Shadow of a Tiger

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by Michael Collins


  “Your boy friend is Charlie Burgos?”

  She nodded. “We went to his pad. We were there all night. You know that, your men picked me up there.”

  “But not Charlie. He wasn’t there, was he? You’re sure he was with you all night, and you never went home?”

  “I’m not a kid,” the girl said scornfully. “And Charlie was with me all night—in bed! You can’t say he wasn’t!”

  “I didn’t try—yet,” Marx said.

  She bit her full lips, glared at the Lieutenant like a child caught in some crime and rebuked.

  Marx said, “Did Charlie have a key to the pawn shop? Your key, maybe?”

  “You’re crazy! I don’t have a key!”

  I said, “Charlie’s a punk, Danielle, a schemer. Not his fault, maybe, but he’ll drag you down. He’s too smart to sink into the slums, but not smart enough to get out a straight way.”

  “Charlie’s smarter than any of you!” Danielle said hotly. “He’s going places, big places, and I’m going with him!”

  “Why, Danielle?” I said. “You’re no street kid. You have a good home, plenty of chances. You don’t belong in the slums.”

  “You and my parents! I love Charlie, you hear? He’s a real man. He’s not a fat nothing who can’t even make money out of a pawn shop!”

  “What can Charlie make money out of?” Marx snapped.

  “Anything!” she sneered. “Charlie’s a leader.”

  “A leader in a cheap sewer, Danielle,” I said. “You weren’t surprised to find your father dead, were you? I think you knew he was dead before the police came. Was it an accident, Danielle? Charlie Burgos was robbing the store, and—”

  “Charlie was in bed with me! All night! You can’t make me say anything else! Some dumb robber, that’s all! Or maybe ask Uncle Claude! He was supposed to go back to the shop. I heard my father tell him to come back!”

  Claude Marais said, “I didn’t go back. Eugene called it off.”

  “I don’t suppose you can prove it?” Marx said.

  “The hotel switchboard took a call for me from Eugene around eleven. Maybe they listened.”

  “It wouldn’t prove anything anyway, would it?” Marx said. “You could have gone back anyway.”

  “I could have,” Claude Marais agreed. “But I didn’t.”

  I sat with Marx in his office. “What do you think?”

  “Robbery,” Marx said, “what else? Pawn shop. A prime target for small-timers, junkies, street kids.”

  “Three hundred in cash left? The safe not touched?”

  “Panic. Points even more to junkies or kids.”

  “Maybe,” I said. “What was actually taken?”

  “We’re still checking. Marais kept lousy records. Jimmy Sung and the wife, Viviane, are helping us check.”

  “Does the wife have an alibi?”

  Marx sighed. “She was home all night—alone.”

  “So no one has an alibi. Jimmy Sung was curled up alone with his bottle. When I tailed the brother to the shop, he had to knock. The door was locked. I checked all doors and windows. No marks of entry, and most windows barred. Either the killer had a key, or Eugene Marais let him in. Which makes it an inside job. But then more should have been taken. With Eugene Marais dead, the killer had plenty of time.”

  “Except that he panicked when he saw Marais was dead.”

  “If he panicked, he wouldn’t have stopped to search.”

  “Unless he hit Marais, started his search, decided to tie Marais up halfway, found him dead, and then ran.”

  Marx had a good point. I could see some thief hit Eugene Marais, start to ransack the shop, maybe hear a groan or just realize Marais might come awake, go back to tie the owner up, find him dead, and panic. That would explain the half search.

  “I still don’t like the entry,” I said.

  “All right, so maybe Marais left the door open by mistake later,” Marx said. “It’s too sloppy for an inside job. I figure an open door, a small-time thief. We’ll find the loot, talk to our stoolies, and we’ll have our killer.”

  “Maybe you will,” I said, and I stood up. “Can I go to the shop and get my ring out of hock?”

  “No, not until we inventory and release the stock.”

  4

  I went to my one-window office and tried to call Marty again. No luck, so I spent the afternoon alone in the office, sweating and paying some bills, and hoping the telephone would and wouldn’t ring. I wanted Marty to call me, but if the phone rang it might be Li Marais asking for some of her money back.

