“He ain’t going to answer you,” Gene said impatiently.
“I didn’t think he would… which means he’s afraid I might recognize his voice.”
Gene frowned and his eyes were baffled now. “Damned if I see any way except to bump you both.”
“Please, Shayne,” Carlton cried hoarsely, cowering in his straight-backed chair again. “You have no right to jeopardize my position, also. I’m merely an innocent bystander, and you talked me into this dangerous situation. If I hadn’t listened to your arguments last night I wouldn’t be in this predicament.”
“But you’d have a dirty smear on your conscience.”
“I don’t care about my conscience. All I ask is to be allowed to go in peace.” Sweat stood on Carlton’s face between the strips of adhesive.
Shayne said, “I’m willing to listen to a proposition.” He turned to Gene with lifted brows.
“I’ve told you the only way the boss will dicker.”
Shayne sighed. “There’s our impasse again.” He lit a cigarette and inhaled deeply, with every indication of great enjoyment of the situation.
“We’ll have to see can we persuade you,” Gene said.
“I don’t persuade easily.”
“Then it’ll be just that much tougher on you.”
Shayne was keenly aware of his sore, broken ribs, but he argued placidly, “If the boss is smart he knows that torture never accomplished anything. Sure, you can maybe make me talk, but you’ll never know how much of it is the truth.”
Carlton rose from his chair and cried wildly, “How can you be so stubborn, Shayne? Don’t you realize we’ll both die if you don’t tell them what they want to know?”
“I don’t think so. They don’t dare kill me and they know it.” Shayne threw his lighted cigarette on the floor. He lifted his body with both hands gripping the back of the heavy wooden chair. “Know what I’m going to do?” He addressed Gene in a calm, conversational tone.
Gene took a backward step. “You better watch your step, Shamus.”
“You’re the one who’d better be watching your step,” Shayne grated. His anger anaesthetized the pain in his ribs as he lifted the chair. “I’m going to smash your head with this, then I’m going to unlock that door and walk out.” He moved forward, stalking the small dark man.
“No! Don’t do it,” Carlton screamed hysterically. “For God’s sake don’t! They’re waiting outside with guns.”
“You keep out of this,” Shayne growled, not looking at him.
Gene cowered, unarmed, against the door. Shayne set himself and swung the chair over his head.
There was another squawk of protest from Carlton, who lunged forward and threw his weight desperately against Shayne’s legs.
Shayne and the chair and Carlton went to the floor together. Cursing, Shayne extricated himself, got to his feet in time to see Gene dash through the door and slam it shut in his face.
He dived for the knob, but the door was locked again from the outside. He turned and grabbed the chair, raging at Carlton, “They’ll get away now, goddamn it. If you’d left me alone…”
“If I had let you go on with it we’d both have been shot,” Carlton said in a shaky tremolo.
Shayne’s hard gray eyes rested on him for a moment. He said, “I think they would have, at that.” Then he snorted in disgust and swung the chair over his head to bring it down savagely against the door.
A panel splintered under the impact and the sound of a racing motor came clearly as Shayne swung the chair again. This time the whole upper portion of the door gave way. He reached out and turned the key in the lock, opened the door and rushed out in time to see a red tail light fade away.
Carlton peered out fearfully, then came gingerly to join him. Shayne muttered angrily. “They’ve taken my car… and I don’t know where the hell we are.” He turned about, trying to get his bearings in the moonlight.
Carlton caught his arm and exclaimed, “They left my car.”
Shayne muttered, “If they left the keys.” He sprinted across the walk and plowed through the sand to Carlton’s green Buick coupe.
Carlton raced up beside him panting for breath. He pushed in beside Shayne and felt for the keys. “They’re here,” he said and gasped with relief.
“Get under the wheel,” Shayne ordered, “and let’s get to a telephone.” He got in on the right-hand side and leaned out to get his bearings as Carlton pulled away fast. By the time they had gone two blocks he had the location of the cabin fixed in his mind. It was in the midst of the undeveloped hammocked section in the south part of the city, lying about half-way between the bayfront and Coral Gables.
