocent," Beck growled. "A man's been killed."
"All in this house are innocent, Beck. They will be presumed to be innocent and treated with every courtesy until the truth is uncovered."
"What?" Beck sneered. "This gang of liars? Treated with courtesy? This rotten, lousy, high-society pack of hyenas..."
"How dare you! Apologize at once."
Beck took a deep breath and clenched his fists angrily.
"Inspector Beck, did you hear me? Apologize to these ladies and gentlemen at once."
Beck glared at Powell, then turned to the staring guests. "My apologies," he mumbled.
"And I'm warning you, Beck," Powell snapped. "If anything like this happens again, I'll break you. I'll send you straight back to the gutter you came from. Now get out of my sight."
Powell descended to the floor of the hall and smiled at the guests. Suddenly he was again transformed. His bearing conveyed the subtle suggestion that he was at heart one of them. There was even a tinge of fashionable corruption in his diction.
"Ladies and gentlemen: Of course I know you all by sight. I'm not that famous so let me introduce myself. Lincoln Powell, Prefect of the Psychotic Division. Prefect and Psychotic. Two antiquated titles, eh? We won't let them bother us." He advanced toward Maria Beaumont with hand outstretched. "Dear Madame Maria, what an exciting climax for your wonderful party. I envy all of you. You'll make history."
A pleased rustle ran through the guests. The lowering hostility began to fade. Maria took Powell's hand dazedly, mechanically beginning to preen herself.
"Madame..." He confused and delighted her by kissing her brow with paternal warmth. "You've had a trying time, I know. These boors in uniform."
"Dear Prefect..." She was a little girl, clinging to his arm. "I've been so terrified."
"Is there a quiet room where we can all be comfortable and endure this exasperating experience?"
"Yes. The study, dear Prefect Powell." She was actually beginning to lisp.
Powell snapped his fingers behind him. To the Captain who stepped forward, he said: "Conduct Madame and her guests to the study. No guards. The ladies and gentlemen are to be left in privacy."
"Mr. Powell, sir..." The Captain cleared his throat. "About Madame's guests. One of them arrived after the felony was reported. An attorney, Mr. ¼maine."
Powell found Jo ¼maine, Attorney-At-Law 2, in the crowd. He shot him a telepathic greeting.
"Jo?"
"Hi."
"What brings you to this Blind Tiger?"
"Business. Called by my cli(Ben Reich)ent."
"That shark? Makes me suspicious. Wait here with Reich. We'll get squared off."
"That was an effective act with Beck."
"Hell. You cracked our scramble?"
"Not a chance. But I know you two. Gentle Jax playing a thick cop is one for the books."
Beck broke in from across the hall where he was apparently sulking: "Don't give it away, Jo."
"Are you crazy?" It was as though ¼maine had been requested not to smash every sacred ethic of the Guild. He radiated a blast of indignation that made Beck grin.
All this during the second in which Powell again kissed Maria's brow with chaste devotion and gently disengaged himself from her tremulous grasp.
"Ladies and gentlemen: we'll meet again in the study."
The crowd of guests moved off, conducted by the Captain. They were chattering with renewed animation. It was all beginning to take on the aspect of a fabulous new form of entertainment. Through the buzz and the laughter, Powell felt the iron elbows of a rigid telepathic block. He recognized those elbows and permitted his astonishment to show.
"Gus! Gus Tate!"
"Oh. Hello, Powell."
"You? Lurking & Slinking?"
"Gus?" Beck popped out. "Here? I never tagged him."
"What the devil are you hiding for?"
Chaotic response of anger, chagrin, fear of lost reputation, self-deprecation, shame—
"Sign off, Gus. Your pattern's trapped in a feedback. Won't do you any harm to let a little scandal rub off on you. Make you more human. Stay here & help. Got a hunch I can use another 1st. This one is going to be a Triple-A stinker."
After the hall cleared, Powell examined the three men who remained with him. Jo ¼maine was a heavy-set man, thick, solid, with a shining bald head and a friendly blunt-featured face. Little Tate was nervous and twitchy... more so than usual.
