The Second Deadly Sin - The Second Deadly Sin Part 16
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The Second Deadly Sin Part 16

"I was a sergeant then and brought over a squad from the Two-three."

"I was sure impressed," Boone said. "They even had cops from Boston and Philadelphia. The Mayor was there. He gave my mother a plaque."

"Yes," Delaney said. "Your mother living?"

"No, she's gone. I've got some cousins down in Tennessee, but I haven't seen them for years."

"You and your wife didn't have any children?"

"No," Boone said, "we didn't. I'm glad. Now."

They rode awhile in silence. Then Delaney said, "I want you to do something on this Maitland thing, but I don't want you to get sore."

"I won't get sore," Boone said. "What is it, Chief?"

"Well, first of all I want to question Maitland's son-what's his name? Theodore. They call him Ted. I want to question him myself. Alone."

"Well, sure, Chief," Boone said. He kept his eyes on the road. "That's okay."

But Delaney knew he was hurt.

"The way I figure is this," he explained. "From the files, and from what his mother said, I think the kid is a wise-guy. The kind of snotnose who calls cops 'pigs' or 'fuzz.' I figure if we both go up against him, he'll feel we're leaning on him. Pushing him around. But if I go up against him alone, all sweetness and light, playing the understanding older man, the father he never had, maybe he'll crack a little."

Boone glanced at him briefly, with wonderment.

"Makes sense," he said. "But I wouldn't have thought of it."

"In return," Delaney said, "I want you to brace that Susan Hemley alone. How did she sound on the phone? Young? Old?"

"Youngish," Boone said. "But very sure of herself. Deep voice. Good laugh."

"Well, here's what you do," Delaney said. "I'll meet the Maitland kid tomorrow. Alone. You do the time trials on the subway from Dukker's place to the Mott Street studio. Either before or after, go up to the office of Simon and Brewster and see this Susan Hemley. Your scam is that you dropped by to set up an appointment for you and me to talk to her boss, J. Julian Simon. Any day next week, morning or afternoon, at his convenience."

"I get it," Boone said, feeling better. "You want me to romance her-right?"

"If you can," Delaney nodded. "See what she's like. If she gives a little, ask her to have lunch. I think it's a one-on-one situation, and we'll get more if you go in alone. If you can make lunch, don't push it. You know-just idle talk. Did she know Maitland, and wasn't it awful what happened to him, and so forth. You know the drill. You can listen, can't you?"

"I'm a good listener," Boone said.

"Fine. That's all I want you to do. Don't drag anything out of her. Just make friends."

"What is she asks about the case?"

"Play it cozy. Tell her nothing, but make it sound like something. Tell her Maitland wasn't wearing any underwear. That'll make her think she's getting the inside poop that wasn't in the newspapers. Also, later we'll try to find out if she told Mrs. Maitland about the underwear. That'll be a tip-off on how intimate the two women are, just what that relationship is. But keep it hush-hush with the Hemley woman. Very confidential. You lean on her and say, 'I want you to promise not to breathe a word of this to anyone, but-' She'll get all excited, and maybe she'll start trading you secret for secret. Think you can handle it?"

Boone took a deep breath, blew it out heavily.

"Oh, I can handle it," he said. "But I'll tell you one thing, Chief: if I ever waste someone, I hope you don't catch the squeal."

They stopped in Nyack to ask directions, and shortly after noon they cruised slowly by the Maitland home and grounds, taking a good gander.

The grounds were an impressive size: a wide expanse of lawn leading up from the road, bordered by a thick stand of oaks, maples, a few firs. The driveway from the road was graveled, led under a side portico, and then to the wide doors of a smaller building that looked as if it had been built as a barn, then converted to a garage. An old black Mercedes-Benz was parked under the side portico.

The house itself was a rambling structure, two stories high, with a widow's walk facing the river. The building was sited atop a small hill with good drainage; trees at the rear had been cut away to provide a splendid river view.

The main entrance had four wooden pillars going up the entire height of the house to support a peaked portico. There were dormers, small minarets, plenty of gingerbread around porticos, windows, doors, and a screened-in porch overhanging a bank that sloped steeply to the river. At one side, close to the trees, was a gazebo that looked unused.

"I'd guess seventy-five years old," Delaney said. "Maybe a hundred. It looks like it started with that main house in the center, and the wings were added later. But the barn is original."

"She's supposed to have money," Boone said, "but it sure doesn't look like it. At least she's not spending much on upkeep."

The lawn badly needed mowing, the trees should have been trimmed, and the undergrowth cut away. Several windows of the gazebo were broken. The graveled driveway had bald patches. The flower beds close to the house grew in wild, untended profusion, choked with weeds. The house itself, and the barn, were peeling, a weather-beaten grey, almost silver in spots.

"Seedy," Delaney said. "The house looks sound, but it would take a crew a month to get this place in shape. But nothing could spoil that view. Well, let's go ..."