“Turn left at the first corner,” Shayne directed. “That’ll take us out to a little business section.”
Carlton drove ably and fast. He regained his composure and was no longer the shrinking thing he had been when he thought death was inevitable.
When he pulled up in front of a drugstore Shayne had the door open. He leaped out as the coupe slid to a stop. He ran in past a couple of startled loungers at the counter and on to the phone booth in the rear.
Dialing Will Gentry’s number and waiting impatiently for an answer, he tugged at his earlobe. When Gentry said, “Hello,” Shayne barked, “Get a call out on my car, Will.” He gave the license number. “A couple of hoods stole it… probably headed for Coral Gables.”
Gentry growled, “Hold it.”
Shayne waited and could hear a mumble as Gentry transmitted the order to the radio operator; then Gentry’s sharp demand in his ears, “What’s doing, Mike?”
“We’re on the last lap, Will. I haven’t time to go into it now, but get some men together right away. You’ll be using them soon.”
Gentry groaned and said, “Maybe you want this. Those prints on the liquor glass belong to a guy named Donald Frazier. A two-time loser. Last released from San Quentin a year ago. Counterfeiting both times. And that forty-five with the busted trigger from Tahiti Beach… Ballistics says it’s the same gun that fired the slugs into that kid in the railroad yards this morning.”
“That ties it up in a knot,” said Shayne exultantly. “I’ll call you, Will.” He dropped the receiver and loped back to the car, ordered Carlton:
“Get out to that printing plant of yours… fast.”
CHAPTER 15
Herbert Carlton meshed the gears obediently, turned a taped face toward Shayne which showed more than the horror of drawn lines. His eyes were terrified. He panted, “My… printing plant?”
“That’s right. And step on it. Bartel will be there, won’t he?”
“Why… he often works at night since I’ve had to be away from the office.”
“Alone?” Shayne asked grimly.
“Yes… at night. I have a boy who helps in the daytime. What…?”
“Faster,” Shayne interrupted, glancing at the speedometer. “I’ll take care of any cops.”
Mr. Carlton licked his lips and demanded with asperity, “What is this about Bartel… and my printing plant?”
“In the first place, his name is not Bartel. He’s Donald Frazier, an ex-convict.”
“Bartel! An ex-convict?”
“That’s right. He’s done a lot of time for counterfeiting. This time he’ll do a lot more,” Shayne ended grimly.
“But I… I don’t understand,” Carlton stammered.
“He’s been using your plant to run off forged gasoline ration books. Hell, it was perfect, being there alone at night.”
“But… are you positive?” Carlton quavered. “I don’t… why, I trusted Bartel implicitly.”
“I knew I’d seen his mug somewhere,” Shayne explained. “I checked his fingerprints. Can’t you, for God’s sake, get any more speed out of this bus?”
“I’m going fifty,” Carlton said with dignity, but he pressed the speedometer harder. “Does that mean that you suspect him of having a hand in that murder last night?”
“That’s something I want you t
o think about,” Shayne urged. “Visualize that car speeding past you last night. Could Frazier, I mean Bartel, have been one of the men?”
“I believe he could,” Carlton said excitedly. His hands shook on the wheel and the coupe swerved sideways. He righted it and rounded a corner leading into a Coral Gables business street. “I’ve had a tantalizing feeling of familiarity all the time,” he went on miserably. “That’s one reason why I was so loath to say I could make a positive identification. I felt I should know, yet I didn’t.”
He slowed the car and Shayne asked sharply, “How much farther?”
“Middle of the next block.”
“Do you have a gun?”
“Yes. There’s one in the glove compartment. I always carry it in the car.”
Shayne opened the compartment and felt among some papers and tools, drew out a tiny pearl-handled automatic which he regarded with disgust.
“A twenty-five. If you want to hurt a guy I suppose you crack him on the head or throw it at him.” He dropped the pistol onto the seat beside him as Carlton pulled up to the curb in the middle of the block.
“He’s not here,” Carlton said. “That’s the office.”
