The Smiling Tiger

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The Smiling Tiger Page 1

by Lenore Glen Offord




  THE SMILING TIGER

  Lenore Glen Offord

  FELONY & MAYHEM PRESS • NEW YORK

  To our mother Laura Dell Offord

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER ONE

  THEY WERE NOT CAREFUL enough about closing their Venetian blinds. From the sidewalk of Cragmont Avenue one could not, it is true, see into the windows of the house high above, but the lights in the Todd McKinnons’ living-room were so arranged that the shadow of a moving person was projected onto a white wall, betraying the fact that someone was at home.

  The young man who had been standing irresolutely on the walk, peering with lifted head at those lighted windows, began to climb the irregular flight of stone steps which led to the front door. Halfway up he paused for breath, turning his back to the buffeting of a northeast wind and looking out over the descending streets of Berkeley toward San Francisco Bay. There was not much to be seen tonight; the storm of the past two days was just beginning to dissipate itself before that strong drying wind, and the sky was masked with cloud, but below it the town lights shone new-washed in a sort of angry clarity. The wind came down again with a scream, and the young man shivered and sneezed and went on his upward way.

  He paused once more, midway on the cement steps of the porch, and stretched himself to look cautiously through the adjoining window. All of the white-walled living-room was visible from this point. It had an air of comfort, although the furniture was sparse, mismated, and far from distinguished in design, and the fireplace gave forth an occasional puff of smoke. The two persons in the room, however, did not look comfortable.

  The male householder was visible in profile, seated in a large shabby chair near the fireplace and gazing moodily into the flames. The profile was sharply cut and lean, with that hard texture that one instinctively classifies as Scottish, and the man’s coloring was inconspicuously sandy. He got up once to give an irritable poke to the fire, revealing medium height and a slight build. When he returned, slumping down dispiritedly into his chair, the watcher outside rose from the crouch into which he had instinctively dropped—not so much in furtiveness but once more in palpable indecision—and again peered through the window.

  The other occupant, a woman, was visible only from the shoulders up. She was sitting across the room, perhaps working at a desk, for her head of short brown curls was bent thoughtfully and her shoulders seemed tense. Her back was to the room, and she and the man appeared oblivious of each other’s presence. It looked almost as if they had been quarreling.

  The young man on the steps wavered once more. He mounted two steps slowly; his eyes located the doorbell but his hand did not move to touch it. He stood there with the wind whipping at his overcoat and tousling his uncovered hair.

  ***

  Todd and Georgine McKinnon had not been having a quarrel. They had, in fact, seldom been closer together in spirit, which was saying a good deal for a couple who had been married and deeply in love for nearly five years. Tonight the bond between them had been forged to double strength by shared anxiety, and over money at that.

  “We can make it, Todd,” said Georgine slowly. She kept her eyes fixed on the column of figures before her. “Barby doesn’t have to stay at boarding school; that’s a luxury. You know she wouldn’t mind much.”— Not too much, she thought sorrowfully; but her daughter loved the Valley Ranch School, and, in the warmer climate behind the foothills, had been in better health than ever in her life.

  “It seems a shame to penalize our cricket for this slump I’m in,” said Barby’s stepfather mildly, “and it’s your income, from her father’s insurance, that pays for her.”

  “Todd, if you think that both Barby and I wouldn’t rather—” Georgine left her sentence unfinished and turned to face him, her eyes flashing blue with affectionate concern. “Oh, you know that. Let’s not talk about it any more tonight. Something’s sure to turn up—and we’re lucky if we never have to worry about anything worse than a little shortage of money.”

  Todd did not answer. He took a small notebook from his pocket and leafed through it, frowning at what he read on the last page. Georgine looked around the room with invincible content: the harmonious dull colors of the draperies, the blue chair and the plum-colored sofa that she’d covered herself, no matter how amateurishly—her house, safe and quiet, and her husband in it.

  “You look dog-tired,” she said gently, considering him.

