Copyright note:
Please note that the full copyright for this work is
owned by Mr. James Hadley Chase and his estate.
You are free to use my e-books free of charge for
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for commercial gain, and acknowledge original
authorship and full rights to Mr. James Hadley
Chase and his successors. This book is for Ozlem Cokker. I hereby dedicate theenergy I wasted in creating this e-book to her, who unknowingly tipped my scales of sanity . . .
I hope I can have the chance to see her . . . just once . . .
This e–book was created by Mohamed Watfa. Send
your comments to [email protected].
I am ready to exchange any Chase book for:
The Mirror in Room 22
There’s no reason to be mean
Massino’s words echoed in Johnny’s ears—
“If anyone busts into that safe, I go after him . . . He wouldn’t
get far. Anyone who takes anything from me had better talk
to a grave-digger . . .
but they won’t. There’s no one dumb enough to try to take
anything from me.”
No one, that is, except for Johnny Bianda.
a man prepared to risk his neck for a dream—a dream that
nagged at him like an aching tooth.
It was attempting the impossible but the urge to get his
hands on such a sum added up to a lot more than guts and
with so much at stake it would be worth it . . .
JAMES HADLEY
CHASE
Knock, Knock! Who’s There?
WATFA BOOKS
ONE
The drizzling rain fell on Sammy the Black’s sweating face as he
shuffled along carrying the bag of money. He was a tall, gangling
negro of around thirty years of age. With the muscular shoulders of a
boxer and huge hands and feet, few would guess he had the spirit of
a mouse. His large black eyes rolled fearfully as he walked, aware
that he was carrying some sixty thousand dollars in the shabby holdall
and what was worse that everyone in the district knew it.
Every Friday, at exactly the same time, he did this long walk
which took four hours. During those hours, he collected money from
bars, news-stands and from the Numbers men. During this stop-start
walk, Sammy sweated with fear, expecting at any moment some nut
would shoot him down and grab the money.
For five hundred and twenty Fridays, he had done this walk and
even after so many Fridays when nothing had happened, he couldn’t
shake the fear out of his system. He kept telling himself that if it
wasn’t this Friday, it could be the next.
Sammy couldn’t believe, even after ten years, in the power of his
boss, Joe Massino. He couldn’t believe that any one man could have
this sprawling town of close on half a million inhabitants in such a
relentless grip that no one—not even a nutter—would dare attempt
to steal the bag of money that Sammy was carrying.
Sammy had told himself often enough that he was crazy to be so
scared since Johnny Bianda was always with him and Johnny was
considered the best gunman of Massino’s mob.
“If anything happens, Sammy,” Johnny had said, time and again,
“fall on the bag and leave the rest to me.”
These should be comforting words, but they didn’t comfort
Sammy. The fact that even Johnny thought something could happen
turned Sammy sick to his stomach.
All the same, he told himself, it was a lot better than nothing to
have Johnny’s protection. He and Johnny had been Massino’s
collectors now for the past ten years. Sammy, at the age of twenty,
had taken the job because the money was good and his nerves were
7
in much better shape than now. Also, in spite of his fear, he was
proud to have been picked as Massino’s collector for that meant the
boss trusted him. Well, maybe not quite trusted him for Johnny
always went along and there was a fool-proof system against a
fiddle. Sammy was given a sealed envelope containing the money
and Johnny a sealed envelope containing a signed chit stating the
amount of the money. It was only when they got back to Massino’s
office and stood around while the money was being counted that
they learned the amount they had collected and the amounts, during
the ten years they had been collectors, increased every year until the
take on the previous Friday had been the alarming ( to Sammy) sum
of sixty-three thousand dollars!
Sure, in spite of Massino’s ruthless reputation and Johnny’s
ability to shoot fast, some nutter would be tempted to snatch the
money, Sammy thought as he trudged along. He looked uneasily
around him. The busy, shabby street teemed with people who made
room for him, grinning at him and calling out to him.
A big, black buck, nearly as big as Sammy bawled from the steps
of a tenement, “Don’t lose it, Sammy ol’ boy, ol’ boy. That little ol’
bag’s got my winnings!”
The crowd laughed and Sammy, sweating more heavily,
lengthened his stride. They had one more call to make before they
could get into Johnny’s beat-up Ford and Sammy could relax.
Watched by the crowd, they walked into Solly Jacob’s betting
office.
Solly, vast, with a tremendous paunch and a face that looked as if
it had been fashioned out of dough, had the envelopes ready.
“Not bad this week,” he said to Sammy, “but tell Mr. Joe, next
week is going to be a bonanza. February 29th! Every sucker in town
will be trying his luck. Tell Mr. Joe you’ll need a truck to bring the
money in. Don’t kid yourself you’ll be able to carry it.”
