The essential noir bundl.., p.18
The Essential Noir Bundle,
p.18
I got up off my knees and went to him. When I got close enough I recognized him as one of the men who had let me into the Ronney Street house the day before.
I sat on my heels beside him and asked:
“Where’ll I find Reno? Hank O’Marra said he wanted to see me.”
“He does that. Know where Kid McLeod’s place is at?”
“No.”
“It’s on Martin Street above King, corner the alley. Ask for the Kid. Go back that-away three blocks, and then down. You can’t miss it.”
I said I’d try not to, and left him crouching behind his hedge, watching my client’s place, waiting, I guessed, for a shot at Pete the Finn, Whisper, or any of Reno’s other un-friends who might happen to call on old Elihu.
Following directions, I came to a soft drink and rummy establishment with red and yellow paint all over it. Inside I asked for Kid McLeod. I was taken into a back room, where a fat man with a dirty collar, a lot of gold teeth, and only one ear, admitted he was McLeod.
“Reno sent for me,” I said, “Where’ll I find him?”
“And who does that make you?” he asked.
I told him who I was. He went out without saying anything. I waited ten minutes. He brought a boy back with him, a kid of fifteen or so with a vacant expression on a pimply red face.
“Go with Sonny,” Kid McLeod told me.
I followed the boy out a side door, down two blocks of back street, across a sandy lot, through a ragged gate, and up to the back door of a frame house.
The boy knocked on the door and was asked who he was.
“Sonny, with a guy the Kid sent,” he replied.
The door was opened by long-legged O’Marra. Sonny went away. I went into a kitchen where Reno Starkey and four other men sat around a table that had a lot of beer on it. I noticed that two automatic pistols hung on nails over the top of the door through which I had come. They would be handy if any of the house’s occupants opened the door, found an enemy with a gun there, and were told to put up their hands.
Reno poured me a glass of beer and led me through the dining room into a front room. A man lay on his belly there, with one eye to the crack between the drawn blind and the bottom of the window, watching the street.
“Go back and get yourself some beer,” Reno told him.
He got up and went away. We made ourselves comfortable in adjoining chairs.
“When I fixed up that Tanner alibi for you,” Reno said, “I told you I was doing it because I needed all the friends I could get.”
“You got one.”
“Crack the alibi yet?” he asked.
“Not yet.”
“It’ll hold,” he assured me, “unless they got too damned much on you. Think they have?”
I did think so. I said:
“No. McGraw’s just feeling playful. That’ll take care of itself. How’s your end holding up?”
He emptied his glass, wiped his mouth on the back of a hand, and said:
“I’ll make out. But that’s what I wanted to see you about. Here’s how she stacks up. Pete’s throwed in with McGraw. That lines coppers and beer mob up against me and Whisper. But hell! Me and Whisper are busier trying to put the chive in each other than bucking the combine. That’s a sour racket. While we’re tangling, them bums will eat us up.”
I said I had been thinking the same thing. He went on:
“Whisper’ll listen to you. Find him, will you? Put it to him. Here’s the proposish: he means to get me for knocking off Jerry Hooper, and I mean to get him first. Let’s forget that for a couple of days. Nobody won’t have to trust nobody else. Whisper don’t ever show in any of his jobs anyways. He just sends the boys. I’ll do the same this time. We’ll just put the mobs together to swing the caper. We run them together, rub out the damned Finn, and then we’ll have plenty of time to go gunning among ourselves.
“Put it to him cold. I don’t want him to get any ideas that I’m dodging a rumpus with him or any other guy. Tell him I say if we put Pete out of the way we’ll have more room to do our own scrapping in. Pete’s holed-up down in Whiskeytown. I ain’t got enough men to go down there and pull him out. Neither has Whisper. The two of us together has. Put it to him.”
“Whisper,” I said, “is dead.”
Reno said, “Is that so?” as if he thought it wasn’t.
