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The third case had been that of a contract hit of a third-rate mobster, Anthony J. DeZego, also known as “Tony the Zee,” on the roof of a downtown parking garage. Ordinarily, the untimely demise of a minor thug would have been forgotten in twenty-four hours, but this particular thug had been in the company of a young woman named Penelope Detweiler
when someone had opened up on him with a shotgun. The Detweiler girl’s father was president of Nesfoods International and one of the rocks upon which the cathedral of Philadelphia society had been built. Not only had this young woman been wounded during the attack on Mr. DeZego, but it had come out that she was not only carrying on with Tony the Zee but also addicted to heroin.
Obviously, since it wasn’t their fault that their precious child had not only been shacking up with a married thug, but had been injecting and inhaling narcotics, it had to be somebody’s fault. Since the police were supposed to stop that sort of thing it was obviously the fault of the police. For a few days, the influence of Nesfoods International had allied itself with Mr. Nelson and his newspaper in roundly condemning the Police Department and the mayor.
But then that had stopped, with Mr. Detweiler making a 180-degree turn. Davis had no idea how Mayor Carlucci (or possibly Peter Wohl) had pulled that off, but what had happened was that Detweiler had made a speech not only praising the police, but also starting, with a large contribution of his own, a reward fund to catch whoever had murdered the young cop in his patrol car.
Special Agent Davis knew that Mr. Detweiler’s change of heart had nothing to do with the cops having caught whoever had killed DeZego and seriously wounded his daughter. That was never going to happen. The DeZego murder and the Detweiler aggravated assault cases would almost certainly never be officially closed.
There had been a report from the FBI’s Chicago office that a known contract hit man meeting the description of the DeZego killer had been found in the trunk of his car with three .45-caliber bullets having passed through his cranial cavity. There was little question in anyone’s mind that the DeZego/Detweiler hit man had himself been hit, probably to shut his mouth, but knowing something and being able to prove it were two entirely different things.
Special Agent in Charge Davis had been meaning to have lunch with Peter Wohl, to chat, out of school, about these cases, even before he had learned, within the past forty-eight hours, that the Nelson case was not, in something of an understatement, over. It was in fact the reason he had asked Staff Inspector Wohl to break bread with him, preferably in some quiet restaurant, like Ristorante Alfredo, where they could talk in confidence.
Davis had been summoned to Washington two days before and informed that after a review of the facts, the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania had brought the case of the two Negro Males who had kidnapped Pierre St. Maury, taken him against his will across a state border, and then shot him to death before a federal Grand Jury and secured an indictment against them under the Lindbergh Act.
Davis had been informed that it behooved him to do whatever he could to assist the deputy attorney general in securing a conviction. He had been told that the case had attracted the interest of certain people high in the Justice Department. Davis did not need to be reminded that the deputy attorney general of the United States, before his appointment, had been a senior partner of the law firm that represented the Daye-Nelson Corporation.
Davis had been on the telephone when Wohl had appeared at his office, and Wohl consequently had had to cool his heels for fifteen minutes before Davis could come out of his office to greet him, and apologize for getting hung up.
This would have annoyed Peter Wohl in any case, when all things were going fine in his world. Today that wasn’t the case. He had just come from the Roundhouse, where he had had a painful session with Mayor Carlucci and Commissioner Czernich, witnessed by Chief Inspectors Matt Lowenstein (Detective Division) and Dennis V. Coughlin concerning the inability of the Special Operations Division to come up with even one fucking thing that might lead them to find whoever had put four .22 Long Rifle bullets into the chest, and one into the leg, of Police Officer Joseph Magnella.
He had not been in the mood to be kept waiting by anybody, and Special Agent Davis had seen this on his face.
It was unfortunate, Davis had thought, that Wohl first of all looked too young to be a staff inspector of police, (he was, in fact, Davis had recalled, the youngest staff inspector in the Department) and second, he seemed to have a thing about not introducing himself by giving his rank or even identifying himself as a police officer unless it was absolutely necessary.
If he had told the receptionist that he was “Staff Inspector Wohl,” Davis thought, she would certainly have taken him into the staff coffee room as a professional courtesy. But apparently, he had not done so; the receptionist had said, “There’s a man named Wohl to see you.” And so she had pointed out a chair in the outer office to him and let him wait.
And then, no sooner had Davis put on his topcoat and hat, as they were literally walking out of the reception room to the elevators, there had been another “must-take” telephone call.
“Peter, I’m sorry.”
“Why don’t we try this another time? You’re obviously really too busy.”
“Wait downstairs, I’ll only be a minute.”
It had been at least ten minutes. When he walked out onto the street, Wohl had been leaning against the fender of his official Plymouth, wearing a visibly insincere smile.
“Well, Walter, here you are!”
“You know how these things go,” Davis replied.
“Certainly,” Wohl said. “I mean, my God, FBI agents aren’t expected to have to eat, are they?”
“How does Italian sound, Peter?”
“Italian sounds fine,” Wohl replied and opened the back door of the car for him. Only then did Davis see the young man behind the wheel of the Ford.
A plainclothesman, he decided. He’s too young to be a detective.
He realized that the presence of Wohl’s driver was going to be a problem. He didn’t want to talk about the murder-kidnapping case, especially the political implications of it, in front of a junior police officer.
Wohl slammed the door after Davis and got in the front seat.
“Shank & Evelyn’s, Matt,” he ordered. “Eleventh and Carpenter.”
“Yes, sir,” the young cop said.
“Officer Payne, this is Special Agent—Special Agent in Charge, excuse me, Davis.”
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