"I'm pretty sure I did. I knew it was gonna be outside all night, I'm pretty sure I would've locked it."
"What'd you do with the key after you, locked it?"
"Put it back in the cabinet."
"You weren't there on Thursday night when Mr.
Pratt brought the car in, were you?" Carella asked.
"No, I go home six o'clock. We don't have any mechanics working the night shift. No gas jockeys,
either. It's all self-service at night. There's just the night manager there. We mostly sell gas to cabs at night. That's about it."
"What time did you get to work on Friday morning?"
"Seven-thirty. I work along day."
"Who was there when you got there?"
"The day manager and two gas jockeys."
Carella took out the list Ralph had written for him.
"That would be Jimmy Jackson..."
"The manager, yeah."
"Jose Santiago ..."
"Yeah."
... "And Abdul Sikhar."
"Yeah, the Arab guy."
"See any of them going in that Caddy?"
"No."
"Hanging around it?"
"No. But I have to tell you the truth, I wasn't like watching it every minute, you know? I had work to do."
"Mr. Mondalvo, the gun we're tracing was used in a homicide earlier tonight..."
"I didn't know that," Mondalvo said, and looked around quickly, as if even mere possession of this knowledge was dangerous.
"Yes," Hawes said. "So if you know anything at all . . ."
"Nothing."
... "About that gun, or who might have taken off the cross
gun from the car..."
"Nothing, I swear."
"Then you should tell us now. Becaus otherwise..."
"I swear to God," Mondalvo said, and made the sl
"Otherwise you'd be an accessory after the fact. Carella said.
"What does that mean?"
"It means you'd be as guilty as whoever pulled the trigger."
"I don't know who pulled any trigger."
Both cops looked at him hard.
"I swear to God," he said again. "I don't know." Maybe they believed him.
The three kids were all named Richard.
Because they were slick-as-shit preppies from a New England school, they called themselves Richard the First, Second, and Third, after Richard the Lion-Hearted, Richard the son of Edward, and Richard who perhaps had his nephews murdered in the Tower of London. They were familiar with these monarchs through an English history course they'd had to take back in their sophomore year. The three Richards were now seniors. All three of them had been accepted at Harvard. They were each eighteen years old, each varsity football heroes, all smart as hell, handsome as devils, and drunk as skunks. To coin a few phrases.
Like his namesake Richard Coeur de Lion, Richard Hopper for such was his real name was six feet tall and he weighed a hundred and ninety pounds, and he had blond hair and blue eyes, just like the twelfth century king. Unlike that fearless monarch, however, Richard did not write poetry although he sang quite well. In fact, all three Richards were in the school choir. Richard the First was the team's star quarterback.
The real Richard the Second had ruled England from 1377 to 1399 and was the son of Edward the Black Prince. The present-day Richard the Second was named Richard Weinstock, and his father was
Irving the Tailor. He was five feet ten inches tall and weighed two hundred and forty pounds, all of it muscle and bruised bones. He had dark hair and brown
" eyes, and he played fullback on the team.
Richard the Third, whose true and honorable name was Richard O'Connor, had freckles and reddish hair and greenish eyes and he was six feet three inches tall and weighed two-ten. His fifteenth-century namesake was the third son of the duke of York, a mighty feudal baron. Richard's left arm was withered and shrunken,
but this did not stop him from being a fierce fighter and a conniving son of a bitch. The king, that is. The present-day Richard was known to cheat on French exams, but he had two strong arms and very good hands and he played wide receiver on the Pierce
Academy team.
All three Richards had come down to the city for the weekend. They were not due back at school till Monday morning. All three Richards were wearing the team's hooded parka, navy blue with a big letter P in white on the back. Just below the stem of the P, there was a white logo in the shape of a football, about three inches wide and five inches long. The patch indicated which team they played on. Over the left pectoral on the front of the parka, the name of the school was stitched in white script lettering, Pierce Academy tara.
The Richards Three.
At four-thirty on that gelid morning, it was doubtful that any of the three, despite the similarity, knew his
own name. Turning back to yell "Fuck you!" and "g