“You asked me that before,” she said, a little annoyed. “Yes, I’m sure! And it’s right here on the photo with a hand-lettered name on it, like on all the rest of the prominent natural features along the coast. And it looks like a good, sheltered spot to bring in a boat you don’t want a lot of people to see, nice and deserted. There doesn’t seem to be a house or road within miles, except the track leading in from the main highway.”
“The question is, why would Warfel risk landing at all, except at Bernardo where his lab is?” I shook my head ruefully. “Well, maybe we’ll find out when we get there. For now, let’s just hope we can hit the right road in the dark.”
“Well, we’ve got a long ways to go yet.”
We rolled on southward through the outskirts of Ensenada. Charlie Devlin’s big wagon, for all its bulk, was considerably more pleasant to drive than the rental sedan I’d left behind. The power brakes were less sudden, the power steering had some road feel to it, and the beefed-up suspension was taut and competent. The engine was smooth and incredibly strong. It gave the massive vehicle the performance, if not the handling of a sports car. Chalk up another point for the horse-loving, humorless Miss Devlin—but she was not the lady whose character concerned me now.
After studying the aerial photograph a little longer, Bobbie returned it to its envelope. She leaned back against the head rest, stretching her long legs as far as the car would permit. She was wearing sneakers and white jeans, a striped yellow-and-white boys’ shirt with the tails out, and a fringed sarape—a coarse, gray-brown, patterned Indian blanket with a hole to stick the head through. Topping off the outfit was a brown hat with a broken-down brim, which she now tipped over her eyes. I cut the interior light and reflected on the various incarnations of Roberta Prince.
I mean, first there had been the sexy, Hollywood-type gangster-moll with the undulating walk, the heavy makeup, and the various glamor-pants getups; and then there had been the nice, tall, tomboy-kid-next-door-trying-to-be-ladylike—once she got some clothes on—in a pretty yellow dress, with just a touch of lipstick.
That was the attractive companion with whom I’d had dinner, during which she’d told me what Tillery had told her over the phone: essentially just that he’d be seeing her, and paying her for her services, later that evening when he got back from Bahia San Agustin down the coast. Afterwards we’d. taken a stroll along the waterfront hand in hand, watching the sun disappear into the Pacific and pausing now and then for some amorous by-play that was supposed to be just for show but didn’t quite work out that way. We’d returned to the hotel slightly disheveled and reasonably sure that, whether or not the syndicate boys had had us under surveillance earlier, there was nobody watching us now.
I’d gassed up the car while Bobbie was changing into a more durable costume; and now I had this lanky, long-haired, female-hippie-type beside me, complete with sarape, floppy hat, and a hate for the pigs. You had to hand it to her. Any part she played, she threw herself into heart and soul; but it would be nice if I could ask the real Roberta to stand up and take a bow. I remembered Charlie’s warning. Well, I hadn’t really planned to turn my back on anybody tonight, anyway…
“You’d better stop, darling.” Bobbie sat up and pushed back her hat. Her voice was calm. “It’s the Mexican immigration guy. Let me handle him.”
I’d already seen a man in a khaki uniform emerging from a roadside shack to flag us down. “What’s he doing down here?” I asked, bringing the station wagon to a halt. “Oh, Ensenada’s treated as a border town, no red tape, but if you want to continue down Baja you’re supposed to have a tourist permit and stuff.” She patted her pockets. “Hell, I left my room key at the desk. Have you got yours?”
“Well, yes,” I said, “but—”
“Never mind. Give it to me.”
She took the key and cranked down the window. The immigration inspector, or whatever he was, came up to greet us politely. Bobbie broke into fluent, atrocious Spanish, waving the key and explaining, as far as I could follow her, that we were American tourists staying in Ensenada and just wanted to take a little moonlight drive down the beautiful peninsula since it was such a lovely night. The señor could understand how it was. Si, we’d be coming back shortly. An hour? Well, that was hard to say. It was such a lovely night. It might be just a little longer than an hour…
“You’ve got to appeal to their romantic natures,” she said as we drove away with official permission. She tossed the key into my lap. “Well, actually they’re not very strict. As long as they know you’ve got a room in Ensenada and are planning to come back soon, they’ll generally let you through. Obviously Tillery and his bunch got through—at least I assume they’re ahead of us, don’t you? Of course, they may have thought to get themselves fixed up with the right papers, like you should have.”