They drove slowly up the driveway and parked in front of the three-step entrance. Sergeant Boone put on his jacket before they walked up to the front door. The paint was cracked, the brass knocker tarnished. Chief Delaney rapped sharply, twice.

The door was opened immediately. The tall woman who glowered at them was gaunt, almost emaciated. Rawboned and sunburned. A big-featured farm face. There were stained carpet slippers on her feet, the heelbacks bent under so the slippers were actually scuffs. The shiny black dress had soiled ruching at throat and cuffs. The woman was wearing a cameo brooch on her flat bosom and, unexpectedly, a man's gold digital wristwatch.

"Yes?" she said. Her voice was harsh, peremptory.

"Mrs. Maitland?" Chief Delaney asked.

"No," the woman said. "You the po-leece?"

"Yes, ma'am," Delaney said softly, trying to smile. "Mrs. Maitland is expecting us."

"This way," the woman commanded. "They on the poach."

Delaney couldn't place the accent. Possibly tidewater Virginia, he thought.

She held the door open just wide enough for Delaney and Boone to slip through, one at a time. They waited while she locked and bolted the door. Then they followed her as she flap-flapped across the uncarpeted parquet floor, down a long, narrow hallway to the river side of the house. The officers, looking around, caught a quick glance of dark, heavy furniture, dried flowers under glass bells, dusty velvet drapes, antimacassars, ragged footstools, gloomy walls of dull mahogany paneling and stained wallpaper. A fusty smell, with vagrant scents of cats, a heavy perfume, furniture polish.

The hallway debouched into a screened porch overlooking the river. Hinged windows had been opened inward and secured with cheap hooks and eyebolts. The porch, which had the appearance of having been added after the main house was built, was approximately twenty feet long and eight feet deep. It was furnished with a ratty collection of wicker furniture, once white, with faded chintz cushions. There was a frazzled rag rug on the planked floor. A small portable TV set was on one of the chairs, a fat, sleepy calico cat on another.

The two women on the porch had their armchairs drawn up near a sagging wicker table. On it was a black japanned tray with a pitcher of what appeared to be lemonade, surrounded by four tall, gracefully tapered glasses decorated with raised designs of enamel flowers, each glass different. Delaney guessed the lemonade set to be authentic Victoriana.

Neither woman rose to greet the visitors.

"Mrs. Maitland?" Delaney asked pleasantly.

"I," the older woman said, "am Dora Maitland."

She held out her hand in a kiss-my-ring gesture. Delaney came forward to clasp the firm hand briefly.

"Chief Edward X. Delaney, New York Police Department," he said. "A pleasure, ma'am."

"And this," Mrs. Maitland said, a lepidopterologist pointing out a rare specimen, "is my daughter, Emily."

The younger woman held out her hand obediently. This time, Delaney found the hand plump, soft, moist.

"Miss Maitland," he said. "My pleasure. May I present my associate, Detective Sergeant Abner Boone."

Boone went through the handshaking ceremony, murmuring something unintelligible. Then the two officers stood awkwardly.

"Please to pull up chairs, gentlemen," Mrs. Maitland said sonorously. "I suggest those two chairs in the corner. I pray you, do not disturb the cat. I fear she is in heat and somewhat ill-tempered. I have had this pitcher of lemonade prepared. I imagine you are thirsty after your long drive."

"Very welcome, ma'am," Delaney said, as the two cops carried the unexpectedly heavy wicker chairs to the table. "A close day."

"Martha," Mrs. Maitland said imperiously, "will you serve, please."

"I got the sheets to do," the gaunt woman whined. She had been standing in the doorway; now she turned abruptly and flap-flapped away.

"So hard to get good help these days," Mrs. Maitland said imperturbably. He hadn't, Delaney reflected, heard that line in twenty years. "Emily," she commanded her daughter, "pour."

The younger woman heaved immediately to her feet.

"Yes, Mama," she said.

She was wearing a sleeveless caftan with a mandarin collar. But even this paisley-printed tent could not hide the obesity, the billows of breast and hip. Her bare arms belonged on a butcher's block, and three chin rolls bulged above the high collar. Even her fingers were fat; puffy toes swelled through strap sandals.

But she had the flawless skin of many fat women, and if her face at first glance seemed girlish and vacant, it was also pleasant and without malice. As she poured the lemonade, she spilled a few drops and said, "My land!" and colored with almost pretty confusion. Delaney guessed her age at about thirty-two, and wondered what her life might be like, with that balloon body, stuck out here ten miles from nowhere.

When she handed him his glass of lemonade, he looked closely at her brown eyes and saw, he fancied, a shrewd intelligence, which startled him. And for all her excessive weight her movements were sure and graceful. Almost dainty. Her voice too was light, younger than her years, with a warm, flirty undertone. When she handed a glass to Boone, she smiled nicely and said, "There you are, sergeant!" and Delaney noted she contrived to have their fingers briefly touch.

