Heroin Annie (26 page)

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Authors: Peter Corris

Tags: #Fiction, #FIC022000, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Large Print Books, #Large Type Books, #FIC050000

BOOK: Heroin Annie
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I put the stuff in my pocket, walked out of the flat and down to my car where I stowed it away under the back seat. Then I went to a public booth and called the police, asking for Grant Evans. He came on and I said what I had to say, and he told me to go up again and wait for him.

Grant was puffing a bit when he got to the top of the stairs. He had a youngish, slim policewoman with him and he'd been showing off for her.

‘Cliff, Grant said. ‘Why'd you call from the street?'

‘Didn't want to touch the phone.'

He grunted and we trooped inside. I told Grant the story while he poked around. He made a few disbelieving noises here and there, just to remind me of the unspoken terms of our relationship—I don't tell him outright lies and he doesn't frame me for things. It's a better set-up than most. I didn't have to feign surprise when Grant slid open the built-in wardrobes, we both whistled. The space was crammed full of dresses, coats, blouses, slacks and other things I don't know the names of. There were six fur coats and fifty pairs of shoes, maybe more.

‘Gotta be jewels with this lot', Grant said. ‘You see an insurance policy, Cliff?'

It was a neat trap, but I saw it in time. ‘No, I told you I didn't touch anything.'

‘Yeah, and Borg can't hit backhands.' We went back into the living room. ‘Well, she put up a fight. Look for a guy missing some skin. How do you see it? Reckon this Hadley bumped her?'

‘Could be.'

‘Has to be. Look at those locks—she let him in.'

‘She was a professional escort remember, she might've let lots of people in. I don't like Hadley, too obvious.'

‘Well, the obvious happens, Cain bumped Abel, Ruby bumped Oswald.'

‘Yeah, but what did Oswald do?'

Grant sneered and asked the policewoman to inspect the rest of Trudi's personals. We were looking at the view when she came out with a jewel box. Grant opened it.

‘Good stuff?'

Her expression was wistful. ‘Very good, worth thousands and thousands.'

‘Scratch robbery.' Grant said.

After that the white coats arrived and then it was down to Headquarters for a statement and the usual carry-on.

‘You'd be kissing this one goodbye, would you?' Grant said after the formalities.

‘Not quite. She paid for about three days' work and she's only had one and a bit. I think I'll stay with it for a while if you don't object.'

He shrugged.

‘I gather I won't have a lot of competition in the field then?'

He shrugged again and pointed to the stack of folders on his desk. I nodded and went out. I wasn't being quite fair to Grant; he'd like to solve every murder in the city and be the same weight he was at twenty-one, it's just that both are impossible.

Primo Tomasetti has a movie projector at his tattooing parlour. He shoots a lot of film himself and buys films from overseas— he says they give him inspirations for designs. I told him I wanted to see a film and he rubbed his hands.

‘Okay, okay. You bring a bottle and I'll lay on a coupla girls, nice girls. You finally learning to live a little, Cliff? Ten o'clock, okay?'

‘Not okay. Now and no bottles, no girls; this is business.'

He shook his head. ‘I shoulda known. You have great love inside you, Cliff. But all that comes out is hate and work. How come?'

‘I'm saving myself. Where's the gizmo?'

He showed me and helped me hook up the reel, then he went back to drawing designs on cartridge paper. I blacked out the little room and ran the film.

He filled the screen, and I'd seen him on TV so many times that it seemed natural to be watching him on film, even though what he was doing couldn't exactly be called natural. He was naked and very excited and the act he was performing with the young blonde was expressly forbidden by the Bible and the law of the land. It went on for a few minutes, boring after the first few frames because of the single camera angle and the lack of plot. I stopped the show and re-wound the film, thinking that all men have something to hide. Sir Peter Barton, ex-Lord Mayor of the city, racehorse owner and homme d'affairs, always poised for a big take-over, would probably have a lot to hide, it would be expected of him; but kinky carnal knowledge of juveniles was a bit exotic.

