A Killing in the Market (8 page)

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Authors: Franklin W. Dixon

BOOK: A Killing in the Market
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"I did," the potbellied man said. "You know, Fleckman called only five minutes ago, and I wanted to get a load of trash in before — "

THWOOMP! CRRRUNCH! As the noise echoed through the room, Joe felt sick to his stomach.

"You know we can't stop that thing, or put anything in it, once it starts? Where were you when they handed out brains?"

"W - well, it's coming to the end of the cycle," the custodian said defensively.

Slowly the noise began to subside.

"I guess we're stopping here to check out the trash on the way upstairs, huh, guys?" Joe asked.

"We're going upstairs all right," the other maintenance man said with a toothless grin. "But you'll be coming out a lot shorter."

At that moment the great machine stopped. The leader opened a door in the front of it, releasing an even fouler odor into the room. He pulled out a grotesque three - foot - wide object — a dense, battered-looking combination of paper, folders, metal brackets, and food wrappers, all crushed into a neat little cube.

Joe swallowed hard. Out of the corner of his eye he could see his brother staring poker-faced at the machine. Joe knew that look. It meant Frank was baffled and was feverishly trying to come up with a plan.

"All right," the leader said, shifting his eyes from man to man. "Throw 'em in."

Brawny arms grabbed Frank and Joe, jerking them toward the open door.

"J - just a minute!" Frank shouted at the top of his lungs. "We've got something Fleckman ought to see!"

"What are you talking about?" the cold-voiced goon demanded.

"We got papers from Spears — the guy who's trying to foul Fleckman up." Frank was almost babbling as he spread out Spears's printouts on top of a panel connected to the trash compactor by a wire.

Joe stared at his brother, wide-eyed. Had he gone berserk? Had he truly given up?

But as he watched Frank spread the printouts with his right hand, he noticed Frank's left hand creeping over to a small switch on the panel.

The leader, who had been trying to make sense of the accounting gobbledygook, turned back to Frank and said, "Just tell me what this proves and I'll — " His eyes popped wide open. "Hey, what are you doing?"

Frank lunged and flicked the switch. With a loud chunk! the compactor's door slammed shut.

A deep humming sound filled the room as the machine started up—with nothing to compact.

"You rotten — " The leader, followed by the largest of Fleckman's goons, rushed Frank.

Joe wasted no time. In the confusion he spun around and flicked off the light switch, plunging the room into total darkness. Loud crashes and shouts of pain resounded as Frank and the others tripped over the trash on the floor.

And in the midst of it all, a high-pitched whistle pierced the air.

Frank, letting me know where he is, Joe thought. He groped around and found the door and knob. Then, as loud as he could, he let out a whistle of his own.

In the darkness he heard low stumbling noises.

"Yeeouch!" came a low, unfamiliar voice.

"Oof!" came another. A third yell was followed immediately by a fourth.

"I'm coming, Joe!" Frank's voice called out. In seconds Frank stumbled against his brother, and they both pushed their way through the door.

As they slammed it behind them, another frustrated yell sounded from inside.

"I got all four of them," Frank said. "Let's get out of here before one of them gets up."

Pushing at top speed, they followed the cinder-block hallway to a stairwell. Flinging the door open, they hauled themselves up three flights of dingy stairs until, panting, they stumbled into the building lobby and out the door.

The honking of horns and the roar of traffic was a welcome sound to their ears as they ran out to the crowded street.

"How do we get to Elite Eye?" Joe shouted to Frank, close on his heels.

"I'm not sure! Let's find a phone and call!" Frank answered.

At the end of the block was a bank of four outdoor pay phones. One of them was empty, and Joe grabbed it. He shoved a quarter into the slot and dialed Clifton's number.

"I'm sorry, your call requires a twenty-five-cent deposit," a recorded voice droned.

"But I did deposit—" Joe began to shout. Then he saw the person next to him hang up and walk away from her phone. He reached over and lifted the receiver—and felt a huge hand on his shoulder.

"Hey, pal, I was on line here!" the guy connected to the hand complained.

Joe turned all the way around to see a group of harried people waiting for the phones. All were glowering angrily at him — especially the man-mountain who had been first.

"Never mind, Joe! Follow me!" Frank shouted. He had just spotted a Chinese restaurant and knew a phone would be inside. They rushed inside and Joe once again dialed Clifton.

"Friendly place, this city—" he said under his breath. "Hello, Joe Hardy for Eric Clifton, please!"

Immediately he heard, "Yes, Joe, where are you?"

