The Ravagers

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by Donald Hamilton


  “Penny!”

  That was a woman’s voice, from the trailer door. I suppose I should have felt very clever. I’d carefully picked a spot where Mrs. Drilling could see me accosting her daughter if she just glanced out the window. She’d reacted as I’d hoped, but I felt kind of disgusted with the whole business. Why hadn’t the damn woman left her child out of it, if she had to go playing secret games with secret men and secret documents? And come to that, why hadn’t I figured out an approach that didn’t involve telling lies to a fifteen-year-old kid? I had no messages for her from anybody.

  The girl gave me a glance and a kind of shrug. She ran off, hugging her armload of laundry. I hurried after her and got there as, having shooed her daughter inside, Genevieve Drilling was struggling to close the double door of the trailer—they put the screen door inside so it won’t get beat up while driving, and it occasionally makes for a little awkwardness.

  “Mrs. Drilling?” I said.

  She started to open the screen to retrieve the outer door, which had failed to catch, but thought better of it. “All right,” she said wearily. “All right, what do you want? As if I didn’t know!”

  “May I come in?”

  “I see no reason why you should.”

  “It’s wet out here,” I said. I couldn’t really see her through the shiny aluminum screen, just a feminine silhouette in a long-skirted garment that looked familiar. “Why don’t you give Penny a break, Mrs. Drilling?” I asked, going into my act. “You’re grown up. What you do with your life is your business. But what’s in it for her?”

  There was a brief pause. “You do that very well,” the woman said from the other side of the screen. “The little sob you get into your voice is particularly good. You make it sound just as if you really loved children.”

  I took a long chance and said, “Actually, I hate the little creeps, Mrs. Drilling, but I have a job to do.”

  She was silent behind the wire mesh, and I decided I’d fluffed it. The earnest, humorless approach would have been better. Then I heard a reluctant laugh and the screen door swung open. I got no real invitation, but she moved aside when I put my foot on the folding metal step, and she closed both doors behind me when I had entered the trailer.

  It was a compact little portable house with a double bed set crosswise at one end, facing a sort of dinette at the other, which could presumably also be converted to sleeping purposes. A counter to starboard, with stove and sink and associated cupboards, was balanced by a closet, butane space heater, and john to port. All the comforts of home were there, packed about as tightly as could be managed. The floor was a narrow trail of linoleum through the forest of birch plywood.

  The kid, Penny, was sitting on the bed at the far end, wiping rain from her glasses. Without them, her small face had an innocent, vulnerable look. Once the dental remodeling was completed, I decided, she might grow into a reasonably pretty girl. She’d shed her raincoat, which left her dressed in a white shirt and one of the little divided skirts popular that year, that looked like the riding skirt of a movie cowgirl, sawed off above the knees. Neither skirt nor shirt was particularly fresh-looking, but then she was camping out after a fashion, and fifteen is young for sartorial perfection.

  I said to her, “I didn’t mean to imply that you’re a creep, honey. I just had to say something to shake your ma up a bit.” Penny gave me a shy glance and showed me a flash of stainless steel in a wary, meaningless smile. Having mended my fences there, I hoped, I turned at last to look at the woman.

  It was kind of a shock. I mean, the buildup had been terrific. This was the woman who’d betrayed her husband with a man of unsavory political associations, who’d stolen for him documents, as she thought, of national importance, and who—it was still perfectly possible— might well have sloshed concentrated sulfuric acid into another man’s face and, when he was helpless, killed him. It was only natural to expect a pretty far-out female, either an unpredictable featherweight neurotic or a dark figure of mystery and evil—something on the order of a vampire lady with slanting eyes and a sinister smile.

  Instead there was just a tallish, nicely proportioned, healthy-looking, pretty woman with, so help me, freckles. I mean, real, all-over freckles, not just a faint, fashionable dusting across the bridge of the nose. Her hair was dark brown with reddish glints, and her face... well, I’ve already said she was pretty. This is considered a crime in some quarters, where a woman is either beautiful or she’s nothing.

