The Body Snatchers Affair

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The Body Snatchers Affair Page 13

by Marcia Muller


  The Gold King business was still a disturbing puzzle. Had Carson been mixed up with the high graders and somehow escaped being identified as one of the gang? Had Artemas Sneed been paroled from San Quentin, and was he in fact blackmailing Carson? And what, in the name of all that was holy, was the bughouse Sherlock up to? If only she could talk to him again! She would demand straightforward answers this time, if necessary at gunpoint. But of all the tasks she had set for Slewfoot, Madame Louella, and their coterie of sources, the present whereabouts of the elusive Mr. Holmes would likely prove the most difficult.

  She mentally replayed her conversation with Ross Cleghorne. He’d said that Carson had returned to San Francisco and taken a position with Monarch Engineering in the summer of 1887, the same month that the gold-stealing scheme had unraveled and the known gang members arrested. A coincidence? Or—

  A sudden thought occurred to her. George M. Kinney, the man who had masterminded the gold-stealing plot, had been described by Ephraim Ballard as as an investor and former Gold King Mine stockholder. Had he been a client of Montgomery and DeSalle, Carson’s father’s brokerage firm? If so, it was quite possible Carson had known him.…

  Ross Cleghorne might have the answer to that, but asking him any more questions might put him on alert. Who else could she consult? Ah, yes, Theodore Bonesall. The manager of Western States Bank, he was both a stock-market investor and a former client for whom she and John had successfully handled an embezzlement matter.

  Western States Bank was on the Telephone Exchange. Sabina gave the operator the number, and after the usual delay in connecting and another as Mr. Bonesall was summoned to the telephone, she asked her carefully worded questions.

  He had two pieces of information for her. The first answered her queries and unfortunately added to her doubts about Carson. Yes, Mr. Bonesall said, he’d known George M. Kinney moderately well before greed and poor investments had brought about the man’s downfall. Kinney had in fact been a client of the Montgomery and DeSalle brokerage firm, and a close enough friend of Evander Montgomery that the latter reportedly had been badly shaken by the news of Kinney’s arrest and conviction. That being the case, it was almost certain that Carson and Kinney had been acquainted, thus strengthening the likelihood of Carson’s involvement in the gold-stealing operation.

  The second piece of information, casually offered by Mr. Bonesall near the end of their conversation, was bemusing in a different way. For he asked if she was still keeping company with Carson Montgomery. How had he known she was? Well, as he’d told her partner, she and Carson had been seen dining together on two occasions, once by him and once by an acquaintance.

  “You told this to Mr. Quincannon? Was he the one who brought up the subject?”

  “No, I did. We met in passing and spent a few minutes together over coffee. I happened to mention it to him, and I must say he was keenly interested. Shouldn’t I have?”

  She wanted to say, “No, you shouldn’t. My personal life is of no concern to anyone but me.” But it wouldn’t do to take a sharp tone with a former client who had been cooperative and might require the agency’s services again. She settled for saying, “It’s of no consequence, Mr. Bonesall. Thank you again for your time and your candor.”

  So John was aware of her liaison with Carson. Knowing John and how he felt about her, “keenly interested” was an understatement. More likely he had been and still was acutely jealous. And no doubt he considered the relationship to be much more intimate than it was, imagining all sorts of lewd goings-on between her and the suave Mr. Montgomery. Why hadn’t he said anything to her? Sneakily checking up on her and Carson? She wouldn’t put it past him. Well, as long as he kept quiet, so would she. Let him stew in his own masculine juices. It served him right.

  Sabina was just finishing up the paperwork when the young man arrived with an envelope clutched in one grubby hand. She knew him: a young half-wit named Cheney who acted as a runner and errand boy for several individuals, Madame Louella among them. He handed her the envelope without speaking, grinned foolishly when she gave him a quarter in exchange, and left her alone again.

  The sheet of notepaper inside the envelope bore a single line of writing in a flowing hand.

  Whereabouts A.S. known to me by 7 P.M.

  Madame L.

  A.S.—Artemas Sneed. The Gypsy fortune-teller had outdone herself; Sabina hadn’t expected to hear from one of her informants so soon. Very fast service, indeed.

