Spill the jackpot, p.9
Spill the Jackpot,
p.9
“But, Dad, you can’t let it go at that. We must find Corla. We must!”
The waitress came with the change. Whitewell gave her an even ten percent tip, put the remaining money in his pocket.
“You didn’t eat nearly as much as usual. Your appetite all right?” I asked Bertha.
“Yes. I just didn’t feel as hungry. Not that I haven’t a good appetite; but I just don’t have that ravenous, all-gone feeling I had when I was—heavier.”
Whitewell said to his son, “Ever seen one of these gambling casinos, Philip?”
“No,” he said, craning his neck.
Whitewell looked at Bertha significantly. “Would you,”
he asked, “care to join us in a little gambling, or would you prefer to go to the hotel and have a conference with your assistant?”
Bertha caught his eye. “We’re going to the hotel,” she said.
As nearly as I could remember afterwards, it was then about eight o’clock. We went up to Bertha’s room. She closed and locked the door. “Donald,” she said, “you’d better let me have that letter.”
I looked at my watch. “Don’t you think it would be a lot better to have me complete my investigations?”
“About what?”
“About the letter.”
“Donald, what the devil are you up to? What in the world do you want to go to Los Angeles for?”
“Various reasons. If you’re going to stay here on account of the climate, someone should be running the Los Angeles office.”
She let her little eyes glitter at me. “Damn you, Donald. You don’t need to play them so close to your chest with me. Why do you want to get out of here?”
“It was just a suggestion.”
She sighed. “All right, you obstinate little devil, go take your damn train.”
“When will I see you?”
“I don’t know. I like it here.”
“The climate?”
“Of course, the climate. What else would. I be sticking around this dump for?”
“I wouldn’t know.”
“I guess you wouldn’t. Go ahead and get your train.”
“Don’t tell the Whitewells where I’ve gone until after the train leaves.”
“What will I tell them?”
“Tell them I’m out making another investigation. I’ll leave a note at the desk for you, telling you I have decided to take the train to Los Angeles, and you can wait here for me. I’ll leave word to have the note delivered at nine-thirty, or you can ring up the office and ask if I left any message for you when I don’t show up.”
She said, “Mr. Whitewell may not like this.”
“That’s right,” I agreed. “He may not.”
She stared at me again as though trying to read my mind, then turned away with a gesture of irritation.
I unlocked the door, walked quickly down to my room, and tossed my wardrobe into a light handbag. Experience with Bertha had taught me the advisability of being able to travel with nothing more bulky than one light bag. I still had half an hour to kill. I killed it studying the letter and thinking back over conversations.
Chapter Seven
THE TRAIN pulled in on time. I climbed aboard and had fifteen minutes to wait. I had a lower berth. The cars were air-conditioned. It was still warm in the depot and after the desert heat, the air-conditioned cars seemed chilly. There wasn’t anything else to do, so I undressed while the train was still in the depot, slid into my berth, found that a single blanket didn’t feel at all uncomfortable, and dropped off to sleep. I didn’t even know when the train pulled out.
Somewhere along the road, I dreamed there was a big earthquake. The track had twisted and turned like a tortured snake trying to crawl off a hot iron. The train buckled in the middle, slewed sideways. Cars were rolling over and over A voice kept saying in a hoarse whisper, “Lower nine—lower nine—lower nine,” and I realized the earthquake was caused by hands tugging at the blanket.
I knuckled my eyes and said, “What is it?”
“Ge’mman has to see you right away.”
“What the devil,” I said, fighting against the sense of unreality and a growing irritation.
“Turn on the light in there,” a voice said.
I sat up in the berth, and pulled the curtains aside. Lieutenant Kleinsmidt was standing in the aisle with the white-coated, big-eyed porter at his side.
The car was rolling slowly along—gathering speed. Far up ahead I could hear the mellowed whistle of the locomotive drifting back across the roofs of the air-conditioned cars. The aisle was a dim mist of green curtains swaying with the motion of the train. Here and there, heads stuck out as curious passengers wondered what the commotion was about.
