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Authors: Frank Kane

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Liddell shoved one of his cards out to the driver. “I’m at the Marlowe. The air-conditioning job is on me.”

The cabby stuck the card in his cap, jammed it back on his head, kicked at the tires unhappily.

“Now what?” Muggsy wanted to know.

“You mean we got a choice? We’re going to find out whether that black-haired witch put us on the spot or whether she wasn’t kidding about being followed. It looks like somebody doesn’t want us to stay on this case.”

“If they’re going to adopt this attitude, I second the motion.”

Liddell grinned. “You wouldn’t let a bum shot like that scare you off, would you, Muggs?”

“Maybe he’ll improve with practice. I vote we don’t stay around to find out.”

“Second the motion.” Liddell wrenched the door open. “We’ll never find anything sitting here like a clay pigeon.” He pulled his collar up, his hat lower over his face.

“Now where are you going?” Muggsy demanded.

“To find a phone. You stay here with the driver and I’ll send some help over. I’ve got to find out what happened to that girl.”

Muggsy scurried to open the door on her side. “Nothing doing, Sir Galahad. Where you go, I go.”

“Don’t be crazy, Muggs. It may be a long way to a phone and it’s pouring out here.”

“Maybe so. But if I’ve got to have something wet running down my face, I’d just as soon it was rain and not blood.”

• • •

The nearest phone was in a broken-down tobacco shop three blocks down Water Street. The proprietor watched disinterestedly as the two bedraggled figures sloshed in. In response to Liddell’s query, he indicated a rickety phone booth in the rear of the dusty store, went back to a determined study of a racing form.

Liddell consulted a battered Los Angeles telephone directory, came up with the number of Denton Towers. He stepped into the booth, fished for a coin, and dialed the number. A small puddle of water was forming at his feet.

“Denton Towers. May I help you?” a metallic voice answered.

“Miss Devine. Terry Devine.”

“One moment, please,” the receiver chirped. There was a muted buzz, followed by another; then the voice told him regretfully, “I’m afraid Miss Devine hasn’t returned yet, sir.”

Liddell nodded, dropped the receiver back on its hook.

“What’s happened, Johnny?” Muggsy asked.

“They got her. She hasn’t shown back at her hotel.”

“What are you going to do?”

“I’m going back to the Hotel Lamont and see if I can pick up her trail. I’ve got a funny idea that when we find
her, we’ll find the guy who tapped out a samba on my skull, and the guy who just left his calling card with us back there on the street.”

• • •

Things were pretty much the same when Johnny Liddell and Muggsy Kiely re-entered the Kangaroo Room of the Hotel Lamont an hour later. The same crowd was huddled against the bar, a blue-gray pall of smoke hung over the place, giving it an appearance of opaqueness. The same white-shirted bartender assuaged his boredom by polishing the bar with desultory semicircular motion. He acknowledged their return with an upward twitch of his heavy eyebrows.

“Back so soon? You must like the joint,” he greeted them with what approximated a smile. “Still raining hard?”

Liddell nodded. “Pouring.”

“More of the same?” the barman asked, reaching back for a cognac bottle.

“Two.” Liddell turned his back to the bar, squinted through the smoke, but failed to see a familiar face in the room. “Say, where’s that waiter who brought me the message last time I was here?”

The bartender shrugged. “Must be Tony. He’s the only one in here regularly. Little guy with a greasy pompadour?”

“That’s him. He still on?”

“Sure. He don’t go off until two.” He glanced up at the clock on the far wall, narrowed his eyes nearsightedly to bring it into focus. “Not even twelve yet.”

Liddell nodded, waited until the barman had filled both glasses. “Where is he?”

“Probably out chinning with the short-order cook. Why? Want something?”

Liddell folded a bill suggestively, made a tent with it on the bar. “I want to have a talk with him. Privately. Any place we can be alone?”

The bartender scratched the hairs on the back of his neck with his index finger, eyeing the bill with interest.
“We got a back room we use for lunches and things. Nobody using it now.”

“That’ll do. Just send him back, and, Mac — you needn’t mention it’s me.” The bartender nodded, snagged the folded bill, slid it into his watch pocket. “You wait here, Muggs. This shouldn’t take long.”

The back room was set off to the right of a telephone booth in the rear of the room. Liddell waited almost five minutes before the door opened. The smile on the waiter’s face froze as he recognized Liddell, saw the .45 in his hand.