Sammy cringed as he put the envelope in the bag. “And, Johnny,”
Solly said, handing Johnny his envelope, “maybe it would be an idea
to get more protection for Sammy next week. Have a word with Mr.
Joe.”
Johnny grunted. He was a man of few words. He turned to the
door and went out into the street, followed by Sammy.
They had only a few yards to walk to where Johnny had parked
his car and with relief Sammy got into the passenger’s seat. The
handcuff around his thick wrist was chaffing his skin. That was
another thing that scared him: to be handcuffed to the bag! He had
once read of some bank clerk who had had his hand chopped off
with an axe by some nutter, trying to get the bag from him. To be
without a hand!
Johnny sank into the driving seat and searched for the ignition
key. Sammy looked uneasily at him. He had an idea that Johnny had
something preying on his mind. For the past few weeks, Johnny had
been more silent than he had ever been. Yes, Sammy was sure
something was preying on his mind and this worried him because he
was fond of this short, thickset man with his thick black hair, shot
with grey, his deep-set brown eyes and his firm, hard m
outh. Sammy
knew Johnny was as tough as teak and he carried a punch like a
sledge-hammer blow. Sammy had never forgotten how Johnny had
once handled a punk who had tried to pick a quarrel. He and Johnny
were enjoying a beer in a down-town bar when this punk, twice
Johnny’s size, came up and said in a voice like a fall of gravel that he
didn’t drink in the same bar as a nigger.
Johnny had said quietly, “Then drink somewhere else.”
That was something Sammy always admired about Johnny: he
always spoke quietly: he never shouted.
The punk had turned on Sammy who was sweating with fright,
but Johnny had stepped between them so the punk had hit him. To
Sammy, it seemed a hell of a punch, but Johnny didn’t even grunt. He
swayed a little, then the punk took a bang on the jaw that broke it
and flattened him. Sammy hadn’t seen the punch: it had been too
fast, but he had seen the effect.
Yes, Johnny-was as tough as teak, but he was fine with Sammy.
He didn’t talk a lot. In fact, Sammy, after going around with him for
ten years, knew little or nothing about him except that he had been
Massino’s gunman for some twenty years, was maybe forty-two or
three years of age, unmarried, no relations, lived in a two-room
apartment and Massino thought a lot of him.
Whenever Sammy got worried or had woman trouble or his
young brother was playing up or something he would consult Johnny,
9
and Johnny, speaking in his quiet voice, always managed to make
Sammy feel good even if he didn’t solve his problem.
When they began the collection together, Johnny had been more
talkative. He had said something that Sammy had never forgotten.
“Listen, Sammy,” Johnny had said. “You’ll make good money
from this racket, but don’t let it kid you. You put by ten per cent of
what you earn every week. Understand? Out of every ten dollars you
earn, put one dollar aside and don’t touch it. In a few years you’ll
have enough to be independent and you can get out of this racket,
for as sure-as God made little apples, sooner or later, you’ll want to
get out.”
Sammy had followed this ‘advice. It made sense to him. He
bought a steel box and every week when he got paid he put ten per
cent of his earnings in the box which he kept under his bed. Of
course there had been times when he had been forced to milk the
box. There was that business with his brother who had to have five
hundred dollars or go to jail. Then there was that business with Cloe
who had to have an expensive abortion, but over the years the ten
per cent mounted up and the last time Sammy checked the amount
he was astonished to find he was worth three thousand dollars.
The box which wasn’t large was getting too full of ten dollar bills
for comfort and Sammy began to worry whether to buy another box.
There was something about Johnny these days that made him
hesitate to ask his advice. He was sure Johnny had something on his
mind and he didn’t want to be a nuisance. He thought maybe he
would wait a little longer before consulting him. Maybe he would get
whatever it was off his mind and then, he would be in the mood to
advise him.
They drove in silence to Massino’s office: a large room with a big
desk, a few chairs and a filing cabinet. Massino believed in austerity
when he was downtown, although he had a Rolls, a sixteen-bedroom
house up-town, a yacht and a ten-bedroom house in Miami.
He was at his desk when Johnny and Sammy came in. Leaning
against the wall was Toni Capello, one of Massino’s bodyguards: a
thin, dark man with snake’s eyes and nearly as fast as Johnny with a
gun. Sitting on a hardbacked chair, picking his teeth with a splinter of
wood was Ernie Lassini, another of Massino’s bodyguards: a fat,
hulking man with a razor ‘Sear down the left side of his face: another
good man with a gun.
Sammy shambled up to the desk and put the bag in front of
Massino who leaned back in his chair and grinned at the bag.
At the age of fifty-five, Joe Massino was massively built. Medium
height, he had barn-door shoulders, no neck, a heavy fat face with a
flattened nose, a straggly moustache and bleak grey eyes that scared
men, but intrigued women. Massino was a great womanizer.