“Dan Rolff killed him yesterday morning, down in the old Redman warehouse, stuck him with the ice pick Whisper had used on the girl.”
Reno asked:
“You know this? You’re not just running off at the head?”
“I know it.”
“Damned funny none of his mob act like he was gone,” he said, but he was beginning to believe me.
“They don’t know it. He was hiding out, with Ted Wright the only one in on the where. Ted knew it. He cashed in on it. He told me he got a hundred or a hundred and fifty from you, through Peak Murry.”
“I’d have given the big umpchay twice that for the straight dope,” Reno grumbled. He rubbed his chin and said: “Well, that settles the Whisper end.”
I said: “No.”
“What do you mean, no?”
“If his mob don’t know where he is,” I suggested, “let’s tell them. They blasted him out of the can when Noonan copped him. Think they’d try it again if the news got around that McGraw had picked him up on the quiet?”
“Keep talking,” Reno said.
“If his friends try to crack the hoosegow again, thinking he’s in it, that’ll give the department, including Pete’s specials, something to do. While they’re doing it, you could try your luck in Whiskeytown.”
“Maybe,” he said slowly, “maybe we’ll try just that thing.”
“It ought to work,” I encouraged him, standing up. “I’ll see you—”
“Stick around. This is as good a spot as any while there’s a reader out for you. And we’ll need a good guy like you on the party.”
I didn’t like that so much. I knew enough not to say so. I sat down again.
Reno got busy arranging the rumor. The telephone was worked overtime. The kitchen door was worked as hard, letting men in and out. More came in than went out. The house filled with men, smoke, tension.
CHAPTER 25: WHISKEYTOWN
At half-past one Reno turned from answering a phone call to say:
“Let’s take a ride.”
He went upstairs. When he came down he carried a black valise. Most of the men had gone out the kitchen door by then.
Reno gave me the black valise, saying:
“Don’t wrastle it around too much.”
It was heavy.
The seven of us left in the house went out the front door and got into a curtained touring car that O’Marra had just driven up to the curb. Reno sat beside O’Marra. I was squeezed in between men in the back seat, with the valise squeezed between my legs.
Another car came out of the first cross street to run ahead of us. A third followed us. Our speed hung around forty, fast enough to get us somewhere, not fast enough to get us a lot of attention.
We had nearly finished the trip before we were bothered.
The action started in a block of one-story houses of the shack type, down in the southern end of the city.
A man put his head out of a door, put his fingers in his mouth, and whistled shrilly.
Somebody in the car behind us shot him down.
At the next corner we ran through a volley of pistol bullets.
Reno turned around to tell me:
“If they pop the bag, we’ll all of us hit the moon. Get it open. We got to work fast when we get there.”
I had the fasteners unsnapped by the time we came to rest at the curb in front of a dark three-story brick building.
Men crawled all over me, opening the valise, helping themselves to the contents, bombs made of short sections of two-inch pipe, packed in sawdust in the bag. Bullets bit chunks out of the car’s curtains.
Reno reached back for one of the bombs, hopped out to the sidewalk, paid no attention to a streak of blood that suddenly appeared in the middle of his left cheek, and heaved his piece of stuffed pipe at the brick building’s door.
A sheet of flame was followed by deafening noise. Hunks of things pelted us while we tried to keep from being knocked over by the concussion. Then there was no door to keep anybody out of the red brick building.
A man ran forward, swung his arm, let a pipeful of hell go through the doorway. The shutters came off the downstairs windows, fire and glass flying behind them.
The car that had followed us was stationary up the street, trading shots with the neighborhood. The car that had gone ahead of us had turned into a side street. Pistol shots from behind the red brick building, between the explosions of our cargo, told us that our advance car was covering the back door.
O’Marra, out in the middle of the street, bent far over, tossed a bomb to the brick building’s roof. It didn’t explode. O’Marra put one foot high in the air, clawed at his throat, and fell solidly backward.
Another of our party went down under the slugs that were cutting at us from a wooden building next to the brick one.
