Pulp Crime

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Pulp Crime Page 256

by Jerry eBooks


  Because of the sudden outcry from the stage, Kemp did not see Bobby Lane suddenly disappear through a side door. And the excitement was confined to those nearest the stage.

  Kemp had heard of the show manager, the civilian agent who was making the tour of the camps. And he saw him now. A tall and black-haired man strode quickly to the middle of the stage and he was signaling with both hands.

  “Ring it down, boys!” came the show manager’s voice.

  His name was Lonny Walsh, according to publicity. Now his tone was sharp and hard. Mary Morgan gripped Kemp’s arm. Apparently she had seen the same thing he had.

  “Don, that isn’t funny!” cried out Mary.

  It was not funny. There was an artist’s life-size drawing of Tina, the famous pin-up girl. Her shapely person was seemingly vital and living as it stood out against the black background on which the artist had painted his picture.

  From golden hair to slender ankles, the figure was one to bring forth an approving applause of the engineers that just as suddenly died out. That was why Lonny Walsh, the camp show manager, was ringing down the curtain. He ordered all stage lights off.

  For the green jade haft of a knife showed distinctly where the blade had been driven into the pin-up picture, just where the heart would have been in the living person of Tina Layton. “What the devil?” exploded Kemp, freeing himself from Mary Morgan, “Why, it’s my dagger—!”

  The exclamation had been shocked from him. He cut it off as Mary’s dark eyes widened. But Kemp did not wait He left Mary staring after him as he wedged his way to the side of the ballroom, and the narrow corridor leading backstage.

  The shouting in the ballroom had died out. There were angry murmurs coming from the men, frightened cries from the WACS and nurses who had come to see the show.

  The corridor was darkened. A shadowy figure brushed by Kemp. Instinctively he struck out with a quick, short left punch. A man grunted and fell down. Kemp kept on going. He had identified Legs McCarthy as he had fallen.

  An electrician and some other stage employees were collected in the stage wings. Kemp bore down upon them.

  “Where’s Miss Layton’s dressing room?” he inquired.

  “That way,” pointed a stage hand. “Who’re you—what the devil business—?”

  But Don Kemp was not answering questions. He was asking just now.

  He saw a door the hotel management had decorated with a gilt star. He tried the knob and the door was locked. He backed off and drove at it with one hard shoulder. Metal snapped. The room was all dark. Kemp cupped his cigarette lighter looking for the button. He kept the light cupped in his hands.

  Tina Layton, the pin-up girl, was there. She was alone. As alone as anyone could be with a green-hafted knife driven into her heart. “Her blue eyes were open, unseeing, but they seemed to Kemp to be asking a question—“Why, Don? Why?”

  One moment Kemp was down beside the pin-up girl. All she had been wearing was the skimpy sarong. Her body was still beautiful. Her face and her sightless blue eyes were ghastly.

  Yet Don Kemp held her in his arms for a few seconds. He scarcely considered the green-handled dagger. He kissed the cold lips, in farewell to the past.

  A hammering came at the door he had slammed shut. Kemp snapped to his feet. He moved to one side among a hanging collection of garments. The lights flashed on.

  Lonny Walsh, the swarthy stage manager was in the doorway, backed up by others.

  “For the love of heaven, look!” Lonny Walsh’s voice trembled. “It wasn’t just a show stunt. It’s true.”

  Kemp edged slowly toward two big wardrobe trunks.

  “The same kind of green jade dagger!” exclaimed Lonny Walsh. “Someone on this stage—no—Tina had that kind of a stabber! What does it mean?”

  Don Kemp crouched, considering his next move. The twin Spanish daggers, of Chinese origin probably, had been the gift of an uncle. Don had been in a laughing mood the night he had put a stone upon Tina’s finger and one of the twin daggers in her hand.

  He had said then, “Here’s my heart, Tina. You can bind it to you or use the knife.”

  She had been unwilling to accept the twin dagger. She had been shy, clinging to him.

  He had said, “Every time you see the dagger, you will know its mate is on my desk. You will think of me. It’s a swell letter opener.”

  Far away and long ago that seemed.

  Lonny Walsh stood with clenched fists. Beside him was the fussy, elegant dresser, Carlos Carnes, civilian assistant manager of the hotel who had remained as a director of other than army activities.