I thanked Primo, ignored his revised offer and hoofed it downtown to a philately establishment I'd passed a hundred times and never entered. A thin, whispy man was leaning over a glass counter under which hundreds of stamps were displayed. The counter was wired and the glass was thick; the stamps would have been as hard to steal as the crown jewels. He looked up at me baring tobacco-stained teeth.

‘Yes?'

I hauled out the envelope and started to pull a stamp out with my fingers.

‘No! No!' He picked up a pair of tweezers and held out a hand for the envelope. He eased several of the stamps out and aligned them on a glass plate. Then he reached up and swung down a magnifying glass mounted on a moveable arm. He peered at the stamps, darting his eyes up to me as he passed from one to the next. He straightened up.

‘Well, sir', he said. ‘Very nice indeed.'

‘They're worth something then?'

He was so surprised he almost dropped the tweezers. ‘I should say so.'

‘How much?'

‘Oh, as to that, well it would take some time …'

‘Round about,' I said. ‘Err on the safe side.'

‘These five would fetch twenty thousand dollars, easily. May I ask, are they yours to sell?'

‘No, they're not mine at all. I'm conducting an investigation, these are part of the evidence.'

‘Evidence', he breathed. ‘You won't be quoting me in court, I trust. I could give you exact valuations, be happy to, but as I say it would take time. Are you with the police?'

‘I'm working with them. Can you tell me anything else about these stamps—would they be stolen property or anything like that?'

‘Shouldn't think so. Let's have another look.'

He arranged the whole stock, which amounted to thirteen stamps, and looked at them all. ‘Curious', he said. He dug under the counter and brought up a heavy loose-leaf volume and flicked through it. After a few minutes of this he looked up at me.

‘This is an intriguing collection. These stamps are each worth about four thousand dollars give or take a bit. So you have about fifty or sixty thousand dollars worth here—a bit more allowing for inflation.'

I grunted, which seemed to nettle him. ‘What is more', he said firmly, ‘I should say they were purchased at regular intervals over the past two years, say, at two monthly intervals.'

My look of interest gratified him. ‘You can be that precise?'

‘Oh yes, very valuable items like these are listed and their sale recorded. These came from a single collection which has been put up for auction at two monthly intervals over the last three years. It was a very famous collection.'

‘Would the auctioneer know who bought them?'

‘Probably not; it's a secretive business, proxies are used. Even if he did know he would not divulge the information except on the highest authority.'

I thanked him and he tweezed the stamps back into the envelope which I put back in my pocket.

‘They should be in a safe', he said.

It was after five o'clock and the streets were starting to fill up with suburbanites bound for home and fun-lovers staying in the city. I walked up through the park, tying things together in my head: Trudi, it seemed, was putting the squeeze on Barton and buying stamps with the proceeds. There wasn't a better way to accumulate valuable assets that took up no space and didn't depreciate. I had two questions. Why was she doing it? She had a prosperous business to judge from her other assets and it looked like she was a very sick woman. Why bother? The other question was the original one—where was Gerry Hadley? Somehow, all things considered, I didn't give much for his chances. Barton was rumoured to have heavy criminal connections and eliminating the partners in the Winsome Escort Agency would be like opening a can of beer for him.

Home is where the booze is, and also the darts board and the books and the food. I used all these things in moderation and was reading the paper with clear eyes in a clear head when the phone rang at 9.30 am. It was Grant.

‘How's your investigation going?' he said.

‘Quietly, how's yours?'

‘Just a snippet I thought you might like. The lady's will turned up, four copies to be exact.'

‘Yeah? Who?'

‘Hadley, every cent. Now what can you tell me?'

‘Nothing, but thanks, Grant; maybe I can use that to flush him out.'

‘Cliff, you've got today. After today you don't owe her a thing.'

He hung up and I dialled Sir Peter Barton's office. A secretary with a north shore voice and manner tried to brush me off, so I became rather rude and left a message which I thought Barton might respond to. He called me back half an hour later.

‘Mr Hardy? I understand you have business with me?' His voice was slow, soft and pleasant, he'd have to do something about that if he got into Parliament.

‘You might say that, yes. I want to see you now. Tell me where you are and I'll come over.'

‘I'm in my office. Come by all means. Ah … will you be bringing anything with you?'