  The Seth Thomas clock on the wall read 4:55 as Sabina pinned on her straw boater, donned her cape, and left the office. She had just enough time for an early, leisurely meal at Darnell’s, one of the small restaurants near Union Square she favored, before once more venturing to Madame Louella’s abode on Kearney Street. Despite another long day and the grim nature of the situation with Carson, she hadn’t lost her appetite: She was, in fact, famished.

  17

  QUINCANNON

  No sooner had he emerged from the building that housed Carpenter and Quincannon, Professional Detective Services, than he was accosted by Homer Keeps. The flatulent little muckraker for the Evening Bulletin had an air of sweaty eagerness, his puffy cheeks glistening in spite of the coolness of the afternoon. In the pocket of his cigar-ash-spotted coat he carried a folded copy of what was probably the latest edition of the rag that employed him.

  “Ah, finally,” he said. He removed the derby from his bald head, with its scraggly fringe of brown hair, and used it to fan himself as he spoke. “You’re a difficult man to track down, sir.”

  Quincannon’s desire to do Keeps bodily harm had cooled somewhat, though his fingers flexed and his palms itched at the man’s nearness. He said, “And you’re a difficult one to avoid,” and kept on walking down Market Street.

  Keeps scurried after him, caught his arm. This brought him once more to a halt, and earned the reporter a sharp swat on the knuckles. “Hands off, you little toad.”

  “Now, now.” The reporter sounded aggrieved, but there was malice in his subsequent grin—one which revealed large nicotine-stained teeth any horse in the city would have been ashamed to own. “I merely took hold of your sleeve. I could press charges for assault, you know,” he said, rubbing his knuckles. “And sue you for slander for the name you called me.”

  “You wouldn’t dare do either. You use a pen filled with poisonous lies and innuendo to do your dirty work.”

  “I write the truth as I see it.”

  “Bah. Go away and stay away, Keeps. I have nothing to say to you.” He began walking again.

  The little muckraker hurried to keep pace. “What are you trying to hide, Mr. Quincannon?”

  “From you, anything and everything.”

  “In particular the nature of your involvement in the Chinatown shooting, eh?”

  “Bah,” Quincannon said again. “I tried to prevent the death of James Scarlett while acting on behalf of a client. I was almost shot and killed myself, as you no doubt know.”

  “So you say. But is that the true version of what happened in Ross Alley?”

  “It is, no matter how you try to twist it otherwise.”

  Keeps showed his equine teeth again. “Mrs. Andrea Scarlett is your client, is she not? What have you done with her?”

  “Done with her? What kind of question is that?”

  “She’s nowhere to be found. Hiding her for some reason, are you?”

  “If I were, which I’m not, I wouldn’t admit it to the likes of you.”

  “What’s your connection with the Chinaman known as Little Pete?”

  “None whatsoever. Why mention his name?”

  “We both know he is behind the theft of Bing Ah Kee’s corpse.”

  “Do we? I’m sure I don’t know it.”

  “The police think he is,” Keeps said. “Why else would the Chinatown squad have raided Little Pete’s shoe factory today?”

  Quincannon scowled. “What’s that?”

  “Don’t tell me you don’t know about the no
on-hour raid.”

  “I will tell you that because it’s the truth. But I won’t ask you for the details; you’d only distort them.”

  “Read all about it in the latest edition of the Bulletin. I was fortunate enough to finish my bylined account just before deadline.”

  Keeps tried to hand over the folded newspaper; Quincannon refused to take it. “My reading habits don’t include trash.”

  The comment warped Keeps’s mouth into petulant lines. He produced a small notebook and began to scribble in it, muttering, “Private detective refuses to answer questions pertaining to attorney’s murder and raid on shoe factory, or his involvement with the heathen Chinee … caugghh!”

  The last utterance, a crowlike squawk, was the result of Quincannon taking hold of his throat in one splay-fingered hand. He didn’t squeeze as hard as he would have liked, barely squeezed at all as a matter of fact. But the grip was strong enough so that Keeps dropped the notebook and fumbled with both hands in a futile attempt to break free. A passing pedestrian, witnessing this, detoured widely around the two men.

