"That she"s hanging on," Wohl said.

"You know where I mean, Matt?" Wohl asked. "In the 12th Street Market?" Matt nodded. "Take Amanda there. I"ll meet you. I want to get word to Pekach where we"ll be."

In the elevator Amanda said, "He"s very nice."

"What was that business about you riding in his car?" Matt asked.

"You"re jealous!"



"Oh, bulls.h.i.t!"

"You are!" she insisted.

"The h.e.l.l I am."

She smiled at him triumphantly.

"Whatever you say, Officer Payne," she said.

"Thanks for getting us out of there," Matt Payne said to Peter Wohl.

They were sitting at a tiny table in the 12th Street Market, on fragile-looking bent-wire chairs. Three enormous hoagies on paper plates, a pitcher of beer, and three mugs left little room for anything else.

Peter Wohl finished chewing a large mouthful before replying.

"My pleasure," Wohl said.

"How"d you find out?" Matt asked.

"Lieutenant Natali called me. He thought I ought to know.""

"Am I in trouble?" Matt Payne asked as he poured a mug half full of beer.

"Why did you take your car away from the crime scene without permission?"

"I didn"t know I needed permission. It was blocking the exit ramp. I moved it out of the way of the wagon when they took Penny Detweiler to Hahneman. And then, when I went to the Union League to tell her parents what had happened, I just got in it and drove off. No one said I shouldn"t."

"Who told you to notify her parents?""

"There was a 9th District lieutenant there. I didn"t get his name. Great big black guy. I told him I knew her parents, where they were, and he said it was okay for me to tell them. He saw me get in the car, and he didn"t say anything."

"Lewis? Lieutenant Lewis?"

"Yeah. I"m sure that"s the name."

"Officer Lewis"s father," Wohl said.

"Oh! Oh, yeah. I didn"t put that together."

"Okay. Let"s take it from the top."

"Jesus, again?"

"Don"t be a wisea.s.s with me, Matt. The last I heard, not only am I your commanding officer but also I "m one of the good guys."

"Sorry," Matt said sincerely. "That son of a b.i.t.c.h upset me. The whole thing upset me."

"From the top," Wohl repeated, reaching for the pitcher of beer.

Captain David Pekach walked up just as Matt finished, and a second pitcher of beer was delivered. He took one of the bent-wire chairs from an adjacent table and sat down on it.

"You want a gla.s.s? Good beer," Wohl said.

"No thanks. I"m cutting down. Oh, what the h.e.l.l!"

He got up and went to the stand and returned with a mug.

"What did you find out?" Wohl asked.

Pekach looked at Payne and Amanda and then at Wohl, his raised eyebrows asking if Wohl wanted him to continue in front of them.

"Go on," Wohl said. "I"m convinced that neither Matt Payne nor Miss Spencer shot Tony the Zee or is into drugs."

"Dolan says the Detweiler girl was," Pekach said.

"My G.o.d!" Amanda exclaimed.

"What?" Matt asked incredulously. "That"s absurd!"

"No, it"s not. Dolan is a good cop," Pekach said, responding more to Peter Wohl"s raised eyebrows than to Matt Payne. "I believe him. He says that he was following her, that he has reason to believe she went to the Penn Services Parking Garage to make a buy, and that the shooting was tied in with that. And Tony the Zee had a thousand dollars" worth of c.o.ke on him, in a plastic bag."

"Dolan was following her?" Wohl asked thoughtfully. "Where was he during the actual shooting?"

"He said the first he heard of it, he was across the street, watching the entrance and exit, and the other one, who I used to think was a smart cop, was watching the fire exits in the alley."

"Try that again, I"m confused," Wohl said.

"Okay. They followed her to the parking garage. Dolan stayed across the street and watched the entrance and exit ramps. Gerstner, the other Narcotics cop, watched the fire exits on the alley. At least until he heard the sirens and went out on the street to see what was happening. I guess that"s when the doers left the building, via the fire escape to the alley.""

"So where does Dolan figure Payne ties in?"

"He saw him drive in. Had no idea at first he was a cop but recognized him as someone-him and Miss Spencer-he had seen in the last couple of days. And then he saw him drive his car away from the place later. And apparently figured that"s where the drugs-according to him, the Detweiler girl is into cocaine-were."

"That whole scenario is incredible," Matt said.

"No it"s not," Wohl said. "If I were the cop on the street, Dolan, that"s pretty much how I would see it."

"You don"t think I"m into drugs? Or that Amanda is?"