At that instant lights came on behind a wide plateglass window across the sidewalk from them. Through the window they saw the tall figure of the ex-convict turning away from a drop-cord dangling from the ceiling light. The street door was open.
Shayne slid out and without a word started across the sidewalk to the open door. There was a plain business office with a high board partition all the way across the back. Frazier was on his way toward a door in the partition when Shayne stepped inside.
Frazier, alias Bartel, looked at Shayne, smiled thinly and asked, “Looking for me?”
Shayne heard Carlton coming across the sidewalk. Shayne said, “That’s right, Frazier,” and started forward slowly.
Frazier’s gaze darted past Shayne. His smile went away. He hunched his shoulders and stepped swiftly toward a desk.
“Look out!” Carlton yelled, “he’s going to…”
There was a light spatting sound… as though the publisher had clapped his palms together.
Frazier swayed in his tracks, dropped to his knees, then toppled sideways to the floor and lay very still.
Shayne strode to the body and stood over it. He said, “I’ll be goddamned,” and turned to look at Carlton.
Carlton was staring stupidly at the baby automatic hanging limply in his hand. A thready wisp of white smoke curled upward from the muzzle. He whispered hoarsely, “It… went off.”
“Right between the eyes,” Shayne grated. “That would be shooting, if you’d meant it.”
Carlton began to tremble violently. He rubbed the back of one hand across his eyes. “I guess I did mean it… sort of. When he started for that desk I remembered that he always kept a gun in the drawer. I… I didn’t know what to do.”
Shayne said, “I’ll never call one of those a plaything again.” He stepped over Frazier’s body to the desk, asking, “Which drawer?”
“His gun? In the top right-hand, I think.”
Shayne opened the top right-hand drawer and pawed around, then tried the other drawers, but came up with only a handful of Hammond Bond typewriter paper. “I don’t find any gun, but here’s some of the same paper those anonymous letters were written on.”
“But I know he always kept a pistol there,” Carlton persisted in a quavering voice. “Said it made him feel better working alone at night.”
“What caliber was it?”
“I don’t know. I don’t know much about guns.” He looked at the. 25 in his hand and shuddered. “Some larger than this one.”
“A thirty-two is the next size larger,” Shayne told him. “Clem Wilson was killed with a thirty-two.” He went to the telephone and called Gentry’s office. Giving him the address of the printing plant, he added, “There’s a dead ex-con lying on the floor here. He matches those fingerprints I gave you today.”
He listened for a moment, then said impatiently, “I didn’t gun him. We’ll have to give Mr. Carlton credit for that. Have somebody case this joint carefully for evidence that ration books have been forged here. And how about that pick-up on my car?”
“Your car is located,” Gentry told him. “Empty gas tank. Near the Coral Gables entrance gates.” He specified the exact location.
“Things are speeding up,” Shayne warned him. “And I’m still going to need those men. I’ve got one more call to make before we pull the curtain down.” He hung up and said to Carlton:
“I’ve got things to do. Stay here until the police come and tell them just how it happened.” He strode out before the publisher could protest, hurried up the street to a taxi and got in, directing the driver to the location of his car.
A radio car was parked beside his deserted sedan when the taxi drew up. Shayne got out and paid the driver, approached a grinning policeman at the wheel of the police car.
“You’ll be calling on us to find your hat for you next, Mike,” the officer chuckled.
Shayne grinned agreement, “Or my badge. You got some of those emergency cans of gasoline in this hack?”
“Standard equipment since rationing,” he said.
“This is an emergency. Let’s have it.” Shayne unscrewed his tank top.
The officer got out and brought a full gallon can, poured the contents into Shayne’s tank, and reminded him, “I’ll have to take a receipt for that.”
Shayne scribbled his name on a blank pad the policeman held for him, thanked him, and got into his car. It took only a few minutes to reach the small stucco bungalow where he had left Mrs. Wilson some fifteen hours earlier. There were lights in the front windows.