I didn't answer. I drove to my office in the Cross and locked film and stamps away in the safe. Then I caught a cab to Clarence Street where Barton had an office in a glass and aluminium tower which he probably owned. I was passed from one sycophant to another until finally I was in the presence of the great man. He stood about six foot four, which gave him four inches on me, but he was beginning to lose the battle with his waist. He was standing behind a half-acre desk and he waved me into a chair in front of it.

‘Mr Hardy, it's a little early for a drink, can I offer you coffee?'

‘No. I've got the film.'

‘Yes?'

‘You paid Trudi Walker a lot of money.'

‘True, and now I suppose I have to pay you?'

‘Maybe, I haven't decided. I might just show it on TV for fun. But I don't care much who puts what in who, I was working for Trudi Walker and I think you had her killed. I'm much more concerned about that.'

The imperturbable mask slipped a bit, and there was an edge in his voice. ‘I certainly did
not
have her killed. Why would I? You know what she had over me, killing her would only introduce complications, such as yourself.'

‘I assume something went wrong. Look, I'm not green, extortionists get killed, it's a risk they take. But she hired me to find someone and she paid me and I haven't done it. I'd like to tie that up, then I can think about other steps.'

He was looking puzzled, probably at having to deal with someone who had something on his mind except money. ‘I don't see how I can help. Find someone you say? Who?'

‘Gerry Hadley, the business partner. Now, I'm just guessing, but it looks to me as if you decided to wipe out the whole operation. Maybe you removed Hadley to frighten the Walker woman, I don't know.'

The mask was back, nicely in place. He got up from the desk and walked across to a drinks cabinet. ‘It's early as I say, but I'm going to have a drink. Join me?'

I shook my head; he poured himself a solid whisky, added water and came back behind the desk. He sipped the drink. ‘You'll forgive me if I see a ray of hope in all this unpleasantness', he said. ‘If I can convince you that I did not kill Trudi Walker or Hadley, is there a chance that you'd hand over the film?'

‘There's a chance', I said.

‘Hadley is alive, I can have him brought here inside an hour.' He lifted a phone and spoke three crisp sentences. He worked a bit more on his drink and looked at me.

‘What do the police think about the Walker killing?'

‘They think Hadley did it.'

He smiled. ‘They're right for once. Hadley killed her but he didn't intend to. This is a very messy business, Mr Hardy, and I can't afford messes just now.'

‘Too bad', I said. ‘You should take up jogging and cold showers.'

‘Perhaps. I'm going to be frank with you. I'm a blackmailer myself in a way. I hold a lot of paper on Hadley, gambling debts.'

‘I'm glad I live a blameless life', I said.

He ignored me. ‘I persuaded Hadley to approach Trudi with a view to getting hold of the film. He did, they quarrelled, he shot her. An accident.'

‘What did you do?'

‘I didn't believe him; I thought he'd grabbed the film himself and was going to run the show. I had him roughed-up, shall we say? His car was taken and his money. I told him he had two days to produce the film. He was very frightened, now I know why.'

‘Hadley was missing for two days before the killing. You have anything to do with that?'

‘Yes indeed. I told you that Hadley had to be persuaded.'

‘You're a prime bastard. You've kept your eye on Hadley since?'

‘Round the clock, I thought he'd crack and get the film. He's been scuttling about, I suppose he's heard that the police are after him. His situation has been unenviable, he'll be relieved by this development.'

I looked at him, wondering how much of this to believe. One thing I knew, if Hadley had killed Trudi his face would be marked.

We sat there uneasily; Barton answered the phone a few times, wrote things in files on his desk and signed things a secretary brought in. He finished the whisky and didn't make another. I was thinking about taking him up on the drink offer when the door opened and two men walked in. One was big, with a blank, hard face. The other man, much smaller, was pudgy looking and pale; his soft brown hair was cut short and his expensive clothes looked slept in. His expression was timid; he wasn't the laughing GI of yesteryear but he was Gerry Hadley just the same. There was heavy sticking plaster down one side of his face and along his jaw.

When he saw me he buckled at the knees and the guy with the cold eyes had to hold him up.

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