spot
appeared.
In stunned silence, Reich saw a second, then a third red splotch appear on the
lace. He snatched his hand back and a red drop spattered on the stage before
him, to be followed by a slow, inexorable stream of gleaming crimson droplets.
"That's blood!" Maria screamed. "That's blood! There's someone upstairs
bleeding. For God's sake, Ben... You can't leave me now. Lights! Lights!
Lights!"
6
At 12:30 A.M., the Emergency Patrol arrived at Beaumont House in response to
precinct notification: "GZ. Beaumont. YLP-R" which, translated, meant: "An Act
or Omission, forbidden by law has been reported at Beaumont House, 9 Park
South."
At 12:40, the Park precinct Captain arrived in response to Patrol report:
"Criminal Act possible Felony-AAA."
At 1:00 A.M„ Lincoln Powell arrived at Beaumont House in response to a frantic
call from a deputy inspector: "I tell you, Powell, it's Felony Triple-A. I'll
swear it is. The wind's been knocked out of me. I don't know whether to be
grateful or scared; but I know none of us is equipped to handle it."
"What can't you handle?"
"Look here, Powell. Murder's abnormal. Only a distorted TP pattern can produce
death by violence. Right?"
"Yes."
"Which is why there hasn't been a successful Triple-A in over seventy years. A
man can't walk around with a distorted pattern, maturing murder, and go
unnoticed these days. He'd have as much chance of going unnoticed as a man with
three heads. You peepers always pick 'em up before they go into action."
"We try to... when we contact them."
"And there are too many peeper screens to pass in normal living these days for
you to be avoided. A man would have to be a hermit to do that. How can a hermit
kill?"
"How indeed?"
"Now here's a killing that must have been carefully planned... and the killer
was never noticed. Never reported. Even by Maria Beaumont's peeper secretaries.
That means there couldn't have been anything to notice. He must have a passable
pattern and yet be abnormal enough to murder. How the hell can we resolve a
paradox like that?"
"I see. Any prospects?"
"We've got a pay-load of inconsistencies to iron out. One, we don't know what
killed D'Courtney. Two, his daughter's disappeared. Three, somebody robbed
D'Courtney's guards of one hour and we can't figure how. Four---"
"Don't count any higher. I'll be right over."
The great hall of Beaumont House blazed with harsh white light. Uniformed police
were everywhere. The white-smocked technicians from Lab were scurrying like
beetles. In the center of the hall, the party guests (dressed) were assembled in
a rough corral, milling like a herd of terrified steers at a slaughter house.
As Powell came down the east ramp, tall and slender, black and white, he felt
the wave of hostility that greeted him. He reached out quickly to Jackson Beck,
police Inspector 2: "What's the situation Jax?"
"Scramble."
Switching to their informal police code of scrambled images, reversed meanings
and personal symbols, Beck continued: "Peepers here. Play it safe." In a
microsecond he brought Powell up to date.
"I see. Nasty. What's everybody doing lumped out on the floor? You staging
something?"
"The villain-friend act."
"Necessary?"
"It's a rotten crowd. Pampered. Corrupt. They'll never cooperate. You'll have to
do some tricky coaxing to get anything out of them; and this case is going to
need it. I'll be the villain. You be their friend."
"Right. Good work. Start recording."
Halfway down the ramp, Powell halted. The humor departed from his mouth. The
friendliness disappeared from his deep dark eyes. An expression of shocked
indignation appeared on his face.
"Beck," he snapped. His voice cracked through the echoing hall. There was dead
silence. Every eye turned in his direction.
Inspector Beck faced Powell. In a brutal voice, he said: "Here, sir."
"Are you in charge. Beck?"
"I am, sir."
"And is this your concept of the proper conduct of an