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Delphi Collected Works of Max Brand US

Page 76

by Max Brand


  “What are you going to do?”

  “Going to argue with this gent in a way he’ll understand a pile better than the chatter we’ve been making so far.” He stepped a long light pace forward. “Macklin, you know what we want to find out. Will you talk?”

  A cloud of red gathered before the eyes of Macklin. It was impossible that he must believe his ears, and yet the words still rang there.

  “Why, curse your little rat-face!” burst out Robert Macklin, and, stepping in, he leaned forward with a perfect straight left.

  Certainly his long vacation from boxing had not ruined his eye or stiffened his muscles. With delight he felt all the big sinews about his shoulders come into play. Straight and true the big fist drove into the face of the smaller man, but Robert Macklin found that he had punched a hole in thin air. It was as if the very wind of the blow had brushed the head of Ronicky Doone to one side, and at the same time he seemed to sway and stagger forward.

  A hard lean fist struck Robert Macklin’s body. As he gasped and doubled up, clubbing his right fist to land the blow behind the ear of Ronicky Doone, the latter bent back, stepped in and, rising on the toes of both feet, whipped a perfect uppercut that, in ring parlance, rang the bell.

  The result was that Robert Macklin, his mouth agape and his eyes dull, stood wobbling slowly from side to side.

  “Here!” called Ronicky to his companion at the door. “Grab him on one side, and I’ll take the other. He’s out on his feet. Get him to that chair.” With Gregg’s assistance he dragged the bulk of the man there. Macklin was still stunned.

  Presently the dull eyes cleared and filled immediately with horror. Big Robert Macklin sank limply back in the chair.

  “I’ve no money,” he said. “I swear I haven’t a cent in the place. It’s in the bank, but if a check will—”

  “We don’t want your money this trip,” said Ronicky. “We want talk, Macklin. A lot of talk and a lot of true talk. Understand? It’s about that girl. I saw you grin when you saw the picture; you remember her well enough. Now start talking, and remember this, if you lie, I’ll come back here and find out and use this on you.”

  The eyes of Robert Macklin started from his head, as his gaze concentrated on the black muzzle of the gun. He moistened his white lips and managed to gasp: “Everything I know, of course. Ill tell you everything, word for word. She — she — her name I mean—”

  “You’re doing fine,” said Ronicky. “Keep it up, and you keep away, Bill. When you come at him with that hungry look he thinks you’re going to eat him up. Fire away, Macklin.”

  “What first?”

  “What’s she look like?”

  “Soft brown hair, blue eyes, her mouth—”

  “Is a little big. That’s all right. You don’t have to be polite and lie. We want the truth. How big is she?”

  “About five feet and five inches, must weigh around a hundred and thirty pounds.”

  “You sure are an expert on the ladies, Macklin, and I’ll bet you didn’t miss her name?”

  “Her name?”

  “Don’t tell me you missed out on that!”

  “No. It was — Just a minute!”

  “Take your time.”

  “Caroline.”

  “Take your time now, Macklin, you’re doing fine. Don’t get confused. Get the last name right. It’s the most important to us.”

  “I have it, I’m sure. The whole name is Caroline Smith.”

  There was a groan from Ronicky Doone and another from Bill Gregg.

  “That’s a fine name to use for trailing a person. Did she say anything more, anything about where she expected to be living in New York?”

  “I don’t remember any more,” said Macklin sullenly, for the spot where Ronicky’s fist landed on his jaw was beginning to ache. “I didn’t sit down and have any chats with her. She just spoke to me once in a while when I did something for her. I suppose you fellows have some crooked work on hand for her?”

  “We’re bringing her good news,” said Ronicky calmly. “Now see if you can’t remember where she said she lived in New York.” And he gave added point to his question by pressing the muzzle of the revolver a little closer to the throat of the Pullman conductor. The latter blinked and swallowed hard.

  “The only thing I remember her saying was that she could see the East River from her window, I think.”

  “And that’s all you know?”

  “Yes, not a thing more about her to save my life.”

  “Maybe what you know has saved it,” said Ronicky darkly.

