For a little over two hours I sat there, having one beer after another, hearing a cross-sectional viewpoint of the city. Vice was losing ground fast to the publicity of the cleanup.
When I had enough I crawled to the phone booth and dialed the Sunic House. The desk clerk said Mr. Berin had arrived a few minutes before. I thanked him and hung up. Later I'd go up and refund his dough. I went out where the mist had laid a slick on the streets and found another bar that was a little more cheerful and searched my mind for that other piece to the puzzle.
My stomach made growling noises and I checked my watch. Six-thirty. I threw a buck on the counter for the bartender and walked out and stood in the doorway.
It had started to rain again.
When I finished eating and climbed behind the wheel of the car it was almost eight. The evening shadows had dissolved into night, glossy and wet, the splatter of the rain on the steel roof an impatient drumming that lulled thoughts away. I switched on the radio to a news program, changed my mind and found some music instead.
Some forty-five minutes later I decided I had had enough aimless driving and pulled to the curb between two sheer walls of apartment buildings that had long ago given up any attempt at pretentiousness. I looked out and saw that there were no lights showing in Cobbie Bennett's room and I settled down to wait.
I might have been alone in that wilderness of brick and concrete. No one bothered to look at me huddled there, my coat collar turned up to merge with the brim of my hat. A few cars were scattered at odd intervals along the street, some old heaps, a couple more respectable by a matter of a few years. A man came out of a building across the way holding a newspaper over his head and hurried to the corner where he turned out of sight.
Off in the distance a fire engine screamed, demanding room, behind it another with a harsh, brassy gong backing up the order. I was listening to the fading clamor when the door of Cobbie's house opened and the little pimp stepped out. He was five minutes early. He had a cigarette in his mouth and was trying to light it with a hand that shook so hard the flame went out and, disgusted, he threw the unlit butt to the pavement and came down the steps.
He didn't walk fast, even in the rain, nor a straight course. His choppy stride carried him through a weaving pattern, avoiding the street lights, blacking him out in the shadows. When he came to a store front I saw his head turn to look into the angle of the window to see if he was being followed.
I let him turn the corner before I started the car. If the police were there, they weren't in sight. Nothing was moving this night. I knew the route Cobbie would take, and rather than follow him, decided to go ahead and wait, taking a wide sweep around the one-way street and coming up in the direction he was walking.
There were stores here, some still open. A pair of gin mills operated at a short stagger apart, smelling the block up with the rank odor of flat beer. Upstairs in an apartment a fight was going on. Somebody threw a coffeepot that smashed through the window and clattered down the basement well. Cobbie was part of the night until it hit, then he made a short dash to the safety of a stairway and crouched there, determining the origin of the racket before continuing his walk. He stopped once to light a cigarette and made it this time.
He was almost opposite me when a car pulled up the street and stopped in front of the gin mill. Cobbie went rigid with fear, one hand halfway to his mouth. When the driver hopped out and went into the dive he finished dragging on the cigarette.
I had to leave the car where it was, using Cobbie's tactics of hugging the shadows to pass him on the opposite side of the street without being seen. Following did no good. I had to anticipate his moves and try to stay ahead of him. The rain came in handy; it let me walk under awnings; stop in doorways for a breather before starting off again.
A cop went by, whistling under his slicker, his night club slapping his leg in rhythm to his step. It was ten minutes after ten then. I didn't see Pat or his men. Just Cobbie and me. We were in his own bailiwick now, the street moving with people impervious to the rain and the tension. Beside a vacant store I stopped and watched Cobbie hesitate on the corner, making his decision and shuffling off into a cross street.
I didn't know where I expected it to come from, certainly not from the black mouth of an apartment. Cobbie's weave had been discarded for an ambling gait of resignation. Tension can be borne only so long, then the body and mind reverts to normal. His back suddenly stiffened and I heard a yelp that was plain fear. His head was swiveled around to the building and his hands came up protectively.
