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"Maybe." Spade got into the sedan. "We'll ride up to number thirty-one. You can use your lights."
Number 31 was a square grey house across the street from, but a little farther up than, 26. Lights glowed in its downstairs-windows. Spade went up on the porch and rang the bell. A dark-haired girl of fourteen or fifteen opened the door. Spade, bowing and smiling, said: "I'd like to get the key to number twenty-six."
"I'll call Papa," she said and went back into the house calling: "Papa!"
A plump red-faced man, bald-headed and heavily mustached, appeared, carrying a newspaper.
Spade said: "I'd like to get the key to twenty-six."
The plump man looked doubtful. He said: "The juice is not on. You couldn't see anything."
Spade patted his pocket. "I've a flashlight."
The plump man looked more doubtful. He cleared his throat uneasily and crumpled the newspaper in his hand.
Spade showed him one of his business-cards, put it back in his pocket, and said in a low voice: "We got a tip that there might be something hidden there."
The plump man's face and voice were eager. "Wait a minute," he said. "I'll go over with you."
A moment later he came back carrying a bra.s.s key attached to a black and red tag. Spade beckoned to the chauffeur as they pa.s.sed the car and the chauffeur joined them.
"Anybody been looking at the house lately?" Spade asked.
"Not that I know of," the plump man replied. "n.o.body's been to me for the key in a couple of months."
The plump man marched ahead with the key until they had gone up on the porch. Then he thrust the key into Spade's hand, mumbled, "Here you are," and stepped aside.
Spade unlocked the door and pushed it open. There was silence and darkness. Holding the flashlight-dark-in his left hand, Spade entered. The chauffeur came close behind him and then, at a little distance, the plump man followed them. They searched the house from bottom to top, cautiously at first, then, finding nothing, boldly. The house was empty-unmistakably-and there was nothing to indicate that it had been visited in weeks.
Saying, "Thanks, that's all," Spade left the sedan in front of the Alexandria. He went into the hotel, to the desk, where a tall young man with a dark grave face said: "Good evening, Mr. Spade."
"Good evening." Spade drew the young man to one end of the desk. "These Gutmans-up in twelve C-are they in?"
The young man replied, "No," darting a quick glance at Spade. Then he looked away, hesitated, looked at Spade again, and murmured: "A funny thing happened in connection with them this evening, Mr. Spade. Somebody called the Emergency Hospital and told them there was a sick girl up there."
"And there wasn't?"
"Oh, no, there was n.o.body up there. They went out earlier in the evening."
Spade said: "Well, these practical-jokers have to have their fun. Thanks."
He went to a telephone-booth, called a number, and said: "h.e.l.lo.... Mrs. Perine? ... Is Effie there? ... Yes, please.... Thanks.
"h.e.l.lo, angel! What's the good word? ... Fine, fine! Hold it. I'll be out in twenty minutes.... Right."
Half an hour later Spade rang the doorbell of a two-story brick building in Ninth Avenue. Effie Perine opened the door. Her boyish face was tired and smiling. "h.e.l.lo, boss," she said. "Enter." She said in a low voice: "If Ma says anything to you, Sam, be nice to her. She's all up in the air."
Spade grinned rea.s.suringly and patted her shoulder.
She put her hands on his arm. "Miss O'Shaughnessy?"
"No," he growled. "I ran into a plant. Are you sure it was her voice?"
"Yes."
He made an unpleasant face. "Well, it was hooey."
She took him into a bright living-room, sighed, and slumped down on one end of a Chesterfield, smiling cheerfully up at him through her weariness.
He sat beside her and asked: "Everything went O K? Nothing said about the bundle?"
"Nothing. I told them what you told me to tell them, and they seemed to take it for granted that the phone call had something to do with it, and that you were out running it down."
"Dundy there?"
"No. Hoff and O'Gar and some others I didn't know. I talked to the Captain too."
"They took you down to the Hall?"
"Oh, yes, and they asked me loads of questions, but it was all-you know-routine."
