Read 1953 - I'll Bury My Dead Online

Authors: James Hadley Chase

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BOOK: 1953 - I'll Bury My Dead
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English studied her, his eyes interested.

‘What makes you say that?’

‘From the appearance of the box. The bottom of it was very dusty, and by the marks in the dust it was pretty obvious that there had been a number of cards in the box. I’m just making a guess, but it did strike me that a number of cards had been recently removed.’

‘Maybe the box belonged to the previous owner.’

‘It looked new to me, Mr. English.’

English pushed back his chair and stood up. He began to prowl around the office, his brows wrinkling into a frown.

‘It’s damned funny, isn’t it?’ he said after a long silence. ‘So no business at all was done in the office from August of last year to date. Is that right?’

‘Yes, unless copies of letters and dossiers covering that period have been taken away.’

‘Any sign of any paper having been burned in the office?’

‘No.’

‘Well, all right, Lois, thanks a lot. Sorry to have kept you out of bed so late. Be a good girl and go home after lunch. What’s important for me today?’ You have two interviews this afternoon - Miss Nankin and Mr. Burnstein. You are lunching with the senator at one-thirty. There’s the mail and a number of contracts for your signature, and Harry would like you to see the balance sheet and figures of the fight.’

‘Let’s have the mail first. Then send Harry in to me. English glanced at his watch. I have an hour and a half before I need worry about the senator.’

‘Yes, Mr. English.’

She went out and returned almost immediately with the mail. She sat down at the desk with her notebook ready for his dictation.

Working with his usual speed, English polished off the mail, glanced through a number of contracts that had been initialled by Sam Crail, signed them, then pushed the pile of papers over to Lois.

‘Let’s have Harry in now,’ he said.

Harry Vince came in with slightly dragging feet. He looked pale, and there were smudges under his eyes.

English gave him a quick glance, then grinned.

‘Late hours don’t seem to suit you, Harry,’ he said. ‘You look like something the cat dragged in.’

‘I guess I feel like it, too,’ Harry said with a wan smile. ‘I have the figures for you. We have a net take of two hundred and seventy-five thousand.’

English nodded.

‘That’s not so bad. Did you put a bet on Joey, Harry?’

Harry shook his head.

‘I guess I forgot.’

English gave him a sharp look.

‘What’s the matter with you? Don’t you want to pick up some free money? I told you you couldn’t go wrong.’

‘I meant to, Mr. English,’ Harry said, flushing, ‘but in the rush it went out of my mind.’

‘Chuck made himself a thousand. Didn’t Lois back Joey?’

‘I don’t think she did.’

‘You two are hopeless,’ English said with a resigned shrug. ‘Well, it’s your own funeral. I can’t do more than put the opportunity to make some money in front of you. That reminds me. Morilli will look in some time this morning. Give him three hundred out of my expense account. He’s supposed to have won it on the fight.’

‘Yes, Mr. English.’

English stubbed out his cigar.

‘Ever thought of getting married, Harry?’ he asked abruptly.

Harry stiffened. His eyes shifted away from English.

‘Why, no. I guess I haven t.’

‘Haven’t you even got a girl?’ English asked, smiling.

‘I just haven’t had time to get around to girls yet,’ Harry said in a low, flat voice.

‘Well, for God’s sake! You re - what? Thirty-two or three?’

‘Thirty-two.’

‘You’d better buck up,’ English said, and laughed. ‘Why, when I was half your age I had a string of girls.’

‘Yes, Mr. English.’

‘Maybe I’m working you too hard. Is that it?’

‘Oh, no, Mr. English. Nothing like that.’

English stared at him, puzzled, then he shrugged.

‘Well, it’s your life. Better send that balance sheet over to Asprey, and get him to certify it. I have a lunch date with the senator, worse luck.’

As Harry moved to the door, the buzzer on the desk sounded. English pressed down the switch.

‘Lieutenant Morilli is here, Mr. English,’ Lois said. ‘He would like a word.’

‘Harry will see him,’ English said. ‘I’m going to lunch.’

‘He particularly wants to see you, Mr. English. He says it’s important and urgent.’

English hesitated, frowning.

‘Okay, send him in. I’ve still got ten minutes. Tell Chuck to have the car ready.’ As he released the switch, he said to Harry, ‘Get his money ready and give it to him as he goes out.’