Reno cursed stolidly and said:
“Burn them out, Fat.”
Fat spit on a bomb, ran around the back of our car, and swung his arm.
We picked ourselves up off the sidewalk, dodged flying things, and saw that the frame house was all out of whack, with flames climbing its torn edges.
“Any left?” Reno asked as we looked around, enjoying the novelty of not being shot at.
“Here’s the last one,” Fat said, holding out a bomb.
Fire was dancing inside the upper windows of the brick house. Reno looked at it, took the bomb from Fat, and said:
“Back off. They’ll be coming out.”
We moved away from the front of the house.
A voice indoors yelled:
“Reno!”
Reno slipped into the shadow of our car before he called back:
“Well?”
“We’re done,” a heavy voice shouted. “We’re coming out. Don’t shoot.”
Reno asked, “Who’s we’re?”
“Well?”
“This is Pete,” the heavy voice said. “There’s four left of us.”
“You come first,” Reno ordered, “with your mitts on the top of your head. The others come out one at a time, same way, after you. And half a minute apart is close enough. Come on.”
We waited a moment, and then Pete the Finn appeared in the dynamited doorway, his hands holding the top of his bald head. In the glare from the burning next-door house we could see that his face was cut, his clothes almost all torn off.
Stepping over wreckage, the bootlegger came slowly down the steps to the sidewalk.
Reno called him a lousy fish-eater and shot him four times in face and body.
Pete went down. A man behind me laughed.
Reno hurled the remaining bomb through the doorway.
We scrambled into our car. Reno took the wheel. The engine was dead. Bullets had got to it.
Reno worked the horn while the rest of us piled out.
The machine that had stopped at the corner came for us. Waiting for it, I looked up and down the street that was bright with the glow of two burning buildings. There were a few faces at windows, but whoever besides us was in the street had taken to cover. Not far away, firebells sounded.
The other machine slowed up for us to climb aboard. It was already full. We packed it in layers, with the overflow hanging on the running boards.
We bumped over dead Hank O’Marra’s legs and headed for home. We covered one block of the distance with safety if not comfort. After that we had neither.
A limousine turned into the street ahead of us, came half a block toward us, put its side to us, and stopped. Out of the side, gun-fire.
Another car came around the limousine and charged us. Out of it, gun-fire.
We did our best, but we were too damned amalgamated for good fighting. You can’t shoot straight holding a man in your lap, another hanging on your shoulder, while a third does his shooting from an inch behind your ear.
Our other car—the one that had been around at the building’s rear—came up and gave us a hand. But by then two more had joined the opposition. Apparently Thaler’s mob’s attack on the jail was over, one way or the other, and Pete’s army, sent to help there, had returned in time to spoil our get-away. It was a sweet mess.
I leaned over a burning gun and yelled in Reno’s ear:
“This is the bunk. Let’s us extras get out and do our wrangling from the street.”
He thought that a good idea, and gave orders:
“Pile out some of you hombres, and take them from the pavements.”
I was the first man out, with my eye on a dark alley entrance.
Fat followed me to it. In my shelter, I turned on him and growled:
“Don’t pile up on me. Pick your own hole. There’s a cellar-way that looks good.”
He agreeably trotted off toward it, and was shot down at his third step.
I explored my alley. It was only twenty feet long, and ended against a high board fence with a locked gate.
A garbage can helped me over the gate into a brick-paved yard. The side fence of that yard let me into another, and from that I got into another, where a fox terrier raised hell at me.
I kicked the pooch out of the way, made the opposite fence, untangled myself from a clothes line, crossed two more yards, got yelled at from a window, had a bottle thrown at me, and dropped into a cobblestoned back street.
The shooting was behind me, but not far enough. I did all I could to remedy that. I must have walked as many streets as I did in my dreams the night Dinah was killed.
My watch said it was three-thirty A.M. when I looked at it on Elihu Willsson’s front steps.
