The chief turned red. “I don’t give a goddamn what he was,” he said. “Have you found out who killed him?”
“No, right now I’m still guessing at it,” Grave Digger said.
“Well, guess fast then. I’m getting goddamned tired of standing up here watching this comedy of errors.”
“I’ll give you a quick fill-in and let you guess too,” Grave Digger said.
“Well, make it short and sweet and I damn sure ain’t going to guess,” the chief said.
“Listen, Digger,” the colored civilian interposed. “You and me is both city workers. Tell ’em my boy ain’t done no harm.”
“He’s broken the Sullivan law concerning concealed weapons by having this gun in his possession,” the homicide lieutenant said.
“That little thing,” Bones’s father said scornfully. “I don’t b’lieve that’ll even shoot.”
“Get these people away from here and let Jones report,” the chief said testily.
“Well, do something with them, Sergeant,” Lieutenant Anderson said.
“Come on, both of you,” the sergeant said, taking the man by the arm.
“Digger–” the man appealed.
“It’ll keep,” Grave Digger said harshly. “Your boy belonged to the Moslem gang.”
“Naw-naw, Digger–”
“Do I have to slug you,” the sergeant said.
The man allowed himself to be taken along with his son across the street.
The sergeant turned them over to a corporal and hurried back. Before he’d gone three steps the corporal was summoning two cops to take charge of them.
“What kind of city work does he do?” the chief asked.
“He’s in the sanitation department,” the sergeant said. “He’s a garbage collector.”
“All right, get on Jones,” the chief ordered.
“Galen picked up colored school girls, teenagers, and took them to a crib on 145th Street,” Grave Digger said in a flat toneless voice.
“Did you close it?” the Chief asked.
“It’ll keep; I’m looking for a murderer now,” Grave Digger said. Taking the miniature bull whip from his pocket, he went on, “He whipped them with this.”
The chief reached out silently and took it from his hand.
“Have you got a list of the girls, Jones?” he asked.
“What for?”
“There might be a connection.”
“I’m coming to that–”
“Well, get to it then.”
“The landprop, a woman named Reba – used to call herself Sheba – the one who testified against Captain Murphy–”
“Ah, that one,” the chief said softly. “She won’t slip out of this.”
“She’ll take somebody with her,” Grave Digger warned. “She’s covered and Galen was, too.”
The chief looked at Lieutenant Anderson reflectively.
The silence ran on until the sergeant blurted, “That’s not in this precinct.”
Anderson looked at the sergeant. “No one’s charging you with it.”
“Get on, Jones,” the chief said.
“Reba got scared of the deal and barred him. Her story will be that she barred him when she found out what he was doing. But that’s neither here nor there. After she barred him Galen started meeting them in the Dew Drop Inn. He arranged with the bartender so he could whip them in the cellar.”
Everyone except Grave Digger seemed embarrassed.
“He ran into a girl named Sissie,” Grave Digger said. “How doesn’t matter at the moment. She’s the girl friend of a boy called Sheik, who is the leader of the Real Cool Moslems.”
Sudden tension took hold of the group.
“Sheik sold Sissie to him. Then Galen wanted Sissie’s girl friend Sugartit. Sheik couldn’t get Sugartit, but Galen kept looking for her in the neighbourhood. I have the bartender here and a two-bit pimp who has a girl at Reba’s. He steered for Galen. I got this much from them.”
The officers stared appraisingly at the two handcuffed prisoners.
“If they know that much, they know who killed him,” the chief said.
“It’s going to be their asses if they do,” Grave Digger said. “But I think they’re leveling. The way I figure it, the whole thing hinges on Sugartit. I think he was killed because of her.”
“By who?”
“That’s the jackpot question.”
The chief looked at Good Booty. “Is this girl Sugartit?”
The others stared at her, too.
“No, she’s another one.”
“Who is Sugartit then?”
“I haven’t found out yet. This girl knows but she doesn’t want to tell.”