  “Now you have genuine cause to charge me with assault,” Quincannon said menacingly. “But you won’t do that, will you?”

  “Caugghh.”

  “Nor will you publish any more vicious lies about me. Not if you value what’s left of your miserable life.” He relaxed his grip and then removed his hand. “Well? Do we understand each other?”

  Either Keeps had nothing to say or he had temporarily lost the power of speech. What he saw in Quincannon’s face caused his eyes to bulge even wider; he bent swiftly to retrieve his notebook, spun on his heel, and went scuttling away, casting several backward glances as if he were afraid of being chased.

  * * *

  The Hall of Justice was quiet in the aftermath of the raid on Little Pete’s factory. A small clutch of newshounds lurked in the vicinity of the front desk; Quincannon managed to avoid two of them, curtly refused comment when a third attempted to buttonhole him, and hurried upstairs to the detective division.

  Lieutenant Price was present but away from his office. Quincannon sat on a bench outside the slatted room divider and waited with as much patience as he could muster. He smoked one bowlful of shag and was halfway through another when Price finally returned.

  The American Terror looked like nothing of the sort. He appeared even more frazzled today, the luggage beneath his eyes larger and darker, both corners of his mustache now chewed into raggedness. He was not overjoyed to find Quincannon waiting for him.

  “You wouldn’t be here because you have information for me, I suppose?”

  Quincannon was not ready to share his suspicions about Mock Quan, and wouldn’t until he was able to back them up. He shook his head.

  “Because of the raid this noon, then.”

  “I just learned of it, yes.”

  Price sighed heavily. “Well, all right, come into my office. I’ll give you five minutes.”

  Once they were seated in the small, cluttered office, Price rubbed his tired eyes and gnawed a few more hairs off his mustache before he spoke. “There being no new developments overnight, Chief Crowley decided we’d waited long enough. I tried to talk him out of it but once his mind is made up…”

  “Did you lead the raid?”

  “Yes. Better me than Sergeant Gentry. I don’t mind saying he’s a hothead. If he’d had his way, there likely would’ve been more violence than there was.”

  “How much was there?”

  “One man dead,” Price said bleakly. “One of Pete’s bodyguards drew a knife and Gentry was forced to shoot him in self-defense. Unfortunately in one sense, perhaps fortunately in another.”

  “How do you mean?”

  “The highbinder had a letter in his possession bearing James Scarlett’s letterhead and signature.”

  “Oh? What kind of letter?”

  “One linking Scarlett and Fong Ching.”

  Quincannon scowled. “I find that hard to believe. If Scarlett was a traitor to the Hip Sing, why wasn’t he shot by one of their hatchet men instead?”

  “Working both ends against the middle, perhaps.”

  “Are you certain the letter is genuine?”

  “It would seem to be.”

  “But you’re not convinced?”

  “No. Although I can’t think of any plausible reason why it should have been faked.”

  Neither could Quincannon at the moment. But the piscine odor tickled his nostrils again. “If it is genuine,” he said, “why would Little Pete’s bodyguard have had it in his possession? Why not Pete himself? For that matter, why would it have been kept at all?”

  “All questions without answers yet.”

  “What did Pete have to say?”

  “He denied any knowledge of the letter, of course—loudly and indignantly proclaimed it a forgery. Denied any involvement with Scarlett whatsoever. He defied us to find any more such evidence on the premises or anywhere else in his domain.”

  “And you found none.”

  “We went over his office and the rest of the factory with a fine-tooth comb. His home as well. Not so much as a scrap tying him to Scarlett, or to indicate he was responsible for the Bing Ah Kee snatch.”

  “So you didn’t take him into custody.”

  “No. Gentry argued that the letter was sufficient cause, but without additional evidence…” Price essayed a frustrated shrug.

  “Have there been any repercussions from the raid?”

  “Not as far as we know. The sergeant was all for raiding Kwong Dock headquarters, too, but I quashed that notion. It would have been incendiary as well as another waste of time.”

  “The pot’s bubbling hot enough as it is,” Quincannon agreed.

  “Close to boiling over is more like it.” Price glanced at the Seth Thomas clock mounted on one wall. “Your five minutes are up.”

