There's Dealey Plaza. The PD building's close. Look for: The book building/a Hertz sign/Greek columns.
There-- The columns. The sign. Mourners at Houston and Elm. A hot-dog vendor. Nuns sobbing.
Littell shut his eyes. The driver turned right. The driver pulled down a ramp. The driver stopped hard and fast. The back windows slid down.
Somebody coughed. Somebody said, "Mr. Littell?"
Littell opened his eyes. Littell saw a basement garage. There's a kiddy Fed standing there. He's all uptight.
"Sir, I'm Special Agent Burdick, and . . . well, the ASAC said you should come straight up and see the witnesses."
Littell grabbed his briefcase. The gun chafed his hip. He got out. He stretched. He cleaned his glasses.
Burdick stuck close. Burdick rode him tight. They walked to a freight lift. Burdick pushed 3.
"Sir, I have to say it's a madhouse. We've got people saying two shooters, three, four, they can't even agree where the shots--"
"Did you isolate them?"
"Well . . . no."
"Who's interviewing them?"
The boy stuttered. The boy gulped.
"Which agencies, son?"
"Well, we've got us, DPD, the Sheriff's, and I--"
The door opened. Noise boomed in. The squadroom was packed.
Littell looked around. Burdick got antsy. Littell ignored him.
The witnesses were antsy. The witnesses wore name tags. The witnesses perched on one bench.
Thirty-odd people: Talking. Fretting. Contaminating facts.
Back-wall cubicles. Cops and civilians--holed up in interview slots. Flustered cops and civilians in shock.
Forty desks. Forty phones. Forty cops talking loud. Odd badges on suitcoats. Wastebaskets dumped. Inter-agency chaos and-- "Sir, can we--"
Littell walked over. Littell checked the bench. The wits squirmed. The wits smoked. Full ashtrays jumped.
I saw this/I saw that/his head went pop! A talkathon--bad work--pure mass-witness slop.
Littell looked for standouts. Solid types/credible wits.
He stood back. He framed the bench. He saw a woman: Dark hair/handsome/thirty-five-plus.
She sat still. She stayed calm. She watched an exit door. She saw Littell. She looked away. She never blinked.
Burdick walked a phone up. Burdick mimed "Him." Littell grabbed the phone. The cord stretched taut.
Mr. Hoover said, "Be concise."
Littell cupped his free ear. The room noise half died.
"The preliminary stage of the investigation has been ineptly executed. That's all I'm certain of at this point."
"I'm not surprised and I'm not disappointed, and I'm thoroughly convinced that Oswald acted without assistance. Your job is to cull the names of potentially embarrassing witnesses who might contradict that thesis."
Littell said, "Yes, sir."
Burdick held up a clipboard. Note slips were clamped in. A witness log/clamped witness statements/driver's licenses attached.
The phone went dead. Burdick grabbed it. Littell grabbed the clipboard. It bulged. The clip wobbled.
He skimmed the slips.
Two-line statements. Confiscated DLs. Detainment insurance. Ambiguous data: 3/4/5/6 shots/1/2/3 directions.
The stockade fence. The book building. The triple underpass. Head-on shots. Missed shots. Shots from behind.
Littell checked DL pix.
Wit #6: Shots at Houston and Elm. Wit #9: Shots off the freeway. The calm woman: 2 shots/2 directions. Her stats: Arden Smith/West Mockingbird Lane.
The smoke was bad. Littell stepped back. The smoke made him sneeze. He bumped a desk. He dropped the log. He walked to the interview slots.
Burdick tailed him. The room noise doubled. Littell checked the slots.
Shoddy work--no tape machines/no stenos.
He checked slot #1. A thin cop braced a thin kid. The kid laughed. What a gas. My dad voted for Nixon.
Littell checked slot #2. A fat cop braced a fat man.
The cop said, "Mr. Bowers, I'm not disputing what you told me."
Mr. Bowers wore a railroad cap. Mr. Bowers squirmed.
"For the tenth time then, so I can go home. I was up in the tower behind that fence on the knoll. I saw two cars cruising around there about. . . shit. . . a half hour before the shooting, and two men standing right at the edge of the fence, and then just as I heard the shots, I saw a flash of light from that very spot."