“Make her tell.”
“How?”
The chief appeared to be embarrassed by the question. “Well, what the hell do you want with her if you can’t make her talk?” he growled.
“I think she’ll talk when we get close enough. The Moslem gang hangs out somewhere near here. The bartender here thinks it might be in the flat of a boy who has a pigeon loft.”
“I know where that is!” the sergeant exclaimed. “I searched there.”
Everyone, including the prisoners, stared at him. His face reddened. “Now I remember,” he said. “There were several boys in the flat. The boy who kept pigeons, Caleb Bowee is his name, lives there with his Grandma; and two of the others roomed there.”
“Why the hell didn’t you bring them in?” the chief asked.
“I didn’t find anything on them to connect them with the Moslem gang or the escaped prisoner,” the sergeant said, defending himself. “The boy with the pigeons is a halfwit–he’s harmless, and I’m sure the grandma wouldn’t put up with a gang in there.”
“How in the hell do you know he’s harmless?” the chief stormed. “Half the murderers in Sing-Sing look like you and me.”
The homicide lieutenant and Anderson exchanged smiles.
“They had two girls with them and–” the sergeant began to explain but the chief wouldn’t let him.
“Why in the hell didn’t you bring them in, too?”
“What were the girls’ names?” Grave Digger asked.
“One was called Sissieratta and–”
“That must be Sissie,” Grave Digger said. “It fits. One was Sissie and the other was Sugartit. And one of the boys was Sheik.” Turning to Big Smiley, he asked, “What does Sheik look like?”
“Freckle-faced boy the color of a bay horse, with yellow cat eyes,” Big Smiley said impassively.
“You’re right,” the sergeant admitted sheepishly. “He was one of them. I should have trusted my instinct; I started to haul that punk in.”
“Well, for God’s sake, get the lead out of your ass now,” the chief roared. “If you still want to work for the police department.”
“Well, Jesus Christ, the other girl, the one Jones calls Sugartit, was Ed Johnson’s daughter,” the sergeant exploded. “She had one of those souvenir police ID cards signed by yourself and I thought–”
He was interrupted by the flat whacking sound of metal striking against a human skull.
No one had seen Grave Digger move.
What they saw now was Ready Belcher sagging forward with his eyes rolled back into his head and a white cut – not yet beginning to bleed – two inches wide in the black pockmarked skin of his forehead. Big Smiley reared back on the other end of the handcuffs like a dray horse shying from a rattlesnake.
Grave Digger gripped his nickel-plated thirty-eight by the long barrel, making a club out of the butt. The muscles were corded in his rage-swollen neck and his face was distorted with violence. Looking at him, the others were suspended in motion as though turned to stone.
“Stop him, God damn it!” the chief roared. “He’ll kill them.”
The sculptured figures of the police officers came to life. The sergeant grabbed Grave Digger from behind in a bear hug. Grave Digger doubled over and sent the sergeant flying over his head toward
the chief, who ducked in turn and let the sergeant sail on by.
Lieutenant Anderson and the homicide lieutenant converged on Grave Digger from opposite directions. Each grabbed an arm while he was still in a crouch and lifted upward and backward.
Ready was lying prone on the pavement, blood trickling from the dent in his skull, a slack arm drawn tight by the handcuffs attached to Big Smiley’s wrist. He looked dead already.
Big Smiley gave the appearance of a terrified blind beggar caught in a bombing raid; his giant frame trembled from head to foot.
Grave Digger had just time enough to kick Ready in the face before the officers jerked him out of range.
“Get him to the hospital, quick!” the chief shouted; and in the next breath added, “Rap him on the head!”
Grave Digger had carried the lieutenants to the ground and it was more than either could to do to follow the chief’s command.
The sergeant had already picked himself up and at the chief’s order set off at a gallop.
“God damn it, phone for it, don’t run after it!” the chief yelled. “Where the hell is my chauffeur, anyway?”
Cops came running from all directions.