  Genevieve Drilling wasn’t beautiful. You didn’t want to hang her on a wall and admire her as a work of art. She was just a damn pretty woman, and you wanted to say something to make her smile, for a start. Once you got her smiling at you, other ideas would doubtless occur to you unless, of course, your heart was set on a vision of pure and perfect loveliness—or unless you were, as I was supposed to be, a dedicated agent whose singleminded devotion to duty was impervious to temptations of any kind.

  Well, I didn’t have her smiling at me yet, far from it. She was watching me with cool dislike.

  “Who are you?” she asked.

  “David P. Clevenger, ma’am,” I said. “The P stands for Prescott, but I don’t use it much.”

  “Indeed?” she said. “That’s very interesting. What do you do, Mr. Prescott Clevenger? To be specific, what are you doing here? Besides molesting young girls, I mean.”

  I glanced around. “I didn’t lest a single mo, did I, honey? All I did was tell you I had a message from your pa. Isn’t that right?”

  The kid on the bed didn’t say anything. She just put her glasses back on her small nose so she could see me clearly. Genevieve Drilling said, “We’re not interested in messages from my husband.”

  I said, “I hear you say it, ma’am. I don’t hear her.”

  The woman’s gray-green eyes narrowed. “You sound as if you thought I was intimidating... Penny’s here of her own free will, aren’t you, darling? She’s made her choice. You can tell my husband that.”

  I said, “I can remember some choices I made in my teens, that I’m damn glad now were overruled by higher authority.”

  Genevieve Drilling said, “Penny and I understand each other. You go right ahead and deliver my husband’s message, Mr. Clevenger, if it will reassure you. I’m surprised he’d allow himself to be distracted from his work long enough to send one, I really am. Both Penny and I were under the distinct impression he’d forgotten that we existed. Well, what does he want?”

  “He wants her,” I said.

  I was aware of the kid stirring slightly behind me. I didn’t look that way. I had no idea what Dr. Herbert Drilling really wanted. Maybe children, even his own, just bored him. He sounded as if he might be that kind of a man.

  “Just her?” Genevieve said challengingly. “Not me?”

  “Nothing was said about you, ma’am.”

  “Well, that figures,” she said dryly. “He always did consider me the only mistake of an otherwise perfectly planned life. Is that all he wants?”

  I glanced at her innocently. “Probably not, ma’am, but that’s all of his wants I’m concerned with. I gather the U.S. government is attending to some other desires of Dr. Drilling’s. That part of it is out of my jurisdiction.”

  She was watching me closely. “Then you do not represent the U.S. government, Mr. Clevenger?”

  “Not me,” I said. “I’m a private investigator from Denver, Colorado. We were recommended to your husband by another firm that already had an operative on the job.”

  She frowned. “You mean the man who calls himself Michael Green? I thought...” She checked herself and was silent.

  I said, “That’s the man. Mike Green.”

  She asked, “Why would Mr. Green’s detective agency, if that’s what he really worked for, recommend a rival firm? Don’t tell me the confident, handsome Mr. Green needs help to do a simple job like deceiving a woman?”

  I said, “Mike needs plenty of help, ma’am, but none of it’s going to do him much good
. He’s dead. He was murdered last night.”

  I heard the kid behind me gasp. The woman before me changed expression, started to speak, and stopped. At last she said flatly, “I don’t believe you! Murdered?”

  “It’s in the papers,” I said. “Of course they don’t say murder. They say suicide.” I glanced around. “Duck out to my car and get the newspaper from the back seat, will you, honey?”

  “You stay right there, Penny!” snapped her mother. She licked her lips. “The paper says suicide but you say murder, Mr. Clevenger?”

  I said, “Mike would never have killed himself, ma’am. What, deprive all the women of the world of his fascinating personality? He’d never have been so cruel.”

  A faint smile touched the woman’s lips briefly. “At least you’re telling the truth in one respect. Obviously you did know Mr. Green.” She hesitated. “Does anybody... is it known who killed him?”

  “I wouldn’t know, ma’am. I just read the papers. The police may have their own theories, but as a private op I prefer not to consult with them when I don’t have to.”

