by Gores, Joe
‘Did you talk with Maxwell Stayton?’
‘Yes, doll. No fires burning there. I’m on my way to the assessor’s office now to keep you from jumping down my throat tonight.’
Her relief showed in her voice. ‘So we won’t need Jack Leavitt after all.’
‘Nope. Still out of the slammer. But that reminds me. You’ll find an apartment key in the left corner of my middle desk drawer. Mail it off to Vince Wylie at Homicide, will you? I want to piss him off. And I want you to dummy up the Dahlberg file so it looks as if we’re expecting Eric LaValley up from LA next weekend as a possible surprise witness. Can do?’
‘Sure. But Neil …’
His chuckle was soothing, as if to allay the anxiety which had reappeared in her voice. ‘Just getting at Wylie, doll. Really.’
10
The office at 858 Bush Street was just large enough for a steel safe as squat as a hydrant, a table, a desk, three straight-backed chairs splattered with the paint of ancient refurbishments, and a bottled water dispenser. The single door opened on the garage floor. Beside it was a tall square inset table with a stool in front of it. The table was just large enough for a time-punch machine and a cumbersome antique cash register loaded with silvery curliques.
The office itself smelled of oil and gasoline and dampness and old socks. Walter Hariss was behind the desk; with his pearl-grey hand-stitched suit and two-dollar cigars he was as incongruous as Spode in Woolworth’s.
‘Missed him?’ he demanded. Anger reddened his firm round face.
‘We kept the fucker in the city,’ grunted Kolinski.
‘All he has to do is rent a car—’
‘No driver’s license, according to Fargo.’
Hariss shrugged meaty shoulders under expensive tailoring. Restless, he stood, went to the door, peered out into the garage. He could see the dark polished length of his Cadillac, with the top of Gus Rizzato’s head showing behind the steering wheel.
‘Steal a car, then?’ he suggested.
‘And drive it where?’
Hariss turned back. His expensive arm waved to indicate the wide world. Kolinski shook his head emphatically.
‘Can you think of anywhere more vulnerable, once somebody’s got a make on you, than behind the wheel of an automobile on a freeway?’ A rare sunny smile twitched his lips. His arms came up holding an imaginary machinegun. He sprayed the room with it as his mouth said, ‘Phtoo-phtoo-phtoo-phtoo-phtoo-phtoophtoo,’ then added ‘Fwoom!’ His eyes watched the car rolling and burning.
‘We don’t have the manpower to cover all four freeways out of this city,’ objected Hariss.
‘Docker doesn’t know that.’
‘And if we did spot him – what about our dope? What about the hundred-seventy-five gee?’
‘Docker can’t take the chance that we won’t cut him down.’
‘Then what will he do? You know a fugitive’s psychology better than I do, this is a new—’
‘You’re a fucking delicate flower, I know. He’ll hole up. Head for an airport. Rent a private plane …’
‘Fargo said he’s got all the small airfields in the bay area covered.’
‘You trust that fucker.’ It was said in a tone of amazed disbelief.
‘Did I say I trusted him?’
Hariss might have elaborated on his methods of safeguard against Neil Fargo’s possible perfidy, but a woman had come to the door with a ticket in her hand. Kolinski looked past her, saw the door of the restroom shut and the light on, so took her ticket himself and ran it through the time-punch. His deceptively Neanderthal features were pleasant.
‘Ninety-five cents, ma’am,’ he beamed.
He gave her back her nickel and handed the ticket to the only car-park attendant who was on the floor during the slack midday hours, and who had just emerged from the john. He was a black-haired kid with a wiseass face, wearing a white jacket grimy around the cuffs and creased across the seat from sliding in and out of cars. He went off to the vertical manlift to the upper floor where her car was stashed.
The woman wandered vaguely toward the cigarette machine. After staring thoughtfully at her back for a moment, Kolinski went back into the office.
‘Nice ass on that broad.’
‘We’re out a quarter of a mil in heroin, and you’re staring at women’s backsides.’ Hariss’ voice was filled with distaste at the wanton vulgarity.
‘A woman’s ass might find us Docker if he’s holed up in town.’