I stared at Kleinsmidt. “What’s the idea?” I asked. “You’re going back, Lam.”
“Back where?”
“To Las Vegas.”
“When?”
“Right now.”
I said, “Guess again. I’m going to be in Los Angeles at exactly eight-thirty in the morning.”
He looked at his watch. “I got on at Yermo at two-thirty,” he said. “We stop brief!y at Barstow at three-ten. You’re going to be dressed and off the train then.”
“This is the kind of co-operation I get in return for giving you a break, I suppose.”
He started to say something, changed his mind, said instead, “Start getting dressed, Lam,” and added, “This is an official visit, and I’m talking in my official capacity. I mean it.”
“How’d you get here)” I asked, accepting the situation and wriggling out of my pajamas.
He stood with one elbow propped against the lower part of the upper berth, looking down at me. “Airplane. There’s a car following the train. We’ll go back and—”
A man’s voice from the upper berth asked irritably, “Why don’t you get a ship-to-shore telephone?”
“Sorry,” Kleinsmidt said.
The porter moved up “Beg pand’n, ge’mmen, if you all don’t mind.”
“It’s all right,” I told him. “We’ll be quiet.”
I dressed in silence. Kleinsmidt’s big hand reached in and took my bag as I finished packing.
He led the way down to the men’s washroom. “What do you want out, Lam?” he asked.
“Toothbrush, hairbrush—” - He looked at his watch. “All right. I’ll play valet.”
I combed my hair and brushed my teeth, washed up, and reached for my shirt. Kleinsmidt handed it to me. He’d been holding it—looking at it.
I put my hairbrush, toothbrush, and tooth paste back in the bag. Kleinsmidt snapped the bag shut and wrapped his big hand around the handle.
“I can take it,” I said.
“It’s all right. I have it.”
The porter came in. “Jus’ a few minutes we’ll be in Barstow, suh. We only stop there jus’ a second. If you ge’mmen will be all ready to hop off.”
Kleinsmidt nodded.
“Ah’s openin’ up at the rear,” the porter said.
I lit a cigarette. “What’s it all about?” I asked Kleinsmidt.
“Sorry, Lam, I’m not doing any talking right now.”
“I’ll say you’re not. The way you’re acting, a person would think you were breaking a murder case.”
I could have bitten my tongue off as soon as I’d said it. The look on his face told me everything I needed to know. “How did you know there’d been a murder, Lam?”
“Has there?”
“That’s what you said.”
“Don’t be silly. I told you you were going through as much agony as though there had been a murder.”
“That isn’t exactly what you said.”
“The hell it isn’t.”
“You know it isn’t.”
“I know it is. I was merely using a figure of speech anyway. But that’s no sign you can’t tell me.”
“We’ll talk about something else until we get to Las Vegas.”
The train slowed down. We walked back through the vestibule. The porter stood at the door, his hand on the catch. When the train came to a stop, he slammed up the platform, jerked open the door, jumped down the stairs, and stood staring. I could see the whites of his eyes.
The sharp tang of pure desert air knifed my nostrils. Even in the air-conditioned car I’d been conscious of sticky emanations oozing into the atmosphere from persons who were sleeping. Out in the desert, the cold, dry air, pure and sharp, dissolved those impurities from my lungs so rapidly it was like a stab.
I held a quarter out to the porter. He started to reach for it, then suddenly jerked his hand back and said, “No, suh. That’s all right, suh. Ah ain’ courtin’ no bad luck. Ah means— Good mornin’, suh.”
I put the quarter back in my pocket.
Kleinsmidt chuckled.
I looked forward along the train. There was a wind blowing. Smoke and steam from the locomotive were whipped back, and tossed about to dissolve into fragments. Kleinsmidt walked ahead with my bag, seemed to know very definitely where he was going. Out beyond the station, I looked up at the sky. The stars were staring steadily down, close to me, unwinking and brilliant. It seemed there wasn’t an inch of the heavens that wasn’t blazing with pin points of light.
