Read The Mike Hammer Collection, Volume 2 Online
Authors: Mickey Spillane
“And I still would have had something to trade.”
“Like what?”
“Lou Grindle is dead. I killed him a few hours before I walked in here. Not only that, but two of his boys are dead. I got one and Lou bumped the other by mistake thinking he was me.”
“Mike ...” Pat was drumming his fists on the arms of the chair.
“Shut up and listen. Teen had me picked up. He thought I killed Link and took something from the apartment. It was kidnaping and I was within the law when I shot them so don’t worry about it. There’s a body in the road out near Islip someplace and the local police ought to have it by now. The other two are in a house I can locate for you on a map and you better hop to it before they get turned up.
“Ed Teen gave the orders to bump me but you can bet your tail you aren’t picking him up for it. He probably had an alibi all set for an emergency anyway, and now that he no doubt knows what happened he’ll insure it.”
“Why the hell didn’t you tell me this earlier? Good Lord, we can break any alibi he has if he’s involved!”
“You’re talking simple again, friend. I’d like to see you break his alibi. Whoever stands up for him has a chance of being dead if he talks. All you can offer is a jail cell. Nope, you won’t put anything down on Teen. He’s been through this mill before.”
Pat slammed his head with his open palm. “So you waste an hour playing games with the D.A. Damn, you should have said something.”
“Yeah, I had plenty of time to talk. You would have heard all about it if you didn’t give me that under arrest business.”
“I wish I knew what was going on, Mike.”
“That makes two of us.”
He dragged out a map of the Island and handed it to me. I penciled in the roads and marked the approximate spot where the house was and handed it back. Pat had the thing on the wires immediately. Downstairs somebody checked with the police in Islip and verified the finding of the body on the road.
I said, “Pat ...”
He covered up the mouthpiece of the phone and looked at me.
“Go through the motions of finding Lou’s body before you hand the story to the D.A., will you?”
The phone went back into its cradle slowly. “What’s the score, Mike?”
“I think I know how we can get Teen.”
“That’s not a good reason at all.” His voice was soft, dangerous.
“You tell him now and I’ll get the treatment again, Pat. Look ... you’ve been working this from the wrong angle. You would have gotten there, but it would have taken longer. I’m hot now. I can’t stop while I’m hot. You said I could have three days.”
“The picture’s changed.”
“Nix ... it’s just hanging a little crooked, that’s all. With all your cops and all your equipment, you’re still chasing after shadows.”
“You know it all, is that it?”
“No ... but I got the shadows chasing me now. I know something I shouldn’t know. I wish to God I knew where and how I picked it up. I’ve been wandering through this thing picking up a piece here and there and it should have ended when Toady died. I thought he was the one I was after.”
“He was.”
Pat said it so flatly that I almost missed it.
“What’d you say?”
“He drove the car when Decker was killed.”
It was like a wave washing up the beach, then receding back into itself, the way my body was suddenly flushed before it was drained completely dry. I couldn’t get my hands unclenched. They were the only live part of me, balled up in my lap doing the cursing my throat wanted to do. The killer was supposed to be mine, goddamn it. I promised the kid and I promised myself. He wasn’t supposed to die in bed never knowing why he died. He should have gone with his tongue hanging out and turning black while I choked the guts out of him!
“How do you know?”
“Cole and Fisher were apprehended in Philadelphia. They decided to shoot it out and lost. Cole lived long enough to say a few things.”
“What things?”
“You were right about Hooker and Decker. Toady gave the orders to get Mel. He was going to put Cole and Fisher out with Decker, changed his mind and went himself instead. That was all they knew.”
“You mean they were supposed to bump Decker?”
“No ... just go with him when they pulled the job.”
I got up slowly. I put my hat back on and dropped my butt in the ash tray on the desk. “Okay, Pat, get Teen your own way. I still want you to give me a break with the D.A. I want to get some sleep. I need it bad.”
“If Grindle’s dead he’ll stay dead. Make yourself scarce. When you wake up give me a ring. I’ll hold things as long as I can.”
“Thanks.”
“And Mike ...”
