The Outfit: A Parker Novel (Parker Novels)

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The Outfit: A Parker Novel (Parker Novels) Page 1

by Richard Stark




  Praise for THE OUTFIT:

  “Richard Stark's Parker novels, a cluster of which were written in an extraordinary burst of creativity in the early '60s, are among the most poised and polished fictions of their time and, in fact, of any time.”

  —John Banville, Bookforum

  “Richard Stark is the Prince of Noir.”

  —Martin Cruz-Smith

  “Parker is a brillant invention. . . . What chiefly distin-guishes Westlake, under whatever name, is his passion for process and mechanics. . . . Parker appears to have eliminated everything from his program but machine logic, but this is merely protective coloration. He is a romantic vestige, a free-market anarchist whose independent status is becoming a thing of the past.”

  —Luc Sante, New York Review of Books

  “Super-ingenious, super-lethal. . . . Parker is super-tough.”

  —New York Times Book Review

  “Gritty and chillingly noir. . . . [Westlake] succeeds in demonstrating his total mastery of crime fiction.”

  —Booklist

  “Westlake is among the smoothest, most engaging writers on the planet.” on the planet.”

  —San Diego Tribune

  “One of the most original characters in mystery fiction has returned without a loss of step, savvy, sheer bravado, street smarts, or sense of survival.”

  —Mystery News

  “The Parker novels . . . are among the greatest hard-boiled writing of all time.”

  —Financial Times (London)

  “No one can turn a phrase like Westlake.”

  —Detroit News and Free Press

  “Westlake's ability to construct an action story filled with unforeseen twists and quadruple-crosses is unparalleled.”

  —San Francisco Chronicle

  “Stark, a pseudonym of the venerable and wildly prolific author Donald E. Westlake, is a mystery connoisseur's delight. . . . A tremendously skillful, smart writer.”

  —Time Out New York

  “Elmore Leonard wouldn't write what he does if Stark hadn't been there before. And Quentin Tarantino wouldn't write what he does without Leonard. . . . Old master that he is, Stark does them all one better.”

  —Los Angeles Times

  The Outfit

  BOOKS BY RICHARD STARK

  The Hunter [Payback]

  The Man with the Getaway Face

  The Outfit

  The Mourner

  The Score

  The Jugger

  The Seventh

  The Handle

  The Damsel

  The Rare Coin Score

  The Green Eagle Score

  The Dame

  The Black Ice Score

  The Sour Lemon Score

  Deadly Edge

  The Blackbird

  Slayground

  Lemons Never Lie

  Plunder Squad

  Butcher's Moon

  Comeback

  Backflash

  Flashfire

  Firebreak

  Ask the Parrot

  Dirty Money

  The Outfit

  RICHARD STARK

  The University of Chicago Press

  The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637

  © 1963 by Richard Stark

  All rights reserved.

  University of Chicago Press edition 2008

  Printed in the United States of America

  17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 1 2 3 4 5

  ISBN-13: 978-0-226-77101-4 (paper)

  ISBN-10: 0-226-77101-6 (paper)

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Stark, Richard, 1933-

  The outfit / Richard Stark.

  p. cm.

  ISBN-13: 978-0-226-77101-4 (pbk. : alk. paper)

  ISBN-10: 0-226-77101-6 (pbk. : alk. paper)

  ISBN-13: 978-0-226-77289-9 (electronic)

  1. Parker (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Criminals—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3573.E9O9 2008

  813′.54—dc22

  2008021509

  The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.

  The Outfit

  CONTENTS

  ONE

  1

  2

  3

  4

  TWO

  1

  2

  3

  4

  THREE

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  FOUR

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  ONE

  1

  When the woman screamed, Parker awoke and rolled off the bed. He heard the plop of a silencer behind him as he rolled, and the bullet punched the pillow where his head had been.

  He landed face down on the floor. His stubby, pregnant .32 was clipped to the springs under the bed like a huge black fly standing upside down, and Parker's hand was reaching out for it before he hit the floor. He spun a half-turn away from the bed and raised the .32 so the other one would know he had it but he didn't fire. This was a hotel room, and the .32 wasn't silenced.

  A half-turn; then he reversed his spin and rolled under a bed, hearing the second bullet thud into the floor just behind him. His arms were tucked in close to his body and he rolled all the way across and came up on the other side, seeing the other one just stooping to fire under the bed. Parker threw the .32. The grip hit the other's forehead, just above the nose. He grunted; then dropped out of sight. Parker bent and looked through under the bed. The other was lying on his face.