  “And why are you telling me this?”

  I said, “Hell, you asked me. Excuse me. Didn’t mean to swear in front of ladies. But you asked me why I was here. I’m taking Mike’s place.”

  “I see.”

  “Mike was trying to be subtle, I guess, pretending to be an insurance man on vacation or something. Well, I’m not the subtle type of guy, ma’am. Cards on the table, that’s me.”

  “And you have come about Penny? And that was what Mr. Green was after all the time? I wondered what he had in mind.”

  I said, “Yes, ma’am. Dr. Drilling would have come himself, I’m told, but apparently the government isn’t encouraging him to take any long trips right now, particularly out of the country, so he had to hire somebody to come for him.”

  I kept looking straight ahead as I said it, ignoring the girl behind me. No matter which parent she preferred, she’d presumably like to think the other cared enough to come after her. It was easier to lie without looking at her face.

  Genevieve Drilling laughed abruptly. “You don’t mean they suspect he might be in collusion with me? Oh, that’s wonderful! That must make him absolutely livid!” She stopped laughing and drew a deep breath. “I’m sorry. I just... Living with that stuffed scientific jackass for over a dozen years, being given a lecture on security every time I asked a simple wifely question... I hope they take away his clearance! That would hurt him worse than... than being castrated, or something. Oh, much worse! After all, he hardly ever...” She stopped, and turned pink, and glanced at her daughter, and at me. “Damn you! How did we get on that?”

  It was an interesting glimpse into the Drilling family relationships. I waited, hoping for more, but it didn’t come. I said, “You’re not going to make it, Mrs. Drilling. I haven’t been told what all the big deal is you’ve got yourself into here, but everybody’s got you spotted and you’ll never get away. Sooner or later you’ll make a wrong move and get clobbered. Do you want Penny to be there when it happens?”

  Genevieve was looking at me hard. “I’m surprised, if my husband did hire you, that he didn’t ask you, or Mr. Green, to take her back by force.”

  I said, “You’ve been seeing too many TV shows, ma’am. No real-life detective agency is going to get involved in a kidnaping, or in anything that could possibly kick back as a kidnaping.”

  “Then what are you going to do?”

  I said, “First off, I’m going to ask you nicely to send her back, like I’m doing now. Let her go, ma’am. Tell her to pack her stuff and come with me. I’ll take good care of her, I promise. I’ll have her home by tomorrow night.”

  “And if I refuse?” Her voice was hard.

  I said, “I’m driving a black Volkswagen with Colorado plates. I’ve got a light green explorer tent—that’s the little A-shaped job, not the big umbrella type. Any time you want to talk to me again, either of you, I’ll be around. And when the blowup comes, I’ll pick up the pieces as best I can. But I’d rather not wait that long. You hear that, Penny? Any time you want to go home, don’t worry about clothes or money or anything, just come on over and we’ll be on the road in five minutes. Dave Clevenger. Don’t forget the name. Okay?”

  There was a little silence. I hoped I hadn’t been too persuasive. It would be awkward if they decided to send the kid home with me after all.

  Then Penny got up slowly. She had to turn sideways and squeeze a bit to get past me in the narrow space, but she made it, and threw her arms around her mother without saying a word. Genevieve Drilling hugged her tightly and looked at me.

  “You see, Mr. Clevenger?”

  “I see,” I said, heading for the door handle. “Well, you can’t win them all. I’ll be around.”

  8

  The Moosehead Lodge in Brandon made a valiant effort to look rustic and backwoodsy, but the phony log-cabin architecture and the stray antlers and skulls nailed up around the place didn’t succeed in camouflaging the basic motel modern. I drove past to look the situation over, parked a couple of blocks away, and walked back. There was no point in advertising my visit to Elaine.

