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The Collected Westerns of William MacLeod Raine: 21 Novels in One Volume

Page 366

by Unknown


  "I heerd her holler from inside. She called my name. I run after the car, but I couldn't catch it."

  Clay slipped a revolver under his belt. He slid into a street coat. Then he got police headquarters on the wire and notified the office of what had taken place. He knew that the word would be flashed in all directions and that a cordon would be stretched across the city to intercept any suspicious car. Over the telephone the desk man at headquarters fired questions at him, most of which he was unable to answer. He promised fuller particulars as soon as possible.

  It had come on to rain and beneath the street lights the asphalt shone like a river. The storm had driven most people indoors, but as the Westerner drew near the drugstore Clay saw with relief a taxicab draw up outside. Its driver, crouched in his seat behind the waterproof apron as far back as possible from the rain, promptly accepted Lindsay as a fare.

  "Back in a minute," Clay told him, and passed into the drug-store.

  The abduction was still being discussed. There was a disagreement as to whether the girl had stepped voluntarily into the car or been lifted in by the man outside. This struck the cattleman as unimportant. He pushed home questions as to identification. One of the men in the drug-store had caught a flash of the car number. He was sure the first four figures were 3967. The fifth he did not remember. The car was dark blue and it looked like a taxi. This information Clay got the owner of the car to forward to the police.

  He did not wait to give it personally, but joined Johnnie in the cab. The address he gave to the driver with the waterproof hat pulled down over his head was that of a certain place of amusement known as Heath's Palace of Wonders. A young woman he wanted to consult was wont to sit behind a window there at the receipt of customs.

  "It's worth a fiver extra if you make good time," Lindsay told the driver.

  "You're on, boss," answered the man gruffly.

  Johnnie, in a fever of anxiety, had trotted along beside his chief to the drug-store in silence. Now, as they rushed across the city, he put a timid question with a touch of bluff bravado he did not feel.

  "We'll get her back sure, don't you reckon?"

  "We'll do our best. Don't you worry. That won't buy us anything."

  "No--no, I ain't a-worryin' none, but--Clay, I'd hate a heap for any harm to come to that li'l' girl." His voice quavered.

  "Sho! We're right on their heels, Johnnie. So are the cops. We'll make a gather and get Kitty back all right."

  Miss Annie Millikan's pert smile beamed through the window at Clay when he stepped up.

  "Hello, Mr. Flat-Worker," she sang out. "How many?"

  "I'm not going in to see the show to-night. I want to talk with you if you can get some one to take yore place here."

  "Say, whatta you think I am--one o' these here Fift' Avenoo society dames? I'm earnin' my hot dogs and coffee right at this window. . . . Did you say two, lady?" She shoved two tickets through the window in exchange for dimes.

  Clay explained that his business was serious. "I've got to see you alone--now," he added.

  "If you gotta you gotta." The girl called an usher, who found a second usher to take her place.

  Annie walked down the street a few steps beside Clay. The little puncher followed them dejectedly. His confidence had gone down to chill zero.

  "What's the big idea in callin' me from me job in the rush hours?" asked Miss Millikan. "And who's this gumshoe guy from the bush league tailin' us? Breeze on and wise Annie if this here business is so important."

  Clay told his story.

  "Some of Jerry's strong-arm work," she commented.

  "Must be. Can you help me?"

  Annie looked straight at him, a humorous little quirk to her mouth. "Say, what're you askin' me to do--t'row down my steady?"

  Which remark carries us back a few days to one sunny afternoon after Clay's midnight call when he had dropped round to see Miss Annie. They had walked over to Gramercy Park and sat down on a bench as they talked. Most men and all women trusted Clay. He had in him some quality of unspoken sympathy that drew confidences. Before she knew it Annie found herself telling him the story of her life.

  Her father had been a riveter in a shipyard and had been killed while she was a baby. Later her mother had married unhappily a man who followed the night paths of the criminal underworld. Afterward he had done time at Sing Sing. Through him Annie had been brought for years into contact with the miserable types that make an illicit living by preying upon the unsuspecting in big cities. Always in the little Irish girl there had been a yearning for things clean and decent, but it is almost impossible for the poor in a great city to escape from the environment that presses upon them.

  She was pretty, and inevitably she had lovers. One of these was "Slim" Jim Collins, a confidential follower of Jerry Durand. He was a crook, and she knew it. But some quality in him--his good looks, perhaps, or his gameness--fascinated her in spite of herself. She avoided him, even while she found herself pleased to go to Coney with an escort so well dressed and so glibly confident. Another of her admirers was a policeman, Tim Muldoon by name, the same one that had rescued Clay from the savagery of Durand outside the Sea Siren. Tim she liked. But for all his Irish ardor he was wary. He had never asked her to marry him. She thought she knew the reason. He did not want for a wife a woman who had been "Slim" Jim's girl. And Annie--because she was Irish too and perverse--held her head high and went with Collins openly before the eyes of the pained and jealous patrolman.

  Clay had come to Annie Millikan now because of what she had told him about "Slim" Jim. This man was one of Durand's stand-bys. If there was any underground work to be done it was an odds-on chance that he would be in charge of it.

