"This is Sergeant Henderson, ma'am, of the Highway Patrol. Is this Mrs. McFadden?"
"Senior," she said. "I'm his mother."
"Yes, ma'am."
"I'll get him," she said. "Just a moment."
She put the handset carefully beside the base and then went upstairs. Charley's room was at the rear. When he had first gone on the job-working Narcotics undercover, which had pleased his mother not at all, the way he went around looking like a bum and working all hours at night-he had had his own telephone line installed.
Then, as happy as a kid with a new toy train, he had found a little black box in Radio Shack that permitted the switching on and off of the telephone ringer. It was a great idea, but what happened was that after he turned off the ringer, he forgot to turn it back on, which meant that either he didn't get calls at all, or the caller, as now, had the number of the phone downstairs, and she or his father had to climb the stairs and tell him he had a call.
She knocked at his door and, when there was no answer, pushed it open. Charley was lying facedown on the bed in his Jockey shorts, his arms and legs spread, snoring softly. That told her that he'd stopped off for a couple (to judge by the sour smell, a whole hell of a lot more than a couple) of beers when he got off work last night.
She called his name and touched his shoulder. Then she put both hands on his shoulders and bounced him up and down. He slept like the dead. Always had.
Finally he half turned and raised his head.
"What the hell, Ma!" Charley said.
"Don't you swear at me!"
"What do you want, Ma?"
"There's some sergeant on the phone."
Still half asleep, Charley found his telephone, picked it up, heard the dial tone, and looked at her in confusion.
"Downstairs," she said. "You and your telephone switch!"
He got out of bed with surprising alacrity and ran down the corridor. She heard the thumping and creaking of the stairs as he took them two at a time.
"McFadden," he said to the telephone.
"Sergeant Henderson, out at Bustleton and Bowler."
"Yes, sir?"
"You heard about Officer Magnella being shot last night?"
"Yeah."
"We're trying to put as many men on it as we can. Any reason you can't do some overtime? Specifically, any reason you can't come in at noon instead of four?"
"I'll be there."
Sergeant Henderson hung up.
Charley had two immediate thoughts as he put the phone in its cradle: Jesus, what time is it? and, an instant later, Jesus, I feel like death warmed over. I've got to start cutting it short at the FOP.
"What was that all about?" his mother asked from the foot of the stairs, and then, without waiting for a reply, "Put some clothes on. This isn't a nudist colony."
"I gotta go to work. You hear about the cop who got shot?"
"It was on the TV. What's that got to do with you?"
"They're still trying to catch who did it."
Mrs. Agnes McFadden had been the only person in the neighborhood who had not been thrilled when her son had been called a police hero for his role in putting the killer of Captain Dutch Moffitt of the Highway Patrol out of circulation. She reasoned that if Gerald Vincent Gallagher was indeed a murderer, then obviously he could have done harm to her only son.