  His victim eyed him with sullen malevolence. “Maybe there’ll be a new trick or two in this game before it’s finished. I’ll never forget you, Doone, and you, Gregg.”

  “You haven’t a thing in the world on us,” replied Ronicky.

  “I have the fact that you carry concealed weapons.”

  “Only this time.”

  “Always! Fellows like you are as lonesome without a gun as they are without a skin.”

  Ronicky turned at the door and laughed back at the gloomy face, and then they were gone down the steps and into the street.

  6. THE NEW YORK TRAIL

  ON THE TRAIN to New York that night they carefully summed up their prospects and what they had gained.

  “We started at pretty near nothing,” said Ronicky. He was a professional optimist. “We had a picture of a girl, and we knew she was on a certain train bound East, three or four weeks ago. That’s all we knew. Now we know her name is Caroline Smith, and that she lives where she can see the East River out of her back window. I guess that narrows it down pretty close, doesn’t it, Bill?”

  “Close?” asked Bill. “Close, did you say?” “Well, we know the trail,” said Ronicky cheerily. “All we’ve got to do is to locate the shack that stands beside that trail. For old mountain men like us that ought to be nothing. What sort of a stream is this East River, though?”

  Bill Gregg looked at his companion in disgust. He had become so used to regarding Doone as entirely infallible that it amazed and disheartened him to find that there was one topic so large about which Ronicky knew nothing. Perhaps the whole base for the good cheer of Ronicky was his ignorance of everything except the mountain desert.

  “A river’s a river,” went on Ronicky blandly. “And it’s got a town beside it, and in the town there’s a house that looks over the water. Why, Bill, she’s as good as found!”

  “New York runs about a dozen miles along the shore of that river,” groaned Bill Gregg.

  “A dozen miles!” gasped Ronicky. He turned in his seat and stared at his companion. “Bill, you sure are making a man-sized joke. There ain’t that much city in the world. A dozen miles of houses, one right next to the other?”

  “Yep, and one on top of the other. And that ain’t all. Start about the center of that town and swing a twenty-mile line around it, and the end of the line will be passing through houses most of the way.”

  Ronicky Doone glared at him in positive alarm. “Well,” he said, “that’s different.”

  “It sure is. I guess we’ve come on a wild-goose chase, Ronicky, hunting for a girl named Smith that lives on the bank of the East River!” He laughed bitterly.

  “How come you know so much about New York?” asked Ronicky, eager to turn the subject of conversation until he could think of something to cheer his friend.

  “Books,” said Bill Gregg.

  After that there was a long lull in the conversation. That night neither of them slept long, for every rattle and sway of the train was telling them that they were rocking along toward an impossible task. Even the cheer of Ronicky had broken down the next morning, and, though breakfast in the diner restored some of his confidence, he was not the man of the day before.

  “Bill,” he confided, on the way back to their seats from the diner, “there must be something wrong with me. What is it?”

  “I dunno,” said Bill. “Why?”

  “People been looking at me.”
r />   “Ain’t they got a right to do that?”

  “Sure they have, in a way. But, when they don’t seem to see you when you see them, and when they begin looking at you out of the corner of their eyes the minute you turn away, why then it seems to me that they’re laughing at you, Bill.”

  “What they got to laugh about? I’d punch a gent in the face that laughed at me!”

  But Ronicky fell into a philosophical brooding. “It can’t be done, Bill. You can punch a gent for cussing you, or stepping on your foot, or crowding you, or sneering at you, or talking behind your back, or for a thousand things. But back here in a crowd you can’t fight a gent for laughing at you. Laughing is outside the law most anywheres, Bill. It’s the one thing you can’t answer back except with more laughing. Even a dog gets sort of sick inside when you laugh at him, and a man is a pile worse. He wants to kill the gent that’s laughing, and he wants to kill himself for being laughed at. Well, Bill, that’s a good deal stronger than the way they been laughing at me, but they done enough to make me think a bit. They been looking at three things — these here spats, the red rim of my handkerchief sticking out of my pocket, and that soft gray hat, when I got it on.”

