But nothing of the turmoil in her mind showed on her face. At first glance the two detectives saw only a young and nubile, tawny-skinned Negress in a smartly tailored beige dress. Her voice was cool and impersonal. “May I help you?” she asked.
Then Lt. Andrew McGreavy, the older detective, spotted the spreading perspiration stain under the armpit of her dress. He automatically filed it away as an interesting piece of information for future use. The doctor’s receptionist was up-tight. McGreavy pulled out a wallet with a worn badge pinned onto the cracked imitation leather. “Lieutenant McGreavy, Nineteenth Precinct.” He indicated his partner. “Detective Angeli. We’re from the Homicide Division.”
Homicide? A muscle in Carol’s arm twitched involuntarily. Chick! He had killed someone. He had broken his promise to her and gone back to the gang. He had pulled a robbery and had shot someone, or—was he shot? Dead? Is that what they had come to tell her? She felt the perspiration stain begin to widen. Carol suddenly became conscious of it. McGreavy was looking at her face, but she knew that he had noticed it. She and the McGreavys of the world needed no words. They recognized each other on sight. They had known each other for hundreds of years.
“We’d like to see Dr. Judd Stevens,” said the younger detective. His voice was gentle and polite, and went with his appearance. She noticed for the first time that he carried a small parcel wrapped in brown paper and held together with string.
It took an instant for his words to sink in. So it wasn’t Chick. Or Sammy. Or the grass.
“I’m sorry,” she said, barely hiding her relief. “Dr. Stevens is with a patient.”
“This will only take a few minutes,” McGreavy said. “We want to ask him some questions.” He paused. “We can either do it here, or at Police Headquarters.”
She looked at the two of them a moment, puzzled. What the hell could two Homicide detectives want with Dr. Stevens? Whatever the police might think, the doctor had not done anything wrong. She knew him too well. How long had it been? Four years. It had started in night court…
It was three A.M. and the overhead lights in the courtroom bathed everyone in an unhealthy pallor. The room was old and tired and uncaring, saturated with the stale smell of fear that had accumulated over the years like layers of flaked paint.
It was Carol’s lousy luck that Judge Murphy was sitting on the bench again. She had been up before him only two weeks before and had gotten off with probation. First offense. Meaning it was the first time the bastards had caught her. This time she knew the judge was going to throw the book at her.
The case on the docket ahead of hers was almost over. A tall, quiet-looking man standing before the judge was saying something about his client, a fat man in handcuffs who trembled all over. She figured the quiet-looking man must be a mouthpiece. There was a look about him, an air of easy confidence, that made her feel the fat man was lucky to have him. She didn’t have anyone.
The men moved away from the bench and Carol heard her name called. She stood up, pressing her knees together to keep them from trembling. The bailiff gave her a gentle push toward the bench. The court clerk handed the charge sheet to the judge.
Judge Murphy looked at Carol, then at the sheet of paper in front of him.
“ ‘Carol Roberts. Soliciting on the streets, vagrancy, possession of marijuana, and resisting arrest.’”
The last was a lot of shit. The policeman had shoved her and she had kicked him in the balls. After all, she was an American citizen.
“You were in here a few weeks ago, weren’t you, Carol?” She made her voice sound uncertain. “I believe I was, Your Honor.”
“And I gave you probation.”
“Yes, sir.”
“How old are you?”
She should have known they would ask. “Sixteen. Today’s my sixteenth birthday. Happy birthday to me,” she said. And she burst into tears, huge sobs that wracked her body.