The Jugger

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by Richard Stark


  Parker wasn’t a single-o. He always worked with a pickup group gathered for that single specific job. Every man was a specialist, and Parker’s specialties were two: planning and violence. Other men were specialists in opening safes or scaling walls or making up blueprints from nothing more than observation, but Parker was a specialist at planning an operation so it ran smoothly, and at stopping any outsider who might be thinking of lousing things up.

  It was rare for a job to take more than a month in the planning and the operation, so it was rare for Parker to spend more than a month to six weeks a year at his work. The rest of the time he lived on the proceeds, usually in a coastal resort center, under the name Charles Willis. Willis owned pieces of small businesses—parking lots and laundromats and things like that—here and there around the country; they never brought him a dime, but they justified his income on his Federal tax forms. As Charles Willis he had a complete background, documents and everything, enough to satisfy anybody.

  He had been Charles Willis in Miami Beach, spending the money from his last job—at a place called Copper Canyon, North Dakota, in the course of which he’d met the woman he was living with now—when the first letter had come from Joe Sheer. It had read:

  Parker,

  I think I got some trouble here, but I’ll take care of it. But maybe you better not try to get in touch with me for a while, until I get everything squared away again. I’m not down in my place in Omaha, but staying up here in my house in Sagamore. If anybody tries to get in touch with you through me for the next while I’ll have to tell them to go to you direct if I’m sure of who it is. If I’m not sure, I’ll just play dumb, until this trouble straightens itself out. I’ll let you know when everything is okay again.

  Joe

  Joe Sheer was an old-time jugger who’d cracked his first safe the other side of the First World War. He wasn’t working anymore now, but in his day he’d been one of the best safe and vault men in the business. There wasn’t a bank vault made he couldn’t open, and he worked at staying on top of the profession. Under three or four names, at different addresses around the country, he got all the trade papers and promotional copy from every safe and vault manufacturer, private protective association, and manufacturer of locks and burglar alarms; and he got all the banking association trade journals. Nor was he, like most juggers, limited in his methods; he could use nitro or the torch or the hammer or a drill, whatever was best for the particular job. When he was active, he’d been in steady demand.

  But about five years ago he’d retired. Like Parker, like most of the professionals in this business, he’d had a cover name for years, complete with a faked-up way of earning a livelihood and all the documents you could ask for to prove identity. Among those documents was a Social Security card. When, shortly after his sixty-fifth birthday, he began to receive Social Security payments, Joe Sheer laughed for a week and then retired. His Social Security payments didn’t cover the standard of living he was used to, but they didn’t have to; he’d salted away some of his take over the years, enough to keep him going clear to the other side of the actuarial tables.

  Joe had retired from the active side of the business, but not from the profession entirely. He still sat in on occasional planning sessions for a small piece of the action, and he operated as an answering service of sorts for Parker and a few other guys in the business.

  The thing was, when Parker was being Charles Willis, he didn’t want anybody contacting him as Parker. Almost everybody else in the business felt the same way; they didn’t want other people in the business busting in on them when they were using their cover identities. So Parker, like a lot of others, had a friend who relayed any messages that might come along, who served as the one link between Parker and Charles Willis. Joe Sheer was the friend. If anyone in the business wanted to get in touch with Parker, he had to contact Joe Sheer, tell Joe the story, and wait for Joe to pass the word on to Parker. If Parker then felt like it, he would meet the other guy wherever the original message had said. If he didn’t feel like it, there was no answer. His not showing up was its own answer.

  For the last five years, that had been the main connection between Parker and Joe Sheer, the message bit. Plus, one time a couple years ago, he’d holed up at Joe’s place in Omaha while Joe got him set up for a plastic surgeon to give him a new face; the one he’d carried around till then had got unpopular. Since then, except for occasional messages from other people through Joe, Parker had had no direct contact with him.