Mrs. Wilson opened the door to Shayne’s knock. She was alone in the small, cheery living room, and explained, “Sarah’s lyin’ down in back. I told her she could just as well take it easy while I’m here to do for her.” Her tragic eyes searched Shayne’s face anxiously as she spoke.
He took off his hat and tangled his red hair, said, “That’s just as well. My news isn’t very good, Mrs. Wilson.”
She steadied herself with one blue-veined hand on the back of a chair. “You… ain’t found the man that shot Clem?”
Shayne didn’t look at her. “I know who he is.” He paused, then added gently, “I’m sorry.”
“You mean… Bob, don’t you?” Her voice was flat, devoid of any emotion.
Shayne asked, “Did you know all the time?”
“I didn’t, Mr. Shayne. I was scared…” Her voice broke. She recovered and went on strongly, “I won’t protect him if that’s what you’re thinking. I would from desertin’, no matter how shamed I was. I guess any mother would. But not if he killed his own father.”
Shayne dropped into a chair and took out a cigarette. “You better tell me all about it now.”
Her thin lips worked in a spasm, as though she urged them to speak. Presently, she began:
“It started when that Army man come out an’ told us Bob had run away… deserted. Clem was that mad he swore Bob wasn’t no son of his no longer. He cut his picture off that’n of Bob and Joe on the wall. And he swore to the officer he’d turn Bob in like any other deserter if he showed his face at home.” She paused and covered her face with her hands.
After a moment she continued, “Two days ago a man come out an’ talked to Clem. I didn’t hear what was said, but Clem told me. The man said Bob was in Miami hidin’ from the Army. Bob was afraid to face Clem hisself, but told the man to say he’d be all right an’ wouldn’t get arrested if Clem would agree to sell his station for most nothin’. Well, Clem told him plenty, I reckon. Said to tell Bob he’d have no truck with him an’ he’d give Bob one chance to give hisself up to maybe make it easier on him. He gave him till midnight last night.”
Her voice broke again. She wiped tears from her eyes with the back of her hand and went on in a hushed voice:
“An’ it was right on to midnigh
t when Clem come in mad an’ wantin’ to call you. I got to thinkin’… after a while it was when it come to me… I got to thinkin’, what if it was Bob out there? If he saw his father go to the phone… but I couldn’t believe it. Not my boy. An’ Clem had allus been so good to his younguns. Bob was wild, but he wouldn’t… he couldn’t do that. I knew he wouldn’t.”
Shayne said, “You should have told me right away. It was wrong to protect a deserter.”
“I know it, Mr. Shayne. I know it. I prayed over it last night but I couldn’t see what was right to do.”
Shayne got up and said, “I don’t think Bob killed his father, Mrs. Wilson, but he has to be arrested for desertion.”
She caught the arms of her chair, braced herself stiffly and looked up at him incredulously. “You mean it?” Then she sank back moaning, “Oh, thank God if he didn’t! That’s all I care now. I know he’s got to pay for desertin’.”
Shayne pulled his hat down over his tangled hair. “Try not to worry about it. I’ll call you just as soon as anything happens.” He hurried out to his car.
Driving back to the city on the Tamiami Trail, Shayne slowed as he approached the last filling station at which he had attempted to buy bootleg gasoline. He saw an elderly man leaning against one of the pumps, and the plump woman was nowhere in sight. The station was one of those checkmarked on Eddie Seeney’s list.
He pulled into the station and stopped. The man hurried to the open door of Shayne’s car and said, “Evenin’, stranger. Somethin’ for you?”
Shayne said, “I’m in a hell of a jam. Got a date with a doll on the Beach and no gas. I’d pay plenty for a couple of gallons.”
“No coupons, I reckon.”
“No. I’ve used them all up. Look, I…”
“Nothin’ doin’, Mister.” The man backed away. “I’d sure like to ’blige you, but I can’t do it. Not the way things are.”
“You needn’t be afraid of me.” Shayne reached for his wallet, flipped it open and drew out the green membership card of the Motorist Protective Association. “See? I’m all right.”
Heads You Lose ms-8 Page 14