‘Yes, Mr. English,’ Harry said and opened the door and stood aside to let Morilli enter the office.

‘You’ve caught me at a bad time,’ English said as Harry went out, shutting the door behind him.’ I’ve got to go out in five minutes. What’s on your mind?’

‘I thought I ought to have a word with you,’ Morilli said, coming over to the desk. ‘We’ve located your brother’s secretary. A girl named Mary Savitt.’

English looked at him, his darkly tanned face expressionless.

‘So what?’

‘She’s dead.’

English frowned and stared at Morilli, who stared back at him.

‘Dead? What - suicide?’

Morilli lifted his shoulders.

‘That’s what I’ve come to see you about. It could be murder.’

 

IV

 

F
or a long second, English stared at Morilli, then waved him to a chair. ‘Sit down, and let’s hear about it.’

Morilli sat down.

‘I telephoned Mrs. English this morning,’ he said, ‘to find out if Mr. English had a secretary. She gave me the girl’s name and address. I and a sergeant went down there. She has an apartment on 45th East Place.’

He paused and looked hard at English.

‘I know,’ English said, taking his cue from Morilli’s look. ‘I went there myself this morning. I couldn’t get an answer. I thought she must have gone down to the office.’

Morilli nodded.

‘That’s right,’ he said. ‘Miss Hopper, who lives in the apartment above Miss Savitt’s, said she had seen you.’

‘Well, go on,’ English said curtly. ‘What happened?’

‘We didn’t get an answer to our buzz. There was a bottle of milk and a newspaper outside the door, and that made me suspicious. We got a passkey and found her hanging on the bathroom door.’

English pushed his cigar box across the desk after taking one himself.

‘Go ahead and help yourself,’ he said. ‘What’s this about murder?’

‘On the face of it, it looked like suicide,’ Morilli said. ‘The police surgeon said it was a typical suicide.’ He rubbed his bony nose and added softly, ‘And he still thinks it’s suicide.’ Then he went on. ‘After the body was removed, I had a look around the room. I was on my own, Mr. English, and I made a discovery. Near the bed was a damp patch on the carpet as if it had been recently washed. When I examined it carefully I found a small stain. I gave it a benzidine test. It was a bloodstain.’

English took his cigar from between his lips and frowned at the glowing end.

‘I don’t reckon to be as smart as you, Lieutenant, but I fail to see how that makes it murder.’

Morilli smiled.

‘A faked suicide is very often difficult to spot, Mr. English,’ he said. ‘We’re trained to look for the giveaway. That stain on the carpet was a pretty complete giveaway. You see, when I cut the girl down I noticed she had bled from the nose. There were no marks on her nightdress, and I expected to find at least a drop or two of blood somewhere about her clothes. Then I find a stain on the floor. That tells me she died on the floor, and not hanging from the door.’

‘You mean she was strangled on the floor?’

‘That’s right. If someone surprised her, slipped the dressing gown cord around her throat and tightened it she would have lost consciousness very quickly. She would have fallen face down on the carpet, and while the killer was exerting pressure on the cord, it is likely she would bleed from the nose, making a stain on the carpet. Having killed her, it would be simple for him to string her up against the bathroom door to give the appearance of suicide.’

English thought about this, then nodded.

‘I guess that’s right. So you think it’s murder?’

‘I won’t swear to it, but how else did the stain get on the carpet?’

‘You’re sure it’s blood?’

‘No doubt about it.’

English glanced at his wristwatch. He was already four minutes late for his appointment.

‘Well, thanks for telling me, Lieutenant,’ he said. ‘This is unexpected. I don’t know what to make of it. Maybe we can talk about it later on. Right now I have a date with the senator. He got to his feet. I’ve got to be running along.’

Morilli didn’t move. He sat looking up at English, an odd expression in his eyes that English didn’t like.

‘What’s on your mind?’ English asked curtly.

‘It’s up to you, Mr. English, but I should have thought you would have wanted to settle this business right now. I haven’t put my report in yet, but I’ll have to within the next half-hour.’

English frowned.

‘What’s your report got to do with me?’

‘That’s for you to say,’ Morilli returned carefully. ‘I like to help you where I can, Mr. English. You’ve always been pretty good to me.’

English had a sudden idea that there was something very wrong behind Morilli’s visit.

He leaned forward and flicked down the intercom switch.

‘Lois? Get hold of the senator and tell him I’m going to be late. I shan’t be with him until two o’clock.’

