BLACK ALLEY
Mickey Spillane
The phone rang. It was a thing that had been sitting there, black
and quiet like a holstered gun, unlisted, unknown to anybody, used only for
local outgoing calls, and when it was triggered it had the soft, muted sound of
a silenced automatic. I picked up the receiver off the cradle and in as
growling a voice as I could put on, said, "Yes?"
When I heard his first word I felt a chill work its way across my
shoulders. He said; "Hi, Mike." His tone was as pleasant as could be.
I took another deep, easy breath. "Hi, Pat."
He paused a moment. "Somebody shot Marcos Dooley."
Softly, I muttered, "Damn."
Pat Chambers knew what I was thinking and let me take my time. Old
buddy Marcos Dooley had brought Pat and me into the intelligent end of the
military before the war ended and steered us to where we were today. Only Pat
could still wear the uniform, an NYPD blue. I carried a New York State P.I.
ticket and a permit to keep a concealed weapon on my person. Marcos Dooley had
become a wild-ass bum, and now he was dead.
"What happened, Pat?"
"Somebody broke in and shot him in the guts."
"You know who?"
"Not yet. We may have a suspect."
"Anyone I know?"
"You shot his brother. Ugo Ponti."
I said something unintelligible. "How is he?"
"Dying. He wants to see you."
"I'll be there."
# # #
Pat had made the way easy for me. A plainclothesman I recognized
met me at Bellevue Hospital and took me in.
I turned the knob, went in and closed the door behind me.
The place was a death room. It hung heavy in the air. Light came
from the instrument panel behind the bed, the glow a pale orange yellow. You
could smell death.
When my eyes adjusted I saw the mound under the sheet. Quietly, I
walked over and stood beside the bed, looking down on something with a hole in
it that let life leak out. His breathing was shallow but even, the pain of the
wound buried under the weight of narcotics.
While I was trying to figure out a way to wake him he seemed to sense
he was not alone, and with an effort his eyes opened, strayed vacantly, then
centered on me. "You made it, huh?"
"Sure, for you, Dooley. Why didn't you ask for Pat?"
"He's not a snake like you are."
"Come on –" I started to say, but he cut me off with a
shake of his head.
"Mike . . . you're a mean slob. You're . . . nasty. You do
the damnedest things. Pat's not like you."
"He's a cop, Marcos."
"Uh-huh." He coughed lightly and his face twitched with
pain. My eyes were almost fully adjusted to the gloom and I could see him
clearly. The years hadn't been good to him at all and the final indignity of
getting shot had drained him.
There was a clock ticking behind his eyes. I knew it and he knew
it. Each tick took him closer to the end. He strained to see me again, finally
found my eyes. "Mike . . . remember Don Angelo?"
I thought he was drifting back along memory lane. Don Angelo had
been dead for 20 years. At the age of 90-something he had died in peace in his
Brooklyn apartment, surrounded by his real family. His other family was a
hundredfold larger, spread out over the East Coast domain the don called his
own.
"Sure, Dooley. What about him?" His expression looked
strained and there was shame in his eyes. There was a long pause before he
said, "I worked for him, Mike."
It was hard to believe.
"Dooley," I asked him, "what kind of work would you
do for the Mob? You were no gunhand. You never messed around in illegal
business."
He held his hand up, and I stopped talking. "It was . . . a
different . . . kind of business." My silent nod asked him a question and
he answered it. "Do you know . . . what the yearly take . . . of the . .
." he groped for the words and said, "associated mobs . . . adds up
to?"
"It's a pile of loot," I said.
"Mike," he said very solemnly, "you haven't got the
slightest idea."
"What are you getting at, Dooley?" His chest rose under
the sheet while he took several deep breaths, his eyes closing until whatever
spasm it was had calmed down. When he looked up his mouth worked a bit.
"Mike, remember when the young guys tried to take over . . .
the family business?"
"But they didn't make it, Dooley."
"No . . . not then." He sucked in another big lungful of
air. "But it made the dons think."
"What are you getting to, Dooley?" Once again, he gave
out a grunt, this time of satisfaction. "They . . . were all getting
screwed . . . by their kids. The ones they put through college. The ones they .
. . tapped to run the business . . . when they handed it over."
"The dons weren't that dumb," I interrupted.
"Computers," Dooley said.
"Computers!"
"They learned . . . how to use them . . . in college. They
didn't want to wait. They wanted it now . . . and were getting it. Now shut up
and don't talk until I'm finished."