“Come on in. Close the door.” Liddell’s voice was cold, hard.

The waiter hesitated, his eyes glued to the gun. They rolled up to Liddell’s face, the man’s brow glistening with perspiration. “I — I — ”

“Inside, I said.”

The waiter walked in, closed the door behind him. He wiped the perspiration off his upper lip with a shaking hand. “I — I thought you’d left, Mr. Liddell — ”

Liddell got up from the chair he’d been straddling, walked over to the waiter, caught him by the lapel, shoved him Back into the room. He showed him the muzzle of the .45, close up. “Never mind the small talk, Tony. We got important things to talk about.”

“Say, what is this?” The waiter’s face was a murky gray; he couldn’t seem to control the twitch under his left eye.

“This?” Liddell stuck the muzzle of the gun closer to the man’s nose. “This is a gun. One end spits lead, the other splits skulls. But why should I tell you? You’re in a pretty good spot to find out first hand.”

The waiter made a feeble attempt at a smile, managed only to look sick. “I — I guess you’re ribbing me. I don’t know anything you’d want to know. I never seen you before you came in tonight.”

“Keep playing games with me, Buster, and you’re going to be sorry you ever did see me. Who saw that note before you gave it to me?”

The flutter in the man’s eyes became more pronounced.
“Nobody. I didn’t even know what was in it myself. The girl asked me to hold it until she was gone, and then — ”

Liddell’s open hand described a short arc, resounded with a loud slap across the waiter’s mouth. A red patch dyed out the grayness where the hand had hit. “Who saw it?”

“Honest, Mr. Liddell, I-”

Johnny Liddell raised his hand again. The waiter cringed back in his chair, his eyes sick with fear. “Don’t hit me. I’ll tell you.” He licked his lips. “I didn’t mean any harm. The guy said — ”

“Never mind the autobiography. Who saw it?”

“I don’t know his name. As soon as the girl ran out the door, he came over to me. He told me he’d break me over his knee if I didn’t let him see it, so — ”

“What’d he look like?”

The waiter wiped his streaming forehead with the side of his hand. “He was big. Bigger than you, even.” The left eye fluttered maddeningly. “I think he was a pug or something. His nose was smeared all over his face. He had on a sports jacket, and — ”

“That’s all I need to know.” Liddell poked his .45 back into its holster, grabbed the waiter by the collar of his jacket, and yanked him to his feet.

“Look, pal. You almost put me on the spot tonight. I’m narrow-minded about guys who help guys try to rub me out. If I were you I wouldn’t be around here any more when I come in. And I’m figuring on coming in from now on.”

“But my job,” the waiter protested. “I’ll lose my job.”

Liddell’s hand brushed off an imaginary speck on the man’s lapel. “If it was me, I’d rather have my next contact with the newspapers in the Help Wanted Column than in the Obituary Column.”

CHAPTER ELEVEN

J
OHNNY
L
IDDELL AND
M
UGGSY
K
IELY
dropped the cab about a block from Denton Towers, waited until it had pulled away from the curb, screeching around the nearest corner.

“Understand what you’re supposed to do, Muggs?” Liddell asked.

“I understand it, but I don’t like it. Look, Johnny, why don’t we just drop it in Devlin’s lap and let him take it from here?”

“Because it’s getting to be a personal matter and I intend to handle it personally. I get jumped by a couple of hoods in my room, I lose my gun, I get set up as a clay pigeon, my client disappears, a waiter I don’t even know double-crosses me, a dame who wants to talk to me drops out of sight. And you want me to blow a police whistle?”

“But what can you do, Johnny? You don’t know that Terry Devine has disappeared. Maybe she’s the one that put you on the spot. After all, she was working with Yale Stanley’s gang. You said so yourself.”

“Okay,” Liddell conceded. “All the more reason I want to pay her apartment a visit.”

Muggsy sighed. “I still don’t like it.”

“But you’ll play along?”

The blonde nodded. “Let me get it straight. You want me to walk into the lobby, keep the switchboard operator busy until you get to the elevator. What do I say to her?”

“Ask her to ring somebody. Anybody. Just make sure that you stand where she can’t see around you. Okay?”

“Okay. Muggsy Kiely the Girl Shill. Why I let myself get talked into these things I’ll never know. How’ll you know when to come in?”