The cop doodled. Mr. Bowers tapped a cigarette. Littell studied him. Littell got queasy.
He didn't know the shooter plan. He did know credible wits. Bowers was intractably firm. Bowers was good.
Burdick tapped Littell. Littell swung around. Littell knocked him back.
"What?"
Burdick stepped back. "Well, I was just thinking that DPD pulled these three guys, bums or something, out of a railroad car behind the fence, about a half hour after the shooting. We've got them in the tank."
Littell went more queasy.
Littell said, "Show me."
Burdick walked point. They passed the slots. They passed a coffee-break room. Hallways crossed. They veered left. They hit a mesh-front pen.
An intercom popped: "Agent Burdick. Front desk, please."
Burdick said, "I should catch that."
Littell nodded. Burdick fidgeted. Burdick took off from a crouch. Littell grabbed the mesh. The light was bad. Littell squinted hard.
He saw two bums. He saw Chuck Rogers.
Chuck was Pete's man. Wet arts/CIA. Chuck was tight with Guy B.
Rogers saw Littell. The bums ignored him. Rogers smiled. Littell touched his shield. Rogers mimed a rifle shot.
He moved his lips. He went "Pow!"
Littell backtracked.
He walked down the hall. He turned right. He hit a bisecting hall. He made the turn. He saw a side door.
He pushed it open. He saw fire steps and rungs. Across the hall: A men's room and a door marked "Jailer."
The men's room door opened. Mr. Bowers walked out. He stretched. He zipped his fly. He settled his nuts.
He saw Littell. He squinted. He keyed on his shield.
"FBI, right?"
"That's right."
"Well, I'm glad I ran into you, 'cause there's something I forgot to tell the other guy."
Littell smiled. "I'll pass it along."
Bowers scratched his neck. "Okay, then. You tell him I saw some cops rousting these hoboes out of a hay car, and one of them looked like one of the guys I saw by the fence."
Littell pulled his notebook.
He scribbled. He smeared some ink. His hand shook. The book shook.
Bowers said, "I sure feel sorry for Jackie."
Littell smiled. Bowers smiled. Bowers tipped his cap. He jiggled some coins. He ambled. He walked away sloooooow.
Littell watched his back.
Bowers ambled. Bowers turned right. Bowers hit the main hall. Littell flexed his hands. Littell caught his breath.
He worked the Jailer door. He jiggled the knob. He forced it.
The door popped. Littell stepped in.
A twelve-by-twelve space--dead empty. A desk/a chair/a key rack.
Paperwork--tacked to a corkboard: Vagrant sheets--"Doyle"/"Paolino"/"Abrahams"--no mug shots attached.
Call it: Rogers packed fake ID. Rogers booked in with it.
One key on the rack--cell-size/thick brass.
Littell grabbed the sheets. Littell pocketed them. Littell grabbed the key. He gulped. He walked out brazen. He walked to the pen.
He unlocked the door. Rogers primed the bums. He pumped them up. He went "Ssshh now" He gave a pep talk.
We got ourselves a savior--just do what I say.
The bums huddled. The bums stepped out. The bums hugged the wall.
Littell walked.
He hit the main hall. He faced the squadroom. He blocked the view. He signaled Rogers. He pointed. The fire door--go.
He heard footsteps. The bums squealed. The bums giggled loud. The fire door creaked. A bum yelled, "Hallelujah!" The fire door slammed.
Littell caught a breeze. His sweat froze. His pulse went haywire.
He walked to the squadroom. His legs fluttered and dipped. He grazed desks. He bumped walls. He bumped into cops.
The wit bench was smoked in. Twenty cigarettes plumed. Arden Smith was gone.
Littell looked around. Littell scanned desks. Littell saw the wit log.
He grabbed it. He checked statements and DLs. Arden Smith's package--gone.
He checked the slots. He checked the halls. He checked the main window.
There's Arden Smith. She's on the street. She's walking fast. She's walking away.
She crossed Houston. Cars swerved by her. She made Dealey Plaza.
Littell blinked.