Hariss listened intently as the angular bony man told him what Robin had come up with concerning Docker and his sexual habits. Listening, Hariss could not stay still: he perched on the corner of the desk, sat behind it, stood, fidgeted, cracked his knuckles all together with a swift palms-out shoving motion of both interlaced hands.
‘How sure are you of Robin?’ he asked finally.
‘She didn’t make it up, if that’s what you mean. She supplied details about Docker himself.’
The woman with the nice ass got into her Saab and left. The dark-haired boy headed for the candy machine beside the office door.
‘I meant, how sure are you that she won’t get the information and then hold out on you?’
Kolinski’s eyes gleamed as if with remembered lust. ‘No way. I own that bitch.’
‘I hope so,’ said Hariss equably. ‘Remember, I am playing for much higher stakes in this than a kilo of heroin. Roberta Stayton is my entrée to her father’s commercial empire.’
‘I’ve told you before and I say it again, Walt, that old bastard is nobody to mess with. I worked for him—’
‘I didn’t,’ said Hariss drily. ‘Through your persistence and vindictive nature, we … possess Stayton’s daughter. He does not yet know this. Once he does, he will not know who I am until I have been legally granted … certain rights in Stayton Industries.’
‘He knows who I am.’ Kolinski’s voice was glum. ‘All he has to do is see me.’ He suddenly slammed a frustrated fist into his open palm, and his voice became a rant. ‘Goddam that fucking Docker! It was all so easy, right now we should be counting hundred-dollar bills …’
‘Do you really think Docker planned this alone?’
‘There isn’t anybody else.’
‘There’s Neil Fargo.’ His heavy features were judicial; he looked like a man who would make laws rather than break them. His eyes became suddenly murderous without a muscle changing in his face. ‘If Fargo is mixed up in this hijack …’
‘He ain’t been breaking his ass to shower us with information, has he?’ Kolinski checked his watch. ‘One phone call, to say Docker doesn’t have a car or driver’s license – and it’s goddam near two o’clock …’
Hariss nodded, a somewhat worried look on his face. He drummed thoughtful fingers on the desktop. The dark-haired youth started into the office, munching his candy bar, checked at whatever he saw in their faces or sensed in the room’s atmosphere, and went away hurriedly.
A look that could almost have been fear flitted across the grey-haired importer’s heavy features.
‘There’s something else, Alex.’
‘About Fargo?’
‘About Docker. A … pattern of erratic behavior that … that’s worrisome. We have assumed that Docker, realizing the exchange point between the money and the heroin was our weakest spot because we worked through agents rather than being there ourselves, decided to take both the money and the heroin. Correct?’
‘Correct,’ said Kolinski.
‘Then let us follow his actions for the last six hours. Before Addison arrives, he attacks and kills Marquez. He now has what he supposedly wants. Does he leave? No. He waits for Addison, knocks him cold – but does not kill him also. Why?’
‘Leaving him for a fall guy for the Marquez murder,’ said Kolinski promptly.
‘He needed no fall guy until he was seen. Nobody except Neil Fargo, up to that point, knew what he looked like. Now Addison does. Then he goes into Franklin Square, talks with a junkie there, a
nd sends him up to the flat also. Then, almost assuredly, he phones a tip to the police about the dead body in the flat.’
‘Setting up another possible fall guy.’
‘Except Addison is still alive to testify the junkie isn’t the killer.’
He paused to light a cigar, turning it evenly in the flame of his lighter. He talked around the rolled, saliva-wet leaf, then used it as a pointer to jab home his points.
‘See what I mean by worrisome? It makes no rational sense. He acts as if he is high on something himself. Supporting this theory, my police informant has told me that there was a broken ampule of speed on the bathroom floor.’
‘Did you ask Fargo if Docker is hooked on anything?’
‘When he first mentioned Docker, he said he’d been a North Vietnamese POW for a couple of years. He might have gotten habituated to painkillers subsequently in a military hospital. But that’s academic; this isn’t: does Docker attempt to leave San Francisco?’