  The phone did ring—twice. It wasn’t Marty, or Li Marais, either time. The first call was a woman who wanted her fifteen-year-old daughter tailed, the second was a man who suspected his wife’s nephew of stealing from his store. I turned down both jobs. I didn’t like them, and I had five hundred dollars.

  It was after 7:00 P.M when I finally found Marty at home. She told me to come over.

  As I walked downtown in the hot evening, I suddenly felt like a boy really wanting a woman for the first time, nervous and afraid she wouldn’t want him. Uncertain and shy, like a stranger to Marty, an unseen wall up between us.

  The wall was there in her eyes as she opened her door and walked ahead of me into her living room. She repairs and refinishes all her own furniture. Antiques and junk, whatever meets her fancy. She works hard on it, a small woman in jeans and a stained man’s shirt. Now she was a different woman—somehow taller, reserved in a slim green pants suit that had cost her three hundred dollars. She usually wore it only for business, for the theater. Not for me.

  “I got the money,” I said.

  “That’s fine,” she said, sat on the long old couch I’d known for so many years now.

  “I hocked the ring, but I got a job, too,” I said. I didn’t sit with her on the couch. I took a chair. “So I can get the ring back, okay? Where’ll we go? Fair Harbor?”

  “It’s the best,” Marty said.

  “I’d have the ring back now, but the police are holding it. Eugene Marais was murdered in his store last night.”

  “No, Dan! Marais?” Her eyes widened, and narrowed with a kind of pain. “Who? Why? He was such a … kind man. My God, half the people we know hung on because Marais paid too much, bought what he couldn’t really sell.”

  “A thief, it looks like. You know how pawn shops get hit.”

  “That’s horrible.” She was silent. “He asked so little for himself. Chance, Dan? Just stupid, blind chance?”

  “I suppose so,” I said. “It’s all chance, Marty, all just accident. The good and the bad.”

  Her face went hard. “No, I can’t believe that. A person has to make life happen, act to have what he wants. Good or bad, you have to have the life you decide you want.”

  “Meaning?” I said.

  She didn’t answer. She found a cigarette, lit it, her small face closed. Not a beautiful face, but pretty enough, and very alive.

  I said, “I’m not sure Marais’s murder was an accident. A lot’s wrong. Call it a feeling, a theory. My hound nose.”

  “Theory?” she said. “Are you going to investigate?”

  “No one’s asked me.”

  “When did that stop you, Dan?” Marty said. “The observer, the detached theorizer. Curiosity and the hunt. The interesting puzzle. So neutral, Dan?”

  I said, “What’s wrong, Marty?”

  She smoked in the hot living room. I waited, and out in the streets of the city twilight was turning to darkness. That sudden surge and fading of noise that comes in the city just at twilight.

  “I’m not sure, Dan,” she said.

  “When will you be sure?”

  She was silent again. “Dan? Don’t plan Fire Island just yet. I’m not sure I want to do it that way. May be I want to be alone for a while.”

  “All right. Take my money. I’ll get the ring when—”

  “No, give me the pawn money,” she said. “I have to think. I want to think, Dan. I can’t
live and die like Eugene Marais. What did he have? What did he do? Nothing.”

  “He had peace. Acceptance of what he was, and what the world is. And maybe his death wasn’t blind chance.”

  “That’s not enough for me. Not for any woman.”

  “Maybe not,” I said.

  I gave her the five hundred for the ring. She sat silent. I didn’t want to leave then, but I left. A man is what he is.

  I wanted to stay with Marty, show her that she was mine, make her want to be mine. I wanted to do that, but I never would. That doesn’t make me much of a man, I know, but it makes me what I am. She had to shape her own life. All I could do was hope she would, in the end, want me. You owe every human being understanding, respect for their needs and wants. But that doesn’t mean that you will like the results. To accept, understand, another person’s needs, doesn’t change one iota of what you need yourself.

  I wanted to stay, but I left. Not much man. Not very strong. But a human being. At least, I like to think that’s what I am. Sometimes I wonder even about that. The observer, even of myself.