“Give the lieutenants a hand,” the chief said. “They’ve got a wild man.”
Four cops jumped into the fray. Finally they pinned Grave Digger to the ground.
The sergeant climbed into the chief’s car and began talking into the telephone.
Coffin Ed appeared suddenly. No one had noticed him approaching from his parked car down the street.
“Great God, what’s happening, Digger?” he exclaimed.
Everybody was quiet, their embarrassment noticeable.
“What the hell!” he said, looking from one to the other. “What the hell’s going on.”
Grave Digger’s muscles relaxed as though he’d lost consciousness.
“It’s just me, Ed,” he said, looking up from the ground at his friend. “I just lost my head, is all.”
“Let him go,” Anderson ordered his helpers. “He’s back to normal now.”
The cops released Grave Digger and he got to his feet.
“Cooled off now?” the homicide lieutenant asked.
“Yeah. Give me my gun,” Grave Digger said.
Coffin Ed looked down at Ready Belcher’s bloody head.
“You too, eh, partner,” he said. “What did this rebel do?”
“I told him if I caught him holding out on me I’d kill him.”
“You told him no lie,” Coffin Ed said. Then asked, “Is it that bad?”
“It’s dirty, Ed. Galen was a rotten son of a bitch.”
“That doesn’t surprise me. Have you got anything on it so far?”
“A little, not much.”
“What the hell do you want here?” the chief said testily. “I suppose you want to help your buddy beat up some more of your folks.”
Grave Digger knew the chief was trying to steer the conversation away from Coffin Ed’s daughter, but he didn’t know how to help him.
“You two men act as if you want to kill off the whole population of Harlem,” the chief kept on.
“You told me to crack down,” Grave Digger reminded him.
“Yeah, but I didn’t mean in front of my eyes where I would have to be a witness to it.”
“It’s our beat,” Coffin Ed spoke up for his friend. “If you don’t like the way we handle it why don’t you take us off.”
“You’re already off,” the chief said. “What in the hell did you come back for, anyway?”
“Strictly on private business.”
The chief snorted.
“My little daughter hasn’t come home and I’m worried about her,” Coffin Ed explained. “It’s not like her to stay out this late and not let us know where she is.”
The chief looked away to hide his embarrassment.
Grave Digger swallowed audibly.
“Hell, Ed, you don’t have to worry about Eve,” he said in what he hoped was a reassuring tone of voice. “She’ll be home soon. You know nothing can happen to her. She’s got that police ID card you got for her on her last birthday, hasn’t she?”
“I know, but she always phones her mother if she’s going to stay out.”
“While you’re out here looking for her she’s probably gone home. Why don’t you go back home and go to bed? She’ll be all right.”
“Jones is telling you right, Ed,” the chief said brusquely. “Go home and relax. You’re off duty and you’re in our way here. Nothing is going to happen to your daughter. You’re just having nightmares.”
A siren sounded in the distance.
“Here comes the ambulance,” Lieutenant Anderson said.
“I’ll go and phone home again,” Coffin Ed said. “Take it easy, Digger. Don’t get yourself docked, too.”
As he turned and started off a fusillade of shots sounded from the upper floor of some nearby tenement. Ten shots from regulation .38 police specials were fired so fast that by the time the sounds had reached the street they were chained together.
Every cop within earshot froze to alert attention. They strained their ears in almost superhuman effort to place the direction from which the shots had come. Their eyes scanned the fronts of the tenements until not a spot escaped their observation.
But no more shots were fired.
The only signs of life left were the lights going out. With the rapidity of gun shots, one light after another went out until only one lighted window remained in the whole block of darkened dingy buildings. It was behind a fire-escape landing on the top floor of the tenement half a block up the street.
All eyes focused on that spot.