“Yeah?”
“Do something about your face. You look like hell.”
“I’ll cut it off at the neck and get a new one,” I said.
Pat said seriously, “I wish you would.”
CHAPTER 10
I had company again. I had a whole hall full of company Everybody was coming to see me. I was the most popular guy in town and everybody was standing in front of my door dying to get a look at me. One of my company gasped in a huge breath of air before she said, “Oh ... oh, thank heavens, there he is.”
The super’s wife was a big fat woman no corset could contain properly and with all that air in her she looked ready to burst. But she was smiling as she recognized my walk and then the smile froze on her face. The super stopped poking a key in the lock on my door, pushed through the small knot and he froze too.
Then there was Marsha. She shoved them all out of the way. The laugh she had ready for me twisted to dismay and she said, “Mike!”
“Hello, sugar.”
“Oh, Mike, I knew something happened to you!” She ran into my arms and the tears welled into her eyes. Her fingers touched my cheek gently and I felt them tremble. “Darling, darling ... what was it ...”
“Oh, I’ll tell you about it sometime. What’s all the excitement about?”
She choked and gasped the words out. “I kept calling you and calling you all last night and this morning. I ... thought something happened .. , like that last time in your apartment. Oh, Mike ...”
“It’s all right now, honey. I’ll be back to normal soon.”
“I ... came up and you didn’t answer. I told the superintendent you might be hurt ... and he ... he was going to look. Mike, you scared me so.”
The super was nodding, licking his lips. The others crowded in for a last look at me before going back to their apartments. His wife said, “You scared us all, Mr. Hammer. We were sure you were dead or something.”
“I almost was. Anyway, thanks for thinking of me. Now if you don’t mind, I’d just like to be left alone for a while. I’m not feeling any too hot.”
“Is there anything ...”
“No, nothing, thanks.” I took out my key and opened the door. I had to prop myself against the jamb for a minute before I could go in. Marsha grabbed my arm and held me steady, then guided me inside to a chair and helped me down.
The day had been too long ... too much to it. A guy can’t take days like that one and stay on his feet. I let my head fall back and closed my eyes. Marsha sobbed softly as she untied my shoes and slid them off. The aches and pains came back, a muted throbbing at first, taking hold slowly and biting deeper with each pulse beat.
Marsha had my tie off and was unbuttoning my shirt when the knock came. It didn’t make any difference any more who it was. I heard her open the door, heard the murmur of voices and the high babble of a child’s voice in the background.
“Mike ... it’s a nurse.”
“The superintendent asked me to look in on you,” the other voice said.
“I’m all right.”
Her voice became very efficient. “I doubt it. Will you watch the child, please? Thank you.” Her hand slipped under my arm. “You’ll do better lying down.”
I couldn’t argue with her. She had an answer for everything. Marsha was on the couch still crying, playing with the kid. I got up and went to the bedroom. She had me undressed and in bed before I realized it. The sting of the iodine and the cold compresses on my face jerked me out of immediate sleep and I heard her telling Marsha to call a doctor. It seemed like only seconds before he was there, squeezing with hands that had forgotten how to be gentle, then gone as quickly as he had come. I could hear the two women discussing me quietly, deciding to stay until I had awakened. The kid squealed at something and it was the last thing I heard.
There were only snatches of dreams after that, vague faces that had an odd familiarity and incomprehensible mutterings about things I didn’t understand. It took me away from the painful present and threw me into a timeless zone of light and warmth where my body healed itself immediately. It was like being inside a huge beautiful compound where there was no trouble, no misery and no death. All that was outside the transparent walls of the compound where you could see it happen to everyone else without being touched yourself.
They were all there, Decker with his child, listening intently to what Mel Hooker had to say, and Toady Link in the background watching and nodding to make sure he said it right, his boys ready to move in if he said the wrong thing. Lou and Teen were there too, standing over the body of a man who had to be Fallon, their heads turned speculatively toward Toady. A play was going on not far away. Everybody was dressed in Roman togas. Marsha and Pat held the center of the stage with the D.A. and Ellen was standing in the open wings waiting to come on. They turned and made motions to be quiet to the dozens of others behind them ... the women. Beautiful women. Lovely women with faces you could recognize. Women whose faces I had seen before in photographs.