  So busy observing myself as I cut through the alley behind my five cheap rooms, that I never saw them until they had me trapped cold in the alley.

  Four shadows. Two at each end of the dark alley.

  Silent, they stood there.

  Four quick, alert shapes that appeared to block my way front and rear. Coming up from nowhere, silhouetted against the feeble street light at either end of the alley in the hot night. Each a distinct shadow, a person, yet all the same—thin and without faces. They made no sound or movement, looming like thin birds of prey in the night.

  I looked around the alley. Windowless walls on both sides, locked rear doors. No way out except past them. Nothing to help me except three ranks of garbage cans, and two cats that ran silently away as the four shadows began to move toward me.

  They came bent forward, watching me warily like hunters approaching some cornered animal. An animal they weren’t going to let escape, yet respected, so advanced carefully.

  I didn’t try to talk to them. They hadn’t come to talk, at least not until they had given me their message in a more direct way.

  I sidled toward a rank of six garbage cans.

  The first attack came from behind me.

  One jumped in alone, something in his raised right hand. A darting attack like a snake striking. Maybe he thought I was momentarily not looking behind me. Whatever, it gave me a faint chance. For a moment, he was alone.

  It was a tire iron in his hand. I grabbed at his arm, missed, ducked under and in, took a hard blow from the tire iron on my left shoulder, and hit him in the belly.

  A scrawny belly, my fist sinking almost to his backbone. He vanished, the tire iron clattering down on the cobblestones.

  A shadow behind me.

  I kicked over a garbage can, and the shadow sprawled and rattled among the cans.

  Something like a club smashed against my nose and cheek. I tasted blood.

  My hand closed on a thin, bony wrist. My face was close against a pale, hard-breathing face—a young face, with acne.

  Kids!

  Street kids. Thin, savage, crazy-eyed, breathing hard and silent as they swarmed over me as deadly as wild animals in any jungle.

  I kicked the one I held. He fell away. I had a garbage can cover. I smashed it into a face. A long iron bar cracked my ribs. Something battered my head, my arm. They breathed, grunted, said nothing. They had not come to talk at all. To at least put me into some hospital.

  I was bruised and bleeding—one arm against eight arms with weapons. But they were kids. There is a difference between a kid and an adult, even a street kid. It’s called viciousness, the ability to attack totally without flinching. An adult has learned to hold back nothing in a fight. Most kids, if they are sane, sober and not on drugs, will hesitate a hair, flinch unsure, and that was what saved me.

  That, and the fact that street kids are all muscle, but the muscles are starved. They are not in good shape or health. Pound for pound, they are weak compared to a well-fed, athletic suburban boy.

  They had me, but they flinched. They could grab me, but they couldn’t hold me.

  I sank teeth into a face. I kicked bellies and groins. I stamped thin arms on the ground. I hammered them with my garbage can cover. I tangled them among the cans.

  I saw a clear space, and ran. Unsure, without stamina, they gave me space and too much time, and I ran for the escape of the street. My street.

  I saw them behind me. Two of them. The other two must have taken more from me than they could handle. I didn’t know the two behind me, not exactly. Familiar faces, but I could fit no names to the faces.

  I reached my building, locked the vestibule door, made it up the stairs to my five hot but secure rooms. In the room I waited. They didn’t come up. It was my territory.

  Shaking, I got to my bathroom. The mirror showed me cuts, blood and bruises. My ribs stabbed. My arm was limp, ached. I washed, daubed Merthiolate. My left eye was blackening, but I didn’t think anything was broken. I sat down in my shabby living room in the hot night, lit a cigarette.

  I hadn’t recognized any of them, but I didn’t have to. Street kids, they could have been sent by only one person—Charlie Burgos. A favor for Charlie, or maybe orders. Charlie himself hadn’t been there, he was a leader.’ Besides, I would have recognized him. They had wanted at least to put me into the hospital. Why?

  Eugene Marais’s murder? Sure. But I wasn’t really involved in that, was I? Another mistake like Li Marais hiring me to stop Gerd Exner? Or was Charlie Burgos showing off his power for Danielle Marais? I had bothered Danielle.