If the guy had shot from the doorway he would have had him, but he wanted to do it close-up and came down the steps with a rod in his fist. He hadn't reached the third step when Cobbie screamed at the top of his lungs, trying to shrink back against the inevitable. The gun leveled with Cobbie's chest but never went off because a dark blur shot out of the same doorway and crashed into the guy's back with such force that they landed at Cobbie's feet together.
My own rod was in my hand as I ran. I heard the muted curses mingled with Cobbie's screaming as a heavy fist slammed into flesh. I was still fifty feet away when the two separated, one scrambling to his feet immediately. Cobbie had fallen into a crouch and the guy fired, name lacing toward his head.
The other guy didn't bother to rise. He propped his gun arm on the sidewalk, took deliberate aim and pulled the trigger. The bullet must have gone right through his head because his hat flew off faster than he was running and was still in the air when the man was nothing but a lump of lifeless flesh.
A gun went off farther up the street. Somebody shouted and shot again. I was on top of the guy with the rod and it didn't worry me at all seeing it pointed at my middle. It was a police positive and the guy had big, flat feet.
Just the same, I raised my hands, my .45 up and said, “Mike Hammer, private op. Ticket's in my pocket, want to see it?”
The cop stood up and shook his head. “I know you, feller.”
A prowl car made the corner on two wheels and passed it, the side door already open with a uniformed patrolman leaning out, his gun cocked. The cop and I followed it together, crossing the street diagonally where the commotion was.
Windows were being thrown open, heads shouted down asking what went on and were told to get back in and stay there. A voice yelled, “He's on the roof!” There was another shot, muffled by walls this time. A woman screamed and ran, slamming a door in her passage.
Almost magically the searchlights opened up, stretching long arms up the building fronts to the parapets, silhouetting half a dozen men racing across the roof in pursuit of someone.
The reflection of the lights created an artificial dawn in the tight group, dancing from the riot guns and blued steel of service revolvers. The street was lousy with cops, and Pat was holding one of the lights.
We saw each other at the same time and Pat handed the light over to a plain-clothes man. I said, “Where the hell did you come from? There wasn't a soul on the street a minute ago.”
Pat grimaced at me. “We didn't come, Mike ... we were there. The hard boys weren't too smart. We had men tailing them all day and they never knew it. Hell, we couldn't lay a trap without having everybody and his brother get wise, so the men stuck close and stayed on their backs. Cobbie was spotted before he got off his block. The punks kept in touch with each other over the phone. When they saw Cobbie turn down here one cut behind the buildings and got in front of him. There was another one up the block to cut him off if he bolted.”
“Good deal. How many were there?”
“We have nine so far. Seven of them just folded up their tents and came along quietly. We let them pass the word first so there would be no warning. What came of that guy down the block?”
“He's dead.”
From the roof there was a volley of shots that smashed into stone and ricocheted across the sky. Some didn't ricochet. A shrill scream testified to that. One of the cops stepped into the light and called down, “He's dead. Better get a stretcher ready, we have a wounded officer up here.”
Pat snapped, “Damn! Get those lights in the hallway so they can see what they're doing!” A portable stretcher came out of a car and was carried upstairs. Pat was directing operations in a clear voice, emphasized by vigorous arm movements.
There wasn't anything I could do right then. I edged back through the crowd and went up the street. There was another gang around the body on the sidewalk, with two kids trying to break away from their parents for a closer look.
Cobbie Bennett was nowhere in sight.
CHAPTER 14
S
eeing a job well done can bring a feeling of elation whether you did it yourself or not. There was a sense of pride in me when I climbed behind the wheel of my heap, satisfaction extraordinary because the bastards were being beaten at their own game. I switched on the radio a few minutes later in time to catch the interruption of a program and a news flash of the latest coup. I went from station to station, but it was always the same. The noses for news were right in there following every move. Scattered around town would be other tough boys hearing the same thing. Money wouldn't mean a damn thing now, not if the cops were going to play in their way. It's one thing to jump the law, but when the law is right behind you, ready to jump back even harder, it's enough to make even the most stupid, hopped-up killer think twice.