  “How tired can a dog get?” Todd replied. “I am a li’le bushed, I’ll admit, but as for—”

  The wind, which had been thrashing in the garden shrubbery, had just died abruptly; and outside the McKinnons’ front door there sounded a shattering sneeze.

  “Someone’s out there,” said Georgine obviously, recovering from a start. “I didn’t hear the bell ring!”

  She and Todd exchanged a glance as the doorbell did ring, with a belated and guilty effect. “It’s after nine,” she murmured. “Who on earth—”

  She wondered with a little sinking sensation how long the person had been there. Those blinds—but when you were so far above the street you didn’t always remember. Georgine was wont to describe herself as the queen of the scaredy-cats, and on her list of terrors the Peeping Tom ranked not far from burglars.

  Draughts billowed in from the open door, and she stood still, listening. The visitor’s utterance was impeded by a handkerchief which he was using vigorously before announcing himself, and Georgine thought wildly of hold-up men. But what a household to choose, she told herself; he wouldn’t get more than two dollars.

  “Mr. McKinnon?” said the young man, putting away his handkerchief and speaking in a plangent, confident voice. “My name’s Hugh Hartlein, and I’m an acquaintance of Frederic Devlin. Do you remember him?”

  “I do. Won’t you come in?”

  Hugh Hartlein walked into the living-room, acknowledged his introduction to Georgine, and sat down in Todd’s chair. He disposed crisply of the news about Ricky Devlin, whom the McKinnons had not seen since 1942; and indeed, even with the link of a murder investigation in which they and Ricky had been involved, they could not at this date think of much to ask about him except “Well, how is he?” and “What’s he doing now?” It also transpired that Mr. Hartlein had known Ricky only casually, during a brief sojourn of both at the University of Washington, and had now completely lost track of him.

  The conversation, however, did not die. It was evident that no conversation could do that while Hugh Hartlein chose to keep it alive.

  “I came to see you because of something he told me,” the young man announced. “You write mystery fiction based on true cases, don’t you, McKinnon?”

  Todd suppressed a sigh of fatigue. He knew what was coming and wanted to get to bed. “That’s correct. My wife and I were about to have a drink; will you join us?”

  “Thank you,” said Hugh Hartlein. “I’ll have a hot toddy, please, it might help this ghastly cold of mine.”

  Georgine, who had risen hospitably, almost sat down again. Todd’s presence of mind did not fail him; he said smoothly, and mendaciously, “Sorry, we have none of the makings. It will have to be beer, I’m afraid.”

  “Beer will do.”

  They sat in silence until Georgine came back with the beer, Hartlein employing the time by looking around him with an air of ease. He was a thin and somewhat romantic-looking young man, hollow-checked and beak-nosed, with
dark hair in windblown disorder. There was no telling whether the drooping lock of hair over his brow had been disarranged by the northeaster, or whether he kept it that way. His hatlessness was probably a student affectation, for otherwise he was thoroughly wrapped in a scarf, sports jacket and overcoat. He accepted a glass with an absent nod of thanks, drank at once and set it down.

  “I have a story for you,” he announced kindly.

  Todd’s eyelids drooped slightly. “Would you mind not telling it?” he said. “I’m sure you are acting in good faith, but I’ve known more than one colleague who was accused of plagiarism because he used a story someone had ‘given’ him.”

  “But I want to sell it,” said Hartlein.

  “I never buy them, either. Sorry.”

  “You don’t—” Hartlein set down his glass with a thud. “But I was sure—Devlin said—”

  “Devlin probably told you that I make a living writing for the pulp magazines, and that I use actual cases as material. But,” said Todd wearily, “the cases have to be authentic, either from my own personal knowledge of ’em or from documents. And—”

  “But that’s all right. This is completely authentic, you could meet some of the people right here in Berkeley. There are no documents, I’ll admit, but that’s because—” Hartlein paused impressively “—no one has ever suspected that a crime was committed.”

  “And I can’t afford to buy material, for more than one reason.”