"I don't like it when somebody tells me to shut up," I
said with mock indignation. Then added, "But now I'm shut up."
"OK. Stay that way . . . and listen. All the old dons . . .
never exploited their wealth. They might spend it, but they never looked like
they had a dime. Lousy apartments, their wives did the cleaning and cooking.
The kids . . . the bad ones . . . didn't know where the dons kept it." He
was starting to breathe with an unnatural rhythm and I didn't like it, but
there was no way to stop him now. "That was when . . . they got hold of
me."
A little red light flashed on the panel behind his head. It stayed
on about two seconds, then went off. Nobody came in, so I ignored it.
He said, "Nobody really knows . . . how they did it. Cash and
valuables got moved by truck with different crews so that no one knew where it
came from or where it was going. Except the last crew."
"What happened to them?"
"Like the old pirate days. Their skeletons are still there.
When their job . . . was done . . . so were they." He rolled his eyes up to
mine again. "Now stay shut up . . . OK?"
I gave him the nod again.
"All their heavy money . . . was in paper. They cashed in
everything they had and turned it into dollars. They pulled out all their
numbered accounts in Switzerland, the Bahamas, the Caymans. The cash flow was
still coming in from gambling and drugs and all that . . . crap, you
know?" I nodded again. "That's what fooled . . . the young bucks. The
walking . . . walking-around money was there, but the capital had disappeared."
"When did they find out?"
"Maybe a year ago. The computers came up with it. At first
they . . . they thought it was . . . like a mistake. When the machines said no
way, then they . . . thought they were being ripped off. All those hotshots
went nuts."
He made sense. There had been unrest in the upper echelons of the
underworld fraternity a couple of years back.
Dooley said, "The dons were getting old by then. When they
died off . . . it all . . . seemed natural. You know, strokes and heart
attacks, falls down stairs."
"I remember that. There was a regular parade of those gaudy
funerals."
I looked straight down at Dooley, and he read my thoughts
perfectly.
"I was . . . working for Lorenzo Ponti, Mike. Ponti . . . was
in charge. He moved faster than the kids . . . he kept ahead of everybody, that
guy."
"Did he move right in when the others died?" I asked
him.
"Hell, Mike, they didn't . . . just die. They were killed.
All of them. Except Ponti. And when he goes there won't be any more dons . . .
just the young phonies howling mad because their inheritance has disappeared.
Poof! Just . . . like that." He tried to snap his fingers but didn't have
the strength.
"Dooley, doesn't Lorenzo Ponti know where this hoard
is?"
"He thinks he does."
"But somebody faked him out?"
"Me," Dooley told me. "I faked . . . him out. I
changed the road signs . . . covered up paths . . . and I disguised
everything."
Suddenly sheer, raw pain flashed across his face and his back
arched under the covers. He was beginning to look down his own black alley now,
and it was too fearful to believe.
"How much time, Mike?"
I said, "Any minute, kiddo. You're close. They probably think
it's better if you just drift off alone. It won't hurt."
His smile was brief and there was a small glow of relief on his
face. "Listen to me," he said. "What would you do . . . if you
had . . . $89 billion?"
"Buy a new car," I told him.
"I said . . . $89 billion, Mike." Facetious words that
started to come out stopped at my lips. His eyes were clear now and hard into
mine.
Softly, I said, "Only a government has that kind of money,
Dooley."
"That's right," he agreed. "It's a government all
right. It's got citizens and taxes and soldiers and more money than anyone . .
. can imagine."
When I scowled at him he knew I had gotten the message. He didn't
want me to speak because he had more to say and no time to say it. "They
left $89 billion, Mike. Billion, you know? I know where it is. They
don't." Before I could speak I saw the spark begin to go out.
His voice was suddenly soft. It had the muted quality of great
importance and I leaned forward to hear him better. He said, "You can . .
. find out . . . where it is." His eyes never closed. They just quietly
got dead.
# # #
I pushed open the office door and there was Velda behind her desk,
chin propped in her hands, watching me. I said, "Am I supposed to say good
afternoon or kiss you?"
She gave me an insolent moue and pointed at my private quarters.
"The arresting officer is in there."
I went over and kissed the top of her head before I went in. Pat
Chambers was comfortably folded into my nice, big office chair, his feet up on
a half-opened desk drawer, drinking one of my cold Miller Lite beers like he
owned the place.
"It's for the clients," I told him.
