Bryce Harriman stood on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 67th Street, staring up at one of those anonymous white-brick high-rises that infested the Upper East Side. It was a gray Tuesday afternoon, and Harriman had the dull ache of an old hangover pulsing somewhere behind his eyeballs. His editor, Ritts, had chewed him out for not covering the story the night before. Well, he wasn’t on call, like a doctor, was he? He sure as hell wasn’t being paid enough to go out sniffing up copy at three o’clock in the morning. And besides, he’d been in no condition to cover a murder. It was all he could do to find his way home on the subway.
He thought there might be some stragglers, but what he’d found instead was a crowd, generated by morning television news and the Internet. Here it was, past two in the afternoon, but at least a hundred people had converged on the block—rubberneckers, Goths, white witches, East Village weirdos, even a few Hare Krishnas, which he hadn’t seen in New York in at least half a dozen years. Didn’t any of these people have jobs? To his right, a bunch of satanists wearing what looked like medieval robes were drawing pentagrams on the sidewalk and chanting. To his left, a group of nuns were praying on their rosaries. A bunch of teenyboppers were holding a vigil, candles burning despite the time of day, singing to the accompaniment of a strummed guitar. It was unbelievable, something out of a Fellini film.
As he looked around, Harriman felt a swelling of excitement. He’d scored a mild success the week before with his piece about the Grove murder. Yet there had been little evidence to go on, and his story had been long on lurid speculation. But now he was here on the heels of a second murder—a murder that, from the whispered rumors that surged through the crowd like electricity, was even worse. Maybe his editor was right. Maybe he should have been here in the wee hours of the morning, despite all the single-malt Scotch he had unwisely imbibed at the Algonquin with his buddies the night before.
Another thought occurred to Harriman. This was his chance to stick it to his old nemesis Bill Smithback, busy dipping his wick on his honeymoon. Angkor Wat, of all places. Smithback, that bastard, who now had his old spot at the Times—not through brilliant journalism, or even just plain old pavement-pounding, but through sheer dumb luck. He’d happened to be at the right place at the right time, not once, but several times: during the subway murders a couple years back, and then again just last fall, with the Surgeon murders. That last was particularly bitter: Harriman owned the story—he’d already beaten Smithback to the punch—but then that stupid police captain, Custer, had stuffed him with false leads . . .
It wasn’t fair. It was Harriman’s connections that had gotten him the job at the Times, that and his distinguished last name. Harriman was the one—with his carefully pressed Brooks Brothers suits and his repp ties—who belonged in the rarefied and elevated atmosphere of the Times. Not rumpled, slovenly Smithback, who had been quite at home among the bottom-feeders at the Post . . .
Water under the bridge. Now this was hot and Smithback was ten thousand miles away. If the killings went on—and Harriman fervently hoped they would—the story would only get bigger. There might be television opportunities, magazine articles, a big book contract. Maybe even a Pulitzer. With any luck, the Times would be only too happy to get him back.
He was jostled by an old man in a wizard costume, gave a hard shove back. There was an almost hysterical frenzy to the crowd Harriman had never seen before, a potentially dangerous mixture if you stopped to think about it: volatile, like a tinderbox.
There was a sudden noise off to one side, and Harriman looked over. Some Elvis impersonator in gold lamé—a halfway-decent-looking one, for a change—was blaring “Burning Love” with the aid of a portable karaoke machine:
“I feel my temperature rising.”
The crowd was growing noisier, more restless. Now and then Harriman could hear the distant shriek of a police siren.
“Lord Almighty, I’m burning a hole where I lay.”
He had his tape recorder ready; he could pick up some color to add to what he already had on the murder itself. He looked around. There was a guy at his elbow, in leather boots and a Stetson, carrying a crystal wand in one hand and a live hamster in the other. Nah: too weird. Someone more representative. Like that kid with the Mohawk not far away, in black. A pimply middle-class suburban kid trying to be different.
“Excuse me!” He elbowed his way toward the youth. “Excuse me! New York Post. Can I ask a few questions?”
The kid looked toward him, eyes lighting up. They were all so eager for their fifteen nanoseconds of fame.