Joe craned his neck to see the street sign outside. "Rector and Greenwich, down in the financial district. Are we near you?"

"No. What are you doing down there?"

"We had a run-in with Fleckman. He knew we were talking to Spears, and — "

"Fleckman! Who told you to — I should have warned you. Stay clear of that guy. He's ruthless — especially if he needs something from you."

"Now you tell me," Joe muttered.

"What's that?"

"Never mind. Listen, we've got more suspects than we know what to do with. Fleckman tried to kill us, Spears may have lied to us. And you'd better know, we found Alexandra Simone's scarf at Simone's cottage — "

"What? Alexandra — hmm, you know, I've been having suspicions about her. Listen. Meet me in half an hour at the train station at the gate for Bayport. I think it's time we confronted Mrs. Simone—and on the way there you can tell me about your other evidence. Get a move on and stay away from Fleckman."

"Right!" Joe slammed down the phone and said, "Follow me, Frank!"

Without wasting a moment they barged out of the restaurant. "Okay," Joe said, looking around. "Wall Street..." He noticed a crowd of people at a nearby bus stop and asked one of them, "Excuse me, where's the Wall Street subway?"

He didn't answer Joe. An elderly tourist couple said, "We'll let you use our guidebook if you'll point us toward the World Trade Center."

While Frank pointed the way, Joe flipped through the downtown street maps. "It's just up this street and a couple of blocks — "

He looked around—to find himself staring up into the surprised eyes of one of Fleckman's goons. "Thanks!" He handed the tourists their guidebook, then he and Frank raced uphill along the street.

When they got to the top, they turned a corner to find a crowd filling the street shoulder to shoulder. Hundreds of backs were moving as people craned their necks, trying to watch something the Hardys couldn't see.

Frank and Joe started back down the hill, but stopped when they noticed all four of Fleckman's goons rushing them. There was only one way to go.

"Excuse me — excuse me—" Frank and Joe said, pushing their way through the crowd.

People called out as the Hardys pressed desperately onward: "Hey, knock it off!" "Don't push me, man!" "Where are you going, pal? This is a parade!"

Sure enough, Joe glanced up to see a motorcade rolling down the street. In front of it was a large banner that said NYC WELCOMES ITS OWN WORLD SERIES CHAMPS! Ticker-tape and computer paper rained down from the skies.

"I wonder how much of this will end up in a trash compactor," Frank mused, elbowing people right and left.

In convertible limos baseball players sat waving triumphantly to the crowd. Between the cars walked more of the players, bat boys, front-office people, and others. Everyone was whooping it up. "I don't even recognize half those people!" said Joe. "Maybe we could fit in with them!"

They burst through the crowd and vaulted over the police barricade that lined the street. "Now, look triumphant!" Joe said as they joined the parade. They marched with a group of celebrating ballplayers, waving and throwing kisses into the crowd.

The four men had reached the barricade by now, and the potbellied goon ducked under first. He was met on the other side by a large, annoyed policeman, tapping a billy club into his palm.

After a few blocks Frank and Joe scanned the onlookers and saw no sign of their attackers.

"Let's get out of here!" Joe said.

The two brothers slipped away from the parade and back into the crowd, where they finally made their way toward the subway.

"All aboard the Bridgefield train, leaving Track Eighteen in one minute!" the voice echoed through the train station.

"Come on!" Joe called to his brother. "That's the one that stops in Bayport! We've got to get aboard!"

Frank and Joe hurried to the top of the stairs. The station was especially jammed with people who had come to town for the parade. Below them, a throng of people was scrambling to get into the train before the doors closed. Joe caught a glimpse of Eric Clifton boarding one of the cars.

"Clifton's in the second car up!" Joe called back to Frank. The two of them tried to make some headway in that direction.

"Welcome to New York," Joe muttered. "It feels like all I've done today is fight crowds."

"That may not be all we'll have to fight," Frank said in his ear. "Look who's over there."

Joe glanced to his right and fell silent. Forcing their way down the stairs and onto the platform were two familiar faces — the goons Fleckman had sent. They were without the custodians this time though; they must have split up. In the crush of the crowd, the jacket one of the thugs wore flapped open—revealing a leather shoulder holster!

The man pulled his jacket closed and stepped onto the train. In seconds another man squeezed out of the train.

"That was Bart, Spears's assistant!" Frank said.

"What's going on here?" Joe asked. He and Frank maneuvered their way halfway down the stairs to get closer to the train. They could just see Clifton sitting right beside the window. They also saw the two goons take seats—right behind him!

"Clifton!" Joe shouted as he tried to shove his way down to the train.