"I didn"t say that," Wohl said carefully. "No. I don"t think either of you are. But if this Sergeant Dolan has good reason to believe that the Detweiler girl was into drugs, I have no reason to doubt him. And you didn"t help matters any by driving away from the crime scene with Miss Spencer."

Matt exhaled audibly.

"Payne went to the Union League," Wohl explained to Pekach, "to tell the Detweiler girl"s family what had happened. Lieutenant Lewis, who I suppose was the senior supervisor there then, told him it was okay."

"Dolan didn"t mention Lewis," Pekach said.

"Is there a Captain Petc.o.c.k or something here?" a loud voice interrupted. Matt stopped and turned to the voice. A tall, very skinny, long-haired man in white cook"s clothing was holding up a telephone.

"Close." Wohl chuckled. "Go answer the phone, Captain Petc.o.c.k."

"Yes, sir, Inspector Wall," Pekach said, and got up.

"Miss Spencer-" Wohl began.

"You were calling me Amanda," she said. "Does Miss Spencer mean I"m a suspect again?""

"Amanda, did you ever hear anything about the Detweiler girl being into drugs?"

She hesitated a moment before replying. Matt wondered if she was going to defend Penny Detweiler loyally.

"She took diet pills to stay awake to study sometimes," she said finally. "And I suppose she smokes gra.s.s-I know she smokes gra.s.s-I"m about the only one I know who doesn"t. But I never heard anything about her and heroin or cocaine or anything else. Hard drugs."

"Just out of idle curiosity, why don"t you smoke gra.s.s?" Wohl asked.

"I tried it once and it made me sick," Amanda said.

"Me too," Wohl said, smiling at the look of surprise on Matt Payne"s face.

Captain David Pekach walked back up to the table.

"That was Lucci," he said. "There was just a radio call. M-Mary One wants H-Highway One and W-William One to meet him at Colombia and Clarion."

Curiosity overwhelmed Amanda Spender"s normally good manners. "M-Mary One? W-William One? What in the world is that?"

"The mayor is M-Mary One," Wohl explained, somewhat impatiently. "Did Lucci say what the mayor is doing at Colombia and Clarion?"

"They found a 22nd District cop lying in the gutter," Pekach said. "Shot to death."

"Oh, my G.o.d!" Amanda said.

Wohl stood up, fished in his pockets, and came up with a set of keys. He handed them to Payne.

"I"ll ride with Captain Pekach, Matt. The Jag"s on 12th Street. Right across from your car. You bring the Jag there. You know where it is?"

Matt shook his head no.

"Just before you get to Temple University on North Broad, turn right," Captain Pekach said. "Couple of blocks in from North Broad. Colombia and Clarion. You won"t have any trouble finding it."

"Yes, sir," Matt said.

"Are you going to be able to get home by yourself all right, Amanda?" Wohl asked.

"Sure. Don"t worry about me, I"ve got Matt"s car."

Wohl and Pekach hurried away.

"Is it always like this?" Amanda asked.

"No," Matt said. "It isn"t."

He went to the counter and paid the bill. When they got outside to 12th Street, he handed Amanda the keys to the Porsche.

"Wouldn"t it be easier if I just got in a cab?" she asked. "Or, how long are you going to be?"

"G.o.d knows," he said. "I really don"t want to leave the car here. Some street artist would draw his mother"s picture with a key on the hood by the time I got back."

"Couldn"t I leave it at your apartment, then?" she asked. "Aren"t you going to need it?"

"Jesus, would you?" he asked.

"Sure."

"I live on Rittenhouse Square-"

"That"s right by the church?"

"Yeah. I live on the top floor of the Delaware Cancer Society Building-"

"Where?" she asked, chuckling.

"You can"t miss it. Anyway, there"s a parking garage in the back. Just drive in. There"s two parking s.p.a.ces with my name on them. And there"s a rent-a-cop on duty. He"ll call you a cab."

He started to hand her money. She waved it away. "Nice girls don"t take cab fare," she said. "Haven"t you ever heard of women"s lib?"

"This has been one h.e.l.l of a date, hasn"t it?" he said.

"It lends an entirely new meaning to the word memorable," Amanda said.

"I"m sorry."

"Don"t be an a.s.s," she said, and stretched upward to kiss him.

Whatever her intentions, either to kiss his cheek or, chastely, his lips, it somehow didn"t turn out that way. It was not a pa.s.sionate embrace ending with Amanda semi-swooning in his arms, but when their lips broke contact, there seemed to be some sort of current flowing between them.

"Jesus!" Matt said softly.

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