"Oh. You going to tell me how you did with Dooley?"
I pulled a chair away from the wall and sat down. "He died
practically in my arms, Pat. Didn't he have anybody else?"
"You know Dooley. He was a loner. I wondered why he didn't
call for me."
I let a few seconds pass, then said, "You really want to
know?"
He set down the beer on my blotter and squinted at me. "Sure
I do!" he said. "Hell, after all we went through together you'd think
–"
"Dooley thought you were too soft."
"For what?"
"To do what has to be done," I said. I sat there and
studied my friend. Pat Chambers, a captain in the homicide division. Smart,
streetwise, college educated, superbly trained in the nuances of detection.
Tough, but not killing tough. His conscience was still finely honed, and that's
what Dooley had meant. There was no way I could tell him what Dooley had told
me.
Pat picked up the beer can and emptied it in two swallows. There
was nothing else in the wastebasket under the desk, so the can made a clanking
sound when it hit bottom. "He wants you to nail the guy who shot
him," he said flatly.
"Something like that," I replied.
"There's a lot of street talk over who wiped out Azi Ponti,
Mike."
"I shot the punk. I took him out with one fat cap-and-ball .45."
"That's what I figured," Pat told me, "but if I
were you, I'd keep it to myself."
"By the way," I said, "how big a bundle would a
million bucks in hundreds make?"
He looked at me like I was kidding, but my eyes said I wasn't.
"A big carton full. Clothes-drier size."
"Then a billion would take a thousand cartons like
that."
Pat was puzzled now. "Yeah, why?"
I chose a smaller number for easier figuring. "Then how big a
place would you need to store 80,000 cartons?"
"How about a great big warehouse?"
"That's what I figured." I grinned at him and said,
"What would you do with a bundle that big, Pat?"
"Buy a new car," he growled.
"That's what I thought," I said.
# # #
Downstairs, Pat and Velda and I caught a cab over to Richmond's
funeral parlor and saw DOOLEY neatly lettered on a mahogany sign with an arrow
pointing to the chapel on the left. The silence was dank. Like a fog.
I was expecting to find the place empty, but there must have been
two dozen people there. Four of them were gathered around a chest-high display
table that held a graciously curved urn.
I knew what that was. It was Marcos Dooley.
And the guy looking at me was wishing it was me instead. He was
almost as tall as I was, and from the way his $600 suit fit you knew he worked
out on all the Nautilus equipment and most likely jogged 50 miles a week. He
had the good looks of a Sicilian dandy and the composure of a Harvard graduate,
but under that high-priced facade he was a street punk named Ponti. The
younger.
I walked over. We had never met, but we didn't need an
introduction. I said, "Hello. Have you come to pay your respects?"
Under his coat his muscles tightened and his eyes measured me. He
was like an animal, the young male in the prime of life who now wanted to
challenge the old bull.
I played the old bull's part perfectly. I said, "You haven't
answered my question."
His eyes flicked around. "Dooley worked for my father."
"I know that." I got a frown again, strangely concerned
this time.
"And how do you know him?"
"We were in the Army together. So was that cop over
there." Ugo didn't have to look. He knew who I meant. Pat was looking
right at us. He got that twitch again and I knew the young buck had lost the
confrontation. But there would be another time, and the young buck would get
strong and the old bull would be aging out of the picture. He hoped.
At the display table, I got a close look at Dooley's
encapsulation. It was a dull metal urn, modestly decorated at the top and
bottom, with a plaque in the middle engraved with gold lettering.
His name, age and birthplace were at the top, then under it a
brief history that gave his GI serial number in eight digits and a record of
his service aboard the U.S. destroyer Latille. Nothing about his Army
time at all. He had served in, and then ducked out of, the U.S. Navy.
The funeral director sidled up to me and asked, "Can I see
you a moment, Mr. Hammer?"
I nodded and followed him to the far side of the room. He stood
there, wondering how he should explain his situation. "When Mr. Dooley
purchased our services, he asked that you see to his remains."
"Be glad to," I told him. "What did he want done
with them?"
"He said he had a son named Marvin, and he wanted you to
deliver his ashes in the urn to the boy."
"I never knew about a kid."
"Apparently he had one."
"Well," I said to him, "if that's what he wanted,
that's what he gets. I sure owe him that much."
He looked at his watch. Half the crowd had signed the register and
already left. The others would be out in a few minutes. "I'll box the urn
for you and you can pick it up in my office."