The doors closed tight just as Frank and Joe hit the platform.

"Fleckman knows who Clifton is and what he's investigating," said Frank. "He's probably got those guys after him too!"

"Clifton!" Frank and Joe shouted, running beside the train as it slowly started up. They pointed wildly to the seat behind him.

But as the train picked up speed and pulled away, Clifton just stared back at them, looking bewildered. Only Frank and Joe knew that behind him sat two armed killers.

Chapter 11

WITH A RHYTHMIC chunk - a - chunk - a - chunk, the brushed-chrome commuter train disappeared into the tunnel.

"What do we do now?" Joe asked.

His question was answered by the track announcer's next words: "Three-thirty train for Kirkland now boarding. Track Twelve. All aboard!"

"Come on, Joe!" Frank said. "Kirkland's close to Bayport. We can catch a lift from there."

They ran back up the stairs and followed the crowd to Track 12. This time they were early for the train and grabbed two seats in a rear car.

As the train pulled out of the station, Frank looked out the window and drummed his fingers on his armrest. "I hope we're not too late," he said. Worry showed in his eyes.

Joe nodded. "I can just see the headlines: 'Commuter Shooter: Murder on the Bridgefield Express.' "

"They'll probably wait to nail Clifton until after they reach Bayport," Frank stated objectively.

"Sure, go ahead and be logical," Joe retorted.

The brothers fell into a gloomy silence as the train chugged through the tunnel. Their aunt Gertrude had spent the night and most of that day in jail, and the man who could help them get her out was riding on a train into a deathtrap.

 

***

 

"Thanks, Chet." Frank patted their friend Chet Morton on the shoulder as his car pulled up beside the Hardy van at the Bayport train station. Joe was already halfway out the door. "Call you later with the whole story."

As Frank climbed into the van's passenger seat, Joe was already shifting into first.

The van sped out onto the highway that ran beside the train tracks. "At least nothing happened at the station," Joe said as they ate up the road. In a few minutes they passed a sign that said Entering Cliffside Heights. Joe turned off the highway and drove through lazy, winding side streets. The houses here were larger and farther apart than the ones in the rest of Bayport, and each lawn seemed to be tended by a professional gardener.

"Do you remember the address Officer Riley mentioned for Mrs. Simone?" Joe asked. "Wasn't it Archer Street?"

Frank thought back. "Yeah. Four seventy-seven."

Joe turned onto Archer Street, while Frank looked out the window at the house numbers. "Hey, slow down!" Frank said. "There it is!"

Joe pulled the van in front of a large white colonial with a bay window. A manicured lawn sloped up to it, and a gravel driveway cut beside it to a three-car garage in back.

"Whew, a family could live in that garage," Joe remarked. "Alexandra Simone must be doing well."

Frank raced to the front door and pounded on it. "Mrs. Simone!" he called out. "It's Frank and Joe Hardy!"

Joe was still coming up the drive as the door was swung open by Alexandra Simone. "What's all this commotion, guys? I have a doorbell," she said.

"Look, we're sorry, but have you heard from Clifton? We lost him at the — "

"You lost me?" a voice behind Mrs. Simone said. "I'm the one who made the train!"

Frank's face brightened. "You made it! We thought that — "

Clifton nodded. "I picked up your hand gestures just fine. Besides, I'd had my eye on those two drones when they got on the train."

"What did you do? They were armed!"

"No kidding. The stop before Bayport, I got up and headed between the cars. When they followed me, I got the drop on them, took their guns, and locked them in one of the rest rooms." He grinned. "I even put a sign on it—Out of Order. They'll probably be in Bridgefield before they get loose. And I called the cops to meet them there."

Frank smiled. "Very neat."

At that moment they were interrupted by the sudden ringing of the phone.

"I'll get it," Mrs. Simone said, running into the kitchen.

Frank watched her leave and then turned to Clifton. "Did you tell her about the scarf?" he asked.

Clifton shook his head. "No, but I'm about to."

"Good, because we really should get back to the station house. Our poor aunt is probably going out of her mind."

"Clifton, it's for you!" came Mrs. Simone's voice from the kitchen. "It's urgent."

"Look, you go and take care of your aunt. I'll handle this end of it." He gave the brothers a wink before he started off to the kitchen. "Call me later."

Frank and Joe ran off to the van. "He's a good guy," Joe remarked as they climbed in.

"Sounds like he handled those goons pretty well," Frank agreed.

As they approached the station house, Joe gazed curiously into the parking lot. "That looks exactly like Dad and Mom's car," he said.