Typical of the vagaries of desert climate, the heat had given way to an intense, dry cold.
“Got an overcoat?” Kleinsmidt asked.
“No.”
“Okay, the car’s warm.”
He walked across to where a car was parked. A man jumped out and pulled the rear door open. Kleinsmidt saw that I got in first, tossed the bag in, and c!imbed in beside me.
“Let’s go,” he said to the driver.
We slid into smooth motion out from the railroad grounds in a wide, sweeping turn, up to the highway, and across a bridge. It was warmer inside the car, but there was the nearness of the stars the vast space of the desert stretching away on each side, in front and behind, gave one a feeling of cold insignificance.
I said to Kleinsmidt, “Nice weather we’re having.”
“Isn’t it.”
“What’s the idea? Am I being charged with some crime?” You’re just going back, that’s all.”
If I’m not charged with anything, you haven’t any authority to take me off a train and take me back.”
“That may he. However, the chief said to bring you back, and you’re going back.”
“What’s the car?”
“One I rented down the line a piece. I have a plane parked down there.”
I said, “Well, anyway, I’m glad we’re friends. If we hadn’t been, you might have got sore and decided not to tell me anything.”
He laughed at that. The driver half turned, then pivoted his head back so his eyes were on the road.
The car roared into high speed, taking a series of dips in the road so fast I could feel the body lurch and sway on its springs. I settled back into the corner and wrapped myself in silence. Kleinsmidt bit the end from a cigar and smoked. There was no sound save the noise made by the cold desert wind as it whistled around the car, and the sound of the motor. Once or twice we went through streaks of sifting sand hissing across the highway in long tendrils of drifting white.
The pitted crescent of an old moon came up when we had been traveling about half an hour, and a few minutes later the car slowed.
Ahead, a square of multicolored lights marked the location of a landing-field. The driver slowed the car, searched for a turn-off road with a spotlight, found it, and approached the field. Almost at once, I heard the roar of an airplane motor and saw lights come on on a plane.
Kleinsmidt said to the driver, “I’ll want a receipt for this so I can turn it in on expenses.”
The driver took the money Kleinsmidt gave him and scrawled out a ‘receipt. Kleinsmidt opened the door, grabbed my bag, and we stepped out into the cold. The driver of the car backed it around and started back for the highway. The motor on the plane was turning over with clicking regularity. I could hear the coarse sand crunching beneath our feet.
Kleinsmidt said to me, out of the corner of his mouth, “They’d break me if they knew I’d done any talking. You’re supposed to hit the chief’s office without knowing anything about what the score is.”
“Why?” I asked.
Kleinsmidt measured the distance to the waiting airplane, slowed his pace somewhat so he wouldn’t get there too soon. “What time did you leave Bertha Cool in the Sal Sagev Hotel?” he asked.
“Why, I don’t know. Yes, I do, too. It was shortly after eight.”
“Where’d you go?”
“Down to my room.”
“What’d you do there?”
“Packed up.”
“You didn’t check out?”
“No. I left that for Bertha to do. They’d have charged me for another twenty-four hours on the room, anyway, and Bertha’s the treasurer. She knew I was going.”
“You didn’t say anything to anyone in the hotel?”
“No. just took my bag and walked out. I put a note for Bertha on the desk.”
“This one bag all the baggage you have?”
“Yes. What’s the idea?”
He said in a low voice, “Somebody got killed. The chief thinks you may have had something to do with it. I don’t know what makes him think so, but somebody gave him a bum steer. He thinks it’s hot. Keep your head. Don’t talk after we get in the airplane.”
I said, “Thanks, Lieutenant.”
“It’s okay,” he mumbled. “Just keep turning this over in your mind, and try and get an alibi.”
“For what time?”
“From ten minutes to nine until the time the train pulled out.”