  Maybe. Maybe this, and maybe that, and to hell with it. I hurt, I hadn’t slept much last night, and I didn’t give a damn about Charlie Burgos.

  I went to bed.

  To hell with Marty.

  I went to sleep wondering what Charlie Burgos thought I was doing that I wasn’t. To hell with it. But my mind wouldn’t quit. The human problem—that damned mind of ours.

  I awoke to the telephone ringing. It was my answering service. A Viviane Marais had called me about five last night. She wanted to see me.

  5

  Eugene Marais had lived in Brooklyn, out in Sheepshead Bay.

  New York is a city of “villages,” a series of neighborhoods each with its local life and natives. In these villages there are some who are important to the natives, but who are never really natives themselves—the white shopkeepers of Harlem who live in Queens; the black police captains who rule Bedford-Stuyvesant, but live in New Rochelle. Eugene Marais had been a fixture in Chelsea, but he had lived in Sheepshead Bay.

  I took the subway. It was a trip into the past. When I was a boy in Chelsea, Sheepshead Bay was where we had gone fishing. An outing, an adventure; the clean air and the sea. Before I lost my arm and wandered far from Chelsea. Still, I remembered, and the smells of fish and sea came to greet me when I left the subway in the hot sun. But the Bay wasn’t the same anymore.

  When I was a boy it had been a fishing village—wooden piers, shops and restaurants on pilings over the water, Italian trawlers tied up drying their nets, hordes of gulls wheeling over the fish refuse dropped into the Bay. Now it was just another part of the city, the Belt Parkway knifing through it. Mayor LaGuardia had started the change; banning the trawlers, making the piers concrete, closing the shops over the water, cleaning it all up. A loss, a tragedy, yet the mayor could do nothing else. The city had been growing too fast. A small population can live casually with nature, its pollution swallowed up. A large one can’t. Too many people must regulate how they live with nature, or destroy nature and themselves. So a fishing village was lost.

  But not quite. I found Eugene Marais’s house in a quiet old section not far from the water. Narrow old frame houses with porches and high attic windows. Trees and grape arbors. Out of time—as Eugene Marais himself had been, in a way. I went through the small yard of lawn and hydrangea
bushes to the front door. Viviane Marais let me in herself.

  She was a small, dark woman of fifty, with an energetic walk as she led me into an old-fashioned living room of delicate furniture, china bric-a-brac, and lace—very French. There was nothing old-fashioned about Viviane Marais. She wore a chic black sheath on a full yet firm figure that could handle it. She wore no jewelry, her fine features and erect carriage needing no adornment. Her eyes were dark and quick as she gave me a chair.

  “Eugene spoke of you, Mr. Fortune. He liked you. Now I think I want to hire you.”

  “I liked him,” I said.

  She didn’t sit. She lit a cigarette, French and masculine.

  “Do you believe it was robbery, Mr. Fortune?”

  “I’m not sure. Yes and no.”

  “I am sure, and it is no.”

  Small and determined, she began to pace with a dynamism Eugene Marais had lacked. A quiet, slowish man, and a fiery, energetic wife. Complementary? A good marriage?

  “First,” she said, smoked, “I think something had disturbed Eugene lately. I am not sure, he was not a man to trouble me with his worries, but I feel it now. Second, Eugene would not have resisted a thief. Money was not so important to him.”

  “He was hit from behind,” I said.

  She ignored that. “Too little was stolen, almost nothing of real value. Some cheap rings, some watches, useless objects. I have the police list.”

  She gave me the list. I read it. She was right—nothing but a seemingly random grab bag of cheap items, bric-a-brac.

  She paced. “In a way, the shop was a charity. Eugene’s idea of how to help small people. He said a pawn shop could help those no one else would—the drunkards, phonies, gamblers; the desperate and the forgotten.”

  She looked at me. “We have family money. The shop had to make us only a small income. Our needs were few: this house, food, an occasional night out. We have only Danielle.”

  She thought. “Eugene wanted no more children in this world. He said we could help those who were here, not bring more to suffer. He had little faith in values. From the past.”

  “What about the past?” I said. “A killer? A motive?”

 

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