"Anyway," he said, "who's going to shoot at a state-police helicopter?"
"If they fall for it," Shirillo qualified.
"They did before."
"That's why they might not fall for it a second time. Familiarity breeds suspicion."
"Contempt, I believe it is."
"Not with these guys."
"The old Iron Hand, huh?"
Shirillo smiled.
Shirillo was correct, of course, no matter how much Tucker might attempt to minimize their problems. Still, Tucker couldn't see any good in standing together, depressing each other with speculations on the nature of their imminent demise. Soon they'd be in as bad a way as Pete Harris, jumping at the slightest noise, overreacting to every imagined movement in the shadows.
"Got to go," Tucker said.
He turned away from the kid and began to check the partitions between the rooms, searching for any obvious disparity.
The time was 5:41 in the morning, well after dawn of a new day.
Five minutes later Tucker knew where the hidden room lay and where, by extension, Merle Bachman was being kept. He entered the back room in the short wing where a guard-either the dead man, the wounded man or the missing gunman-slept, and he removed the clothes from the closet. He wasn't worried about wrinkling what he tossed out of the way, and he'd begun to examine the closet walls with the beam of his flashlight when he heard the Thompson start to chatter again in the corridor.
He went to see what was wrong, went to Harris, who stood at the head of the stairs with the big weapon aimed down at the landing wall.
"Tried to come up," Harris said. His wounded leg didn't seem to be bothering him as much as before That could be good or bad; it might mean the wound was as shallow as it looked and had stopped bleeding, or it might mean that Harris was too afraid to register pain. "It was the same bastard we tied up downstairs. I thought I put him out for a good long while."
"Get him?"
"No."
At least the missing guard hadn't high-tailed it off the estate, as he'd feared. Instead, the man had come inside and revived his workmate and was probably now trying to figure a way to get upstairs.
Down at the end of the hall Shirillo shouted something unintelligible. When Tucker turned he saw the kid shooting into the narrow confines of the rear stairs' shaft, though his silenced Lüger made very little sound.
"Any luck?"
"No!" Shirillo called.
"There are only two of them," Tucker said. "They can keep harassing us, but they can't very well rush us."
"There's the cook," Harris said.
"Keesey may lie, but he doesn't fight," Tucker said. "Besides, one more man isn't enough to put us on the defensive. We could stand off a dozen from here."
Harris stepped away from the head of the stairs so he could not see or be seen by anyone coming up. He remained facing the steps, though, with the machine gun at his hip, but his attention was on Tucker. His face was a mess of sweat, greasepaint, deeply carved lines of fatigue, and when he spoke he didn't have to whisper: his voice was hoarse with fear. "Let's get the hell out of here. Bachman isn't here. There's nothing here we want."
"Bachman's here," Tucker corrected him.
"Yeah?"
"Definitely."
"I don't see him," Harris said, grinning. The grin was malicious, and it threatened a further breakdown, one that would permit him to disregard Tucker's orders and call his own shots.
Harris was no longer trustworthy. Tucker did not let him see that he'd reached that conclusion, and he said, "Bachman's in a concealed room." He took two large steps to the back wall and rapped on the plaster with his knuckles. "Doesn't it seem odd there's all this wall space and no rooms behind it?"
Harris blinked at the long expanse of unmarred plaster, looked right and left at the nearest doors. "I thought those two rooms accounted for it."
"You've been in the one in the short wing. The one adjacent to this empty space in the long wing is about the same size. There's something in between them."
Harris squinted, thought about it. He would have preferred to get out of there; he didn't want to have to think about anything besides running, hiding, staying alive. However, he said, "Okay. How do we get him?"
"I think it's through a closet in one of the two adjacent rooms, but I haven't found the door yet."
"Make it fast," Harris said.
He turned back to the stairwell, waiting for something to happen, for something to shoot at.
"Hold the fort," Tucker said, turning back toward the room from which the stuttering Thompson had called him.
The walls of the closet were featureless plaster, too smooth to contain a secret doorway. He got down on his hands and knees and gave the quarter round a careful inspection to see if any of it was loose or movable. None of it was. Satisfied that the entrance was in the other room in the long wing, he went to raid a second closet.
Passing Harris and the woman, he said, "We'll have him out in a couple of minutes."
"Wait," Miss Loraine said.
He almost didn't hear her. When she called again he turned and said, "Yeah?"
"I want to talk to you."
"No time," Tucker said.
"I want to make a deal." She spoke softly, but her voice carried well. "I can help you."
"Too late for that."
"No, it isn't."
"Sorry."
"I could save you half an hour finding Bachman."
He said. "I doubt that. The entrance to that hidden space has to be in the closet in that room. I'll have it worked out in . . ." He suddenly realized that she'd used Bachman's name, that both he and Harris had given it to her. What the hell. Was he losing his edge? He said, "Christ!"
She walked toward him and held out her hand as if to take his. "You can buy Bachman, and my silence, if you want to."
"It'd be easier for Bachman to change his name," he said.
"Untrue. Besides, Ross would find him sometime."
That was right enough. But he said, "Buy your silence? With what?"
