Kurt von Fahlendorf; they sat together in the front row, together with a very elderly fellow of the kind Carmine always called a âDapper Danââa bit like the 1930s movie star, William Powell, even including the little mustache.
Kurt von Fahlendorf was a looker in any language. Six feet tall, a good physique, and the kind of Nordic good looks a fan of Teutonic myth might associate with Siegfried. His crew-cut hair was so fair that it glittered as if made of frostâno fan of the fashionable Beatles-length hair here! His eyes were the same shade of ice-blue as Desdemonaâs, and his facial features sharply defined, including high cheekbones that made it easy to mentally put a Wehrmacht generalâs cap on his head. Odd, that he didnât look Gestapo. Maybe thatâs because I heard Helen on Prussian junkers? To Carmine he seemed cold in a scientific way; the eyes were extremely intelligent, but not involved as were the eyes of Mason Novak next to him. This was a passionate man, about the same height and physique as von Fahlendorf, but coppery in coloring and owning a face most women would probably prefer to the Prussianâs; despite his facial irregularities, Mason was powerfully attractive. The heart and soul of the Gentleman Walkers? Yes, he looked all of that. The way he and Kurt sat said that they were very good friends who trusted each other, which said a lot about both men. Probably not the Dodo.
Mark then asked each Walker to rise and give his name; after driving around Carew and looking at records, this was a bonus Carmine hadnât expected. He had imagined that he would be obliged to demand identification, which would have put the meeting on a different, more antagonistic footing. Sugarman was a good guy. Feinman was a youthful sixty-eight, fit and appealing; he probably had no trouble pulling women. Arnold Hedberg looked studious, Mike Donahue looked as if he went rock climbing for pleasure, Gregory Pendleton was darkly handsome, Bill Mitski a âgoldâ manâhair, eyes, skin.
What all shared was remarkable physical fitness, and none was small in stature, maybe because small men would have found it hard to stay in stride with long-legged men: a manâs height was in his legs, not his trunk.
âOur patrols are convivial because we always walk with the same companions,â said Dapper Dave.
âDo you roster everybody?â Delia asked.
âYes, for every second night, come hell or rainstorms,â Sugarman answered. âWe field twenty-four trios, with two men in reserve. As Dave says, always the same three men in a trio. They sorted themselves out amicably during the first six weeks, and havenât changed since. So on any one night, we saturate the district. Thatâs why we donât understand how weâve missed him.â
âYou walk at the wrong hour, Mr. Sugarman,â Nick said. âHe starts earlier than you do, so by the time youâre on the streets, heâs already inside his premises of choice.â
âYes, but he has to come out!â
âIf he were a run-of-the-mill rapist, sir, youâre right, he would be leaving while youâre patrolling. Unfortunately he makes a night of it,â Nick said. âInstead of attacking and leaving at once, he remainsâand rapes multiple timesâfor about five hours. So heâs in before you start, and not out until way after youâve all gone home.â
âWeâre useless !â Mason Novak cried, voice breaking.
âNo, sir, youâre not,â Carmine said in a strong, positive voice. âLook at what you know youâve done! While youâre on the streets patrolling, the women of Carew know they can walk safely. Youâve apprehended three potential rapists. And as long as you enjoy the exercise, keep on going. Your activities may not affect the Dodo, but they do make Carew safer nonetheless.â
That made them feel better; they
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