  Carnes was rubbing his hand along a thin nose. His light hair appeared to bristle and his mouth quivered.

  Several others of the traveling entertainers were crowding into the room. Lonny Walsh waved them back with a soulful oath. Legs McCarthy, one eye swollen, forced his way through the crowd to the inside.

  Lonny Walsh was bending down, looking at the death dagger.

  “Not a chance of fingerprints,” he said. “The jade haft’s all carved into little figures.”

  Carlos Carnes rubbed the back of a hand across his mouth. He seemed to have all the natural instincts of a hotel man, even if the army was in possession.

  “Can’t the army keep this from being smeared all over?” said Carnes. “It’ll be remembered when the hotel’s turned back.”

  Carnes’ interest in the dead girl, her body still warm and lovely, was purely business, it appeared.

  “Look!” said an entertainer. “Wasn’t there a little light like a match or some-thing beside the body when we came in?”

  That had been Don Kemp’s cigarette lighter. “Sure thing, and the shock almost made me forget it,” said Lonny Walsh. “Tina was killed in the past few minutes. It must have been the killer.”

  “If it was,” said Carlos Carnes, “he could be mixing up right now with the crowd. There was a small light and a man’s figure. Seeing the girl and that same dagger that was on the stage a few minutes ago made me forget it.”

  Baldish Bobby Lane thrust others aside and came in.” Bobby Lane’s eyes were bagged and his thick lips were too loose. But he appeared to have genuine grief.

  He cried out with an oath, then he was on the floor, one arm around the dead girl’s shoulders.

  “Who’s the killer—?” then Bobby Lane barely touched the tip of the dagger haft. “That stabber!” he cried out “Tina had one like it. She said it was a twin to a dagger owned by some engineer named Kemp, Lieutenant Don Kemp, I think. She’s—”

  Bobby Lane’s voice broke convincingly. “—the only girl I’ve ever really loved.”

  Don Kemp swore silently, holding to his hiding place behind the trunks. He knew that Bobby Lane had already had four wives and considerable other newspaper notice of woman troubles.

  A pair of tough M.P.s used their clubs to get through the room.

  “Get away from her, buddy!” rapped one at Bobby Lane. “Nobody’s to touch anything. What’s that about the dagger belonging to Lieutenant Don Kemp?”

  “Yeah, Tina had one of a pair Kemp had given her,” repeated Bobby Lane vindictively. “I demand Kemp’s immediate arrest.”

  “But, Bobby,” countered Tony Walsh. “It’s the same as the dagger someone stabbed into the heart of our life-size pin-up picture. Perhaps a search of the room—”

  “You’ll leave that to the regular cops, mister!” ordered one M.P. “This isn’t a part of the show. It’s murder and in the city of Miami Beach!”

  Apparently it had not occurred to anyone that the man seen with the light could still be hidden in the room. Kemp’s eyes strayed to the dressing table close beside his hideout trunks. A gold, beaded handbag lay there. He noticed that its clasp was open as if the murderer might already have explored its contents.

  Or it could have been left that way as Tina made up for the show.

  Kemp decided he had to take a chance. If he could reach out and snatch the handbag without being detected, th
ere was a possibility that it might contain some hint of a motive for killing the pin-up girl.

  An overalled stage hand spoke up then from the back of the crowd.

  “Heard you say that knife was the same as was in that pin-up picture on the stage,” he said. “Maybe it’s the same one. Anyway while the lights was out that knife was grabbed by somebody an’ we ain’t seen it since.”

  “When the city cops get here, we’ll pay a visit to Don Kemp’s quarters,” said one M.P.

  Legs McCarthy spoke almost viciously. “Kemp isn’t there! That’s where I got this eye! I met him in the stage corridor an’ he slammed me one!”

  “And what were you doing back here?”

  Tony Walsh’s black eyes glittered and he was quick. “Why—well, you see Tina Layton comes from my home town,” said McCarthy, the corps cameraman. “I was back here, yes, but her door was locked and she didn’t answer. I was going back out front when Lieutenant Kemp rushed me and slammed me one.”

  All interest was for seconds centered upon Legs McCarthy. Kemp saw his chance. He possessed the beaded handbag with cat-like quickness.