Spade rubbed his palms together. "Swell," he said and then frowned, "though I guess they'll think up plenty to put to me when we meet. That d.a.m.ned Dundy will, anyway, and Bryan." He moved his shoulders. "Anybody you know, outside of the police, come around?"
"Yes." She sat up straight. "That boy-the one who brought the message from Gutman-was there. He didn't come in, but the police left the corridor-door open while they were there and I saw him standing there."
"You didn't say anything?"
"Oh, no. You had said not to. So I didn't pay any attention to him and the next time I looked he was gone."
Spade grinned at her. "d.a.m.ned lucky for you, sister, that the coppers got there first."
"Why?"
"He's a bad egg, that lad-poison. Was the dead man Jacobi?"
"Yes."
He pressed her hands and stood up. "I'm going to run along. You'd better hit the hay. You're all in."
She rose. "Sam, what is-?"
He stopped her words with his hand on her mouth. "Save it till Monday," he said. "I want to sneak out before your mother catches me and gives me h.e.l.l for dragging her lamb through gutters."
Midnight was a few minutes away when Spade reached his home. He put his key into the street-door's lock. Heels clicked rapidly on the sidewalk behind him. He let go the key and wheeled. Brigid O'Shaughnessy ran up the steps to him. She put her arms around him and hung on him, panting: "Oh, I thought you'd never come!" Her face was haggard, distraught, shaken by the tremors that shook her from head to foot.
With the hand not supporting her he felt for the key again, opened the door, and half lifted her inside. "You've been waiting?" he asked.
"Yes." Panting s.p.a.ced her words. "In a-doorway-up the-street."
"Can you make it all right?" he asked. "Or shall I carry you?"
She shook her head against his shoulder. "I'll be-all right-when I-get where-I can-sit down."
They rode up to Spade's floor in the elevator and went around to his apartment. She left his arm and stood stood beside him-panting, both hands to her breast-while he unlocked his door. He switched on the pa.s.sageway light. They went in. He shut the door and, with his arm around her again, took her back towards the living-room. When they were within a step of the living-room-door the light in the living-room went on. beside him-panting, both hands to her breast-while he unlocked his door. He switched on the pa.s.sageway light. They went in. He shut the door and, with his arm around her again, took her back towards the living-room. When they were within a step of the living-room-door the light in the living-room went on.
The girl cried out and clung to Spade.
Just inside the living-room-door fat Gutman stood smiling benevolently at them. The boy Wilmer came out of the kitchen behind them. Black pistols were gigantic in his small hands. Cairo came from the bathroom. He too had a pistol.
Gutman said: "Well, sir, we're all here, as you can see for yourself. Now let's come in and sit down and be comfortable and talk."
18.
THE FALL - GUY.
Spade, with his arms around Brigid O'Shaughnessy, smiled meagerly over her head and said: "Sure, we'll talk."
Gutman's bulbs jounced as he took three waddling backward steps away from the door.
Spade and the girl went in together. The boy and Cairo followed them in. Cairo stopped in the doorway. The boy put away one of his pistols and came up close behind Spade.
Spade turned his head far around to look down over his shoulder at the boy and said: "Get away. You're not going to frisk me."
The boy said: "Stand still. Shut up."
Spade's nostrils went in and out with his breathing. His voice was level. "Get away. Put your paw on me and I'm going to make you use the gun. Ask your boss if he wants me shot up before we talk."
"Never mind, Wilmer," the fat man said. He frowned indulgently at Spade. "You are certainly a most headstrong individual. Well, let's be seated."
Spade said, "I told you I didn't like that punk," and took Brigid O'Shaughnessy to the sofa by the windows. They sat close together, her head against his left shoulder, his left arm around her shoulders. She had stopped trembling, had stopped panting. The appearance of Gutman and his companions seemed to have robbed her of that freedom of personal movement and emotion that is animal, leaving her alive, conscious, but quiescent as a plant.