I said, “Hell, my dope-chasing associate could have got me honorary Mexican citizenship, judging by the way she talked, but nobody told me I was going to have to pass any check points. Thanks. Are there any other surprises lurking along this highway?”
“Not that I know of,” she said. “Of course, I’ve been down only a little beyond the end of the pavement, some ninety miles south, but this bay we’re going to isn’t nearly that far. As a matter of fact, I think you’d better plan on slowing down as soon as we get through that black-looking range of hills ahead. There seem to be all kinds of lousy little goat-paths leading off into the boondocks, and we don’t want to miss ours, do we?”
Actually, we had no trouble finding it. There was even a weathered sign, at just about the right mileage from Ensenada, reading Bahia San Agustin 11 km. As I’d expected, it wasn’t much of a road, just a pair of ruts across the desert that was now vaguely illuminated by half a moon. I turned off the highway, stopped the big Ford, and got out to check the ruts by the glare of the headlights. After studying the tracks in the dust for several minutes, I got into the car once more, frowning thoughtfully.
“Well, can you track the varmints, Davy Crockett?” Bobbie asked. “Did the critters take this road, Dan’l Boone?”
“I think so,” I said. “At least, a big car with new tires came through not very long ago. But there’s been some other traffic before it. A truck of some kind—a husky, six-wheeled job, if I read the sign correctly—and a jeep.”
“A jeep? That man called Willy was driving a jeep last night, wasn’t he? Frank Warfel’s driver and general handyman? I never met him while I was with Frankie, but I heard Jake telling Tillery about him.”
I said, “Well, I don’t know exactly whose driver and general handyman he is—when last heard from, he seemed to be working for Beverly Blaine—but that’s our Willy, all right. Of course, jeeps aren’t exactly scarce in this country, and a lot of them come with identical tires, but the tracks do look familiar. Maybe Warfel’s putting into this San Agustin place simply to collect Willy, but it would seem even simpler if Willy just met him at Bernardo where he’s got to land anyway. And who wants a big truck down by the shore tonight, and what’s it carrying? Is Frankie’s boat picking up another shipment we don’t know about? If so, it can’t very well be heroin. The world’s yearly production would hardly take up that much room or be that heavy—hell, one kilo is a lot of H, I’m told, worth over a quarter million bucks; and that’s only two and two tenths pounds.”
Bobbie said, “Of course, it could just be coincidence. It could just be a Mexican rancher hauling feed to his cattle, or something.”
“It could be, except that I don’t see any cattle around or any ranches either, and there wasn’t any sign of habitation in that aerial shot. Let me see the thing again.”
She handed me the envelope, and I switched on the light once more and studied the photograph. It takes a little adjustment for a man brought up on topographical maps, as I was, to make sense of an aerial photo, but once you get used to the idea you can get a much better notion of the terrain from a print like that.
I said, “We’ll be approaching from th
e northeast, but the road actually passes well inland and hooks back around to the south side of the bay where the land is fairly flat. On that side it looks like there are just some dunes running out into a long sandspit that more or less shelters the anchorage. But there seem to be some steep bluffs or rocky cliffs on the north side, terminating in a rocky headland and some reefs. If I were Tillery, I’d put myself somewhere on that northern cliff, where I could cover the whole beach. The only catch is, if I were Warfel, I’d put a couple of sentries up there first thing, just to keep guys like Tillery honest. Well, we’ll see. Cross your fingers; here we go.”
It was just as rough as I’d expected from my previous experiences with Mexican back-country roads, but the stiffly sprung station wagon took it better than I’d expected and only scraped bottom occasionally. My big concern was the people ahead who weren’t supposed to know that there were people behind them.