Liddell caught her by the arm, walked her toward the Denton Towers. “Don’t worry. I’ll be watching. The minute it’s safe I’ll make the try. The worst that can happen is that I’ll get tossed out.”

“Should I wait for you?”

‘Of course not. As soon as you get out of here, take a cab and go to your place. I’ll meet you there as soon as I can.

The lobby of the building was deserted when Muggsy walked in. The desk where the receptionist sat during the day was empty, and Muggsy was relieved to see that the elevators were apparently on self-service after midnight. She crossed the lobby to where a middle-aged man sat behind a low enclosure, earphones strapped on his head, reading a magazine.

He looked up as she approached, seemed to like what he saw, tried a smile for effect. “Looking for somebody, ma’am?” he asked.

“Yes. I wonder if you’d ring Miss Lewis for me. I think she said in her letter that she was in four fifty-six.”

“Miss Lewis?” The operator frowned at the unfamiliarity of the name. “I don’t think I know her. Is she expecting you?”

Muggsy shook her head. “I just got in town this afternoon. I know it’s late, but I thought I’d surprise her.”

The man at the switchboard nodded absently and pronounced the name again. “I’d better check that room for you again.” He reached under the switchboard, came up with a leather-bound notebook. “Some people get a little huffy if you ring the wrong room at this hour,” he explained.

He riffled through the pages, ran his finger down a list of room numbers. “Four fifty-six?” He stopped at a listing and scratched the side of his jaw. “That’s Mr. Carter’s suite. I don’t think there’s any young lady in there. Maybe she’s listed in one of the other suites.” He wet a finger, went from page to page, finally shook his head. “Sorry, miss. No Miss Lewis in here. Maybe she’s got a married
name?” he suggested helpfully.

Muggsy considered it, shook her head. “I’m sure she would have told me.” She appeared very disappointed. “It’s stupid of me, I know, but I was sure she said she lived here.” She worked on one of her best smiles. “I’m awfully sorry to have troubled you.”

“Not at all, miss. Glad to have the company.” He looked her over carefully, added cautiously, “Gets awful lonesome around here after midnight.”

“I’m sure it does.” Muggsy smiled. “Thanks again for your trouble.” As she turned to walk out, she looked at where the elevator had stood empty when she’d arrived, noted that the door was closed and the indicator over it showed the car stopped on the seventh floor. She walked out without a backward glance and caught a cab at the corner.

Johnny Liddell left the elevator on the seventh floor, found the doorway marked
Stairs,
and went down to the fifth floor. He opened the door a crack, looked up the corridor, satisfying himself that it was empty, and walked down to the door of Terry Devine’s apartment.

He rapped softly on the door, got no response. Then, after making certain that he was unobserved, he slipped a thin steel strip from his pocket and applied it to the door. In a few seconds there was a faint click, and the doorknob turned in his hand. He stepped into the dark apartment, closed the door behind him, and waited.

There was no sign of life in the rooms. He slipped the .45 from its holster into his hand, felt for the light switch. With the gun trained in the direction of the living-room where he had talked with the girl, he snapped the switch, flooding the small hallway with light.

He walked through into the living-room, checked the bedroom and bath, found the apartment empty. He checked the small service door in the kitchen, found it locked.

There was little to go by in the apartment. The girl’s clothes were still hanging in the closet. In the night table
by the head of her bed was a clipping book, filled with pictures of the girl in various roles she had played, mentions she had gotten in the columns. Lulu Barry had apparently found her more capable than Eddie Richards had indicated, to judge by the number of mentions she had given the little bit player.

Liddell made a hasty search of her drawers, found nothing that might lead him to Stanley or his goons. The desk in the living-room was equally unproductive. By the time he had finished ransacking the outer room, Liddell was ready to admit it was a dry run.

He lit a cigarette, looked around. He was convinced that Terry had something she intended to turn over to him, something that he felt certain had a direct bearing on the Shad Reilly kill. He had a strong hunch that it was something she had in her apartment, which made it necessary for her to set the date back an hour. He was willing to bet she had never got back to her apartment to get it.

He rechecked the living-room from where he stood, saw no place that he had overlooked where anything of value could have been cached. He walked back into the bedroom, checked under the pillows, took the bed apart, lifted the mattress, pulled out drawers, examined their undersides, drew a blank.

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