  “Derned if I see anything wrong with your outfit. Didn’t they tell you that that was the style back East, to have spats like that on?”

  “Sure,” said Ronicky, “but maybe they didn’t know, or maybe they go with some, but not with me. Maybe I’m kind of too brown and outdoors looking to fit with spats and handkerchiefs like this.”

  “Ronicky,” said Bill Gregg in admiration, “maybe you ain’t read a pile, but you figure things out just like a book.”

  Their conversation was cut short by the appearance of a drift of houses, and then more and more. From the elevated line on which they ran presently they could look down on block after block of roofs packed close together, or big business structures, as they reached the uptown business sections, and finally Ronicky gasped, as they plunged into utter darkness that roared past the window.

  “We go underground to the station,” Bill Gregg explained. He was a little startled himself, but his reading had fortified him to a certain extent.

  “But is there still some more of New York?” asked Ronicky humbly.

  “More? We ain’t seen a corner of it!” Bill’s superior information made him swell like a frog in the sun. “This is kinder near One Hundredth Street where we dived down. New York keeps right on to First Street, and then it has a lot more streets below that. But that’s just the Island of Manhattan. All around there’s a lot more. Manhattan is mostly where they work. They live other places.”

  It was not very long before the train slowed down to make Grand Central Station. On the long platform Ronicky surrendered his suit case to the first porter. Bill Gregg was much alarmed. “What’d you do that for?” he asked, securing a stronger hold on his own valise and brushing aside two or three red caps.

  “He asked me for it,” explained Ronicky. “I wasn’t none too set on giving it to him to carry, but I hated to hurt his feelings. Besides, they’re all done up in uniforms. Maybe this is their job.”

  “But suppose that feller got away out of sight, what would you do? Your brand-new pair of Colts is lying away in it!”

  “He won’t get out of sight none,” Ronicky assured his friend grimly. “I got another Colt with me, and, no matter how fast he runs, a forty-five slug can run a pile faster. But come on, Bill. The word in this town seems to be to keep right on moving.”

  They passed under an immense, brightly lighted vault and then wriggled through the crowds in pursuit of the astonishingly agile porter. So they came out of the big station to Forty-second Street, where they found themselves confronted by a taxi driver and the question: “Where?”

  “I dunno,” said Ronicky to Bill. “Your reading tell you anything about the hotels in this here town?”

  “Not a thing,” said Bill, “because I never figured that I’d be fool enough to come this far away from my home diggings. But here I am, and we don’t know nothing.”

  “Listen, partner,” said Ronicky to the driver. “Where’s a fair-to-medium place to stop at?”

  The taxi driver swallowed a smile that left a twinkle about his eyes which nothing could remove. “What kind of a place? Anywhere from fifty cents to fifty bucks a night.”

  “Fifty dollars!” exclaimed Bill Gregg. “Can you lay over that, Ronicky? Our wad won’t last a week.”

  “Say, pal,” said the taxi driver, becoming suddenly friendly, “I can fix you up. I know a neat little joint where you’ll be as snug as you want. They’ll stick you about one-fifty per, but you can’t beat that price in this town and keep clean.”

  “Take us there,” said Bill Gregg, and they climbed into the machine.

  The taxi turned around, shot down Park Avenue, darted aside into the darker streets to the east of the district and came suddenly to a halt.

  “Did you foller that trail?” asked Bill Gregg in a chuckling whisper.

  “Sure! Twice to the left, then to the right, and then to the left again. I know the number of blocks, too. Ain’t no reason for getting rattled just because a joint is strange to us. New York may be tolerable big, but it’s got men in it just like we are, and maybe a lot worse kinds.”

  As they got out of the little car they saw that the taxi driver had preceded them, carrying their suit cases. They followed up a steep pitch of stairs to the first floor of the hotel, where the landing had been widened to form a little office.

  “Hello, Bert,” said their driver. “I picked up these gentlemen at Grand Central. They ain’t wise to the town, so I put ’em next to you. Fix ’em up here?”

