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“These friends of Mr. Corbett’s,” Carella said, “how do you know they were homosexuals?” He was remembering that Corbett’s alibi for his whereabouts at the time of the Craig murder was a married woman named Priscilla Lambeth who had entertained him on her office couch.

“One of them came here just the other night,” she said, “looking for the big party.” She lisped the word “party” and accompanied it with a mincing limp-wristed gesture. “He didn’t realize Mr. Corbett lived on the other side of the mews.”

“Did he give you his name?” Heidiger asked.

“Who?”

“The man who came here looking for Corbett.”

“Man? Don’t make me laugh.”

“Did he give you his name?”

“Why would he? He asked for Da

“This was when, did you say?”

“Christmas Eve. Mr. Corbett had a big Christmas Eve party. I had to work on Christmas Eve, I was trying to get some sleep. Instead, I got a fruit knocking on the door asking for Da

“Did you see anyone entering the courtyard tonight?” Carella asked.

“No, I didn’t.”

“I mean, before you heard the screaming.”

“Nobody. I was in the tub, in fact, when I heard all the fuss. What I like to do is take a bath before di

“Did you see anybody in the courtyard after you heard the screams?”

“I stayed in the tub.”

“You mean you didn’t immediately call the police?”

“No, I called them when I got out of the tub. There’s always noise over there. If I called every time I heard noise, it’d be a full-time job.”

“What time was it when you heard the screams?”

“I don’t wear a watch in the tub.”

“How long did you stay in the tub? After you heard the screams, I mean.”

“About fifteen minutes, I guess.”

“The call came in at five-fifty-three,” Heidiger said. “That means you heard the screams at…” He hesitated, doing his mental calculation, and then said, “Approximately twenty to six, somewhere in there.”

“I would guess.”

“When you got out of the tub,” Carella said, “did you see anyone in the courtyard? Anyone near the Corbett apartment?”

“I didn’t look. I went to the phone and called the police. I figured if I didn’t do something about it, the noise would go on all night. And I wanted to have my di

“Was the screaming still going on?”

“No, it had stopped by then.”

“But you called the police anyway.”

“Who knew when it might start again? You know how those people are,” she said.

“Mm,” Carella said. “Well, thank you very much, Miss Groat. Sorry to have bothered you.”

In the street outside, Heidiger lighted a cigarette, belatedly offered one to Carella, who refused, and then said, “Ever talk to this Corbett guy?”

“Last Saturday,” Carella said.

“Strike you as being a fag?”

“Seemed straight as an arrow.”

“Who can tell these days, huh?” Heidiger said. “How about Craig?”





“He was living with a beautiful twenty-two-year-old girl.”

“Mm,” Heidiger said. “So what do you make of it? Any co

“I don’t know.”

“Knife in both murders.”

“Yeah.”

“If the witch in there was right, this one might’ve been a lovers’ quarrel.”

“Maybe. But we’ve only got her word for what Corbett was. Did she strike you as a particularly reliable character witness?”

“She struck me as a particularly reliable character,” Heidiger said dryly. “You want a beer or something? Officially I’m still on duty, but fuck it.”

“Shooflies are heavy around the holidays,” Carella said, smiling.

“Fuck the shooflies, too,” Heidiger said. “I’ve been with the department twenty-two years, I never took a nickel from anybody in all that time. Just let them bring charges for a glass of beer, I’d like to see them do that.”

“Go on without me,” Carella said. “There’s somebody I want to talk to.”

“Keep in touch,” Heidiger said, and shook hands with him, and walked off up the street. In the phone booth on the corner, Carella checked the Isola directory for a Priscilla Lambeth listing, found none under her name, but two for a Dr. Howard Lambeth—one for his office and one for his residence. The residential number was Higley 7-8021, which sounded like the number Carella had dialed from Corbett’s apartment last Saturday. He dialed the number now. A woman answered the phone; her voice sounded familiar.

“Mrs. Lambeth?” Carella said.

“Yes?”

“Priscilla Lambeth?”

“Yes?”

“This is Detective Carella, we talked last Saturday, do you re—”

“I asked you not to call here again,” she said.

“Daniel Corbett has been murdered,” Carella said. “I’d like to talk to you. I can come there, or we can meet someplace.”

There was a long silence on the line.

“Mrs. Lambeth?” he said.

The silence lengthened.

“Which would you prefer?” Carella said.

“I’m thinking.” He waited. “Give me half an hour,” she said. “I’ll be walking the dog in half an hour. Can you meet me on Jefferson and Juniper at…What time is it now?”

“Close to ten.”

“Make it ten-thirty,” she said. “He’s a golden retriever.”

As befitted an editor of children’s books, Priscilla Lambeth was a petite brunette with a pixie face and wide, i

Priscilla was wearing a dark blue ski parka over blue jeans and boots. She was hatless, and the wind caught at her short dark hair, bristling it about her head and giving her the appearance of someone who’d just been unexpectedly startled out of her wits—rather close to the truth. She told Carella at once that she’d been truly shocked by what he’d revealed on the telephone. She still couldn’t get over it. Da

Jefferson Avenue at this hour of the night was largely deserted, the shopwindows shuttered, a fierce wind tossing up eddies of snow from the banks along the curbs. To the north, on Hall Avenue, there were still strollers, still browsers in the bookshops that remained open till midnight in hope of catching the after-theater crowd drifting southward from the Stem and the theatrical district. Even those hardy souls were small in number on a night like this, with the wind howling in over the River Harb and the temperature hovering at twenty-four degrees Fahrenheit. Carella walked with his hands in his pockets, the collar of his coat pulled high on his neck, his shoulders hunched. The dog trotted ahead of them like the lead dog on a sled team, tugging at the leash, yanking Priscilla behind him and by association Carella as well.

“Mrs. Lambeth,” he said, “Daniel Corbett told us you and he had been intimate. The thing I want to—”

“I wish you wouldn’t say that,” Priscilla said. Her voice was tiny, the voice of an eight-year-old trapped in a thirteen-year-old’s pubescent body. He wondered briefly what kinds of books she edited. Picture books? Had his daughter, April, read any of the books that crossed Priscilla Lambeth’s desk? The dog stopped at another lamppost, sniffed it, found it to his liking, and lifted his hind leg.

“But it’s true, isn’t it?” Carella said.

“Yes, it’s true. It’s just that when you put it that way…”

The dog was off again, almost yanking her arm out of its socket. She held gallantly to the leash, out of breath, racing along behind the dog. Carella trotted beside her. His face was raw from the wind, his nose was ru