  Unit number fourteen was easy to locate from a distance, by the big number on the door. It faced the swimming pool patio. A last year’s Ford was parked in front—the little dressed-up Falcon with the hot V-8 engine, I noticed with envy. I’d had quite a day of driving along the Trans-Canada Highway after my interview with Genevieve Drilling. For a pretty woman, she handled a pickup-and-house-trailer combo with surprising dash and precision, and I had a hunch she’d been watching her big, truck-type rearview mirrors carefully and maneuvering to make life just as miserable as she could for me, trailing along behind.

  The Canadian drivers along the road had done their best to help her. There hadn’t been one who’d let a Volkswagen pass him without a fight, particularly a Volkswagen with U.S. plates. I hadn’t met such an aggressive bunch of wheel-jockeys since the last time I drove in competition on a real track, and the bug was underpowered for playing high-speed traffic-tag. Hence my envious glance at the jazzy little Ford with the big mill up front.

  I strolled around the swimming pool in a leisurely manner. Partly it was an act for anyone who might be watching, but partly I guess I was stalling mildly, torn between my personal desire to see Elaine again and my professional knowledge that the minute I did see her I’d have to start lying to her. We were on opposite sides. My job was to get the documents through and hers was to stop them. At least she thought it was, and I was not allowed to tell her she was actually there just to make a tricky plant look plausible. There was also a little question of murder between us, but I wasn’t brooding heavily over that. Greg had been no great friend of mine. If his death didn’t bother Mac, it didn’t bother me. Nevertheless, it was another area of uncertainty and possible conflict.

  Nobody seemed to be watching me as I came abreast of Number 14. I was just about to commit myself by turning that way when I saw, out of the corner of my eye, a slight movement of the knob, as if someone inside had been about to open the door but had decided against it upon hearing my footsteps outside. Somewhere in my head the warning lights went up on the control board and the sirens began to scream, figuratively speaking. I reminded myself that I was an agent on a mission, not a schoolboy bringing his girl a bunch of posies.

  It could, of course, be Elaine herself preparing to fling open the door and greet me with loving arms, but if so why didn’t she do it? I moved on without pausing, to the soft-drink machine in the corner of the patio. It took me a while to find a Canadian dime and a little longer to extract the bottle and pry off the cap. The door to Number 14 remained closed.

  I walked back deliberately the way I had come, past Elaine’s door, taking an occasional swig of the stuff in the bottle, some local preparation that tasted like a certain cough syrup of my childhood, diluted with carbonated water. Around the next corner was the office, with a big picture window. I went
inside and found a magazine rack strategically located nearby. I stood there browsing and drinking my medicated-tasting drink, and presently a man came into view at the big window. He walked past, looking neither right nor left.

  He could have been any man from any unit in the motel, of course, except that he fit a description I’d recently memorized. He was about five eleven, about thirty-five, he had dark, wavy hair with a touch of gray at the temples, and he had regular, distinguished-looking features. He also had a neat, narrow, dark mustache that was not part of the description, but mustaches are easy to grow.

  When he had gone by, I looked up from the magazine I’d been pretending to examine and watched him walk out across the general parking lot that served the office and restaurant. If he looked around, he’d see me through the glass, but I knew that if he was Hans Ruyter he wouldn’t look around. He was a trained man—not one of their best, Mac had said, but competent—and he knew better than to give himself away by glancing over his shoulder in a furtive manner, particularly if he had something to be furtive about.

  He walked straight to a parked car. In keeping with his distinguished appearance it was a distinguished car: a big, tan Mercedes sedan, its dignity only slightly marred by the cute curly fins the German designers had stuck on it in belated imitation of the American practice of a few years back. I made a note of the license, a California number. Well, if you want to blend with the tourists on any highway on the continent, you get yourself a set of California plates. I don’t think anybody in that state ever stays home.

  I watched him drive away smoothly in his expensive imported car. I didn’t try to follow. My own car was two blocks away. Anyway, I didn’t think that as Dave Clevenger, private dick, I was supposed to ever recognize Mr. Ruyter, let alone tail him. And as Matt Helm, agent of the U.S. government, I was under strict orders not to interfere with him, quite the contrary. The fact that I was anxious to stay and find out what he’d been up to in Elaine’s room had, I hope, no influence on my decision, since it was more or less a private worry.

 

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