The grotesque silhouette of something crawling over the window sill appeared in the glare of light. Slowly it straightened and took the shape of a short, husky man. It staggered slowly along the three feet of grilled iron footing and leaned against the low outer rail. For a moment it swayed back and forth in a macabre pantomime and then, slowly, like a roulette ball climbing the last hurdle before the final slot, it fell over the railing, turned in the air, missed the second landing by a breath. The body turned again and struck the third railing and started to spin faster. It landed with a resounding thud on top of a parked car and lay there with one hand hanging down beside the driver’s window as though signaling for a stop.
“Well, God damn it, get going!” the chief shouted in stentorian tone. Then, on second thought, he added, “Not you, Jones. Not you!” and ran toward his car to get his megaphone.
Already motion had broken out. Cops were heading toward the tenement like the Marines landing.
The two cops guarding the entrance ran out into the street to locate the scene of the disturbance.
The chief grabbed his megaphone and shouted, “Get the lights on that building.”
Two spotlights that had been extinguished were turned back on immediately and beamed on the tenement’s top floor.
A patrolman stepped from the window onto the fire-escape landing and raised his hands in the light.
“Hold it, everybody!” he shouted. “I want the chief! Is the chief there?”
“Lower the lights,” the chief megaphoned. “I’m here. What is it?”
“Send for an ambulance. Petersen is shot–”
“An ambulance is coming.”
“Yes sir, but don’t let anybody in here yet–”
Grave Digger took hold of Coffin Ed’s arm.
“Hang on tight, Ed,” he said. “Your daughter’s up there.”
He felt Coffin Ed’s muscles tighten beneath his grip as the cop went on, “We found Pickens but one of the Moslem gangsters grabbed Pete’s pistol and shot him. He used his buddy as a shield and I got his buddy but he snatched one of the girls here and escaped into the back room. He’s locked himself in there and there’s no other way out of this shotgun shack. He says the girl is Detective Ed Johnson’s daughter. He threatened to cut her throat if he can’t talk to you and Grave Digger Jones.
Whatcha want me to do?”
The ambulance approached and the chief had to wait until the siren had died away to make himself heard.
“Has he still got Petersen’s pistol?”
“Yes, sir, but he emptied it.”
“All right, Officer, sit pat,” the chief megaphoned. “We’ll get Petersen down the fire escape and I’ll go up and see what it’s all about.”
Coffin Ed’s acid-burnt face was hideous with fear.
16
“You stay down here, Johnson,” the chief ordered. “I’ll take Anderson and Jones.”
“Not unless you shoot me,” Coffin Ed said.
The chief looked at him.
“Let him come,” Grave Digger said.
“I ought to come too; I know the flat,” the sergeant said.
“It’s my job to come,” the lieutenant from homicide said.
“Who the hell’s running this police department,” the chief said.
“We haven’t got any time,” Grave Digger replied.
All of them went quickly and quietly as possible. No one spoke again until the chief said through the kitchen door, “All right, I’m the chief. Come out and give yourself up and you won’t get hurt.”
“How do I know you’re the chief?” asked a fuzzy voice from within.
“If you open the door and come out you’ll see.”
“Don’t get so mother-raping smart. You’re the chief, but I’m the Sheik.”
“Well, all right, you’re a big-shot gang boss. What do you want?”
“Keep him talking,” Coffin Ed whispered. “I’m going up on the roof.”
“Who’s that with you?” Sheik asked sharply.
Grave Digger pointed to the sergeant and Lieutenant Anderson.
“The precinct lieutenant and a sergeant,” the chief said.
“Where’s Grave Digger?”
“He’s not here yet. I had to send for him.”
“Send those other mother-rapers away. Let’s you and me settle this, the Sheik and the Chief.”
“How will you know if they’re gone if you’re scared to come out and look?”
“Let ’em stay then. I don’t give a good goddam. And don’t think I’m scared. I don’t need to take any chances. I got Coffin Ed’s daughter by the hair with my left hand and I’m holding a razor-edged butcher knife against her throat with my right hand. If you try to take me I’ll cut her mother-raping head off before you can get through the door.”
The Real Cool Killers Page 13