Although fat, he was still tough and there had been times when he
had personally disciplined one of his mob and that man hadn’t been
fit for active service for two or even three months.
“No problems, Sammy?” Massino asked and his small grey eyes
shifted to Johnny who shook his head. “Okay . . . get Andy.”
But Andy Lucas, Massino’s accountant, had already come into
the office.
Andy was sixty-five years of age: a tiny, bird-like man with a
computer for a brain. Fifteen years ago he had served a -stretch for
fraud and when he had come out, Massino, realizing Andy’s
brilliance, had hired him to control his financial kingdom. As with
most things Massino did, this was a wise choice. There was no one in
the State as smart as Andy when it came to a tax form, an
investment or an idea to make money.
Andy unlocked the handcuff from Sammy’s sweating wrist, then
pulling up a chair by Massino, he began to check the contents of the
bag while Massino watched as he chewed a dead cigar.
Both Sammy and Johnny moved away and waited. The count
came to sixty-five thousand dollars.
Andy put the money back in the bag, then nodding to Massino,
he carried the bag into his office and put it in the big, old-fashioned
safe.
“Okay, you two,” Massino said, looking at Johnny and Sammy,
“take time off. I don’t need you until next Friday. You know what
next Friday is?” His hard little eyes rested on Johnny.
“The 29th.”
Massino nodded.
11
“That’s it; the freak day: Leap year’s day. It’s my bet the take will
be around $150,000.”
“Solly said the same.”
“Yeah.” Massino dropped the dead cigar into the trash basket.
“So . . . Ernie and Toni will go with you. You’ll collect in the car. Never
mind the traffic. I’ll have a word with the Commissioner. Next Friday,
the cops will look the other way if you have to double park $150,000
is a hell of a lot of money and maybe some hop-head just might try,”
He eyed Sammy. “Take it easy, boy, you’ll be protected. Don’t sweat
so.”
Sammy forced a sick grin.
“I’m not worried, boss,” he lied. “You tell me what to do and I’ll
do it.”
Out in the drizzle, Johnny said, “Come on, Sammy, let’s have a
beer.”
This was the usual ritual after the collection and Sammy walked
along beside the short, thickset man, gradually relaxing until they
came to Freddy’s bar. They went into the warm darkness, climbed on
stools and ordered beer.
They drank in silence, then Sammy ordered more beer.
“Mr. Johnny . . .” He paused and looked uneasily at the
hard,
expressionless face. “Excuse me, but have you got worries? You’re
sort of quiet these days. If there’s anything I can do . . .” He began to
sweat, scared he had talked out of turn.
Johnny looked at him and smiled. Johnny didn’t often smile, but
when he did it sent a glow of happiness through Sammy.
“No . . . there’s nothing.” He lifted his heavy shoulders. “Maybe
I’m getting old. Anyway, thanks, Sammy.” He took a packet of
cigarettes, rolled one towards Sammy and lit up. “This is a hell of a
lifer isn’t it? No future in it for us.” He let smoke drift down his
nostrils, then asked, “How do you feel about it, Sammy?”
Sammy shifted on his stool.
“The money’s good, Mr. Johnny. I get scared, but the money’s
good. What else could I do?”
Johnny regarded him, then nodded.
“That’s right . . . what else can you do?” A pause, then he went
on, “Have you been saving?”
Sammy smiled happily.
“Just like you told me, Mr. Johnny. One dollar in ten. That’s what
you said and now I’ve got three thousand bucks in a box under my
bed.” He lost his smile as he paused. “I don’t know what to do with
it.”
Johnny sighed.
“You keep all that money under your bed?”
“What else can I do with it?”
“Put it in a bank, you goon.”
“I don’t like banks, Mr. Johnny,” Sammy said earnestly. “They’re
for white men. It’s best under my bed. I guess I’ll have to buy another
box.”
Although Sammy looked hopefully at Johnny wanting him to
solve this problem, Johnny shrugged and finished his beer. He
couldn’t be bothered with Sammy’s stupid problems. He had too
many problems of his own.
“Please yourself.” He slid off the stool. “Well, see you next
Friday, Sammy.”
“Do you think there’ll be trouble?” Sammy asked fearfully as he
followed Johnny out into the drizzle.
Johnny saw the naked fear in Sammy’s big, black eyes. He smiled.
“No trouble. Not with me, Ernie and Toni with you. Take it easy,
Sammy . . . nothing will happen.”
Sammy watched him drive away, then he set off along the street
towards his pad. Friday was a long way off, he told himself.
$150,000! the Boss had said. Was there that much money in the
world? Nothing would happen. He’d believe that when Friday was
over.
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