Without Mercy

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Authors: Len Levinson, Leonard Jordan
Tags: Literature & Fiction, Mystery, Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, Hard-Boiled, Police Procedurals
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looked into Rackman’s eyes as if his pain could be absorbed and ameliorated by them.
    “Can you come with me now?” Rackman asked gently.
    Fournier nodded. They stood and Rackman led the way out of the bar. They got into his car and drove downtown, wondering where the killer was and why he was knifing prostitutes. On lower Broadway, he figured Fournier had recovered his composure sufficiently to be of use.
    “Mr. Fournier, I’d like to ask you a couple of questions, if you don’t mind.”
    Fournier reflected for a few moments, as they passed dark factory buildings. “Go ahead, m’sieu.”
    “Did you or your wife know a woman named Cynthia Doyle?”
    “Cynthia Doyle? No.”
    “Your wife was killed by a big heavyset man about my height, with short black hair. He wore a red and black wool jacket. Do you know such a person?”
    “No.”
    “Can you remember seeing such a person recently?”
    “I do not think so.”
     

Chapter Five
    Rackman stopped his unmarked Plymouth in front of a white east side apartment building that looked like an upended carton of a dozen eggs. It was fifteen minutes after midnight and he’d just dropped Fournier off at his hotel. Fournier had identified Rene LeDoux, alias Rene Fournier, in the morgue. It seemed certain that the same person had killed Cynthia Doyle and Rene LeDoux, but they still had no solid leads.
    Rackman pulled down his Official Police Investigation sign and got out of the car. The doorman recognized him and said hello. Rackman got into the elevator, rode to the third floor, and knocked on Francie’s door.
    She opened it and gave him a cross look. Wearing jeans and a white blouse, she was slim with large breasts, auburn hair, and finely chiseled Anglo-Saxon features. Rackman thought she resembled Greta Garbo a little.
    “Hi baby,” he said, kissing her cheek.
    She looked away. “I thought you’d forgotten all about me.”
    “How could anyone ever forget about you?”
    “You’re not even in the door yet and already you’re bullshitting me.”
    “I’m not bullshitting you.”
    “You know very well that you hardly ever think about me.”
    “I think about you all the time, but I’m busy.”
    “Nobody could possibly be that busy.”
    She led him past the tank of tropical fish into her living room, which doubled as her bedroom. She’d been sitting on her red corduroy sofa reading a script. At the age of thirty-two she still was taking acting classes and workshops, still hoping for her big break. Across the room against the far wall, in an elaborate plastic apparatus of tubes, boxes, and treadmills, was her pet hamster, Ziggy, looking at him.
    He sat on the sofa and took out a cigarette. The atmosphere was laden with frustration and repressed anger. The look in her eyes hit him like a blast of arctic air.
    “Can I get you a drink?” she asked.
    “Yes.”
    She went to the kitchen, futzed around, returned with a bourbon and water, and placed it on the coffee table before him. Then she sat so far over on the opposite side of the sofa that if she had moved over a few more inches she’d have fallen over the armrest onto the floor.
    He sipped the whiskey and puffed his cigarette. “What’s wrong with you?” he asked.
    “I think it’s time that we had a talk about our relationship and where it’s going,” she said.
    “That’s all we ever talk about, Francie.”
    “I think you’re afraid to have a real relationship with me.”
    “Here we go again.”
    “I think you’ve been traumatized by the relationships you’ve had with your wives and now you’re afraid of women.”
    “I’m very busy, Francie. I don’t have much time for seeing people.”
    “That’s only an excuse. If people like each other they find time to get together.”
    “I work fourteen hours a day. People are killing each other without letup out there. Did you read in the paper about the girl who got her throat cut in an alley on the west side the other night?”
    “I don’t read

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