“I see. Without the Duke’s blessing, I’m out of business.”
“You are indeed. However, if your evidence is so persuasive that any man of good conscience could not stand in the way of reopening this investigation, I would say your ‘business’ might well flourish.”
I nodded. “Fair enough.”
Major Pemberton, who’d been a mute participant till now, spoke up. “You would have my full cooperation, as well.”
I grinned. “Glad to see Barker and Melchen didn’t sour you fellas on all American detectives.”
Both of them returned the smile; not exactly warmly, but this reception had been far more positive than I could ever have dreamed.
“I’ll take the weekend to work on the letter,” I said. “You’ll have it Monday.”
Hallinan rose and offered his hand, which I took and shook. “Thank you, Mr. Heller. Good day.”
That evening I dined with Godfrey Higgs and his wife, who had invited me to see Nassau’s fabled Jungle Club at the Fort Montague Hotel. With the ocean on one side, a lake on the other, and a fragrant tropical garden everywhere else, the deliberately rustic structure beckoned us inside its underlit interior, filled with ferns, palms, waitresses in skimpy sarongs, and green tables under thatched umbrellas, at one of which we feasted on plates of food we’d built ourselves from a buffet of (among other things) crab, lobster, fresh fruit, creamed vegetables, and pepper pots of mysterious, delectable contents.
“I’m delighted our Attorney General gave you such a warm reception,” Higgs said, between sipping spoonfuls of creamy soup. “If a bit shocked.”
“It does tell us one thing.”
“Which is?”
“Hallinan wasn’t in on the fix to frame Freddie.”
“Interesting observation, Nate. Who was?”
“Well, Barker and Melchen, for sure. The question is, whose bidding were they answering? The Duke of Windsor’s? Or Meyer Lansky’s?”
“The Duke called them in.”
“True. Which may mean I’m on a fool’s errand writing this letter.”
A steel band was beginning to play.
Higgs arched an eyebrow. “At least you’ll know where you stand.”
“At least I will.”
Higgs put down his spoon and gave me an earnest look. “Nate—with Freddie cleared, I’m no longer an official part of this case.”
“I realize that.”
“Nonetheless, I want you to know you can depend on me and on whatever resources I might provide.”
He smiled, and I returned the smile; and we spent the rest of the evening talking about the case not at all. Mostly I sampled the Jungle Club’s “famous” (the menu said so) rum-and-lime punch. I sampled quite a bit of it, actually.
Alone at Shangri La in my little guest cottage, I slept soundly and well, despite the impending storm moving the trees and sending ghostly wails of wind through the gardens, keeping those exotic birds unnerved.
The next morning, Saturday, I slept in, and it was ten-thirty before I went over to the main house and fixed myself some scrambled eggs and bacon; rationing and shortages didn’t seem to have any effect on Shangri La’s pantry and king-size Frigidaire, which could have kept a hotel dining room going. I sat alone at the table in the big, gleaming white modern kitchen and listened to the approaching storm rattle the windows.
I had that letter to write, and I’d even found a typewriter to write it on in an office of Di’s; but I was letting the back of my mind chew on it for right now. I was ready for a day off.
Daniel took me over to Nassau, where I thought about calling Marjorie, but didn’t. That situation, despite Freddie’s acquittal, would most likely remain unchanged: as Nancy had made clear, Lady Oakes still considered her son-in-law the murderer of her husband.
Besides, I was involved with somebody else now, wasn’t I? My other summer romance….
So I figured the best thing to do was get my mind off the Oakes case, and toward that goal, I took in a matinee at the Savoy. The movie playing was Above Suspicion and the pretty cashier I bought my ticket from was Betty Roberts.
I had a bite at Dirty Dick’s, and spoke with a few reporters left over from the trial, who were lingering on expense account till Monday; and when I got back out onto Bay Street, it was dark before it should be, thanks to the black, rolling clouds. A few tiny raindrops kissed my cheek. The wind was cold and a chore to walk against; with one hand I pulled the collar of my now too-light linen suitcoat around my neck and with the other held my straw fedora on.