  After the first scream, the woman had been silent. Now she stared, slack-faced, as Parker got to his feet and went around the bed. He was tall and lean with corded veins and hard, tanned flesh. His torso was creased by old scars. His legs had a bony angularity to them; the muscles were etched against the bones. His hands were big, thick, knotted with veins; they were made for gripping an axe, or a rock. When he picked up the .32 again, his hands made it look like a toy.

  The killer lay, arms and legs splayed out, as though he'd been dropped from a height. His gun was still in his right hand. Parker stepped on the wrist, then bent and took the gun. It was a .25 caliber target pistol, useless for almost any serious work except to come up close and kill a sleeping man. The silencer had been made for a gun with a larger barrel, and a jury-rigged clamp arrangement had been fashioned to fit it to the small barrel of the .25.

  Parker stuck his foot under the killer's chest, pushed, and rolled him over. He flopped over like a fish, his right arm swinging over and thumping the floor like a sack. He had a narrow pale face, skimpy eyebrows, small nose and thin lips, prominent cheekbones and temples. He wore a short-sleeved white shirt with button-down collar, a red-and-green striped tie, with sharply creased tan trousers with no cuffs, and highly polished brown shoes with zippers instead of laces. Floppy leather fringes hid the zippers. There was a purpling bruise on his right temple, and a small cut in the middle of it gleamed carmine. Parker had never seen him before.

  The woman found her voice again and half-whispered, “Shouldn't we call the police?”

  “Shut up a minute! Let me think.”

  It was a mess. She knew him as Charles Willis, absentee businessman with an income from a few parking lots and rental properties and gas stations here and there around the country. How to be square Charles Willis and explain a silent killer in the middle of the night? He had to giv
e her a story; she had to be convinced by it; and it had to give her a reason to keep her mouth shut. The law, too, would want to know why a professional killer had been aimed at Charles Willis.

  The truth might do it, but he didn't know her very well; nor how far he could trust her.

  Her name was Elizabeth Ruth Harrow Conway. She was a good-looking woman, twenty-nine, with honey hair, golden flesh and the tall, lush, well-proportioned body of a voluptuous athlete. She lived on a combination of alimony from her ex-husband and atonement gifts from her parents. She'd always been rich, had always lived in luxury surrounded by servants, and she'd never had a problem that wasn't fashionable. That much Parker knew about her. Also, that she was fine in bed, and that she sometimes had a panther craving for brutality. He knew little more than that, and thought there was probably little more to know.

  The killer made a small sound in his throat and his head thrashed slightly on the floor. His blond hair was dry and limp. Sweat had broken out on his face, though the room was air-conditioned. He'd be waking up soon, and Parker had to have the woman squared away by then.

  He saw her watching him, and was surprised at her expression. He'd expected fear and astonishment, but she looked breathless. Pleased, excited, and curious. The way she always looked when they bedded together. Expectant. So, the truth. But as little of it as possible.

  There was a wooden chair with padded seat and back over by the blind window, the one with the air-conditioner in it. He got it, brought it to the bed, and sat down. “Charles Willis isn't my name,” he said. “I have another name. I use it in my work. You don't want to know about my work.”

  “What?” She frowned at him, and glanced down at the man lying on the floor between them. “I don't under—You aren't Chuck Willis?”

  “I am now, and here. When I'm not working, I'm Charles Willis. Here in Miami, or in Nevada, or out on the Coast.”

  “And when you are working?” She'd absorbed it faster than he'd expected.

  He shook his head. “You don't want to know that.”

  “But he—” She pointed at the man who had tried to kill him. “—he's from that other part of your life.”

  “That's right.”

  “What's his name?”

  “I don't know. I never saw him before.”

  “Oh. You mean he was just hired.”

  “That's right.”

  “And you don't want to turn him over to the police.”

  “Right again.”

  “I see.”

  She reached out for the cigarettes on the night table. She was nude and, when she leaned to reach for the cigarettes, her breasts hung heavy for a moment. As she sat back again, they became firm again. She was a good animal.

  She lit a cigarette. “I don't see. You aren't what you seem to be, but you don't want me to know what you really are. Whatever you really are, someone, somewhere, hired this man to kill you. Whatever you really are, it keeps you from wanting to be involved with the police. You want me to help you by being quiet, but you don't want to tell me what's going on.”

  He was silent. She studied him, frowning, but he had nothing to say. He sat and waited. While he waited he watched the killer, whose head had moved again but whose eyes hadn't opened yet. The bruise had stopped swelling, but it was an unhealthy color. The carmine outline of the small cut had started to dull toward maroon as the blood clotted.

  After a minute Parker got to his feet. He had the .32 in his right hand, the silenced .25 in his left. He went over and put the .32 on the dresser, then went back and sat down, studying the thug again.