  Homicide men of the city police were coming in.

  There was light enough for Kemp to open the handbag. His first find was a half dozen letters, tied together.

  Kemp’s anger flared. The return marked was:

  “Thomas McCarthy,—th U. S. Army Engineers, Per Government Island, New York City:”

  Kemp had no opportunity to open a letter. But the situation was clear enough. Postmarks showed that Legs McCarthy had been writing regularly to Tina Layton, all letters addressed to Chicago.

  “Of all the double-crossing heels—” Kemp whispered it.

  Then he stopped. What might Tina have written to McCarthy? Evidently she had been wildly ambitious. Perhaps she was only playing Bobby Lane for a sucker.

  Kemp wondered how many war bond purchases might have gone into choosing the winner of the pinup contest?

  A Seargeant Reardon was in charge of the city homicide squad. Getting a quick review from the M.P.s, Reardon demanded, “Find this Lieutenant Don Kemp. Don’t waste time!”

  A musical, angry voice came from the doorway. Kemp risked being seen and had a glimpse of pretty, dark-eyed Mary Morgan.

  “Lieutenant Kemp was with me outside when this—this pin-up girl was killed!” she announced. “How about asking Bobby Lane some questions? I saw him go toward the stage just before the curtain went up on that dagger in the pin-up picture.”

  Bobby Lane turned toward her his mouth twisting. “That’s a blasted lie!” he mouthed. “I was outside when the curtain went up, and went into the hotel lobby to make a phone call.”

  “We’ll check with the switchboard operator,” said Sergeant Reardon.

  “I used the public dial phone in a booth and didn’t contact the operator,” hastily supplied Bobby Lane. “Why would I want to kill the girl I intended to marry?”

  “On the records you drop ’em fast!” snapped hardboiled Sergeant Reardon. “Maybe she had somethin’ on you, Lane. One of you take over her things. Where’s her handbag? A dame like her always has enough in one to fill a trunk.”

  Two minutes later the searchers announced that the murderer must have taken the handbag.

  Kemp thought, if Legs McCarthy happened to be the man, he would have taken his letters at least.

  Then, holding them in his hand, Kemp noticed a few words written across an envelope in Tina’s scrawly hand. As he was reading the brief sentence in amazement, Captain Morgan came in.

  Mary Morgan was still in the doorway. Kemp heard the C.O.‘s low-voiced command to the girl.

  “Go home—don’t make a fool of yourself over Kemp—we’ve been in his rooms—that dagger he always used on the draughting table is not there—”

  Kemp was still digesting Tina’s scrawled writing. “If anything happens to me, it’s because I talked too much to Bobby and Tony about how I would surprise them with what my pin-up picture is hiding in Don Kemp’s—”

  That was all. The girl might have been interrupted in her scribbling. But clearly she must have had a hunch that she was in danger. She could only have told Bobby Lane and Tony Walsh about the safe behind her pin-up picture, thought Kemp.

  And that stunt of the dagger thrust into the life-size pin-up drawing on the stage? Kemp squinted to study the face and small, beady eyes of Tony Walsh.

  What a throw-off alibi, virtually spoiling his show, that stabbing of a pin-up picture might have been!

  This Sergeant Reardon was tops at picking out what might turn out to be his meat. He rasped an order.

  “Clear the room, boys! You, Walsh, Carnes, Bobby Lane, and this girl with Don Kemp’s alibi, stick here! Don’t any of the rest of you leave the hotel!”

  The room was being cleared, except for those the police sergeant had named. Kemp was surprised that Legs McCarthy had not been included with the others told to stick.

  The police medical examiner was doing his stuff. The fingerprint boys were completely balked. The dagger haft was too rough to retain impressions. Virtually everything else in the dressing room might have been touched by any number of persons.

  The C.O., Captain Morgan, started to exercise his right. Murder was under civil law. But this hotel was military reservation.

  “My daughter will go to her room and be on call, Sergeant Reardon,” declared Captain Morgan. “She isn’t mixed up in this, except by the accidental meeting with Lieutenant Kemp.”

  Kemp’s whole attention was drawn to the girl’s flashing eyes and the quality of her sudden defiance.