When the players moved it was with deliberate slowness so you could watch every move. I stood there in the center of the compound and realized that it was all being done for my benefit without understanding why. It was a scene of impending action, the evil of it symbolized by the lone shadow of the vulture wheeling high above in a gray, dismal sky.
I waited and watched, knowing that it had all happened before and was going to happen again and this time I would see every move and understand each individual action. I tried to concentrate on the players until I realized that I wasn’t the only audience they had. Someone else was there in the compound with me. She was a woman. She had no face. She was a woman in black hovering behind me. I called to her and received no answer. I tried to walk to her, but she was always the same distance away without seeming to move at all. I ran on leaden feet without getting any closer, and tiring of the chase turned back to the play.
It was over and I had missed it again.
I said something vile to the woman because she had caused me to miss it and she shrank back, disappearing into the mist.
But the play wasn’t over, not quite. At first I thought they were taking a curtain call, then I realized that their faces were hideous things and in unreal voices of pure silence they were all screaming for me to stop her and bring her back. Teen and Grindle and Link were slavering in their fury as they tried to break through the transparent wall and were thrown back to the ground. Their faces were contorted and their hands curved into talons. I laughed at them and they stopped, stunned, then withdrew out of sight.
The gray and noiseless compound dissolved into sound and yellow light. I was rocked gently from side to side and a voice said, “Mike ... please wake up.”
I opened my one eye and the other came open with it a little bit. “Marsha?”
“You were talking in your sleep. Are you awake, Mike?”
She looked tired. The nurse behind her looked tired too. The boy in her arms was smiling at me. “I’m awake, honey.” I made a motion for her to pull down the shade. “Same day?”
“No, you slept all through yesterday, all night and most of today.”
I rubbed my face. Some of the puffiness had gone down. “Lord. What time is it?”
“Almost four-thirty. Mike ... that Captain Chambers is on the phone. Can you answer him?”
“Yeah, I’ll get it. Let me get something on.”
I struggled into my pants, swearing when I hit a raw spot. I was covered with adhesive tape and iodine, but the agony of moving was only a soreness now. I padded outside and picked up the phone. “Hello ...”
“Where’ve you been, Mike? I told you to call me.”
“Oh, shut up. I’ve been asleep.”
“I hope you’re awake now. The D.A. found Grindle.”
“Good.”
“Now he wants you.”
“What’s it this time, a homicide charge?”
“There’s no charge. I explained that away. He wants Teen and he thinks you’re pulling a fast one again.”
“What’s the matter with that guy?”
“Put yourself in his shoes and you’ll see. The guy is fighting to hang on to his job.”
“Christ, I gave him enough. What does he want ... blood? Did he expect me to get Teen the hard way for him?”
“Don’t be a jerk, Mike. He doesn’t want Teen dead. He doesn’t want a simple obit in the papers. He wants Teen in court so he can blow the whole thing wide open before the public. That’s the only thing that will keep him in office.”
“What happened to the tin ear?”
“All the guy had was the telephone number of a booth in Grand Central Station. If he didn’t call in every hour it meant there was trouble. We traced the number and there was nobody around. The guy worked through an intermediary who passed the information on to the right people. Both of them got paid off the same way ... a bundle of cash by mail on the first of every month.”
“I suppose Ed Teen’s laughing his head off.”
“Not exactly, but he’s grinning broadly. We checked his alibi for the night before last and it’s perfect. You know and I know that it’s phony as hell, but nobody is breaking it down in court. According to Teen the entire thing is preposterous. He was playing cards with a group of friends right through the night.”
“Nuts. His story is as old as his racket. One good session under the lights and he’ll talk.”
“You don’t put him under lights.”
“There’re other things you can do,” I suggested.
“You don’t do that either, Mike. Teen’s going around under the watchful eye of a battery of lawyers well protected by a gang of licensed strong-arm boys. You try anything smart and it’ll be your neck.”