  “All right,” she said. “For now.”

  “Good.”

  She put her cigarette out, and nodded at the killer. “What about him?”

  “We'll talk to him.” He kicked the killer in the ribs. “You're awake,” he said.

  The killer opened his eyes. They were pale gray, gleaming faintly in the light from the table lamp on the night stand. His face was blank, as though he had no attitude about what had happened to him. He said, his voice as blank as his face, “You can't turn me over to the law. You can't kill me, because you can't get rid of the body and you can't trust the dame. And you can't kill her because that would bring the law on you. You got to let me go.”

  “You can trust me, Chuck,” she said. Her voice was low. She was half-smiling as she looked down at the pallid face of the killer.

  Parker ignored her. He said to the killer, “Name of your contact. The guy who fingered me.”

  The killer shook his head, rolling it back and forth on the floor, doing it carefully, as though he were part of a balancing act. His face was still blank. “No,” he said.

  “And the name of your contact in New York. You work out of New York, don't you?”

  “Forget it,” said the killer.

  “You can't go to the law either,” Parker told him. He looked past the killer, over at the woman. “I've got to force the names out of him,” he said. “I don't like that kind of job. You want to try it? I'll tie him. And gag his mouth so he can't holler.”

  She smiled again, leaned far over the edge of the bed, and looked down at the killer.

  “Yes,” she said. “I've never done anything like that. I'd like to try.” Her tongue peeked out past her lips. She moistened her lips, and looked down, and smiled.

  Parker was pleased. He'd figured her right, every step of the way. He hadn't figured the unloading yet, but that would come when necessary. When it was time to get rid of her, split with her, he'd find the way. Not kill her, just unload her.

  He looked down to see if he'd figured the killer right, too. He had. The killer was staring up at the smiling face of the woman, balloon-like, in the air above him. His pale eyes seemed larger, and the sweat had started on his face again. His fingers were clenching and unclenching and his cheeks seemed hollower, thinner.

  Parker said, “What's your name?”

  “Go to hell,” said the killer. But his voice was higher and thinner and not completely under control.

  Parker got to his feet. “We'll use two of my ties,” he said. “You. Get into the chair.”

  The killer didn't move.

  Parker stepped on his ankle. The killer gasped, and Parker stepped off the ankle again and said, “Get into the chair.”

  The woman said, “Tell him to take his pants off.”

  The killer closed his eyes. His whole face seemed sunken now, more pallid. He said, “Clint Stern. That's my name, Clint Stern.”

  Parker saw the woman pouting. She leaned back against the pillow again and lit a cigarette. She wouldn't meet Parker's eye.

  Parker asked, “Who fingered me?”

  “Jake Menner.”

  “Who is he?”

  “A collector. He collects from the books around the hotels.”

  “All right. Who gives you the assignments?”

  “Jim St. Clair.”

  “In New York?”

  “Yes.”

  “Where do I get in touch with him?”

  Stern's eyes flickered and his brow creased with worry lines. “You're making me dead, man,” he said.

  Parker said to the woman, “Maybe you'll get a chance at him after all.”

  Stern said, “I'll be dead anyway. What's the difference?” He sounded bitter, as though an injustice had been done him.

  “I'm not talking about dead,” Parker told him. “She won't let you die. Will you, Bett?”

  She shrugged. She no longer seemed very interested. She knew Stern was going to give in without her doing anything. So did Parker. So did Stern. He said, “He runs a club in Brooklyn. On Kings Highway, near Utica Avenue.”

  “What's it called?”

  “The Three Kings.” Stern closed his eyes again. Every time he closed them, he looked like a corpse. He said, “You're killing me, man.” He sounded tired, that was all.

  “This guy Menner,” said Parker. “You were supposed to call him when the job was done. Right?”

  “Yes,
” said Stern.

  Parker pointed. “There's the phone. Call him.”

  Stern sat up. Then he winced and put his hand to his bruised temple. He winced again, away from the hand, and looked bleakly at the spot of blood that had come off on his palm. “Maybe I got a concussion,” he said.

  “Move faster,” said Parker.

  Stern got to his feet, climbing up the chair. He moved as though he were dizzy. He stumbled when he moved away from the chair, and almost fell down. He made it to the writing desk where the phone was, and leaned against the wall. He picked up the receiver as though it was heavy, and started to dial. Then he looked over at Parker and said, “What do I say?”

  “Parker's dead.”

  Stern finished dialing, and lifted the receiver to his ear. He waited, dull-eyed. From the middle of the room Parker heard the click and the metallic chatter when the phone was answered at the other end.

 

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