‘He does,’ said Kolinski. ‘First at Greyhound—’
‘Does he? At Greyhound he acts like a man out of control, attacking Rowlands with the utmost ferocity. Then he coolly convinces two witnesses he is a Mafia enforcer. Later, he shows up on Market Street and makes himself very conspicuous in an encounter with a hippie panhandler. He makes himself obnoxious in a First Street bar. He makes flip remarks in a peep-show emporium—’
‘As if he wants to be spotted,’ muttered Kolinski. For the first time, his face reflected some of the concern apparent in Hariss’ voice.
‘Exactly. Incredible stupidity, one would say at first glance. After all, he has what he wanted: the heroin and the money which was to be used to buy it. Why attract attention?’
Kolinski said haltingly, thinking it through, ‘But then when he is spotted, he pulls some sort of very cool switch to disappear completely and leave us running around in circles …’
‘As if he’s laughing at us,’ said Hariss. ‘Why? Is he indeed erratic, or is he playing some sort of game? And where is he? And why hasn’t Neil Fargo come up with anything further—’
The phone rang.
Kolinski picked it up, spoke his name into it, listened. He cupped the receiver with his hand and turned to Hariss. ‘Neil Fargo. He’s got news about Docker.’
11
Walter Hariss moved with a fluid grace surprising in a man of his obviously self-indulgent habits, plucked the receiver off the wall phone over the squatty safe in time to hear Neil Fargo’s voice demand sharply, ‘Who else just came on besides you, Kolinski?’
‘Hariss,’ said the fleshy importer.
‘Good. Half an hour ago Docker rented a car at a joint down the other side of Market. It’s a canary yellow Montego, this year’s or maybe last year’s model, two-door sedan—’
‘License?’ Kolinski’s pen was poised.
‘No got. My man spotted him walking out on Howard, lost him when he ducked into a second-hand office furniture supply warehouse in the eight-hundred block. Twenty minutes later, my man made him again, just driving the Montego out of the car-rental outfit. He wasn’t in close enough to get the license—’
‘Why in fuck didn’t you tell him to go in and get it from the girl behind the desk?’ snarled Kolinski.
Neil Fargo’s voice instantly hardened. ‘Listen, asshole, I’m getting this all relayed through my secretary. I wasn’t in touch with this guy direct. I’m not sitting around my fucking office waiting for Docker to come in and sit in my lap.’
‘What’s the name of the rental outfit?’ asked Hariss soothingly.
‘Never mind that, I’m on my way down there now. I’ll let you know when I pick anything up.’
Kolinski began, ‘Listen, goddammit—’
He stopped. He and Hariss were listening to the empty buzz of a dial tone. Hariss slammed a hand in frustration against the dirty plaster wall of the office. His face was very pale.
‘Who does he think he is?’ he panted. ‘Get Gus.’
Kolinski leaned out the door to bawl across the garage at the diminutive chauffeur. ‘Gus! Get your ass in here.’
Rizzato immediately popped out of the Cadillac, trotted up to the office. He should have been comic in the long dark blue coat and peaked cap he affected while behind the wheel of the limousine, but no figure of fun ever wore eyes like Rizzato’s.
‘Yessir, Mr Hariss?’ He stood in the office door like a dog waiting to be told which way to point. Hariss laid the hand which bore the cigar on his narrow muscular shoulder.
‘Gus, I want you to go over to Neil Fargo’s office. There are some things I want you to find out.’
Obscure excitement sparked the little man’s eyes. ‘I’ll ask that secretary of his.’
‘With restraint, Gus. With restraint. For now.’
‘Yessir, Mr Hariss.’
‘All right, three things. When Neil Fargo came into his office this morning was he carrying a package? A newspaper-wrapped package, perhaps? Two, is there such a package at his office now? Three, did a call actually relay information about Docker renting a car, and was a license number mentioned which the secretary passed on to Fargo? Now, on your way.’ He let the diminutive chauffeur get to the door before calling after him, ‘Restraint, Gus. For the moment.’
Hariss sat down again half-smiling; his good humor was quite restored. He drew on the cigar, put his head back to drift the rich smoke at the ceiling.
