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"I could build it up to five."
He shook his head. "I don't know the party. Not by that name. All kinds of dames come here, mostly pretty flashy. I don't get introduced." He grinned.
I got my wallet out and put three ones in his little damp paw. I added a business card.
"I like small close-built men," I said. "They never seem to be afraid of anything. Come and see me some time."
"I might at that, Jack. Thanks. Linda Conquest, huh? I'll keep my ear flaps off."
"So long," I said. "The name?"
"They call me s.h.i.+fty. I never knew why."
"So long, s.h.i.+fty."
"So long. Gat under his arm-in them clothes? Not a chance."
"I don't know," I said. "He made the motion. I'm not hired to gunfight with strangers."
"h.e.l.l, that s.h.i.+rt he's wearing only got two b.u.t.tons at the top. I noticed. Take him a week to pull a rod from under that." But he sounded faintly worried.
"I guess he was just bluffing," I agreed. "If you hear mention of Linda Conquest, I'll be glad to talk business with you."
"Okay, Jack."
I went back along the black driveway. He stood there scratching his chin.
SIX.
I drove along the block looking for a place to park so that I could run up to the office for a moment before going on downtown.
A chauffeur-driven Packard edged out from the curb in front of a cigar store about thirty feet from the entrance to my building. I slid into the s.p.a.ce, locked the car and stepped out. It was only then that I noticed the car in front of which I had parked was a familiar-looking sand-colored coupe. It didn't have to be the same one. There were thousands of them. n.o.body was in it. n.o.body was near it that wore a cocoa straw hat with a brown and yellow band.
I went around to the street side and looked at the steering post. No license holder. I wrote the license plate number down on the back of an envelope, just in case, and went on into my building. He wasn't in the lobby, or in the corridor upstairs.
I went into the office, looked on the floor for mail, didn't find any, bought myself a short drink out of the office bottle and left. I didn't have any time to spare to get downtown before three o'clock.
The sand-colored coupe was still parked, still empty. I got into mine and started up and moved out into the traffic stream.
I was below Sunset on Vine before he picked me up. I kept on going, grinning, and wondering where he had hid. Perhaps in the car parked behind his own. I hadn't thought of that.
I drove south to Third and all the way downtown on Third. The sand-colored coupe kept half a block behind me all the way. I moved over to Seventh and Grand, parked near Seventh and Olive, stopped to buy cigarettes I didn't need, and then walked east along Seventh without looking behind me. At Spring I went into the Hotel Metropole, strolled over to the big horseshoe cigar counter to light one of my cigarettes and then sat down in one of the old brown leather chairs in the lobby.
A blond man in a brown suit, dark gla.s.ses and the now familiar hat came into the lobby and moved un.o.btrusively among the potted palms and the stucco arches to the cigar counter. He bought a package of cigarettes and broke it open standing there, using the time to lean his back against the counter and give the lobby the benefit of his eagle eye.
He picked up his change and went over and sat down with his back to a pillar. He tipped his hat down over his dark gla.s.ses and seemed to go to sleep with an unlighted cigarette between his lips.
I got up and wandered over and dropped into the chair beside him. I looked at him sideways. He didn't move. Seen at close quarters his face seemed young and pink and plump and the blond beard on his chin was very carelessly shaved. Behind the dark gla.s.ses his eyelashes flicked up and down rapidly. A hand on his knee tightened and pulled the cloth into wrinkles. There was a wart on his cheek just below the right eyelid.
I struck a match and held the flame to his cigarette. "Light?"
"Oh-thanks," he said, very surprised. He drew breath in until the cigarette tip glowed. I shook the match out, tossed it into the sand jar at my elbow and waited. He looked at me sideways several times before he spoke.
"Haven't I seen you somewhere before?"
"Over on Dresden Avenue in Pasadena. This morning." I could see his cheeks get pinker than they had been. He sighed.
"I must be lousy," he said.
"Boy, you stink," I agreed.
"Maybe it's the hat," he said.
"The hat helps," I said. "But you don't really need it."
"It's a pretty tough dollar in this town," he said sadly.
"You can't do it on foot, you ruin yourself with taxi fares if you use taxis, and if you use your own car, it's always where you can't get to it fast enough. You have to stay too close."
"But you don't have to climb in a guy's pocket," I said. "Did you want something with me or are you just practising?"