"Money."
"We haven't any." He sounded angry and bitter, but he couldn't help it. He'd had to keep up his renowned facade too long already.
"You will if you deal with me," the girl said. She dropped the offered hand, waiting. She looked even more like Elise now, a secret smile of self-satisfaction tinting her lovely face.
Tucker said, "What's the deal?"
She pursed her lips, licked them. She said, "Okay, you're going to find this Bachman on your own, I see that. You're going to make a fool out of Ross like no one's ever done before. He won't want me around once I've seen him humiliated, so I haven't any reason to stick around here. The deal is-I get twenty percent of whatever's in those three suitcases, plus a free ride out of here."
Tucker blinked, felt his legs grow momentarily weaker, then smiled. "I'll be damned," he said. "The Tuesday shipment?"
"That's it."
"The cash?"
"Yes."
"I didn't think it'd be here yet."
"It wasn't sent out a second time, for reasons I'll explain if you'll deal."
He shook his head ruefully. "Now that I know it's here, why do I need to deal at all?"
"Because you could waste hours hunting for it. There are a thousand places in a house this size that three suitcases could be hidden. And from the way you've been acting, you can't spend much more time in here-you've got someone coming to pick you up."
He admired her despite the fact that she'd started out on the other side of the fence. When she saw that the circumstances had gotten beyond her control, she maneuvered to increase the range of her power. He could see why Baglio had respected her. The old man's only mistake was in not respecting her even more than he had. He was also pleased with her demands. They were eminently reasonable if she could supply what she boasted.
"Okay," he said.
"Deal?"
"Deal."
She frowned and said, "It's not
as easy as that, though. We'll have to talk some more."
"Talk," he said. He reached into his pocket and took out the roll of Life Savers, popped one into his mouth.
"Not here."
"Where?"
"In the room you're on your way to."
Tucker looked at his watch: 6:06. He didn't feel much like finishing the operation in broad daylight, though it appeared as if they were going to have to do just that. He said, "We can't take long bargaining. It's getting damn late."
"I'll need two minutes," she said.
"Come on, then."
She stepped over the corpse on the corridor floor, her pretty bare toes squishing in the damp carpet, went with Tucker to the guard's bedroom. Behind them, Harris fared another burst down the main stairwell.
In the bedroom she sat down on the corner of the mattress and tucked her long legs under her, now very demure and innocent in the flannel gown. She said, "How do you expect to get out of here?"
He hesitated, then said, "A helicopter."
She made a face. "I'm serious."
"So am I."
She said, "I don't want to make a deal if you're really a bunch of clowns who didn't think this thing through."
He explained, in detail but as rapidly as possible, about Norton and the helicopter with the state-police markings.
"I'm impressed," she said.
"Now," he said, "impress me. Do you know what happens to people who upset Ross Baglio?"
"I know."
"But you're willing to risk it?"
"A girl has to provide for herself," she said. She sounded like an earnest, homely high-school freshman deciding to take the sensible secretarial program to prepare to meet the bills four years hence. She was delightful.
"Baglio knows your name. It'll be easy to track you down."
"A name can be changed," She was implying that Loraine wasn't her real name anyway.
"You can't change the way you look. Every man who sees you is going to remember you."
"You're exaggerating my appeal," she said. "Besides, I know something about makeup and disguise." She got off the bed and said, "Are you trying to talk me out of helping you?"
"No," he said. "I just want to understand exactly why you're doing this so I have a better idea of what's going to happen later. For instance, I wouldn't want you to go through with this with the idea of bringing your twenty percent back to Baglio and telling him all you learned about us while you were counted as a friend."
"I'd have to be a fool," she said.
"I know."
"But I'm not."
He sighed. So much like Elise. "I know that too."
"Well?"
"Deal," he said again.
She went to the closet and started tossing out suits, trousers and dress shirts. When everything was cleaned out of the way, she asked him to step back and to direct the flashlight on the floor between them. Kneeling, she studied the floorboards a moment, got her nails into the cracks on both sides of one of them, tugged at it, let it go. She tried the one beside it, which looked identical to the first, sighed when it rattled and came away in her hands, a two-inch-wide and four-foot-long strip of wood. She put it out of the way, revealing a lever that lay under the tightly fitted but unnailed board.
"I'd have found that in no time," he said.
"Of course," she said. "And you'd have gotten Bachman too. But I'm along to help you get the money, which you didn't even know was here."
"Go on," he said.
She pressed the lever down with the heel of her hand. On Tucker's right the entire back wall of the closet swung inward, a feature that negated the need for a telltale seam in the middle of the wall where an ordinary secret door might have been.
He said, "Is Baglio a chronic paranoid?"
"Among other things."
The wall swung wider open.
"Don't feel you have to catalogue them."
The room beyond the closet was nearly as large as the guard's bedroom on the other side, lighted by fluorescent ceiling strips, windowless. Merle Bachman was strapped in the bed against the far wall, looking their way and trying to grin.