  "I'm askin' you to stand by a poor girl that's in trouble," he said in answer to her question.

  "You've soitainly got a nerve with you. I'll say you have. You want me to throw the hooks into Jim for a goil I never set me peepers on. I wisht I had your crust."

  "You wouldn't let Durand spoil her life if you could stop it."

  "Wouldn't I? Hmp! Soft-soap stuff. Well, what's my cue? Where do I come in on this rescue-the-be-eutiful heroine act?"

  "When did you see 'Slim' Jim last?"

  "I might 'a' seen him this afternoon an' I might not," she said cautiously, looking at him from under a broad hat-brim.

  "When?"

  "I didn't see him after I got behind that 'How Many?' sign. If I seen him must 'a' been before two."

  "Did he give you any hint of what was in the air?"

  "Say, what's the lay-out? Are you framin' Jim for up the river?"

  "I'm tryin' to save Kitty."

  "Because she's your goil. Where do I come in at? What's there in it for me to go rappin' me friend?" demanded Annie sharply.

  "She's not my girl," explained Clay. Then, with that sure instinct that sometimes guided him, he added, "The young lady I--I'm in love with has just become engaged to another man."

  Miss Millikan looked at him, frankly incredulous. "For the love o' Mike, where's her eyes? Don't she know a real man when she sees one? I'll say she don't."

  "I'm standin' by Kitty because she's shy of friends. Any man would do that, wouldn't he? I came to you for help because--oh, because I know you're white clear through."

  A flush beat into Annie's cheeks. She went off swiftly at a tangent. "Wouldn't it give a fellow a jar? This guy Jim Collins slips it to me confidential that he's off the crooked stuff. Nothin' doin' a-tall in gorilla work. He kids me that he's quit goin' out on the spud and porch-climbin' don't look good to him no more. A four-room flat, a little wifie, an' the straight road for 'Slim' Jim. I fall for it, though I'd orta be hep to men. An' he dates me up to-night for the chauffeurs' ball."

  "But you didn't go?"

  "No; he sidesteps it this aft with a fairy tale about drivin' a rich old dame out to Yonkers. All the time he' was figurin' on pinchin' this goil for Jerry. He's a rotten crook."

  "Why don't you break with him, Annie? You're too go
od for that sort of thing. He'll spoil your life if you don't."

  "Listens fine," the girl retorted bitterly. "I take Jim like some folks do booze or dope. He's a habit."

  "Tim's worth a dozen of him."

  "Sure he is, but Tim's got a notion I'm not on the level. I dunno as he needs to pull that stuff on me. I'm not strong for a harness bull anyhow." She laughed, a little off the key.

  "What color is 'Slim' Jim's car?"

  "A dirty blue. Why?"

  "That was the car."

  Annie lifted her hands in a little gesture of despair. "I'm dead sick of this game. What's there in it? I live straight and eat in a beanery. No lobster palaces in mine. Look at me cheap duds. And Tim gives me the over like I was a street cat. What sort of a chance did I ever have, with toughs and gunmen for me friends?"

  "You've got yore chance now, Annie. Tim will hop off that fence he's on and light a-runnin' straight for you if he thinks you've ditched 'Slim' Jim."

  She shook her head slowly. "No, I'll not t'row Jim down. I'm through with him. He lied to me right while he knew this was all framed up. But I wouldn't snitch on him, even if he'd told me anything. And he didn't peep about what he was up to."

  "Forget Jim while you're thinkin' about this. You don't owe Jerry Durand anything, anyhow. Where would he have Kitty taken? You can give a guess."

  She had made her decision before she spoke. "Gimme paper and a pencil."

  On Clay's notebook she scrawled hurriedly an address.

  "Jim'd croak me if he knew I'd given this," she said, looking straight at the cattleman.

  "He'll never know--and I'll never forget it, Annie."

  Clay left her and turned to the driver. From the slip of paper in his hand he read aloud an address. "Another five if you break the speed limit," he said.

  As Clay slammed the door shut and the car moved forward he had an impression of something gone wrong, of a cog in his plans slipped somewhere. For Annie, standing in the rain under a sputtering misty street light, showed a face stricken with fear.

  Her dilated eyes were fixed on the driver of the taxi-cab.

  CHAPTER XXI

  AT THE HEAD OF THE STAIRS

  The cab whirled round the corner and speeded down a side street that stretched as far as they could see silent and deserted in the storm.

  The rain, falling faster now, beat gustily in a slant against the left window of the cab. It was pouring in rivulets along the gutter beside the curb. Some sixth sense of safety--one that comes to many men who live in the outdoors on the untamed frontier--warned Clay that all was not well. He had felt that bell of instinct ring in him once at Juarez when he had taken a place at a table to play poker with a bad-man who had a grudge at him. Again it had sounded when he was about to sit down on a rock close to a crevice where a rattler lay coiled.

  The machine had swung to the right and was facing from the wind instead of into it. Clay was not very well acquainted with New York, but he did know this was not the direction in which he wanted to go.