The sky finally exploded as Daniel was taking me back to Hog Island; out in the small exposed motor launch, sheets of rain pummeling the sea, artillery-fire thunder splitting the sky and jagged white lightning revealing the cracks in it, I hung on to the sides of the rocking boat, shivering with cold and maybe fear, and getting soaked to the bone.
In my cozy cottage, I got out of the sopped clothes and took a hot shower and toweled off and climbed into bed, naked. I pulled the extra blanket up over me, as the cold was finding its way in, and the double glass doors facing the trees, and the windows of the little cottage, were shimmying like Little Sheba. Outside the palms bent and fronds fluttered, and hysterical birds screeched as they sought cover that wasn’t there. The machine-gun fire of the rain on the roof, and on the windows and one side of the structure, kept pace with the howl of the hurricane-like wind.
Somehow I got to sleep, but it wasn’t sleep, it was a sort of hell, it was a tropical hellhole where land crabs skittered and Japs with bayonets stalked while my buddies and me hid in a trench, hoping they’d just walk by, but they didn’t, they saw us, and they charged and my buddies got shot to shit and skewered by the bayonet blades but I was still alive and firing as torrents of rain fell, only it wasn’t rain, it was blood, I was covered in blood.…
I sat up in bed, gasping. A mortar shell exploded, and I hit the deck.
But it wasn’t a mortar shell, it was thunder, and I was bare-ass on the floor, feeling foolish, sweating like Christie in the witness box.
I crawled back into bed. The sheets were soaking; my perspiration had done as good a job as if I’d been sleeping out in the storm, which continued unabated, shaking the windows, the dark shapes of palms bending impossibly beyond the double glass doors.
Leaving behind a twisted mass of damp sheets and blankets, I moved to the couch, and lay there on my back, naked, panting, as winded as if I’d run a mile, and stared at the blackness above me. Now and then lightning would strobe the room, and the pebbled plaster ceiling would be there, above me, protecting me, reminding me I wasn’t in some tropical jungle, even though I was.
Using breathing exercises they’d taught me back at the psych ward at St. Elizabeth’s, I managed to settle myself down; I was almost asleep when I heard a key working the lock at the side door.
For a moment I thought it was Di, back early from her trip.
But then lightning lit up the room, and there they were, stepping inside: two men, standing in their own puddles, their dark suits soaked, big men—one taller than the other, but both wide, massive specimens.
The first one wore a toupee which was plastered to him like a dark, many-fingered hand gripping his head; his glowering, battered, boxer’s face, with small, glittering wide-set eyes, flat nose, hairline mustache, was like a parody of those Inca masks.
The shorter one was no less massive and his eyes were slits in a round, slash-scarred face.
Both had big guns in their big fists—automatics, possibly .45s—the kind of gun that makes a small hole going in and on the way out leaves a picture window to your insides.
They were the men I’d seen with Lansky at the Biltmore.
They were, I had no doubt, the men the late Arthur had seen at Lyford Cay on another wind-swept, rain-lashed night.
All of this I gathered in the particle of a second that the lightning gave me before the room settled back into pitch black.
They were moving toward my bed, to their left as they ca
me in; the tangle of sheets and blankets may have looked like a person, in the nonlight—and they hadn’t seen me stretched out on the couch, when they entered in that flash of lightning, looking instead toward the bed where even now they were firing their automatics, the thunder of the guns, the orange fiery muzzle flashes, drowning out the storm as they killed the mattress, sheets and blankets, making scorched smoky holes.
My nine-millimeter, goddamnit, was in my suitcase, over by the bed, over near them; I lifted a lamp off an end table and pitched it at them. The heavy base caught the short one in the forehead, and he yelped and tumbled back into his partner, who saw me charging and fired at me, but was too tangled up with his pal to aim and managed only to shatter a window.
Then I was on them, pushing them to the wall, the groggy round-faced short one waking up as I clutched his balls in one hand and squeezed and yanked and as he cried in agony, screeching like a parrot, his partner behind him did an awkward dance, trying to get around him to me, where he could shoot me or club me or anything, but I had snatched the short one’s .45 from limp fingers and fired it past the screaming smaller man, aiming for the tall one’s face but missing, in the commotion, and succeeding only in shooting off his left ear, which flew off his head and landed in a sodden scarlet lump against the wall, splattering, sticking there like a big squashed bug.