Ha. They wouldn't be wearing their metallic smiles tonight. The ball was piling up force as it rolled along. The halfways were jumping on the wagon, eager to be on the winning side. Political injustice and string-pulling was taking one hell of a beating. I
knew
where I stood and I felt good about it.
My route uptown was taking me within a few blocks of the Sunic House, and late as it was I wanted to stop off and see my client. This the old boy would like. He was paying for it. At least he was getting his money's worth. The name of Berin-Grotin would be remembered in places long after the marble tomb was eaten away by the sands of time, and that's what he wanted ... someone to remember him.
There was a driveway beside the old brownstone structure that curved into a parking space in back. I pulled halfway in and handed the keys over to a bellboy old enough to be my father. As I walked to the door I heard him grind it into gear, then jerk out of sight. I waited to hear him hit something else, but apparently he made it.
The Sunic House was a well-kept relic of yesteryear, reserved for gentlemen guests only The hushed atmosphere wasn't due to the late hour; it probably was that way all day. The lobby was done in plush, gilt and leather. From the ceiling ancient gas fixtures had been converted to electricity whose yellow bulbs did little to brighten the mortuary effect of the mahogany-paneled walls. The pictures spotted around the place showed the city of long ago when it was at peace with itself, and the Sunic House was a name to hold honor among the best.
I asked the desk clerk if Mr. Berin was in.
He nodded slowly and knit his eyebrows. “I'm certain Mr. Berin does not care to be disturbed, sir. He has been coming here these many years and I know his preferences well.”
“This is a very unusual circumstance, pop. Give him a call, will you?”
“I'm afraid that ... really now, sir, I don't think it proper to....”
“If I suddenly stuck my fingers between my teeth and whistled like hell, then ran up and down the room yelling at the top of my lungs, what would you do?”
His eyebrows ran up to where his hairline used to be. He craned his head to the wall where an old guy was nodding in a chair. “I'd be forced to call the house detective, sir!”
I gave him a great big grin and stuck my fingers between my teeth. With the other hand I pointed to the phone and waited. The clerk got pale, flushed, went white again as he tried to cope with the situation. Evidently, he figured one upset customer would be better than a dozen and picked up the house phone.
He tugged the call bell while watching me nervously, jiggled it again and again until a voice barked hard enough in his ear to make him squirm. “I beg your pardon, sir, but a man insists he should see you. He ... he said it was very urgent.”
The phone barked again and the clerk swallowed hard. “Tell him it's Mike Hammer,” I said.
It wasn't so easy to get it in over the tirade my client was handing out. At last he said bleakly, “It's a Mr. Hammer, sir ... a Mr. Hammer. Yes, sir. Mike Hammer. Yes, he's right here, sir. Very well, sir. I'll send him right up.”
With a handkerchief the clerk wiped his face and gave me his look reserved for the most inferior of persons. “Room 406,” he said. I waved my thanks and climbed the stairs, ignoring the elevator that stood in the middle of the room, working through a well in the overhead.
Mr. Berin had the door open waiting for me. I pushed it in and closed it behind me, expecting to find myself in just another room. I was wrong, dead wrong. Whatever the Sunic House looked like on the outside, its appearance was deceiving. Here was a complete suite of rooms, and as far as I could see executed with the finest taste possible.
A moment later my client appeared, dressed in a silken smoking jacket, his hair brushed into a snow-white mane, looking for all the world like a man who had planned to receive a guest rather than be awakened out of a sound sleep by an obnoxious employee.
His hand met mine in a firm clasp. “It's good to see you, Mike, very good. Come inside where we can talk.”
“Thanks.” He led me past the living room that centered around a grand piano into a small study that faced on the street, a room banked with shelves of books, mounted heads of animals and fish and rows of framed pictures showing himself in his younger days. “Some place you have here, Mr. Berin.”