‘I don’t get it,’ said Kolinski. ‘What’s with this package? And what’s with Gus and Fargo’s secretary? Shit, she’s a fucking kid, nineteen, twenty years old.’
Hariss said in a measured, distasteful voice, ‘She excites him.’
‘Yeah, well, she’s small enough for him at that. Probably the only broad in town he could let get on top without—’
‘Alex, if our association ever terminates, it will be on the basis of your verbal vulgarity—’
‘Yeah, I know, Walt – but you don’t mind taking your cut out of the FarJon Hotel operations.’
‘Business is business. All right: I sent Gus over to Neil Fargo’s office to make sure the missing hundred-seventy-five gee’s aren’t hidden there.’
‘You mean the paper-wrapped package—’
‘Of course. We have only Neil Fargo’s word for it that Docker ever had that money. Assume for the moment that he and Docker, at least initially, planned the hijack together. Docker’s attaché case could have been taken to the Bryant Street flat empty, merely to serve as a receptacle for the key of heroin.’
‘Yeah!’ exclaimed Kolinski softly. ‘I like that.’ His expression changed. ‘But Fargo’s not stupid. He wouldn’t leave the money in his goddam office. He’d put it in a safe deposit box or—’
‘Events have moved rapidly. Docker may have betrayed Fargo as well as us. Safe deposit boxes cannot be reached until ten A.M., he may have had to leave the money in his office and may not have had a chance to collect it since. In any event, the girl will know whether he brought a package, a briefcase, anything which could have held the money into the office with him this morning. And Gus will make sure there is no money there now.’
Kolinski’s eyes had sharpened again. ‘And checking up on whether the information about Docker’s car-rental came through the secretary—’
‘Fargo may have held back a license number, let us say, that would aid your people materially in spotting Docker’s car.’
‘But why would Fargo—’
‘Alex, I’m surprised at you.’ He laid aside his cigar to illustrate his words with gestures. ‘Let us turn it around and suppose that Fargo is not involved in the hijack with Docker. That means that somewhere out there is a man with a hundred-seventy-five thousand dollars in cash, plus heroin worth a quarter of a million on the street once it has been cut to the standard five percent.’ He chuckled. ‘Fargo may very well feel – as we do – that if he could beat the other principals to Docker—’
‘I see.’ Kolinski’s bony face had become pensive. ‘But if Fargo’s
stringing us along, he’ll have briefed his secretary on what to tell us.’
Hariss chuckled richly. ‘Gus has an extremely persuasive way of asking questions of young ladies.’
The back of Gus Rizzato’s open hand drove Pamela Gardner’s delicately-boned skull sideways against the plasterboard partition beside her desk. The pigskin driving gloves he wore left a mottled red pattern on her cheek.
‘I asked you about a package, dearie.’
Outrage and terror fought in the girl’s face. In a voice high with fear but still defiant, she exclaimed, ‘You, you … get out of here! When Neil hears—’
The knuckles whipped across her cheek the other way. She broke, screamed, scrambled from her chair so she could get the desk between them. Rizzato’s dainty size six shoe swept sideways against her ankles, slamming them together and taking her feet out from under her.
Pamela went down heavily on her side, only partially breaking the fall with one hand. In the same motion she tried to roll under the desk in a flurry of nyloned thighs.
Rizzato’s hand darted down between the churning legs. The girl screamed again, whether in pain, further terror or outrage was impossible to distinguish. She kicked up and out; her shoe missed Rizzato’s face by the slimmest of margins. Since she was on her back she used elbows, bottom and heels to scrabble backward into the well under the desk like a threatened spider into a corner.
Rizzato was around the desk as quick as a weasel. He grabbed her short brown hair from behind as she emerged, jerked her head up and then back and sideways to rap it just hard enough on the edge of the well. The girl made a strangled sound in her throat as if she were trying to retch. He rapped again. The girl quit fighting his hands.
‘That’s it, dearie,’ he chirped. His eyes and voice were cheerfully birdlike. He bent his own face over hers, so he could look down into her fear-haunted eyes. ‘Now tell me about the package.’