  When he got the letter, he wondered a little what sort of trouble Joe was in, but since Joe had sounded confident that he could take care of it himself, and since in their business worrying about one’s own self was a full-time job, Parker hadn’t wasted any sleep over Joe Sheer. He was still flush from the Copper Canyon job anyway, and not looking for work, so it didn’t matter to him if the messenger service broke down for a while.

  The second letter came a month later. It read:

  Parker,

  You got to excuse an old man. I need help. You know I never in my life pushed for anybody to get me out of any trouble, but I’m getting old and rusty and scared. If you want to tell me to go to hell that’s okay, but if you got the time and inclination I could use a hand up here. I don’t promise you any profit out of it at all. In fact I don’t see how you could break even on travel expenses unless I pay for them, and I will. If you got a woman, bring her along and I’ll pay for her too. A young hardcase like you could take care of this problem of mine with no sweat, and sit around and drink beer a while afterwards. This isn’t trouble I would have thought twice about ten years ago, but now is another story. Anyway, if you’re coming, just come, and if you’re not then don’t and I won’t hold it against you. Whatever you do for God sake don’t call me on the telephone.

  Joe

  Parker read the letter three times before he made up his mind about it. It sounded like Joe Sheer’s way of speaking and writing, but it sure as hell didn’t sound like anything Joe Sheer would ever say. There were things men in their business might do for each other, like hide each other out if the heat wasn’t too strong or stake each other if there were funds to spare, but they just wouldn’t write this kind of letter to one another. A man didn’t ask for help in a personal problem in the first place. In the second place, if a man asked for help about anything at all, he never said a word about paying for the help; he might say something about how big a piece of the action the helper might expect, but that was something else again. This business of offering to pay transportation was just cheap.

  In the third place, a man never apologized for what cards he’d been dealt; what did Joe Sheer think all of a sudden at age seventy, he was the captain of his fate? A man was what the world decided he would be, and where the world decided he would be, and in the condition the world had chosen for him. If the world had decided to deal Joe a bad hand this time, it wasn’t up to him to apologize for not having better cards.

  But that was something Joe already knew, or had known. Now, from the looks of this letter, he’d forgotten it.

  When he finally made up his mind it was really Joe Sheer who had written that letter, Parker pulled out a suitcase and started packing. It wasn’t for Joe Sheer that he packed, or that he called the airport and made a reservation on the next plane for Omaha. As far as he was concerned, Joe could drop dead right now and that would be fine with Parker. In fact that would be better; it would save him a trip.

  He was going for himself. He was going because in Joe’s letter he saw a danger to himself much more obvious and lethal than any danger Joe had been trying to describe. What he saw was the shaky penmanship and shaky mentality of an old man. Joe was going senile. At seventy, he’d lost every trace of the code of ethics he’d lived by all his adult life.

  But he hadn’t lost Parker’s name and address.

  Joe Sheer could crucify Parker, he could nail him to the wall with a hundred nails. He knew him by his old face, because who else but Joe She
er had set Parker up with the plastic surgeon? He knew Parker’s cover name, he knew twenty or twenty-five jobs Parker had been connected with, he knew enough about Parker to skin him alive.

  Up till now that hadn’t meant anything, because Joe had also known what sort of world he lived in and what his role was in that world. But not anymore. Joe Sheer was just an old jugger now, turned shaky and rusty—he’d said it himself—shaky and rusty and scared, an old jugger ready to trade every man he’d ever worked with for a nice soft mattress and a nice warm radiator and a little peace of mind.

  So Parker packed a suitcase and took a cab from the hotel and a plane from the airport and flew north and west across the country to see what it would take to protect himself from Joe Sheer.

  He arrived at Omaha on Tuesday afternoon, switched from plane to train, got to the town of Sagamore Tuesday evening, and registered at the Sagamore Hotel. He didn’t plan on staying at Joe’s place this time because he didn’t know what his relationship was going to be with Joe this time. And he used the Charles Willis name because that was the name he always used with Joe. He didn’t know then that this was going to get complicated, that a local cop would be in the act before noon the next day; if he’d known it, he would have used some other name.