Now they both were hollering, but the one whose nuts I’d squeezed had recovered enough to elbow me in the midsection, and I tumbled back onto the bed, rolled off the other side, onto the floor, but retaining the .45 even as another .45 from a howling one-eared asshole was chewing holes in the wall just over my head behind me.
I leapt up to return fire, but after one round the goddamn thing was empty, and I threw it and caught somebody somewhere, because I heard a scream as I hit the deck again, with more slugs zinging overhead.
The darkness allowed me to crawl on the wood floor toward the couch, which could provide cover till I got to those double glass doors, where I could get the fuck away from these guys. Without a gun, there was only so much damage I could do.
But when the next stroke of lightning lit the room, I found myself exposed, crouched like a dog on the floor, bare ass in the air, with one of them at my right—the tall one, whose little eyes were big as he pointed the .45 with one hand and held on to the bloody place where his left ear used to be with the other—and standing right in front of those glass doors that were my escape route was the shorter one, the slits of his eyes widened into something savage and furious now, his hands held out like claws. He looked like a sumo wrestler in a wet business suit….
I dove into him. He was the unarmed one, after all, and I’m not sure whether we shattered the glass of the doors, or whether the one-eared man behind us did with his barrage of gunfire, but shatter it did as we flew through the disintegrating glass into the rain, and I was nicked by some shards, but the fat human cushion below me was really cut to shit, a bloody punctured unconscious thing, probably dead. I scrambled off him, the rain splattering my bare flesh like hard wet bullets, the cold a shock even under these circumstances, and scurried into the trees.
“You fucker!” the one-eared man screamed, standing over his fallen partner, and he fired the .45 into the darkness where he’d seen me go.
Only I was behind the biggest tree I could find, a tree too big to sway in the still-punishing wind, and when the lightning gave the night a silvery instant of day, I saw my weapon.
Despite the storm, I heard him snap the new clip into the automatic. And I heard his feet crunching on the twigs and leaves and splashing puddles, and when he came lumbering by with his rain-plastered toupee and his red used-to-be ear, I stepped out and hit him in the forehead with the coconut so hard I heard a crack; whether it was his head or the coconut, I couldn’t be sure. But I had more sympathy for the latter as I stood there, pelted by rain, palms bending around me, naked as Tarzan before Jane sewed him a loincloth, grinning down crazily at an unconscious man with one ear and a wet off-center toupee.
I took the .45 out of his loose fingers and maybe I wouldn’t have done it if he hadn’t somehow reached out and grabbed my leg, but I emptied the thing into his face, three bullets that turned his battered pug’s puss into a mask more grotesque than even the Incas ever imagined.
I stumbled away from him and fell to my knees, in the muck, gasping. I must have looked like some crazy native making a sacrifice to the gods. Winded, hurting, I hung my head, let the .45 fall to the wet ground, listened to the sky rumble, let the water purify me, or try to.
He didn’t say anything.
He was laughing; or maybe he was crying.
But when I looked up, the short one, his face cut and soiled and red-streaked, his suit soaked with as much blood as rain, a big goddamn shard of glass sticking out of one leg like a lightning bolt that got stuck there, was standing over me with the other .45 in one hand.
Somehow I knew it was loaded, now.
“Are you praying, you bastard?” he shouted over the rain. “You should be.”
He raised the .45 and I was looking into the black eye of its barrel about to dive to one side when the gunshot stopped me.
But it stopped him worse.
The shot hadn’t been from a .45—from a much smaller weapon, I would say—and the short wide lightning-scarred thug staggered before me like a tree about to fall. In his forehead, not quite exactly between his eyes, was a quarter-size black hole; a comma of red welled out and was washed away by the rain and now I dove to one side as he fell, heavily, throwing water from the sodden ground every which way.
Behind him, in the jagged doorway we’d made through the glass doors, was a tall, slender figure. From where I knelt I couldn’t make out his features, but he wore a black turtleneck shirt and black pants, like a commando.
Then the lightning showed me the harshly handsome angles of his face.