I ran without lights as much as possible, a precaution that slowed us down considerably and annoyed Bobbie terribly. She’d started worrying that we’d be too late, and of course it was a possibility, but I was gambling that Warfel would have stayed well off shore, out of sight, as long as there was any light at all. The Fleetwind was no speedboat; it would take him some time to bring it in from beyond the horizon. Anyway, late or early, there was only one way for one man to handle three or more, and it didn’t involve barging around carelessly with headlights glaring.
My precautions paid off after about five miles. Creeping over the top of a ridge in blackout status, we saw headlights in the basin below. They weren’t going anywhere; and dark figures were moving around the dim shape of the stalled car that, in the weak moonlight, had something of the look of a stranded whale.
I said, “Well, there they are. I figured, if their transportation was an ordinary sedan, they’d stick it sooner or later. You can practically count on it. City folks just never do seem to master this kind of driving.” I studied the dim, distant scene. “My God, how many of them are there, anyway?”
“I count five,” Bobbie said.
I sighed. “Maybe I should have brought that regiment of Mexican policemen that was offered me.” I let the Ford roll forward to get it off the skyline, stopped it by a clump of shadowy, wispy trees I didn’t bother to identify, and cut the switch. “Wait here, doll,” I said.
“Don’t be silly. I’m coming with you.”
I said, “Sweetheart, I’m sure you’re a great dancer and entertainer, but how many deer and elk have you stalked in your life?”
She said, automatically indignant, “I wouldn’t kill a poor defenseless animal—”
“Says the girl who had steak for dinner, rare. Only somebody else killed that poor defenseless steer for her, so it’s all right. You should hear my chief expound on the subject of people who can’t bear to inflict death but are perfectly willing to profit by it to the extent of a good meal.” I grimaced. “All right, skip the defenseless animals. How many armed men have you sneaked up on and slit the throats of?”
“Ugh,” she said with a shiver. “Well, none, but—”
“Then just what the hell do you figure qualifies you for this duty? Stay here. If they dig it out and drive off, wait and I’ll be back. But if those headlights go out and come back on again after five seconds, hurry on down there on foot. I don’t want to take the chance of getting this heap stuck in whatever they’ve found to bog down in, but I may need your help, so don’t loiter. Okay?”
She hesitated, and drew a long breath. “Okay, Matt. Be careful.”
“Sure,” I said; “Hell there are only five of them. I’ll be careful.”
20
Actually, I had no intention of tackling five syndicate goons all in a bunch. We’re not paid to be heroes—at least we’re not paid to be stupid heroes. I was counting on their splitting up and making the odds a little easier; and when I got within range of their voices, I found that was exactly what they were doing.
It was their logical next move if the Chrysler was badly stuck, as it seemed to be. They’d got it buried to the bodywork in the sand of a dry watercourse. Well, it’s happened to other pavement-type drivers on other desert roads, in Mexico and elsewhere. They never learn. All they can think of, when they start to slip and sink in the soft stuff, is to spin the wheels frantically and dig themselves in deeper.
Tillery was issuing last-minute instructions to the two men I didn’t know, although I should have known there were some others around. Jake had intimated that he hadn’t been alone when he’d watched me disposing of Beverly Blaine’s body.
“You two strong men stay here and get the car out of this riverbed,” Tillery was saying. “Jack it up, stuff brush under the wheels, and back it up on the bank. Get it headed back the way we came, ready to go. When you hear shooting—you’ll hear it all right; we can’t be more than a mile or two from the coast—start the engine and switch on the lights so we’ll know where to find you even if we miss the road in the dark. Come out and cover us if it sounds like we need it… Okay, Jake, you take your rifle. I’ll handle the chopper.”
“I’ll handle the chopper.” That was Sapio’s voice.
“Yes, Mr. Sapio.”
“Well, let’s put it on the goddamn road.”
“Come on, Jake. Mr. Sapio thinks we’d better get moving.”