  No tourist had ever stayed at the Sagamore Hotel; traveling men only. Sagamore was not a tourist attraction, nor was it near any tourist attraction, nor on any possible route to any tourist attraction. A few smallish but dirty factories supported the town, and traveling men supported the Sagamore Hotel. The desk clerk looked at Parker and couldn’t figure out for the life of him who or what Parker was. He spent the rest of the night thinking about it and finally decided that if Parker sold anything it was either liquor or guns.

  Later that night, Parker went over to Joe’s house to have a talk with him and see how the land lay. He walked, both because it was a small town where nothing was impossibly far from anything else and because in the future he might not want anybody able to state with certainty that Charles Willis had been in that neighborhood tonight.

  When he got to the house it was all in darkness, though it was only a little after eight. He stood on the porch and rang the doorbell, telling himself that senile old men sometimes sat in the dark and sometimes took evening naps, and then a teenage kid called him from the porch of the house next door and told him Mr. Shardin had died yesterday, yes, the funeral was to be tomorrow morning, yes, it was all very sudden.

  Too sudden.

  Parker went back to the hotel room to think it out. By the time he’d received that second letter from Joe, the old man had already been dead. What had happened to him? What sort of trouble had he been talking about? Was it anything that could eventually get back to Parker? He remembered, in that first letter, Joe had made a point of saying he’d have to cut out the messenger service until after he got everything straightened out.

  Joe was dead, but that didn’t solve everything after all. Parker still had to know how Joe had died, and who had been causing what kind of trouble, and if there was now anyone in the town of Sagamore who could later on cause trouble for Parker or Charles Willis. He had to know now, and not wait for it to come looking for him, because then it would be too late.

  So he stayed over that night, and in the morning he went down and asked the desk clerk about the local paper, but the local paper was a weekly that came out on Thursday, so what Parker wanted was the district paper, and the district paper office was over in Lynbrooke, seven miles away.

  Across the street from the hotel was the railroad station, and in front of it was parked a taxi, a dusty black Chevrolet four or five years old. Parker hired it to take him to Lynbrooke and back. He rode out there and picked up yesterday’s paper. When he came out of the newspaper office there was a black Ford parked behind the Chevy, and a stocky man in brown business suit and tan cowboy hat was leaning against the side of the Chevy, talking in a lazy way with the driver sitting behind the wheel. He went away when Parker came along, and Parker saw him get into the black Ford.

  Riding back to Sagamore, the black Ford stayed on their tail. After a couple of miles, Parker said to the driver, “Who’s the guy in the cowboy hat?”

  “Him? The guy talking to me?” The driver was in his late twenties, wearing an Army Ike jacket and too-long dry blond hair. A dark inverted V on the sleeve of the jacket showed where he’d stripped off the insignia of the highest rank he’d ever held: Pfc. He had a sharp narrow face, with the bone structure clear and plain around the hollows of the eyes. When he spoke, old frustrations trembled behind his voice.

  Parker said, “He smelled like law. Is he?”

  “You could say that.”

  “What kind of law?”

  “The rotten kind.”

  “I mean what level. State, local, county, what is he?”

  “Town. He runs the town police force, in Sagamore.”

  Parker flicked his cigarette out of the window. “How big’s the town police force?”

  The driver shrugged. “Maybe twelve, fifteen men, I don’t know.”

  “Big responsibility. What do they call him, commissioner?”

  “Captain. He’s got a couple lieutenants and everybody else is sergeants.”

  Parker frowned. The driver was willing enough to talk but he didn’t know how. It was like pulling teeth, getting anything from him. He said, “This captain, he got a name?”

  “Younger, Captain Younger.”

  “What did he want to know about me?”

  “Who said he wanted to know about you? We were just talking.”

  “Sure.” Parker shrugged, and looked back. The Ford was indolently behind them. He said, “How come you aren’t one of his sergeants?”