“For God’s sake, man,” Fleming said, “come in out of the rain.”
He came to me, skirting the corpse he’d made, helped me up, and took me around to the side door, to avoid the broken glass. Once we were inside—though the storm was coming in after us, through the broken doors and a bullet-shattered window—he wrapped me in a blanket and said, “Would you excuse me?”
I didn’t say anything. I wasn’t quite ready to say anything.
He went into the bathroom and closed the door and I heard the sound of violent retching.
When he came back, touching his lips with a tissue, he seemed chagrined. “Sorry.”
“Didn’t you ever kill anybody before?”
“Actually,” he said, sitting next to me, “no.”
I told him he’d picked a good place to start.
“I had a report that those two arrived by clipper this afternoon,” Fleming said. “I’ve been looking for them. I thought they might be coming to call on you, so I dropped by. Hope you don’t mind.”
“Next time,” I said numbly, “do try to ring first.”
He withdrew his beat-up gold cigarette case and lighted himself up.
“Give me one of those,” I said.
He did.
We sat and smoked quietly and as we did, the storm began to abate. I asked him if he’d seen the boat they’d used; I figured there might be a third man, piloting the craft. Fleming said no. Was Daniel still in his shack near the dock? Yes. Within fifteen minutes, the rain was pattering, not pelting, and the wind was a whisper, not a howl.
“The worst is over,” he said.
“Is it?” I asked. “Tell me, Naval Intelligence—what suddenly turned me into a loose end those assholes had to tie up?”
Fleming was lighting a new smoke. “Why don’t you ask Meyer Lansky and Harold Christie?”
“What do you mean?”
He smiled as he waved his match out. “They’re in a suite at the British Colonial, right now—talking business. I can give you the room number, if you like….”
I was dressed and out of there within fifteen minutes—
and I had my own weapon now, the nine-millimeter Browning. With an extra clip.
“Is the main house open?” Fleming asked. “I need to use the phone.”
I gave him the keys. “You’re not coming?”
“No. I’ll just stay behind and…tidy up. Happy hunting, Mr. Heller.”
Somehow I knew what Fleming meant by “tidying up”: those two bodies would soon be gone, as if they’d never been here.
But that wasn’t my concern.
I had tidying up of my own to do.
The world was a pale ghostly green as I padded across the tar roof, feet splashing big pools into little ones. After the storm, the wind had turned lazy and gentle and cool. Getting up here had been no problem—stairs led to the flat roof of the central tower of the British Colonial Hotel—but now things would get tricky.
Meyer Lansky had the sixth-floor suite, the penthouse, in the six-story tower that was the axis of the hotel structure. Right now I was directly above that suite, leaning up against a terra-cotta facade which extended up another half-story and faced the ocean; on the other side was a massive plaque of Columbus, which jutted up higher than the rest of the facade, and atop it like a huge coachman’s lamp was an electric lantern that must have been a good five hundred watts. This was the source of the pale green mock moonlight.
By standing on tiptoe, I could peer over the wall of the facade to the balcony a story below. Meyer Lansky’s balcony. About a fifteen-foot drop, if I wanted to climb over at the point just before the abrupt jut of the Columbus plaque. If I didn’t break a leg or two, trying that drop, and instead missed the balcony altogether, five stories below the cement patio of Davy Jones’ Locker café was patiently waiting.
For a Saturday night, things were quiet—despite my already active evening, it was not yet eleven p.m., but the storm had hit early enough to keep people home or in their hotel rooms. Below, a few couples stood looking out at the restless sea and wind-brushed palms, doing their best not to step or stand in puddles, dodging the occasional fallen branch.
About six feet down was a decorative overhang above the balcony; it was probably just under a foot wide. I reached in my pocket for one of half a dozen cigarettes I’d bummed off the British agent. Lighted one up with a match from the British Colonial matchbook I’d picked up when I was checking the lobby for Lansky muscle. I hadn’t seen anybody who seemed to qualify, but when I went up to the sixth floor, there was a pockmarked burly sentry in the hall by the door to the suite; he wore a two-tone blue suit and sat in a folding chair too small for him, reading Ring magazine. I had walked on by him and taken these stairs to the roof.
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