Frank looked over and caught a glimpse of the license plate. "That is their car. I guess they cut their trip short."

As soon as Joe parked the van, he and Frank darted into the station house. The first thing they heard was a calm but commanding voice.

"Chief Collig, I had to interrupt a perfectly wonderful and long-overdue vacation to come here. My sister sounded absolutely distraught over the phone. And my lawyer tells me you're detaining her on the absurd belief that she committed — "

Frank and Joe instantly recognized who it was. "Hey, Dad, welcome home!" Frank called out.

"I'll get your sister right away, Mr. Hardy," said Chief Collig, standing across the desk from Frank and Joe's father.

Fenton Hardy turned around. "Well, if it isn't the traveling twosome! Don't you think you could have saved your trip to New York until after we got your aunt out of trouble?"

"That's why we went to New York, Dad. To get her out of trouble."

Fenton Hardy's eyes narrowed. "Why don't you start by telling me exactly what happened?"

"Well, you see, we think someone is — " Frank started to say.

But he was cut off by Aunt Gertrude's voice, choked with emotion. "Oh, Fenton!" she exclaimed. "I'm so glad you're here!"

They turned to see Aunt Gertrude approaching Fenton with her arms outstretched. Beside her stood Officer Riley, the envelope of photos tucked under his arm.

Aunt Gertrude embraced Fenton and burst into tears. "I was nowhere near that pier, Fenton!"

"Of course you weren't, Gertrude," Fenton said reassuringly, patting her back. "Now, don't worry. I'll get to the bottom of this." He looked up at Officer Riley. "I'm sure you have an explanation for accusing my sister of the murder of Henry Simone, Con."

"Well, Fenton," Officer Riley replied with a sigh. "It's as strange to me as it is to you. But first I think you ought to look at these."

He handed Fenton Hardy the evidence and walked toward a demure, white-haired woman sitting quietly on a bench.

"Look at that, will you?" Aunt Gertrude said in a shaky voice, pointing toward the four photographs. "He thinks that's me in the pictures!"

"Funny, it does look a bit like you," Fenton Hardy said. "But even so ... "

Officer Riley said a few words to the elderly woman, then slowly brought her over to the four Hardys. "Uh, pardon me, Miss Hardy," Officer Riley said, "but do you recognize this woman?"

Aunt Gertrude grew fidgety and forced a smile. "Why, yes, of course. Edna Sutter," she said. "From Saturday night bingo."

"Hello, Gertrude," Edna Sutter said in a sober, clipped voice.

"What brings you here, Edna?" Aunt Gertrude asked warily.

Before the woman could answer, Officer Riley said to her, "Mrs. Sutter, I'd like to repeat what you told me over the phone. Now, you read the newspaper account of the Simone murder. Is that correct?"

"Yes, sir," Edna said, jutting her chin out resolutely.

"And you remembered driving home with your husband late Sunday night — "

"That's right. We were returning from my grandson's birthday party up in Short Hills. He was six that day — no, seven — "

"That's wonderful, Mrs. Sutter. Congratulations. And what exactly did you see when you got back into Bayport?"

Edna Sutter's eyes darted back and forth between Aunt Gertrude and Officer Riley. "Well, the weather was lovely, so we decided to take the road along the pier. I was about to suggest to Philip — that's my husband — that we stop to take a walk — "

"But you didn't..." Officer Riley continued.

"Well, no. You see, there was already another couple out there, and they seemed to be having cross words with each other. Now, I thought it would be improper to intrude on their privacy. I remember noticing how handsome the man was, and then the woman's face struck me as being familiar. I said to myself, 'Edna, isn't that Gertrude from bingo?' Of course, I didn't think any more of it until I saw the picture of the murdered man in the newspaper the next day. Then I realized who he was — the fellow who was walking with Gertrude!"

She set her jaw and looked Officer Riley straight in the eye. "Of course, I thought it my civic duty to report this. It was just as we were saying at my last bridge club meeting: this society needs to be more vigilant — "

"Uh, thank you so much, Mrs. Sutter," Officer Riley interrupted. He helped her into her coat. "You've been a big help, and I'll be sure to call you when we need you again."

As Edna Sutter walked away, Fenton Hardy shook his head. "I wouldn't trust that lady with a — "

But at that moment Aunt Gertrude burst into tears. "All right! All right! I've had enough!" she cried.

"What is it, Gertrude?" Fenton Hardy asked gently.

"I'll admit it! I lied!"

Gertrude Hardy lifted her tearstained face. "She was right. Cyril and I were on the pier!"

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