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Mr. DeZego had later walked to the Penn Services Parking Garage and gone to the roof, where someone had blown the top of his head off, before or after popping Miss Penelope Detweiler, who had more than likely gone there to meet Mr. DeZego.
There was additional confirmation of this sequence of events by Sergeant Dolan and Officer What's-his-name of Narcotics, who had staked out the Warwick. They even had photographs of Mr. DeZego arriving at the Warwick, in the bar at the Warwick, and walking to, and into, the Penn Services Parking Garage.
Mr. DeZego's car had been driven by somebody to the airport. Probably by the doer. Doers. Why?
"Wake up, Jason, dammit!" Mrs. Martha Washington had interrupted the data-sorting function of his subconscious brain. "You toss and turn all night if I let you sleep in that chair!"
"You act like I've done something wrong," Jason said indignantly.
His brain said, There is an anomaly in what Dolan told me.
"Run around the room or something," Martha Washington said. "Just don't lay there like a beached whale. When you snore, you sound like-I don't know what."
Jason went into the kitchen.
I will just go see Sergeant Dolan in the morning. But I can't take the kid with me. Dolan thinks Matt is dealing coke.
He poured coffee in a mug, then dialed Matt's number and told his answering machine not to meet him at the Roundhouse but to go to Bustleton and Bowler instead.
At nine-fifteen he went to bed, at the somewhat pointed suggestion of his wife.
He went to sleep feeding questions to the computer.
Where is the anomaly? I know it's there.
****
Officers Jesus Martinez and Charles McFadden, in uniform, came to their feet when Captain David Pekach walked into the building at Bustleton and Bowler.
"Good morning," Pekach said.
"Sir, can we talk to you?" McFadden asked.
I know what that's about, I'll bet, Pekach thought. They were not thrilled by their twelve-hour tour yesterday riding up and down the Schuylkill Expressway. They want to do something important, be real cops, and they do not think handing out speeding tickets meets that criteria.
Then he had an unpleasant thought: Do they think that because they caught me speeding, they have an edge?
"Is this important?" he asked somewhat coldly.
"I don't know," McFadden said. "Maybe not."
"Have you spoken to your sergeant about it?"
"We'd really like to talk to you, sir," Jesus Martinez said.
Pekach resisted the urge to tell them to go through their sergeant. They were good cops. They had done a good job for him. He owed them that much.
"I've got to see the inspector," he said. "Hang around, if you like. If I can find a minute, we'll talk."
"Yes, sir," Martinez said.
"Thank you," McFadden said.
Pekach walked to Peter Wohl's door. It was open, and Wohl saw him and waved him in.
"Good morning, Inspector," Pekach said.
"That's open to debate," Wohl said. "Have I ever told you the distilled essence of my police experience, Dave? Never drink with cops."
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