I crouched under a bush—mesquite, judging by the thorns—and watched the three shadowy figures march off to the southwest. Jake was carrying a heavy rifle equipped with some kind of a bulky telescopic sight, or maybe an electronic night-fighting contraption, it was impossible to tell. Sapio packed the unmistakable, old-fashioned shape of a Thompson with a drum magazine. You couldn’t miss it, even in the dark. Well, it’s still a good, reliable weapon, even though superseded in most places by newer and sexier submachine-guns; and it has the sterling virtue that the big drum full of cartridges lets you stay in the homicide business, without interruption, several times as long as the clip-type magazines supplied with most later models.
I lay there and waited while the trio disappeared from sight; and then I waited some more while the two men left behind worked at jacking and brush-cutting—I mean, why should I do the work when I could let them do it for me? When it looked as if they had the big car almost ready to go, I moved in on them.
The edge of the wash, a perpendicular three-foot cut-bank, caused me a little trouble. I had to wiggle downstream a ways to find a low place where I could slither down it without making any noise. They weren’t expecting trouble, however, and I caught them just the way I wanted them: bending over, one man with both hands on the jack handle, the other with an armload of brush he was just about to stuff under the rising wheel.
“Hold it, boys!” I said from the bushes behind them. “There’s a .38 looking right up your rear elevations. If either of you would like an extra hole back there, I’ll be happy to oblige.”
“Who—”
“Never mind who,” I said, rising. “Just call me a man with a gun. No, don’t straighten up. Just stay bent over like that, turn around slowly, and stretch out flat on the ground, faces in the sand. Swell. Now, where the hell do you keep the light switch on this limousine…”
I’d hardly cut the lights for the required five seconds and switched them back on, when there was a muffled cry and a heavy thump behind me. I stepped aside quickly to where I could cover the new threat as well as the men on the ground, but it was merely Bobbie Prince picking herself out of the soft sand at the base of the bank off which she’d fallen. She got up, brushing off her jeans and straightening her floppy hat—the sarape had apparently been left behind as excess baggage. She came forward, limping a bit, a slim, pale, boyish shape in the night.
“Why didn’t you warn me there was a precipice there?” she asked resentfully.
“You’re supposed to be waiting back at the station wagon,” I said.
“You and your deerstalking!” she said. “You didn’t hear me, did you? And neither did they. I didn’t make any no
ise at all, did I?”
I said, “Sure, you’re great like Hiawatha and you damn near got yourself shot. Do you know how to work a hypodermic?”
“Naturally, but don’t ask me how I learned. Why?”
“There’s a kit in my left coat pocket. Use the vial marked Injection C. The other two are lethal, and I see no need to kill anybody, at the moment. The dose is a half cc, cubic centimeter to you. Put the boys to sleep for me while I keep them covered. Then we’ll get this heap out of here and get after their friends.”
It wasn’t quite as easy as that, of course, mainly because, once our prisoners were safely unconscious, I made the mistake of putting Bobbie behind the wheel of the Chrysler. I told her to send it forward very cautiously while I stood by to lend a shoulder if required. Unfortunately, it turned out that he had the same lead-foot, sand-driving technique as the man who’d got it stuck in the first place.
It came off the piled-up brush nicely, moving well—I didn’t even have to push to get it started—but the tires started to slip as she got eager and fed it more power. She felt them dig in and, instead of easing off, she gunned it hard. If I hadn’t sworn at her in a loud, ungentlemanly way, she’d have sunk it out of sight once more.
“I’m sorry!” she said, cutting the switch. Her voice said she was actually more mad than sorry. “I couldn’t help it! It’s just too damn soft. You didn’t have to get nasty about it!”
I said, “It was coming fine, sweetheart. I told you to take it easy, didn’t I? What the hell do they teach you kids in Yuma, Arizona? A lot of crap about defensive driving, I bet, and not a damn thing useful like how to get a car out of a sandy arroyo. Well, come along if you’re coming.”
She started to open the door, but hesitated. “What are you going to do?”
The Poisoners Page 16