As we waited, I said to Velda, "Tomorrow I want you to go
down to the Veterans Administration and run down Dooley's service record."
I scanned the serial numbers on the urn and wrote them down, then handed the
slip to Velda.
"What am I looking for?"
"His kid. He's supposed to have a son. All that information
would have been recorded when he signed up. If they want a reason for the
query, tell them we're trying to find an inheritor."
The three of us left the parlor with Dooley in my arms, packed in
a box.
# # #
The next day no new business had come in and I was ready to close
up shop when Velda returned from the VA.
"What did Dooley tell you?" she asked me shrewdly.
"Eighty-nine billion dollars is stashed somewhere." It
was the first time I had mentioned the numbers to her and she opened her mouth
in disbelief.
"Mike . . . you said billion. Each billion is a thousand
million."
"I think Dooley wanted to tell me where it is, but all he
said was that he had changed the signs so nobody could find it."
"Why did he call you in, Mike?"
Now I grinned real big. "Because I'm not nobody."
"And what do you do with it after you find it?"
"Buy a new car. Hell, you can have some. New dress, shoes,
things like that."
"Get serious," Velda told me.
"I am," I said. "Now, what about Dooley's
history?"
The change of pace rattled her for a moment, then she stumbled
over a page of her notebook. For a moment she frowned at it, and then her eyes
drifted up to mine. "Those Navy serial numbers are wrong, Mike. They
weren't his."
Before I could answer her she cut me off with a wave of her hand.
"Oh, I found him, all right. I ran down the personnel on the destroyer Latille,
and there he was. Then I got his proper ID. I had to mention a few names to get
his son's name and address, but I knew you wouldn't mind." She ripped a
page out of the notebook and handed it to me.
I looked at the address in New Brunswick, memorized it and tucked
the paper under my desk blotter. "We still have a problem, kitten."
She waited for me to say it.
"What are those other numbers on the urn, then?"
"Maybe . . ." she searched for the name, "Marvin
can tell you."
A little nerve tugged at my jaw. Nobody ever forgets his military
serial number. Nobody. You don't forget where to wear your hat either. Or put
on your socks.
# # #
Velda had charted the run to New Brunswick right on the nose.
There were no wrong turns, no stopping to ask directions, just a straight, easy
drive. When I stopped in front of the decrepit old building where Marvin Dooley
lived, she said, "You like my navigation?"
I grinned. "Beautiful, kitten. I hope you can cook like
that."
The place had a common vestibule that housed eight mailboxes, a
single overhead bulb and the smell of multiracial cooking. The slots beneath
the mailboxes held names, except for one, and since DOOLEY wasn't in any of the
others, the blank one had to be Marvin's. I pushed the button and tried the
door. It swung open with no trouble. Muted TV voices overlapped and somewhere a
radio was tuned in to a rock station that thumped out a monotonous beat. Behind
me, Velda closed the door.
To our left was a wooden staircase leading to the second level. A
door creaked open, feet clicked across the floorboards and a male voice yelled
down over the banister, "Yeah, whaddya want?"
"Marvin?"
There was a moment's hesitation before he answered, "Who
wants him?"
But by then I was up the stairs and his head jerked around, not
knowing whether to hold his ground or duck back into his room. "I'm Mike
Hammer, Marvin. I was in the Army with your father."
"He's dead."
Just then Velda came up the stairs and took his breath away long
enough for him to lose his antagonistic attitude. I said, "You mind inviting
us inside?"
He glanced at me a few seconds, frowned, then stared at Velda long
enough to change his mind and nod toward the door. I waited for him to go in
first and followed him closely. Then I waved at Velda to come and close the
door.
As I expected, it was a nothing place. One room with a cot that
doubled as a sofa, a two-burner stove, small sink and a narrow, old-fashioned
refrigerator that took up a corner. The kitchen table had two wooden chairs,
and an old canvas beach chair was right in front of a fairly new TV that was on
the floor. But he was clean. No dirty dishes, no dust accumulation, no pile of
clothes. The only lingering smell was that of antiseptic soap.
He caught my thoughts and said, "I'm poor but neat, Mr.
Hammer." His eyes shifted to Velda and he added, "No woman's here,
lady. It's something I picked up in the Navy."
"The lady is my associate," I told him. "Her name
is Velda."
No surprise showed in his expression. He nodded toward her and
said, "The paper mentioned her. At the funeral."
"Why weren't you there, Marvin?"
