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Kolchak The Night Strangler

Page 12

by Matheson, Richard; Rice, Jeff


  Two-inch-high Bodoni Bold caps proudly announced:

  KILLER FOUND

  IDENTITY UNKNOWN

  Below was a manufactured piece of tripe I’d have been ashamed to sign my name to. Which was all right, because my name wasn’t on it. There was, in fact, no by-line at all.

  Oh, there was other news. The Defense Secretary warned of the possibility of the U.S. blockading an enemy harbor. Crossbinder flailed away at the twin evils of Communism and peace mongering. Mayor Wes Uhlman was calling for a tax reform so Seattle could get its share of the federal revenue-sharing program.

  The news of the day. High: 51; Low: 37. Clouds. Showers. Senator Holman Tells All. University Instructor to face Inquiry on Prostitution Research.

  As expected, my desk was occupied by a new face. A note on the assignment board informed me to pick up my “closing check” from Mr. Crossbinder himself. (A rare treat. This time I was to be fired in person.)

  Janie, I learned, had suddenly resigned after a temper tantrum that “shook the very walls.”

  Everything was quite normal.

  Only a few hours before, I had sat over an old Smith-Corona portable in Louise’s kitchen rapping out my last story for the Daily Chronicle, never to be printed. Despite my grateful thanks and the intimate details of my nocturnal adventure, Louise was strangely distant. She hadn’t even kissed my goodbye as I left for work.

  I was bone-weary. Stiff. Sore. Beaten. I figured I might as well say goodbye to Vincenzo and pick up my time. I could always take a bus out of town. To where? Did it matter?

  Vincenzo wasn’t in his office. Well, I didn’t think he’d stick around to wave goodbye.

  That left Crossbinder.

  I was ushered into the old man’s leather-padded, wood-paneled sanctum sanctorum and found Vincenzo slumped in a chair, glowering. He turned his baleful gaze on me. I glowered back at him.

  “Thanks, Tony. For nothing.”

  He looked stricken. He was munching Maalox like a cud. He turned away.

  “Well, gentlemen. I wanted you to be together for this moment. I have been relishing the thought of what will transpire here for several days.”

  Crossbinder was winding up for a lecture. I wasn’t in the mood.

  “Just give me my check and shove the speech.”

  “Of course, Mr. Kolchak. You will note,” he announced grandly as he handed me my check, “that deductions have been made for the destruction of one typewriter, one pane of glass, and the repair of one wooden partition. That leaves you with $27.32. I say farewell to you with great pleasure in the sure and certain hope that I will never see your face again.

  “Be gone.”

  Vincenzo sighed. “I tried, Carl. I really tried.”

  “Yeah. Sure, Tony. Thanks a bunch.”

  The old man was smiling; his tiny eyes crinkled up as I stuffed my check in my pocket and turned to leave. Vincenzo heaved himself out of his chair and took off his glasses, rubbing his eyes.

  “Carl… I’ll give you a lift home, “he said very quietly. “I want to talk to you.”

  I didn’t care. Everything was shot. My job. My career. My last chance at love. All of it. Finito. Endit.

  Chapter Twenty

  It didn’t take long to settle my bill and clean out my apartment. As the lights of Seattle faded behind me, I fought the wheel of the battered white T-Bird and cursed the front-end alignment.

  I thought to myself as I passed the glow of the Boeing facility that somehow it seemed symbolic. With the death of the SST project, employment was down almost 50 percent there. Seattle had taken a massive blow to its cocky “We dare anything” attitude. Airlines were tightening up their belts and cutting back on orders. General unemployment for the area was approaching a whopping 15 percent. I was just one more statistic.

  I couldn’t help muttering aloud as I drove along. “Another tale of defeat snatched from the jaws of triumph. Another case of virtue unrewarded. Honestly is the worst policy. Injustice…”

  “Will you shut up?” Vincenzo was slouching in the seat next to me, nursing a carton of milk. “Put that goddamn tape recorder away and let me sleep. You’re never going to get this story published either.”

  “Don’t tell me what I’m gonna get published. Nobody’s going to kill this story.”

  “It has been killed, Kolchak. Bury it!”

  “Oh, no! Not this time! This is one story I don’t let go of. If they think they can shut me up…”

  “Can anybody shut you up?”

  “Yes! I can.”

  Louise was awake. She popped up from the rear seat, shaking her tousled hair. I glanced in the rear-view mirror. Angry as she was, no one had ever looked better. There was balm in Gilead. And some justice, after all.

  “I’ve heard all I want to hear from you. You think you have problems. Here I was, one semester away from a degree, and what happens? You show up outside my houseboat one day. Mouth? All mouth! Compared to you, I’m tongue-tied.

  “I let you into my life and what did I get? Dressed down by a captain of police. Charged with obstructing justice. Aiding and abetting in the commission of a felony… or two. God! I’m an accessory to more crimes than Jack the Ripper. Unemployable! ‘Undesirable element’!”

  “Yack-ata-yack-ata-yack!”

  “Quiet! I’m not through…”

  “Peace!” wailed Vincenzo. “Both of you shut up and give me peace! Your problems… you are forgetting I was fired, too?”

  Well, after all, it was his car.

  Epilogue

  Kolchak remains unheard from. But I have faith that, barring an untimely (and ill-deserved) demise, he will eventually show up or contact me in some way.

  The difficulties in getting this book published have at times seemed insurmountable. Pressures have been brought to bear. Each new phone call has been the harbinger of yet another snag; another obstacle.

  I still suffer jet-lag from several flights to New York.

  But thanks to the courage and integrity of my editor, Robert Gleason, this report will see the light of day, and it is my sincere wish that all those who read it not discount it without giving serious thought to the implications contained herein.

  There are people who cannot be bought, coerced, and bullied.

  Bob Gleason is one of them. So is Carl Kolchak.

  Jeff Rice

  Las Vegas, Nevada

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Prologue

  June 6, 1889

  In Memoriam

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Epilogue

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Prologue

  June 6, 1889

  In Memoriam

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Epilogue

  he Night Strangler

 

 

 


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