The lemonade had been freshly squeezed, lightly sugared, and well chilled. It was delicious, and Chief Delaney told Mrs. Maitland so. She inclined her head regally.

He then admired the view, watching a cruise boat move slowly upriver from New York to Bear Mountain between wooded shores. "Magnificent," Delaney commented, and Mrs. Maitland said, "Thank you," as if she had designed it.

Then, amenities at an end, she said crisply, "Chief Delaney, what exactly is being done to find the murderer of my son?"

"Ma'am," Delaney said, leaning forward to deliver what he later described to Boone as "the bullshit speech," and looking directly in the woman's eyes, "I assure you the full and complete resources of the New York Police Department are presently engaged in the search for your son's killer. Nothing is being left undone to find the person or persons responsible. Sergeant Boone and I have been relieved of all other duties to concentrate wholly on this case, and the enormous man-power and technical know-how of the Department are available to us. Believe me, speaking for Sergeant Boone and myself, the search for your son's murderer has Number One priority. The case is open and very active indeed."

His eagerness seemed to impress Mrs. Maitland. It took her a few moments to realize Chief Delaney had really said nothing at all.

"But what is being done?" she demanded. "Is anyone suspected?"

"We have several promising leads," Delaney said. "Very promising. I wish I could tell you more, Mrs. Maitland, but I cannot without slandering possibly innocent people. But I assure you, we are getting close."

"And you think you will find the killer?"

"I believe we have an excellent chance."

"And when will an arrest be made?"

"Soon," he said softly. "It is a very difficult case, Mrs. Maitland. I cannot recall working on a more difficult or more important case. Can you, sergeant?"

"Never," Boone said promptly. "A very tough case. Very complex."

"Complex," Delaney cried. "Exactly! Which is why we have come up from New York to see you and your daughter, Mrs. Maitland. In hopes that you may provide information that will help resolve those complexities."

"We have already been questioned," she said edgily. "And we signed statements. We told all we knew."

"Of course you did," he soothed. "But that was soon after the death of your son. When you were both, quite understandably, numb with grief and shock and horror. But now, with the passage of time, perhaps you can recollect some important information you didn't recall at that time."

"I don't see what possible-"

"Oh Mama," the daughter said, smiling prettily, showing teeth as shiny and small as white peg corn, "why don't we just answer Chief Delaney's questions and get it over with?"

Her mother whirled on her furiously.

"You shut your mouth!" she said. Then she turned to the officers. "More lemonade, gentlemen? Please help yourselves."

Sergeant Boone rose to do the honors, topping off the ladies' glasses first.

"Thank you, sir," Emily Maitland said pertly.

During this pause, with the sergeant moving about, Delaney had the opportunity to examine Dora Maitland more closely.

It was a face, he decided, that belonged on a cigar box. The skin was dusty ivory, eyes dark and flashing, lips carmine, and hair pouring in curls of jet black to below her shoulders. It had to be a wig, and yet it suited her exotic appearance so perfectly that Delaney wondered if it might not be her own hair, darkened, oiled, and fashioned into those glossy ringlets by the hairdresser's art.

He guessed her age at about sixty; face and hair denied it, but the hands were the tip-off. She wore lounging pajamas, not too clean, a bottle-green silk. The blouse was styled like a man's shirt, with an open collar that showed a magnificent, unwrinkled throat and hinted at shoulders just as luscious. She was fleshy enough, but without her daughter's corpulence.

Both men were conscious of her musky scent. Even more conscious of the mature voluptuousness of her ungirdled body. Her feet were bare; toenails painted the same red as fingernails and lips. Just below one corner of her mouth was a small black mole, although it could have been a velvet mouche.

She moved infrequently and had the gift of natural repose, not unlike the cat sleeping carelessly on a nearby chair. She exuded a very primitive sensuality, no less impressive because it was partly the product of artifice. Her physical presence was as deliberately mannered as Cleopatra's on her barge, and just as confident. Such a role, essayed by even a younger woman of less talent and smaller natural gifts, might inspire laughter. Neither officer had any desire to laugh at Dora Maitland; they were convinced.

"Very well, Chief Delaney," she said. "What is it you wish to know?"

Her voice was low-pitched, throaty, with a tendency to raspiness. She had not lighted a cigarette since they arrived, but Delaney thought hers the voice of a heavy smoker.

He took out his notebook, and Sergeant Boone followed suit. Delaney slid on his heavy reading glasses.

"Mrs. Maitland," he started, "you have stated that on the day your son was killed, you and your daughter were here, in this house, during the period from ten in the morning until three in the afternoon. Is that correct?"

"Yes."

"And on that Friday, the housekeeper was not present because it was her day off?"

"That's correct."

"The housekeeper is Martha, the lady who let us in?"

"Yes."

"During that time period, did you have any visitors?"

"No."