‘Yes, Mr. English.’

He released the switch and sat down again.

‘Go ahead, Lieutenant. Do some talking,’ he said, his voice hard and quiet.

Morilli hitched his chair forward, and looking English straight in the face, said, ‘I don’t have to tell you how the D.A. feels about Senator Beaumont. They’ve been sworn enemies ever since the senator got into office. If the D.A. can do anything to discredit the senator he’s going to do it. Everyone knows you’re behind the senator. If the D.A. can make things tough for you, he’ll do it in the hope it’ll eventually hit the senator. If he can involve you in a scandal, he’s not going to be too particular how he does it.’

‘For a lieutenant of homicide, you keep remarkably well informed about politics,’ English said. ‘All right, we’ll take that as read. What has it got to do with Mary Savitt?’

‘It could have plenty to do with her,’ Morilli said. ‘Doc Richards told me your brother died between nine and half past ten last night. He couldn’t put it nearer than that. He says Mary Savitt died between ten o’clock and midnight. Miss Hopper tells me she saw your brother leave Mary Savitt’s apartment at nine forty-five last night. It’s not going to take the D.A. long to arrive at the conclusion these two had a suicide pact. That your brother murdered the girl, then went down to his office and shot himself. If he does arrive at that conclusion there’s going to be quite a stink in the press, and it’s going to come this way and bound off you onto the senator.’

English sat still for a long moment, staring at Morilli, his eyes like granite.

‘Why are you telling me all this, Lieutenant?’ he asked at last.

Morilli lifted his shoulders; his small dark eyes shifted away from English’s face.

‘No one but me knows it’s murder, Mr. English. Doc Richards says it’s suicide, but then he didn’t see the stain on the carpet. If he knew about that, he’d change his mind, but he doesn’t know, nor does the D.A.’

‘But they’ll know when you’ve put in your report,’ English said.

‘I guess they will, unless I forget to mention the bloodstain.’

English studied Morilli’s white, expressionless face.

‘There’s Miss Hopper’s evidence,’ he said. ‘You say she saw Roy leave the apartment. If she starts talking, the D.A. will investigate. He might even find the stain.’

Morilli smiled.

‘You don’t have to worry about Miss Hopper,’ he said. ‘I’ve taken care of her. I happen to know what she does in her spare time. She wouldn’t want to go into the box and give evidence. Some smart attorney like Sam Crail might turn her inside out. I mentioned that fact to her. She isn’t going to talk.’

English leaned forward to knock ash off his cigar.

‘You realize the chances are a hundred to one that Roy killed the girl, don’t you?’ he said quietly. ‘If she was murdered, then someone is going to get away with it, if it wasn’t Roy.’

Morilli shrugged.

‘It’ll be your brother who murdered her if the D.A. hears about the stain, Mr. English. You can bet your bottom dollar on it. Either way the killer gets away with it. He made a little gesture with his hand. It’s up to you. I’ll put the stain in my report on your say-so, but since you’ve taken care of me in the past, I thought it was only right I should give you a break when the chance came my way.’

English looked at him.

‘That’s pretty nice of you, Lieutenant. I shan’t forget it. Maybe it would be better to forget about the stain.’

‘Just as you say,’ Morilli said, getting to his feet. ‘Only too glad to be of help, Mr. English.’

‘Let me see,’ English said absently, ‘you have a bet to collect, haven’t you? How much was it, Lieutenant?’

Morilli ran his thumbnail along his narrow, starkly black moustache before saying, ‘Five thousand, Mr. English.’

English smiled.

‘Was it as much as that?’

‘I guess that was the sum,’ Morilli returned, his face expressionless.

‘In that case I’d better pay you. I always believe in paying my debts. I guess that’s right, and I always believe in giving value for money. You would prefer cash I expect?’

‘It would come in handy.’

English leaned forward and pushed down a switch on the intercom.

‘Harry? Never mind about that little matter I mentioned to you just now. I’m looking after Lieutenant Morilli.’

‘Yes, Mr. English.’

English released the switch, stood up and went over to the wall safe.

‘You’ve a pretty good organization here Mr. English,’ Morilli said.

‘Nice to know you approve,’ English said dryly. He opened the safe and took out two bundles of notes and tossed them on the desk. I won’t ask for a receipt.’

BOOK: 1953 - I'll Bury My Dead
4.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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