Tucker saw at once why Bachman had not been forced to tell Baglio what he knew, why he was still alive and why they still had a chance to keep their identities intact. The crash in the Chevrolet had ruined the small man's lovely smile by breaking loose eighty percent of his teeth and splitting both his lips. The upper lip was split clear to his septum and swollen four or five times larger than it should have been. He had to breathe through his mouth, since the lip closed off his nostrils, and his breathing was so noisy Tucker wondered why that hadn't been audible even through all these walls.
Bachman made a gagging sound that was apparently some sort of greeting, though it didn't succeed any better than his smile.
"You can't talk?" Tucker asked.
Bachman made chortling sounds.
"Then don't try," Tucker said. "You sound disgusting. And while you're at it, wipe that-smile?-off your face."
Bachman didn't try to speak again, but he kept smiling. His left eye was puffed shut and his right was blackened, though not swollen like the other. Several fingers on both hands had been splinted and bandaged by Baglio's doctor. Otherwise, he looked well enough.
"No broken legs or arms?" Tucker asked, kneeling at the bed. "Just shake your head."
Bachman shook his head no.
"Can you walk?"
Bachman shook: no.
"Why not?"
It was a badly phrased question. Bachman looked earnest and began to make gagging noises again, trying to explain.
"Forget it," Tucker said. "You're drugged, aren't you?"
Bachman sighed and nodded yes.
Miss Loraine said, "Shall we get on with the second part of it-the money?"
"It's here?" Tucker asked.
"Yes. But he doesn't know it," she added, nodding to Bachman.
"Get it, then."
She walked away from the bed to the back of the room, where she opened the door of a white metal storage cabinet bolted to the wall.
He stepped up beside her and said, "What gives?"
"The wall." She slid away the metal back of the cabinet, revealing another lever exactly like the one in the closet floor, pressed it down. The cabinet which was bolted to the wall beside this one swung into the room, revealing a narrow storage space large enough for a few suitcases, or for a body. Right now it contained just suitcases.
"A hidden room inside a hidden room," Tucker said, amazed.
"He's a clever man," she said.
Tucker said, "Then why didn't he take this into town? Why'd he leave it here?"
"Ross didn't know who'd hit him," she explained. "He thought it might be someone inside his own organization, and he left the cash here because he didn't trust sending it into town again-not until he could get Bachman to talk."
"A careful man."
"This time he was too careful," she said. "Let's get it out of here." She hefted the smallest suitcase and carried it back to Bachman, while Tucker muscled the other two out of the niche and followed her.
They put the cases on the low table next to the bed and opened them one at a time. The two largest were packed with tightly wrapped bills, while the smaller was half full and padded out with butcher's paper.
"Ahhh," Merle Bachman said. He seemed surprised that the cash had been in the room with him; apparently Miss Loraine was telling the truth when she said he hadn't known about it.
Tucker said, "We scored after all."
While Miss Loraine went to find suitable clothes to wear for an airborne escape, Tucker explained the situation to Shirillo and Harris. The kid accepted it, trusting Tucker, but Harris, more agitated than ever, had some questions.
"She's a woman," he said. "Can she keep her mouth shut when we get out of this?"
"As well as you can," Tucker said. Then, to soften that, he added, "Or as well as I can."
Harris said, "She'll run out of
money fast. She'll squander it, and then she'll start making plans."
"I don't think so."
"If she does, though, she'll come back to one of us, some way, and want more."
"She won't."
"Okay, she'll run back to Baglio."
"He'd kill her."
"Maybe she's too dumb to know that."
"She's not. She knows the risks, and she knows how to handle herself. We can trust her; we have to."
"Not necessarily," Harris said. He looked ugly. Maybe his wound was hurting him again-or maybe it had nothing to do with that look.
Tucker said, "We can't kill her, if that's what you mean."
"Why not?"
"I made a deal with her."
"So?"
Tucker said, "Is that the way you'd have me do business? Remember, I've made a deal with you, too. If I can give my word to her, then kill her, what's to keep me from working the same thing with you?" Before Harris could answer, he said, "No, we can't do business that way. Besides, killing her would make the whole caper too hot. Baglio can cover up the death of one of his gunmen easily enough. But that woman's got a family somewhere, a life outside of the organization, and her death would probably mean the police getting into the act sooner or later."
Harris wiped at his face. His gloved hand came away black, and some of his disguise was gone. "I hope you're right about her," he said.
"I am. And cheer up. Now you can retire, like you want."
Tucker went back to the hidden room, leaving Harris and Shirillo to guard the stairs, and unstrapped Merle Bachman, helped him out of the bed, tried to get him to stand on his own feet. As Bachman had warned with a shake of his head, that proved impossible. Evidently he hadn't been permitted on his feet during the last couple of days, hadn't eaten anything in all that time-couldn't have because of his ruined mouth-and had only drunk what he was forced to drink to keep from dehydrating. His weakened condition, magnified by the pain killers that the doctor had prescribed, had turned his legs to rubber which bent and twisted under him. Finally, though, Tucker got him to the end of the corridor under the attic door and left him with Shirillo.
Koontz, Dean - (1973) - Blood Risk Page 13