  The driver didn’t say anything for a minute. He hunched over the wheel more than he had, and the Chevy picked up speed. But after a few seconds the speed slackened off again, and the driver said, so low that Parker could barely hear it, “I got a job.”

  “Sure.”

  After that they rode in silence, back to Sagamore and the hotel. Then, as Parker was paying him, the driver said quickly, “He wanted to know did I know your name, did you say anything on the way out, had I ever seen you around town before anywhere, did you say what you wanted from the district paper, did you mention any names at all.”

  “Thanks.”

  “Even if I’d known anything, I wouldn’t have told that bastard.”

  Parker got out of the car and stood a second while the driver took the Chevy around a sweeping U-turn and put it in its parking slot across the street in front of the railroad station.

  The Ford pulled to the curb a few yards to Parker’s left. Captain Younger climbed heavily out of it, pulled a handkerchief from his hip pocket, took off his cowboy hat, wiped his forehead and the sweatband with the handkerchief, and put hat and handkerchief back where he’d got them. Out of his inside coat pocket he pulled a cigar and made a long ceremony out of unwrapping it and getting it ready to smoke. He didn’t look at Parker at all.

  Parker turned and went on into the hotel. It was a small building, only four stories high, but spread out in a rambling manner, and with a lobby far too broad and long for the rest of the place. Green leather sofas were scattered here and there over the dark orange carpeting in the lobby, and at the far end one lone man stood like a joke behind the broad sweep of desk.

  Parker went upstairs, and Captain Younger stayed on plant out in front of the hotel.

  Then, everywhere else Parker went, it kept coming back to Captain Younger, and it wound up in Joe Sheer’s house, the two of them face to face, Parker and Captain Younger, and Parker still didn’t know a damn thing.

  Except he had trouble.

  PART TWO

  1

  Dr. Rayborn was a poor liar, but a good doctor. He didn’t ask any questions, either of Captain Younger or Parker, but went right to work on Parker’s face. He cleaned the bruises with cotton, and put a stinging ointment on a couple of the worst places,
and then sprayed something on the side of his face out of a pressurized can. The spray was freezing cold at first, but it cut through the pain and gradually numbed the side of Parker’s face like Novocain.

  All through it, nobody talked. Younger watched Parker and Parker watched the doctor, and the doctor watched his own hands. He wouldn’t meet anybody’s eye. Through his efficiency, nervousness glittered, like the sky seen through an intermittent overcast.

  When at last he was finished and putting his tools back in his black bag, Younger said to him, “This is just between us fellas, Larry.”

  Not looking up from his bag, the doctor said, “This is the end, Abner, the last straw. No more. Don’t call me again.”

  “I didn’t do that to him,” Younger said. “He fell downstairs. Isn’t that right, Willis?”

  Parker didn’t say anything.

  Dr. Rayborn said, “He didn’t get that from falling downstairs. Don’t lie to me, Abner, I’m not a fool.”

  “Well, I say I didn’t do it. God damn it, Willis, did I lay a hand on you?”

  Still Parker didn’t say anything. Face expressionless, he watched the two of them. Sooner or later he’d want another private talk with Dr. Rayborn, the weak link.

  The doctor was saying, “I don’t care about the details, Abner. I don’t want to know about them. I didn’t want to know about—”

  “Shut your mouth!”

  The doctor was suddenly twice as nervous. He shut his bag with a loud click, and his eyes kept darting over to look at Parker. Parker watched him with flat expressionless eyes.

  Younger said, “You’re gonna get yourself in trouble.” He pointed a finger at the doctor and jabbed the finger in the air. ‘You’re gonna get everybody in trouble. Now, you just watch yourself.”

  “I’m sorry. I—”

  “You just won’t quit talking, will you? Go on home, Larry, I’ll call you later on.”

  “All right.” He picked up his bag and stood there looking nervous and agitated. “Abner,” he said, “I don’t want any more. This is the last time.”

 

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