"I figured I'd find out if you were smart enough to be worth talking to."
"I'm very smart," I said. "It would be a shame not to talk to me."
He looked carefully around back of his chair and on both sides of where we were sitting and then drew a small, pigskin wallet out. He handed me a nice fresh card from it. It read: George Anson Phillips. Confidential Investigations. 212 Senger Building, 1924 North Wilc.o.x Avenue, Hollywood. A Glenview telephone number. In the upper left hand corner there was an open eye with an eyebrow arched in surprise and very long eyelashes.
"You can't do that," I said, pointing to the eye. "That's the Pinkertons'. You'll be stealing their business."
"Oh h.e.l.l," he said, "what little I get wouldn't bother them."
I snapped the card on my fingernail and bit down hard on my teeth and slipped the card into my pocket.
"You want one of mine-or have you completed your file on me?"
"Oh, I know all about you," he said. "I was a deputy at Ventura the time you were working on the Gregson case."
Gregson was a con man from Oklahoma City who was followed all over the United States for two years by one of his victims until he got so jittery that he shot up a service station attendant who mistook him for an acquaintance. It seemed a long time ago to me.
I said: "Go on from there."
"I remembered your name when I saw it on your registration this A.M. A.M. So when I lost you on the way into town I just looked you up. I was going to come in and talk, but it would have been a violation of confidence. This way I kind of can't help myself." So when I lost you on the way into town I just looked you up. I was going to come in and talk, but it would have been a violation of confidence. This way I kind of can't help myself."
Another screwball. That made three in one day, not counting Mrs. Murdock, who might turn out to be a screwball too.
I waited while he took his dark gla.s.ses off and polished them and put them on again and gave the neighborhood the once over again. Then he said: "I figured we could maybe make a deal. Pool our resources, as they say. I saw the guy go into your office, so I figured he had hired you."
"You knew who he was?"
"I'm working on him," he said, and his voice sounded flat and discouraged. "And where I am getting is no place at all."
"What did he do to you?"
"Well, I'm working for his wife."
"Divorce?"
He looked all around him carefully and said in a small voice: "So she says. But I wonder."
"They both want one," I said. "Each trying to get something on the other. Comical, isn't it?"
"My end I don't like so well. A guy is tailing me around some of the time. A very tall guy with a funny eye. I shake him but after a while I see him again. A very tall guy. Like a lamppost."
A very tall man with a funny eye. I smoked thoughtfully.
"Anything to do with you?" the blond man asked me a little anxiously.
I shook my head and threw my cigarette into the sand jar. "Never saw him that I know of." I looked at my strap watch. "We better get together and talk this thing over properly, but I can't do it now. I have an appointment."
"I'd like to," he said. "Very much."
"Let's then. My office, my apartment, or your office, or where?"
He scratched his badly shaved chin with a well-chewed thumbnail.
"My apartment," he said at last. "It's not in the phone book. Give me that card a minute."
He turned it over on his palm when I gave it to him and wrote slowly with a small metal pencil, moving his tongue along his lips. He was getting younger every minute. He didn't seem much more than twenty by now, but he had to be, because the Gregson case had been six years back.
He put his pencil away and handed me back the card. The address he had written on it was 204 Florence Apartments, 128 Court Street.
I looked at him curiously. "Court Street on Bunker Hill?"
He nodded, flus.h.i.+ng all over his blond skin. "Not too good," he said quickly. "I haven't been in the chips lately. Do you mind?"
"No, why would I?"
I stood up and held a hand out. He shook it and dropped it and I pushed it down into my hip pocket and rubbed the palm against the handkerchief I had there. Looking at his face more closely I saw that there was a line of moisture across his upper lip and more of it along the side of his nose. It was not as hot as all that.
I started to move off and then I turned back to lean down close to his face and say: "Almost anybody can pull my leg, but just to make sure, she's a tall blond with careless eyes, huh?"
"I wouldn't call them careless," he said.
I held my face together while I said: "And just between the two of us this divorce stuff is a lot of hooey. It's something else entirely, isn't it?"
"Yes," he said softly, "and something I don't like more every minute I think about it. Here."
He pulled something out of his pocket and dropped it into my hand. It was a flat key.
"No need for you to wait around in the hall, if I happen to be out. I have two of them. What time would you think you would come?"