“I can’t do it. I got to the station about nine o’clock. The train pulled in at five minutes past nine, and I got aboard.”
“The porter doesn’t remember you.”
“No. He was talking with someone. My bag was light, and I just climbed up the car steps. I was tired, and I undressed at once. I—”
“Save it,” he said as the figure of the pilot loomed up in front of the plane.
“All ready?” Kleinsmidt asked.
“All right. Hop aboard.”
We climbed into the low-ceilinged cabin of a single-motored plane. The pilot looked at me curiously, said, “You ever flown before?”
“Yes.”
“Understand about your safety belt and all that?”
“Yes.”
The pilot jerked down a curtain behind him, gunned the motor into a roar, and we started moving. After a few minutes, the wheels gave a series of short, sharp jolts, and Alen we zoomed upward and out across the line of colored lights. Ahead, the circling finger of an airway beacon cut through the darkness. Kleinsmidt tapped me on the knee, held his finger to his lips for silence, slid my bag over so that his leg was holding it tightly against the side of the cabin, out of my reach. He closed his eyes and almost immediately began to breathe heavily.
I didn’t think he was asleep. Apparently, it was some sort of a trap to see if I’d try to get something out of mybag. I noticed he kept the edge of his foot pushing against the corner of the bag. He’d have felt it if I’d so much as touched the bag.
I thought back on it and remembered how he’d grabbed that bag as soon as he’d got aboard the train, and hadn’t let it out of his possession since. Then I remembered how he’d examined my shirt in the washroom. Evidently, the chief of police had been given a very hot tip indeed.
Chapter Eight
CHIEF LASTER glared at me across his desk and said, “Sit down.”
I pulled up a chair and sat down. Kleinsmidt settled himself over on the far side of the room, and crossed his legs.
Daylight was just breaking outside the building. The streamers of eastern clouds were a vivid crimson-orange, giving a reddish tinge to the landscape and even causing a slight russet coloring on the chief’s face. There was just enough light outside to make electric lights seem sickly and pale, but not quite enough to dispense with artificial illumination.
Laster said, “Your name is Donald Lam, and you claim to be a private detective.”
“That’s right.”
“Working for the B. Cool Detective Agency.”
“Yes.”
“Now, you hit town yesterday afternoon on a plane, didn’t you?”
“Yes.”
“Right away, you started stirring up a lot of trouble.’ “No.”
He raised his eyebrows. “No?” he asked sarcastically. “No. A lot of trouble started stirring me up.” He stared at me to see if I was cracking wise.
“Well, you involved Lieutenant Kleinsmidt in a fight, had an argument with the attendant in charge of the slot machines at the Cactus Patch, then had a street fight with a man by the name of Beegan, didn’t you?”
I said, “The attendant over at the Cactus Patch took a swing at me. He called for the police. Lieutenant Kleinsmidt answered. As far as the other is concerned, a man made an unprovoked assault upon both Kleinsmidt and me. Kleinsmidt really got going and this man beat it—fast.”
I glanced at the Lieutenant out of the corner of my eye. He was grinning. He liked that version of the fight.
Laster tried another approach. “You called on Helen Framley yesterday, didn’t you?”
“Yes.”
“How did you get her address?”
“A client of the agency gave it to me.”
He started to say something, ,changed his mind, consulted some notes on his desk, looked up suddenly, and said, “Harry Beegan was her boy friend, wasn’t he?”
“I wouldn’t know.”
“He acted like it?”
“I’m afraid I’m not qualified to judge.”
“You were on that train for Los Angeles that leaves here at nine-twenty?”
“That’s right.”
“You got aboard by the skin of your eyeteeth, did you not?”
“I did not.”
“What time did you get aboard?”
“As soon as the train pulled in.”
“You mean you were waiting at the station and got aboard the train just as soon as it stopped?”
“That’s what I said.”
“Now, Lam, think that over carefully, because your answer may make quite a difference.”