CHAPTER 26: BLACKMAIL
I had to push my client’s doorbell a lot before I got any play on it.
Finally the door was opened by the tall sunburned chauffeur. He was dressed in undershirt and pants, and had a billiard cue in one fist.
“What do you want?” he demanded, and then, when he got another look at me: “It’s you, is it? Well, what do you want?”
“I want to see Mr. Willsson.”
“At four in the morning? Go on with you,” and he started to close the door.
I put a foot against it. He looked from my foot to my face, hefted the billiard cue, and asked:
“You after getting your kneecap cracked?”
“I’m not playing,” I insisted. “I’ve got to see the old man. Tell him.”
“I don’t have to tell him. He told me no later than this afternoon that if you come around he didn’t want to see you.”
“Yeah?” I took the four love letters out of my pocket, picked out the first and least idiotic of them, held it out to the chauffeur, and said: “Give him that and tell him I’m sitting on the steps with the rest of them. Tell him I’ll sit here five minutes and then carry the rest of them to Tommy Robins of the Consolidated Press.”
The chauffeur scowled at the letter, said, “To hell with Tommy Robins and his blind aunt!” took the letter, and closed the door.
Four minutes later he opened the door again and said:
“Inside, you.”
I followed him upstairs to old Elihu’s bedroom.
My client sat up in bed with his love letter crushed in one round pink fist, its envelope in the other.
His short white hair bristled. His round eyes were as much red as blue. The parallel lines of his mouth and chin almost touched. He was in a lovely humor.
As soon as he saw me he shouted:
“So after all your brave talking you had to come back to the old pirate to have your neck saved, did you?”
I said I didn’t anything of the sort. I said if he was going to talk like a sap he ought to lower his voice so that people in Los Angeles wouldn’t learn what a sap he was.
The old boy let his voice out another notch, bellowing:
“Because you’ve stolen a letter or two that don’t belong to you, you needn’t think you—”
I put fingers in my ears. They didn’t shut out the noise, but they insulted him into cutting the bellowing short.
I took the fingers out and said:
“Send the flunkey away so we can talk. You won’t need him. I’m not going to hurt you.”
He said, “Get out,” to the chauffeur.
The chauffeur, looking at me without fondness, left us, closing the door.
Old Elihu gave me the rush act, demanding that I surrender the rest of the letters immediately, wanting to know loudly and profanely where I had got them, what I was doing with them, threatening me with this, that, and the other, but mostly just cursing me.
I didn’t surrender the letters. I said:
“I took them from the man you hired to recover them. A tough break for you that he had to kill the girl.”
Enough red went out of the old man’s face to leave it normally pink. He worked his lips over his teeth, screwed up his eyes at me, and said:
“Is that the way you’re going to play it?”
His voice came comparatively quiet from his chest. He had settled down to fight.
I pulled a chair over beside the bed, sat down, put as much amusement as I could in a grin, and said:
“That’s one way.”
He watched me, working his lips, saying nothing. I said:
“You’re the damndest client I ever had. What do you do? You hire me to clean town, change your mind, run out on me, work against me until I begin to look like a winner, then get on the fence, and now when you think I’m licked again, you don’t even want to let me in the house. Lucky for me I happened to run across those letters.”
He said: “Blackmail.”
I laughed and said:
“Listen who’s naming it. All right, call it that.” I tapped the edge of the bed with a forefinger. “I’m not licked, old top. I’ve won. You came crying to me that some naughty men had taken your little city away from you. Pete the Finn, Lew Yard, Whisper Thaler, and Noonan. Where are they now?
“Yard died Tuesday morning, Noonan the same night, Whisper Wednesday morning, and the Finn a little while ago. I’m giving your city back to you whether you want it or not. If that’s blackmail, O.K. Now here’s what you’re going to do. You’re going to get hold of your mayor, I suppose the lousy village has got one, and you and he are going to phone the governor—Keep still until I get through.












