Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Industries, #Technology & Engineering, #Law, #Mystery & Detective, #Science, #Energy, #Public Utilities, #General, #Fiction - General, #Power Resources, #Literary Criticism, #Energy Industries, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Fiction, #Non-Classifiable, #Business & Economics, #European
First, he walked into the busy main lobby of a hotel. After glancing
around, he ducked into a men's room and a few minutes later came out
wearing dark glasses and a soft felt hat, whereas before he had been
bareheaded. The change did not fool Nancy. However, his appearance was
different and she realized that, if Birdsong bad been dressed that way
to begin with, she probably would not have noticed him. He left the hotel
by a side door. Giving him a comfortable start, Nancy followed.
She almost lost him then because, further along the street from the
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hotel, be was boarding a bus which promptly closed its doors and moved
away.
There was no time to return to her car, but luckily a taxi was
approaching. Nancy bailed it. She flashed a twenty-dollar bill and told
the driver, a young black, "Keep that bus in sight but don't make it ob-
vious we're following it. Every time it stops, though, I want to see who
gets off."
The driver was instantly with it. "Will do, ladyl just sit back. Leave
the action to me."
He was smart and resourceful. He passed the bus twice, then each time
eased into right lane traffic so the bus, in an outside lane, would pass
him. While both vehicles were close, Nancy kept her bead averted. But
whenever the bus stopped to take on or disembark passengers, the taxi was
positioned so she could see clearly. For what seemed a long time,
Birdsong did not appear and Nancy wondered if she bad missed him after
all. Then, about four miles from his point of boarding, he got off.
She could see him looking around.
"That's the one-witb the beard," she told her driver.
"I see him!" The cabby accelerated past, without glancing in Birdsong's
direction, then eased into the curb. "Don't turn around, lady. I got him
in the mirror. Now be's crossing the street." After a minute or two: "Be
damned if he ain't getting on another bus."
They followed the second bus too. It was going in an opposite direction
from the first and retraced some of the original route. This time
Birdsong got off after a few blocks, again looking around him. Close by
were several parked taxis. Birdsong took the first and, as it pulled
away, Nancy could see his face peering through the rear window.
She made another decision and instructed, "Let him go. Take me back
downtown."
Nancy reasoned: there was no sense in pushing her luck. She hoped
Birdsong bad not detected her taxi trailing him, but if she persisted he
undoubtedly would. Solving the mystery of where he went, and why, would
have to be done some other way.
"Geez, lady, kinda bard to figure you out," the cabby complained when
they had changed direction. "First you wanna tail the guy, so we do okay.
Then you quit." He went on grumbling, "Didn't even get close enough to
see the other hack's number."
Because he had done his best, she decided to explain why she didn't want
to be that close, and possibly be seen. He listened, then nodded.
"Gotcha!"
A few minutes later the young driver turned his bead. "You still wanna
find out where the beard goes?"
"Yes," Nancy said. The more she thought about Birdsong's elaborate
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precautions, the more convinced she became that something important was
happening. Something she had to know.
The driver asked, "Know where the guy hangs out mostly?"
"His home address? No, but it wouldn't be hard to find."
"Maybe we could work a deal," the driver said. "Me and two buddies. They
ain't working, and they got cars with CB radios. I got a CB too. Three
of us could take turns following the beard, pulling a switcheroo so he
don't keep seeing the same heap. We'd use the radios. That way, when one
guy eased off, he'd call another in."
"But to do that," Nancy pointed out, "you'd have to keep watch on him all
the time."
"Can do. Like I said, my friends ain't working."
The idea had possibilities. She asked, "How much would it cost?"
"Have to figure that out, lady. But not as much as you'd think."
"When you've done your figuring," Nancy said, "call me." She scribbled
her apartment phone number on the back of a business card.
He called late that night. By then she had looked up Birdsong's home
address which was in the phone book.
"Two hunnert and fifty a week," the cabby said. "That's for me and the
other two."
She hesitated. Was it important enough to go to all that trouble and
expense? Again her instincts told her yes.
So should she ask the Examiner for the money? Nancy was doubtful. If she
did, she would have to disclose everything she had uncovered so far, and
she was certain the paper would want to publish immediately the material
on Davey Birdsong and his p&lfp. In Nancy's opinion that would be
premature; she believed strongly there was more to come and it was worth
waiting for. Another thing: The newspaper's pennypinching management
bated to spend money unless it had to.
She decided to go ahead on her own. She would pay the money herself and
hope to get it back later. If she didn't it would be no great disaster,
though it would violate one of the rules she lived by.
By most standards, Nancy Molineaux was wealthy. Several years ago her
father established a trust fund which provided her with a regular,
comfortable income. But, as a matter of pride, she kept her private
finances and professional earnings separate.