  “But, McKinnon, no one knows about it, so you couldn’t get involved in plagiarism.” Hartlein glanced sideways, and a faint shine appeared on his brow. “As to affording, I—I can’t afford not to sell this. I was so sure—I’d counted on it. Look, let me tell you about my situation.” He moistened his lips. “I’m here on an instructorship; Romance languages. It’s not a GI loan, I was not in the armed services, but I’m like plenty of the others, I have a wife and childr—a child. They’re not here with me, I couldn’t afford that, but naturally I must, uh, send them something. They’re with my wife’s mother in Grass Valley. If you happen to have children of your own, you’ll remember that Christmas will be next month; you know how one wants to do something not to disappoint a child. I’d hoped for something from this story idea of mine—twenty dollars, ten, almost anything.”

  Georgine, silent at the far side of the room, thought grimly that if there was one thing she knew it was the value of twenty dollars. For charity to a complete unknown like this—who might well turn out to be a swindler—it was far too much.

  Hartlein watched the slow negative movement of Todd’s head, which managed to convey regret and a refusal to be taken in, in equal proportions. “You think I’m working a racket,” he burst out in real indignation, “but I’m offering you something of value! Look here, McKinnon,” he said more quietly, but with an urgent tone that somehow carried conviction, “will you do this? Will you listen to the story, and then if you use it, pay me whatever you think it’s worth? I’ll write out an agreement, I’ll say that if there should be any trouble—which there could never be—I’d assume complete responsibility, I’ll take out an affidavit if you like that it’s true from my personal knowledge. I’ll do that before you pay me a cent—trusting you, you see; can’t you trust me enough just to listen?” The supercilious ease had gone from his manner; he was twisting his hands together almost in supplication. “You couldn’t fail with this story, Mr. McKinnon. Look, I’ll write that out now.”

  He felt in his overcoat pocket and dug out a used envelope, flicking out in the process a loose cough drop and a metal menthol inhaler. He scribbled four or five lines on the back of the envelope and signed them with a flourish.

  Todd took the envelope and turned it over; it was addressed to Hugh Hartlein, at an address far down on Grove Street in Berkeley. Behind his impassive manner Georgine could discern a sign of weakening, a sort of forlorn-hope interest. “You’re taking a big risk,” he said without inflection.

  Hartlein relaxed. His small sigh was so expressive of relief that Georgine looked at him keenly. She wondered if, now that he’d gained his point, he would again omit the “Mr.” from Todd’s name. And why was he so very much relieved?

  “You’ve heard of the Beyond-Truth, I presume?” he said briskly.

  “I haven’t.”

  Hartlein looked at him incredulously. “You don’t know old Mrs. Majendie, or anything about Cuckoo Canyon? Why, it’s not a mile from here.”

  “You’ll have to tell me, I’m afraid.” Todd’s eyes looked tired, but he settled back patiently in his chair.

  “I should have thought you—” Hartlein began, and was caught by a crashing sneeze before his hand could reach his pocket. He gave an unfriendly look at the empty beer glass, which had so obviously failed to comfort him. Todd moved his chair back out of range, and said, “I’m an ignorant sort. You might start at the beginning.”

  “Cuckoo Canyon isn’t called that on the map, of course,” said Hartlein loftily. “Possibly that misled you. It’s had that nickname since anyone can remember, because of the eccentric people who used to live there. The place has been sold off bit by bit, and the new residents are normal enough, but—there’s still one of the old ones left.” He looked away from Todd, and a small bulge of muscle showed at the side of his jaw. “She sits there—she sits up there in that rich house on the top of the cliff, and grows flowers, and listens to music as if she’d never done anything else. People look at her white hair and her dowdy clothes, and are fooled; but there must be a few, here and there, who suspect what she is. They never could prove anything, but they’ll have that suspicion in their minds for a lifetime—wondering just how their wives and sisters died.”

  He paused, perhaps for effect, looking straight before him. Todd said flatly, “Well, how did they?”

  Young Mr. Hartlein gave him a peevish look. “I’m coming to it! It’s all a part of the Beyond-Truth, and old Nikko Majendie’s prophecies. Those deaths looked natural, but to the other believers it would seem that—those women didn’t dare to live any more.”