  “Sure,” said Bert, lifting a huge bulk of manhood from behind the desk. He placed his fat hands on the top of it and observed his guests with a smile. “Ill make you right to home here, friends. Thank you, Joe!”

  Joe grinned, nodded and, receiving his money from Bill Gregg, departed down the stairs, humming. Their host, in the meantime, had picked up their suit cases and led the way down a hall dimly lighted by two flickering gas jets. Finally he reached a door and led them into a room where the gas had to be lighted. It showed them a cheerless apartment in spite of the red of wall paper and carpet.

  “Only three bucks,” said the proprietor with the air of one bestowing charity out of the fullness of his heart. “Bathroom only two doors down. I guess you can’t beat this layout, gents?”

  Bill Gregg glanced once about him and nodded.

  “You come up from the South, maybe?” asked the proprietor, lingering at the door.

  “West,” said Bill Gregg curtly.

  “You don’t say! Then you boys must be used to your toddy at night, eh?”

  “It’s a tolerable dry country out there,” said Ronicky without enthusiasm.

  “All the more reason you need some liquor to moisten it up. Wait till I get you a bottle of rye I got handy.” And he disappeared in spite of their protests.

  “I ain’t a drinking man,” said Gregg, “and I know you ain’t, but it’s sure insulting to turn down a drink in these days!”

  Ronicky nodded, and presently the host returned with two glasses, rattling against a tall bottle on a tray.

  “Say, when,” he said, filling the glasses and keeping on, in spite of their protests, until each glass was full.

  “I guess it looks pretty good to you to see the stuff again,” he said, stepping back and rubbing his hands like one warmed by the consciousness of a good deed. “It ain’t very plentiful around here.”

  “Well,” said Gregg, swinging up his glass, “here’s in your eye, Ronicky, and here’s to you, sir!”

  “Wait,” replied Ronicky Doone. “Hold on a minute, Bill. Looks to me like you ain’t drinking,” he said to the proprietor.

  The fat man waved the suggestion aside. “Never touch it,” he assured them. “Used to indulge a little in light wines and beers when the country was wet, but when it went dry the stuff didn’
t mean enough to me to make it worth while dodging the law. I just manage to keep a little of it around for old friends and men out of a dry country.”

  “But we got a funny habit out in our country. We can’t no ways drink unless the gent that’s setting them out takes something himself. It ain’t done that way in our part of the land,” said Ronicky.

  “It ain’t?”

  “Never!”

  “Come, come! That’s a good joke. But, even if I can’t be with you, boys, drink hearty.”

  Ronicky Doone shook his head. “No joke at all,” he said firmly. “Matter of politeness that a lot of gents are terrible hard set on out where we come from.”

  “Why, Ronicky,” protested Bill Gregg, “ain’t you making it a little strong? For my part I’ve drunk twenty times without having the gent that set ’em up touch a thing. I reckon I can do it again. Here’s how!”

  “Wait!” declared Ronicky Doone. And there was a little jarring ring in his voice that arrested the hand of Bill Gregg in the very act of raising the glass.

  Ronicky crossed the room quickly, took a glass from the washstand and, returning to the center table, poured a liberal drink of the whisky into it.

  “I dunno about my friend,” he went on, almost sternly, to the bewildered hotel keeper. “I dunno about him, but some gents feel so strong about not drinking alone that they’d sooner fight. Well, sir, I’m one of that kind. So I say, there’s your liquor. Get rid of it!”

  The fat man reached the center table and propped himself against it, gasping. His whole big body seemed to be wilting, as though in a terrific heat. “I dunno!” he murmured. “I dunno what’s got into you fellers. I tell you, I never drink.”

  “You lie, you fat fool!” retorted Ronicky. “Didn’t I smell your breath?”

  Bill Gregg dropped his own glass on the table and hurriedly came to confront his host by the side of Ronicky.

  “Breath?” asked the fat man hurriedly, still gasping more and more heavily for air. “I — I may have taken a small tonic after dinner. In fact, think I did. That’s all. Nothing more, I assure you. I — I have to be a sober man in my work.”

 

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