  He beat with his knuckles on the front of the cab to attract the attention of the driver. In the swishing rain, and close to the throb of the engine, the chauffeur either did not or would not hear.

  Lindsay opened the door and swung out on the running-board. "We're goin' wrong. Stop the car!" he ordered.

  The man at the wheel did not turn. He speeded up.

  His fare wasted no time in remonstrances. A moment, and the chauffeur threw on the brake sharply. His reason was a good one. The blue nose of a revolver was jammed hard against his ribs. He had looked round once to find out what it was prodding him. That was enough to convince him he had better stop.

  Under the brake the back wheels skidded and brought up against the curb. Clay, hanging on by one hand, was flung hard to the sidewalk. The cab teetered, regained its equilibrium, gathered impetus with a snort, and leaped forward again.

  As the cattleman clambered to his feet he caught one full view of the chauffeur's triumphant, vindictive face. He had seen it before, at a reception especially arranged for him by Jerry Durand one memorable night. It belonged to the more talkative of the two gunmen he had surprised at the pretended poker game. He knew, too, without being told that this man and "Slim" Jim Collins were one and the same. The memory of Annie's stricken face carried this conviction home to him.

  The Arizonan picked up his revolver in time to see the car sweep around the next corner and laughed ruefully at his own discomfiture. He pushed a hand through the crisp, reddish waves of his hair.

  "I don't reckon I'll ride in that taxi any farther. Johnnie will have to settle the bill. Hope he plays his hand better than I did," he said aloud.

  The rain pelted down as he moved toward the brighter lighted street that intersected the one where he had been dropped. The lights of a saloon caught his eye at the corner. He went in, got police headquarters on the wire, and learned that a car answering the description of the one used by his abductor had been headed into Central Park by officers and that the downtown exits were being watched.

  He drew what comfort he could from that fact.

  Presently he picked up another taxi. He hesitated whether to go to the address Annie had given him or to join the chase uptown. Reluctantly, he decided to visit the house. His personal inclination was for the hunt rather than for inactive waiting, but he sacrificed any immediate chance of adventure for the sake of covering the possible rendezvous of the gang.

  Clay paid his driver and looked at the house numbers as he moved up the street he wanted. He was in that part of the city from which business years ago marched up-town. Sometime in decades past people of means had lived behind these brownstone fronts. Many of the residences were used to keep lodgers in. Others were employed for less reputable purposes.

  His overcoat buttoned to his neck, Clay walked without hesitation up the steps of the one numbered 243. He rang the bell and waited, his right hand on the pocket of his overcoat.

  The door opened cautiously a few inches and a pair of close-set eyes in a wrinkled face gimleted Clay.

  "Whadya want?"

  "The old man sent me with a message," answered the Arizonan promptly.

  "Spill it."

  "Are you alone?"

  "You know it."

  "Got everything ready for the girl?"

  "Say, who the hell are youse?"

  "One of Slim's friends. Listen, we got the kid--picked her up at a drug-store."

  "I don' know watcher fairy tale's about. If you gotta message come through with it."

  Clay put his foot against the door to prevent it from being closed and drew his hand from the overcoat pocket. In the hand nestled a blue-nosed persuader.

  Unless the eyes peering into the night were bad barometers of their owner's inner state, he was in a panic of fear.

  "Love o' Gawd, d-don't shoot!" he chattered. "I ain't nobody but the caretaker."

  He backed slowly away, followed by Lindsay. The barrel of the thirty-eight held his eyes fascinated. By the light of his flash Clay discovered the man to be a chalk-faced little inconsequent.

  "Say, don't point that at me," the old fellow implored.

  "Are you alone?"

  "I told you I was."

  "Is Jerry comin' himself with the others?"

  "They don't none of them tell me nothin'. I'm nobody. I'm only Joey."

  "Unload what you know. Quick. I'm in a hurry."

  The man began a rambling, whining tale.

  The Arizonan interrupted with questions, crisp and incisive. He learned that a room had been prepared on the second floor for a woman. Slim had made the arrangements. Joe had heard Durand's name mentioned, but knew nothing of the plans.

  "I'll look the house over. Move along in front of me and don't make any mistakes. This six-gun is liable to permeate yore anatomy with lead."

  The cattleman examined the first floor with an especial view to the exits. He might have to leave in a hurry. If so, he wanted to know where he was going. The plan o
f the second story was another point he featured as he passed swiftly from room to room. From the laundry in the basement he had brought up a coil of clothes-line. With this he tied Joe hand and foot. After gagging him, he left the man locked in a small rear room and took the key with him.

  Clay knew that he was in a precarious situation. If Durand returned with Kitty and captured him here he was lost. The man would make no more mistakes. Certainly he would leave no evidence against him except that of his own tools. The intruder would probably not be killed openly. He would either simply disappear or he would be murdered with witnesses framed to show self-defense. The cattleman was as much outside the law as the criminals were. He had no legal business in this house. But one thing was fixed in his mind. He would be no inactive victim. If they got him at all it would be only after a fighting finish.

 

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