"About four-thirty, the way it looks now. You sure you want to give me this key?"
"Why, we're in the same racket," he said, looking up at me innocently, or as innocently as he could look through a pair of dark gla.s.ses.
At the edge of the lobby I looked back. He sat there peacefully, with the half-smoked cigarette dead between his lips and the gaudy brown and yellow band on his hat looking as quiet as a cigarette ad on the back page of the Sat.u.r.day Evening Post.
We were in the same racket. So I wouldn't chisel him. Just like that. I could have the key to his apartment and go in and make myself at home. I could wear his slippers and drink his liquor and lift up his carpet and count the thousand dollar bills under it. We were in the same racket.
SEVEN.
The Belfont Building was eight stories of nothing in particular that had got itself pinched off between a large green and chromium cut rate suit emporium and a three-story and bas.e.m.e.nt garage that made a noise like lion cages at feeding time. The small dark narrow lobby was as dirty as a chicken yard. The building directory had a lot of vacant s.p.a.ce on it. Only one of the names meant anything to me and I knew that one already. Opposite the directory a large sign tilted against the fake marble wall said: s.p.a.ce for Renting Suitable for Cigar Stand. Apply Room s.p.a.ce for Renting Suitable for Cigar Stand. Apply Room 316. 316.
There were two open-grill elevators but only one seemed to be running and that not busy. An old man sat inside it slack-jawed and watery-eyed on a piece of folded burlap on top of a wooden stool. He looked as if he had been sitting there since the Civil War and had come out of that badly.
I got in with him and said eight, and he wrestled the doors shut and cranked his buggy and we dragged upwards lurching. The old man breathed hard, as if he was carrying the elevator on his back.
I got out at my floor and started along the hallway and behind me the old man leaned out of the car and blew his nose with his fingers into a carton full of floor sweepings.
Elisha Morningstar's office was at the back, opposite the firedoor. Two rooms, both lettered in flaked black paint on pebbled gla.s.s. Elisha Morningstar. Numismatist. Elisha Morningstar. Numismatist. The one farthest back said: The one farthest back said: Entrance. Entrance.
I turned the k.n.o.b and went into a small narrow room with two windows, a shabby little typewriter desk, closed, a number of wall cases of tarnished coins in tilted slots with yellowed typewritten labels under them, two brown filing cases at the back against the wall, no curtains at the windows, and a dust gray floor carpet so threadbare that you wouldn't notice the rips in it unless you tripped over one.
An inner wooden door was open at the back across from the filing cases, behind the little typewriter desk. Through the door came the small sounds a man makes when he isn't doing anything at all. Then the dry voice of Elisha Morningstar called out: "Come in, please. Come in."
I went along and in. The inner office was just as small but had a lot more stuff in it. A green safe almost blocked off the front half. Beyond this a heavy old mahogany table against the entrance door held some dark books, some flabby old magazines, and a lot of dust. In the back wall a window was open a few inches, without effect on the musty smell. There was a hatrack with a greasy black felt hat on it. There were three long-legged tables with gla.s.s tops and more coins under the gla.s.s tops. There was a heavy dark leather-topped desk midway of the room. It had the usual desk stuff on it, and in addition a pair of jeweller's scales under a gla.s.s dome and two large nickel-framed magnifying gla.s.ses and a jeweller's eyepiece lying on a buff scratch pad, beside a cracked yellow silk handkerchief spotted with ink.
In the swivel chair at the desk sat an elderly party in a dark gray suit with high lapels and too many b.u.t.tons down the front. He had some stringy white hair that grew long enough to tickle his ears. A pale gray bald patch loomed high up in the middle of it, like a rock above timberline. Fuzz grew out of his ears, far enough to catch a moth.
He had sharp black eyes with a pair of pouches under each eye, brownish purple in color and traced with a network of wrinkles and veins. His cheeks were s.h.i.+ny and his short sharp nose looked as if it had hung over a lot of quick ones in its time. A Hoover collar which no decent laundry would have allowed on the premises nudged his Adam's apple and a black string tie poked a small hard knot out at the bottom of the collar, like a mouse getting ready to come out of a mousehole.
He said: "My young lady had to go to the dentist. You are Mr. Marlowe?"
I nodded.
"Pray, be seated." He waved a thin hand at the chair across the desk. I sat down. "You have some identification, I presume?"