  Quincannon stood. “Before I go,” he said, “would you allow me a look at the letter found on the dead bodyguard?”

  “I might if I had it, but I don’t. The chief took possession, and I’m not about to invade his office on your behalf.”

  “Would you at least tell me the gist of it?”

  “It refers to payments allegedly made by Little Pete to Scarlett for inside information about Hip Sing activities. Amounts totaling nearly five thousand dollars.” Price rubbed again at his bloodshot eyes. “On your way. And don’t forget your promise to bring me anything pertinent you might come up with.”

  “I won’t.”

  The letter was a forgery for sure, then, Quincannon thought as he left the lieutenant’s office. Even an opium addict would not have been fool enough to commit to paper word of such underhanded dealings. But a forgery ordered by whom? Mock Quan?

  * * *

  No one else had passed through the portal marked J. H. SCARLETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW since Quincannon’s nocturnal visit. Or if anyone had, it’d been without any further disturbance of the premises.

  He set about once more sifting through the dead lawyer’s papers. His previous search had been as hasty as his predecessor’s, and it was possible that they had both overlooked something of importance.

  No, not a possibility but a fact, as he discovered when he carefully examined the documents pertaining to Scarlett’s work for the Hip Sing. The hunch that bit him after several minutes of this had plenty of teeth: One name reappeared in similar context in several of the files, and the more he saw it, the more furiously his nimble brain clicked and whirred. When he stood at last from the desk, hunch had become certainty. He gathered the files together and tucked them under his arm. His smile and the oath he uttered through it had a wolfish satisfaction as he left the office.

  He knew now most of what there was to know. Only a few of the game’s pieces were still missing, the largest of them the one that had eluded him from the first—the significance of Fowler Alley.

  18

  SABINA

  Madame Louella’s fortune-telling parlor was one of se
veral such establishments on the section of Kearney Street north of Market. There were a number of fortune-tellers doing business here, as well as such other charlatans as hypnotists, clairvoyants, astral seers, astrologists, phrenologists, even an alectromancer with cages full of roosters—all operating cheek by jowl with saloons, painless dentists, postcard sellers (which no doubt included the French variety sold from under the counter), auction houses, cheap clothing stores, and shooting galleries. During the evening hours the area was packed with crowds of citizens taking part in the nightly ritual stroll along what was known as the Cocktail Route, from the Reception Saloon on Sutter to the Palace Hotel Bar at Third and Market and scores of watering holes in between. Here, flaring torches and Salvation Army band music and the cries of sellers and pitchmen created a carnivallike atmosphere that would last for several hours.

  This evening’s bacchanal was in full swing when Sabina arrived shortly before seven o’clock. She had walked the “Ambrosial Path” before, most recently on the trail of a vicious woman pickpocket at the beginning of what she and John termed the Bughouse Affair—one of the few women to do so who was not trolling nymphes du pavé. As a result she moved swiftly through the crush of humanity here, ignoring the entreaties of the hawkers and the bold stares and bolder comments of well-dressed men and street characters alike, many of whom were deep in drink.

  Her destination, a narrow storefront on the block between Bush and Pine, was flanked on one side by a charlatan who billed himself as “The Napoleon of Necromancers” and on the other by MRS. BRADLEY, FASHIONABLE CLOAK MAKING. A large sign above the entrance proclaimed:

  MADAME LOUELLA

  FUTURES TOLD—25¢

  SEES ALL, KNOWS ALL, TELLS ALL!

  Sabina detoured around a lady of the evening touting her charms to a well-dressed businessman and climbed a short flight of stairs to the second floor. The fortune-teller’s door was covered with symbols—stars, planets, fog formations—that Madame Louella claimed were native to the Gypsy tribes of Transylvania where she’d been born. This was a patent fabrication. Sabina knew for a fact that the woman had been born Louella Green in Ashtabula, Ohio, where she’d been a problem child—truancy, shoplifting. When a band of confidence tricksters temporarily posing as patent medicine drummers had passed through on their way west, she had persuaded them to take her along. It was from them she’d learned the Gypsy fortune-telling dodge.

 

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