  “I’m staying right here, father,” she declared. “They ore trying to put something onto Don Kemp. It’s my place beside him, if he is found. You see, this is all foolishness. I’m sorry for Tina Layton, but Don had given her up weeks ago. Don and I expect to announce our engagement.”

  Kemp really saw Mary Morgan then for the first time. Slim and straight, lovely and daring, she faced her father. Kemp uttered an inward groan. He knew now that this girl had been growing upon him, in spite of his bitterness over Tina’s sudden selfish ambition that had made her another person—a pin-up girl.

  “Okay, miss!” growled Reardon. “Clear ’em out! You stay, if you insist. Captain Morgan, the circumstances fit Lieutenant Kemp fairly straight. We’ll have to hold him when he is brought in.”

  The room was clearing. The murdered Tina’s scrawled words took on sudden, vital importance. Kemp realized that any one of four persons still in this room, although Legs McCarthy was trailing out slowly behind the others, might be the killer.

  And one or a pair or more could be involved in the theft of the tank plans from his room.

  Tony Walsh and Bobby Lane evidently had been told too much by Tina about his hidden safe.

  Legs McCarthy had been secretly corresponding with Tina. Had he made that double-crossing play for the girl, or for what he believed she might know?

  Kemp’s position could not be maintained much longer. It had been sheer audacity that had kept him behind the big trunks. He must get out, be free to put a finger upon the killer and the thief who had stolen the tank plans.

  As the space cleared about the dead girl, the idea came. Kemp looked at the small, brass square around the light button only eight or ten feet away.

  “It’s one chance and a long one,” he whispered. He slid his army .45 into his hand. Always a crack shot, he had no doubt what he could do to that light button and the wires connected with it.

  Then he fixed the position of everyone in the room. Legs McCarthy was just going through the door, slowly, as if there was something here that he wanted. It could be those letters.

  Bobby Lane was standing beside Tony Walsh, his apparently mournful eyes upon Tina’s body. Black-eyed Tony Walsh seemed to be studying everyone who went through the doorway. Carlos Carnes, the civilian manager, was rubbing at his nose in a worried way.

  Captain Morgan and Mary were to one side. The C.O. was red-faced wi
th anger and talking in a low tone to the livid girl. She was shaking her head with firm determination.

  Don Kemp lifted the army gun slowly. The explosion of the .45 was like a crack of thunder in that small room. There was a blue flash from the wall. Then there was almost instant and impenetrable darkness.

  Kemp dropped, crawling a few feet, coming up and diving as Sergeant Reardon roared out an oath.

  “Dumbheads! Get him! The killer’s been here all the time!”

  Reardon’s own Police Positive must have cracked and Captain Morgan called out.

  “Stop that! Someone will be killed! Block the door!”

  Don Kemp made a long dive to where Legs McCarthy was just departing. His hooked arm brought the cameraman of the corps crashing down.

  But there was a concerted rush for the door. As McCarthy fell, cursing wildly, a man screamed hoarsely. His death agony was almost like that of an animal.

  Sergeant Reardon blazed a flashlight across the room. Kemp let go of McCarthy and rolled. He saw Bobby Lane on the floor with blood pumping from his ripped throat. The millionaire playboy was speechless now and would be dead in seconds.

  Tall Tony Walsh had half fallen over the dying man. Kemp’s smashing bullet had torn the wiring and blown a fuse. The outside corridor was all in darkness.

  Kemp let go of McCarthy and came up. He smashed a left to Tony Walsh’s chin. But as Walsh fell, Kemp saw the pudgy white hand that thrust the jade-hafted dagger into Walsh’s pocket The dagger had been snatched from the pin-up girl’s heart.

  Kemp smacked the barrel of his gun across the teeth of Carlos Carnes, the civilian manager. As the man went down, Kemp whirled, talking, with Reardon and three other coppers covering him with their guns.

  “Lieutenant Kemp reporting, sir!” he snapped at Captain Morgan. “Plans two-four-three were stolen by one of these three men this afternoon! The blood on Carlos Carnes’ hand shows who knifed Bobby Lane, possibly because he was afraid he would talk. Before I’m under arrest, I would suggest Carnes’ rooms and all of the baggage of Bobby Lane and Tony Walsh be searched.”

 

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