And the notorious Ben Reich. Powell was meeting him for the first time. Tall, broad-shouldered, determined, exuding a tremendous aura of charm and power. There was kindliness in that power, but it was corroded by the habit of tyranny. Reich's eyes were fine and keen, but his mouth seemed too small and sensitive and looked oddly like a scar. A magnetic man, with something vague inside him that was repellent.
He smiled at Reich. Reich smiled, back. Spontaneously, they shook hands.
"Do you take everybody off guard like this, Reich?"
"The secret of my success," Reich grinned. He understood Powell's meaning. They were en rapport.
"Well, don't let the other guests see you charm me. They'll suspect collusion."
"Not you, they won't. You'll swindle them, Powell. You'll make 'em all feel they're in collusion with you."
They smiled again. An unexpected chemotropism was drawing them together. It was dangerous. Powell tried to shake it off. He turned to ¼maine: "Now then, Jo?"
"About the peeping, Linc..."
"Keep it up on Reich's level," Powell interrupted. "We're not going to pull any fast ones." "Reich called me in to represent him. No TP, Linc. This has got to stay on the objective level. I'm here to see that it does. I'll have to be present at every examination."
"You can't stop peeping, Jo. You've got no legal right. We can dig out all we can—"
"Provided it's with the consent of the examinee. I'm here to tell you whether you've got that consent or not."
Powell looked at Reich. "What happened?"
"Don't you know?"
"I'd like your version."
Jo ¼maine snapped: "Why Reich's in particular?"
"I'd like to know why he hollered so quick for a lawyer. Is he mixed up in this mess?"
"I'm mixed up in plenty," Reich grinned. "You don't run Monarch without building a stock-pile of secrets that have got to be protected."
"But murder isn't one of them?"
"Get out of there, Linc!"
"Stop throwing blocks, Jo. I'm just peeping around a little because I like the guy."
"Well, like him on your own time... not mine."
"Jo doesn't want me to love you," Powell smiled to Reich. "I wish you hadn't called a lawyer. It makes me suspicious."
"Isn't that an occupational disease?" Reich laughed.
"No." Dishonest Abe took over and answered smoothly. "You'd never believe it, but the occupational disease of detectives is Laterality. That's right-handedness or left-handedness. Most detectives suffer from strange changes of Laterality. I was n
aturally left-handed until the Parsons Case when I—"
Abruptly, Powell choked off his lie. He took two steps away from his fascinated audience and sighed deeply. When he turned back to them. Dishonest Abe was gone.
"I'll tell you about that another time," he said. "Tell me what happened after Maria and the guests saw the blood dripping down on your cuff."
Reich glanced at the bloodstains on his cuff. "She yelled bloody murder and we all went tearing upstairs to the Orchid Suite."
"How could you find your way in the dark?"
"It was light. Maria yelled for lights."
"You didn't have any trouble locating the suite with the light on, eh?"
Reich smiled grimly. "I didn't locate the suite. It was secret. Maria had to lead the way."
"There were guards there... knocked out or something?"
"That's right. They looked dead."
"Like stone, eh? They hadn't moved a muscle?"
"How would I know?"
"How indeed?" Powell looked hard at Reich.
"What about D'Courtney?"
"He looked dead too. Hell, he was dead."
"And everybody was standing around staring?"
"Some were in the rest of the suite, looking for the daughter."
"That's Barbara D'Courtney. I thought nobody knew D'Courtney and his daughter were in the house. Why look for her?"
"We didn't know. Maria told us and we looked."
"Surprised to find her gone?"
"We were beyond surprise."
"Any idea where she went?"
"Maria said she'd killed the old man and rocketed."
"Would you buy that?"
"I don't know. The whole thing was crazy. If the girl was lunatic enough to sneak out of the house without a word and go running naked through the streets, she may have had her father's scalp in her hand."
"Would you permit me to peep you on all this for background and detail?"