Gutman lowered himself into the padded rocking chair. Cairo chose the armchair by the table. The boy Wilmer did not sit down. He stood in the doorway where Cairo had stood, letting his one visible pistol hang down at his side, looking under curling lashes at Spade's body. Cairo put his pistol on the table beside him.
Spade took off his hat and tossed it to the other end of the sofa. He grinned at Gutman. The looseness of his lower lip and the droop of his upper eyelids combined with the v's in his face to make his grin lewd as a satyr's. "That daughter of yours has a nice belly," he said, "too nice to be scratched up with pins."
Gutman's smile was affable if a bit oily.
The boy in the doorway took a short step forward, raising his pistol as far as his hip. Everybody in the room looked at him. In the dissimilar eyes with which Brigid O'Shaughnessy and Joel Cairo looked at him there was, oddly, something identically reproving. The boy blushed, drew back his advanced foot, straightened his legs, lowered the pistol and stood as he had stood before, looking under lashes that hid his eyes at Spade's chest. The blush was pale enough and lasted for only an instant, but it was startling on his face that habitually was so cold and composed.
Gutman turned his sleek-eyed fat smile on Spade again. His voice was a suave purring. "Yes, sir, that was a shame, but you must admit that it served its purpose."
Spade's brows twitched together. "Anything would've," he said. "Naturally I wanted to see you as soon as I had the falcon. Cash customers-why not? I went to Burlingame expecting to run into this sort of a meeting. I didn't know you were blundering around, half an hour late, trying to get me out of the way so you could find Jacobi again before he found me."
Gutman chuckled. His chuckle seemed to hold nothing but satisfaction. "Well, sir," he said, "in any case, here we are having our little meeting, if that's what you wanted."
"That's what I wanted. How soon are you ready to make the first payment and take the falcon off my hands?"
Brigid O'Shaughnessy sat up straight and looked at Spade with surprised blue eyes. He patted her shoulder inattentively. His eyes were steady on Gutman's. Gutman's twinkled merrily between sheltering fat-puffs. He said: "Well, sir, as to that," and put a hand inside the breast of his coat.
Cairo, hands on thighs, leaned forward in his chair, breathing between parted soft lips. His dark eyes had the surface-shine of lacquer. They shifted their focus warily from Spade's face to Gutman's, from Gutman's to Spade's.
Gutman repeated, "Well, sir, as to that," and took a white envelope from his pocket. Ten eyes-the boy's now only half obscured by his lashes-looked at the envelope. Turning the envelope over in his swollen hands, Gutman studied for a moment its blank white front and then its back, unsealed, with the flap tucked in. He raised his head, smiled amiably, and scaled the envelope at Spade's lap.
The envelope, though not bulky, was heavy enough to fly true. It struck the lower part of Spade's chest and dropped down on his thighs. He picked it up deliberately and opened it deliberately, using both hands, having taken his left arm from around the girl. The contents of the envelope were thousand-dollar bills, smooth and stiff and new. Spade took them out and counted them. There were ten of them. Spade looked up smiling. He said mildly: "We were talking about more money than this."
"Yes, sir, we were," Gutman agreed, "but we were talking then. This is actual money, genuine coin of the realm, sir. With a dollar of this you can buy more than with ten dollars of talk." Silent laughter shook his bulbs. When their commotion stopped he said more seriously, yet not altogether seriously: "There are more of us to be taken care of now." He moved his twinkling eyes and his fat head to indicate Cairo. "And-well, sir, in short-the situation has changed."
While Gutman talked Spade had tapped the edges of the ten bills into alignment and returned them to their envelope, tucking the flap in over them. Now, with forearms on knees, he sat hunched forward, dangling the envelope from a corner held lightly by finger and thumb down between his legs. His reply to the fat man was careless: "Sure. You're together now, but I've got the falcon."
Joel Cairo spoke. Ugly hands grasping the arms of his chair, he leaned forward and said primly in his high-pitched thin voice: "I shouldn't think it would be necessary to remind you, Mr. Spade, that though you may have the falcon yet we certainly have you."