  He leaned forward in his chair. His material was well in hand now, and he was talking rapidly and rather well, even including Georgine from time to time in a compelling glance. “The Beyond-Truth is one of those vague philosophy-religions that sounds almost plausible when someone spouts it at you from a platform, especially if the professor’s one of those magnetic characters with burning eyes. One gathers that old Nikko Majendie was the type.

  “He was on the faculty at a screwball college out there near Mount Diablo, teaching comparative philosophy and religion, and it got to him. He began to work out a religion of his own, and foisted it on the students. Fairly soon he had other converts, and the Beyond-Truth was a going concern by the time the college folded. I can’t remember its name, but one could check. This all began back in the Twenties; of course,” added Hartlein loftily, “I was scarcely born at the time, so this is all hearsay.”

  Todd, who remembered the 1920s vividly, gave a faint shudder but said nothing.

  “The old man, you see, set himself up as a prophet. The Beyond-Truthers are after the sort of thing that their name implies, a cosmic interpretation of what the uninitiated believe to be truth. They have a few bizarre rules, no religion’s much good without those: they’re not vegetarians or teetotalers, but they’re forbidden hard liquor and shellfish and one or two other things, and they have a day of complete fast each week— Tuesday, just to be different. Toward evening, one gathers, they get light-headed from hunger and begin to see visions, and that’s when they think themselves into the Beyond-Truth, and come back from these trances with a next-sphere vibration that interprets worldly events. Old Majendie never came back without something startling. It was his racket, after all.

  “At the very beginning he’d made a strong prophecy, that within twenty-five or thirty years there’d be some kind of scourge that would strike the human race. It would be ghastly, he left the disciples in no doubt about that. He made it plain, too, that
people now alive couldn’t escape; but in order to spare the future generations, he arranged the rules of Beyond-Truth—note this, please, it’s the crux of the matter—so that there shouldn’t be any future generations.”

  Hartlein’s emphasis, and the pause which he made to let this sink in, caused Georgine to suppress a smile. She had known a few instructors like this, youngish and arrogant and seldom bothering to conceal their contempt for the students’ intelligence. Todd was looking polite but unimpressed.

  “They were pledged to do their part toward race suicide, do you see?” Hartlein added sharply. “They could go through a form of marriage; one even gathers that the Beyond-Truth didn’t actually forbid sex relations. If husband or wife happened to be sterile they’d be within the laws, but the unforgivable sin was having children. And except for a few cases, which I’ll take up in a minute, the ruling was obeyed. The disciples were mostly of the born-spinster type, male and female, who would take up a cult of that kind.

  “But—” he drew in his breath “—they got some converts among children, their own who were born before they joined the cult, or orphans that they took care of. They’re good to all children, in a pitying way. One gathers that they feel the young might as well have their paths smoothed until the scourge actually comes. The Colony has gone on until this day, you see, living peacefully enough on a big tract of land in Contra Costa County—old Nikko made some sharp real-estate deals in his early days, and his widow owns a lot of ranch property over there. They might have died out gradually, except for the Majendie prophecy’s seeming to come true. Many of them must have thought that he meant the late war, but after all a good many survived that. But now—”

  “The atom bomb,” Todd supplied drowsily, since the pause was drawn out almost beyond bearing.

  “Yes. It recharged their beliefs. They’re working twice as hard as before to get converts and to enforce their own rules. There was a time when a backslider could have drifted quietly away from the cult, when some of the older ones were dying off and the thing might have broken up naturally. Not now; you can see that? Old Nikko himself died in the early Thirties, and the widow—she was one of his most ardent disciples—carried on the work. Now there’s this new impetus; the prophecy makes sense—more than anyone had ever dreamed—and nobody can be allowed to depart from the Beyond-Truth’s principles, no one who has ever been a convert.” He glanced at them both. “She’ll see to that,” he added in a queer dull voice. “She has seen to it before.”

 

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