For once, pride would have to be humbled.
The cabby said he would like something in advance, which was reasonable,
and Nancy told him to drop by and pick it up.
After he did, she heard nothing for six days. At the end of that time,
the young cabdriver, whose name was Vickery, brought her a report. To
Nancy's surprise it was detailed and neatly written. All of Birdsong's
movements were described; they were routine and innocuous. At no point
bad be shown awareness of being followed. More significant: He made no
attempt to throw any follower off.
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"Goesta show one week ain't enough," Vickery said. "Wanna try another?"
Nancy thought: What the hell, why not?
In another seven days Vickery was back. He had the same kind of detailed
report, with similarly negative results. Disappointed, she told him,
"Okay, that's all. Forget it."
The young man regarded her with unconcealed contempt. "You gonna give up
now? Look whatcha got investedi" When he sensed her wavering, he urged,
"Go for broke! Try one more week."
"You should be a frigging salesman," Nancy said, "not driving a back."
She thought about it. She had proof that Birdsong was a fraud; did she
still believe he was a crook? And would finding where he went so
mysteriously help the story she intended to write? Finally, should she
cut her losses or-as the smartass kid put it-go for broke?
Her instincts again. They told her all three answers should be yes.
"Okay, botshot," she told Vickery. "One extra week. But no more."
They hit pay dirt on the fourth day.
Vickery phoned, then came to her apartment, that night. "Figured you'd
wanna know right away. This aft the beard tried to shake anybody off, the
way he did that day with you and me." He added smugly, "We beat the
sonovabitcb."
"For what it's cost me," Nancy said, "I should goddam hope so."
The young man grinned as he presented the usual written report. It showed
that Davey Birdsong had driven his own car from his apartment garage and
parked it on the opposite side of the city. Before leaving the car, he
bad put on dark glasses and a bat. Then he bad taken a taxi back across
town, followed by two bus rides in differing directions, and finally a
walk-a roundabout route to a small house on the city's east side.
He went into the house. The address was given.
"The beard stayed inside two hours," Vickery said.
After that, the report continued, Birdsong took a taxi to a point a few
blocks from where his car was parked. From there he walked to the car and
drove home.
Vickery asked hopefully, "Warmus to watch the beard some more?" He added,
"Them buddies of mine still ain't working."
"With you for a friend," Nancy said, "they shouldn't worry." She shook
her head. "No more."
Now, two days later, Nancy was seated in her car, observing the house
which Davey Birdsong had visited so secretively. She had been there
nearly two hours. It was approaching noon.
Yesterday, the day after Vickery's final report, she spent completing an
Examiner feature assignment, though she had not yet turned in her copy
to the city desk. She would do so tomorrow. Meanwhile her time was her
own.
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The house she was watching was number 117 Crocker Street. It was one of
a dozen identical row houses built in the ig2os and, a decade ago,
refurbished by a speculative builder who believed the district was
destined for revival and upgrading. The builder was wrong. Crocker Street
remained what it bad been-an unimpressive, drab thoroughfare where people
lived because they could not afford something better. And the refurbished
houses were slipping back into their former state, attested to by chipped
masonry, cracked windows and peeling paint.
To Nancy's eyes, number 117 seemed no different from the rest.
Cagily, she had parked her Mercedes a block and a half away, where she
had a clear view of the house but believed she would not be observed
herself. The presence of several other parked cars helped. She had
brought binoculars but had not used them for fear of arousing the
curiosity of some passer-by.
So far there had been little activity on the street, none whatever at
number 3 IT
Nancy had no idea what to expect, if anything, nor had she any plan. As
the morning passed she wished she might see something of the occupants
of the house, but the wish went unfulfilled. She wondered if she had
stayed long enough. Perhaps she should leave now and return another day.
A vehicle passed her parked car, as had several others during the pre-
ceding two hours. She noticed casually that it was a beat-up Volkswagen
van, painted brown and with a broken side window. The window was roughly
patched with cardboard and masking tape.
Abruptly Nancy became alert. The VW had swung across the street and was
stopping in front of 117-
A man got out. Nancy risked using her binoculars. She saw that he was
lean, with close-cropped hair and a bushy moustache: she judged him to
be in his late twenties. In contrast to the van, be was neatly dressed
in a dark blue suit and wore a tie. He went to the rear of the vehicle
and opened its door. The binoculars were powerful-she used them in her
apartment to watch shipping in the harbor-and she caught a glimpse of the
man's hands. They appeared to be badly stained in some way.
Now he was reaching inside the van and he lifted out a substantial
red-colored cylinder. It seemed to be heavy. Setting the object down on
the sidewalk, he reached inside again and produced another, then carried