Spade grinned. "I'm trying to not let that worry me," he said. He sat up straight, put the envelope aside-on the sofa-and addressed Gutman: "We'll come back to the money later. There's another thing that's got to be taken care of first. We've got to have a fall-guy."
The fat man frowned without comprehension, but before he could speak Spade was explaining: "The police have got to have a victim-somebody they can stick for those three murders. We-"
Cairo, speaking in a brittle excited voice, interrupted Spade. "Two-only two-murders, Mr. Spade. Thursby undoubtedly killed your partner."
"All right, two," Spade growled. "What difference does that make? The point is we've got to feed the police some-"
Now Gutman broke in, smiling confidently, talking with good-natured a.s.surance: "Well, sir, from what we've seen and heard of you I don't think we'll have to bother ourselves about that. We can leave the handling of the police to you, all right. You won't need any of our inexpert help."
"If that's what you think," Spade said, "you haven't seen or heard enough."
"Now come, Mr. Spade. You can't expect us to believe at this late date that you are the least bit afraid of the police, or that you are not quite able to handle-"
Spade snorted with throat and nose. He bent forward, resting forearms on knees again, and interrupted Gutman irritably: "I'm not a d.a.m.ned bit afraid of them and I know how to handle them. That's what I'm trying to tell you. The way to handle them is to toss them a victim, somebody they can hang the works on."
"Well, sir, I grant you that's one way of doing it, but-"
"'But' h.e.l.l!" Spade said. "It's the only way." His eyes were hot and earnest under a reddening forehead. The bruise on his temple was liver-colored. "I know what I'm talking about. I've been through it all before and expect to go through it again. At one time or another I've had to tell everybody from the Supreme Court down to go to h.e.l.l, and I've got away with it. I got away with it because I never let myself forget that a day of reckoning was coming. I never forget that when the day of reckoning comes I want to be all set to march into headquarters pushing a victim in front of me, saying: 'Here, you chumps, is your criminal!' As long as I can do that I can put my thumb to my nose and wriggle my fingers at all the laws in the book. The first time I can't do it my name's Mud. There hasn't been a first time yet. This isn't going to be it. That's flat."
Gutman's eyes flickered and their sleekness became dubious, but he held his other features in their bulbous pink smiling complacent cast and there was nothing of uneasiness in his voice. He said: "That's a system that's got a lot to recommend it, sir-by Gad, it has! And if it was anyway practical this time I'd be the first to say: 'Stick to it by all means, sir.' But this just happens to be a case where it's not possible. That's the way it is with the best of systems. There comes a time when you've got to make exceptions, and a wise man just goes ahead and makes them. Well, sir, that's just the way it is in this case and I don't mind telling you that I think you're being very well paid for making an exception. Now maybe it will be a little more trouble to you than if you had your victim to hand over to the police, but"-he laughed and spread his hands-"you're not the man that's afraid of a little bit of trouble. You know how to do things and you know you'll land on your feet in the end, no matter what happens." He pursed his lips and partly closed one eye. "You'll manage that, sir."
Spade's eyes had lost their warmth. His face was dull and lumpy. "I know what I'm talking about," he said in a low, consciously patient, tone. "This is my city and my game. I could manage to land on my feet-sure-this time, but the next time I tried to put over a fast one they'd stop me so fast I'd swallow my teeth. h.e.l.l with that. You birds'll be in New York or Constantinople or some place else. I'm in business here."
"But surely," Gutman began, "you can-"
"I can't," Spade said earnestly. "I won't. I mean it." He sat up straight. A pleasant smile illuminated his face, erasing its dull lumpishness. He spoke rapidly in an agreeable, persuasive tone: "Listen to me, Gutman. I'm telling you what's best for all of us. If we don't give the police a fall-guy it's ten to one they'll sooner or later stumble on information about the falcon. Then you'll have to duck for cover with it-no matter where you are-and that's not going to help you make a fortune off it. Give them a fall-guy and they'll stop right there."