"Burglaries," Fernack said. "And I have a hunch you know that well enough. Most of them were just burglaries--locked barrooms, for instance, early in the morning. There"s never any sign of tampering with the locks, no sign of breaking and entering, no sign of any alarms being tampered with in any way. But the money"s gone from the cash register, and all of the liquor is gone, too."
Malone stared. "_All_ the liquor?" he said in a dazed voice.
"Well," Fernack said, "all of it that"s in plain sight, anyway. Except for the open bottles. Disappeared. Gone. Without a trace. And most of the time the extra stock"s gone, too, from the bas.e.m.e.nt or wherever they happen to keep it."
"That"s a lot of liquor," Malone said.
"Quite a lot," Fernack said. "Some of the bars have gone broke, not being insured against the losses."
The thought of thousands of bottles of liquor--millions of bottles--went through Malone"s mind like an icepick. He could almost see them, handle them, taste them. "Hair of the dog," he muttered. "What hair. What a dog."
"What did you say, Malone?"
"Nothing," Malone said hastily. "Nothing at all." After a second another query occurred to him. "You mean to tell me that only bars were robbed?
Nothing else?"
"Oh, no," Fernack said. "Bars are only part of it. Malone, why are you asking me to tell you this?"
"Because I want to know," Malone said patiently.
"I still think--" Fernack began, and then said: "Never mind. But it hasn"t been only bars. Supermarkets. Homes. Cleaning and tailoring shops. Jewelers. Malone, you name it, and it"s been hit."
Malone tried valiantly to resist temptation, but he was not at his best, and he lost. "All right," he said. "I will name it. Here"s a list of places that haven"t even been touched by the rising crime wave: Banks, for one."
"Malone!"
"Safes that have been locked, for another," Malone went on. "Homes with wall safes--though that"s not quite accurate. The homes may have been robbed, but the safes won"t have been touched."
"Malone, how much do you know?" Fernack said.
"I"ll make a general rule for you," Malone said. "Any place that fits the following description is safe: It"s got a secure lock on it, and it"s too small for a human being to get into."
Fernack opened his mouth, shut it and stared downward, obviously scanning some papers lying on the desk in front of him. Malone waited patiently for the explosion--but it never came.
Instead, Fernack said: "You know, Malone, you remind me of an old friend of mine."
"Really?" Malone said pleasantly.
"You certainly do," Fernack said. "There"s just one small difference.
You"re an FBI man, and he"s a crook. If that"s a difference."
"It is," Malone said. "And on behalf of the FBI, I resent the allegation. And, as a matter of fact, defy the allegator. But that"s neither here nor there," he continued. "If that"s the difference, what are the similarities?"
Fernack drew in a deep, hissing breath, and when he spoke his voice was as calm and quiet as a coiled cobra. "The both of you come up with the d.a.m.nedest answers to things. Things I never knew about or even cared about before. Things I wish I"d never heard of. Things that don"t have any explanations. And--" He stopped, his face dark in the screen. Malone wondered what color it was going to turn, and decided on purple as a good choice.
"Well?" Malone said at last.
"And you"re always so right it makes me sick," Fernack finished flatly.
He rubbed a hand through his hair and stared into the screen at Malone.
"How did you know all this stuff?" he said.
Malone waited one full second, while Fernack got darker and darker on the screen. When he judged that the color was right, he said quietly: "I"m prescient. And thanks a lot, John Henry; just send the reports to me personally, at Sixty-ninth Street. By messenger. So long."
He cut the circuit just as Fernack started: "Now, Malone--"
With a satisfied, somewhat sheepish smile, Malone dialed another number.
This time a desk sergeant told him politely that Lynch wasn"t at the precinct, and wouldn"t arrive until noon.
Malone had Lynch"s home number. He dialed it.
It was a long wait before the lieutenant answered, and he didn"t look much like a police officer when his face finally showed up on the screen. His hair was uncombed and he was unshaven. His eyes were slightly bleary, but he was definitely awake.
"Oh," Malone said. "h.e.l.lo."
"Hi, there," Lynch said with enormous cheerfulness. "Old buddy-boy. Old pal. Old friend."
"What"s wrong?" Malone said.
"Wrong?" Lynch said. "Nothing. Nothing. Nothing at all. I just wanted to thank you for not waking me up last night. I only waited for your call until midnight. Then I decided I just wasn"t very important to you. You obviously had much bigger things on your mind."
"As a matter of fact," Malone said, eying Lynch"s figure, dressed in a pair of trousers and a T-shirt, speculatively, "you"re right."
"That"s what I thought," Lynch said. "And I decided that, since you were so terribly busy, it could wait until I woke up. Or even until I got down to the station. How about it--buddy-boy?"
"Listen, Lynch," Malone said, "we made a bet. Ten to one. I just want to know if I can come down to collect or not."
There was a second of silence.
"All right," Lynch said at last, looking crestfallen. "I owe you a buck.
Every last one of those kids has skipped out on us."
"Good," Malone said. He wondered briefly just what was good about it, and decided he"d rather have lost the money to Lynch. But facts, he reflected, were facts. Thoroughly nasty facts.
"I spent all night tracing them," Lynch said. "Got nowhere. Nowhere at all. Tell me, Malone, how did you know--"
"Cla.s.sified," Malone said. "Very cla.s.sified. But you"re sure they"re all gone? Vanished?"
Lynch"s face reddened. "Sure I"m sure," he said. "Every last one of them is gone. And what more do you want me to do about it?" He paused, then added: "What do you expect, Malone? Miracles?"
Malone shook his head gently. "No," he said. "I--"
"Oh, never mind," Lynch said.
"But I--"
"Look, Malone," Lynch said, "there"s a guy who wants to talk to you."