He shrugged eloquently. "What good would that have
done?"
"Marvin – how do you know? When was the last time you saw
your father?"
"Before I went in the Navy. We hardly kept in touch. There
were a couple of letters and a card that gave me his new address."
Shrewdness seemed to touch his eyes and he looked directly at me. "What
did the old man leave me, Mr. Hammer?"
"An urn full of ashes, kiddo. What did you expect?"
"Don't give me that crap, buster. You didn't come all the way
down here to tell me that. He left you something and you need me to get
it."
"I need you like a hole in the head," I said. I took out
a notepad and wrote down a name and address, then handed it to him. "His
ashes are in this repository. Do you want them?"
He studied me again, his teeth gnawing at his lips. "You said
you were in the Army with my father?"
"That's right."
"How the hell did he get in the Army? Damn, that doesn't make
sense. All the old man ever wanted was to get out on the ocean."
"He ever do that?"
"Not before he joined the Navy. All he ever did was run that
old boat of his up and down the Hudson River."
That was something Dooley had never mentioned to us. "What
kind of boat?" I asked him. "Where did he keep it?"
"A Woolsley, in a little marina a few miles north of
Newburgh. Nothing much there now, but back in the old days there were about a
dozen yachts docked."
Marvin rubbed his hands over his face, then ran his fingers
through his hair. "Do you want anything else?" he asked.
"Would you give it to me if I did?"
"Depends."
I handed him one of my cards, some of which Velda had put in my
pocket. "Just one thing, Marvin."
"Oh?"
"Your father was killed for a reason. Whoever did it might
think he entrusted information to you and –"
"He didn't tell me nothing! He –"
"I know that, but there's a possibility that the quicker we
get the killer the longer you'll have to live. Give it a thought, Marvin."
The traffic flow on the Jersey Turnpike was loose and fast, so we
got back to the city early enough for me to drop Velda off at her apartment.
# # #
I was on my way to see Don Lorenzo Ponti, and the odds were going
to be on his side. Ponti was getting old, but the game stayed the same. I got
out my shoulder holster, slipped into it, put a clip of fresh ammo in the .45
and tucked it in the leather.
All I hoped was that the boneheads Ponti kept around him had good
memories and better imaginations.
The local club was straight out of an old television movie, with
building blocks of translucent glass to let in light on the main floor while
keeping anybody from seeing in. The only thing different about the block was
that graffiti artists had not touched a spray of paint to the woodwork.
I got out of the cab half a block away and let them see me walk up
to the club. There were two hoods outside the door who came out of the same TV
show as the building. For a few seconds it looked like they were going to move
right in on me. Then one hood whispered something, and the other seemed puzzled
and his face went blank.
I walked too fast for them to flank me, one on either side, and
grinned at their consternation at suddenly being vulnerable if any shooting
started. To make sure they stayed that way, I ran my fingers under the brim of
my porkpie hat and knew they both had a good look at the butt end of the gun on
my side.
You don't try to be nice to guys like this. I said, "Go tell
your boss I want to talk with him."
"He ain't here," the fat one said.
"Want me to shoot the lock off?" I didn't make it sound
like a joke.
The skinny one said, "You got a big mouth, mister."
"I got a big name too. It's Mike Hammer. Now shake your tail
and do what your buddy told you to do."
"You're not coming in here wearing a rod, Hammer."
I didn't get to answer him. The dark figure leaning over the
banister upstairs yelled down in his softly accented voice and said,
"What's going on down there?"
Once again I beat the pair to the punch. "It's Mike
Hammer," I called back. "If you don't want to talk with me, I'll beat
it. If you want trouble I'll shoot the hell out of your guys here and the cops
can mop up the mess."
I think the dialogue came out of that TV movie too.
"He's got a gun on him, Mr. Ponti," the skinny punk
yelled.
"In his hand?"
"No. It's under his coat."
Ponti was like a cat. His curiosity was as tight as a stretched
rubber band. He didn't even wait a second before he said, "He's always got
a gun. Let him up, unless you want to shoot it out down there."
Ponti was a player, all right. When I got to the top of the
stairs, he nodded for me to follow him, and he walked in front of me as if it
were all one big tea party. He could have been showing off or he could have had
men hidden, waiting for me to jump him. But there was no fear in his movements
at all. He pushed open a door to an office but didn't go through. I made sure
the door flattened against the wall so nobody was behind it, visually scanned
the area, then stepped in and edged along the wall to a chair in front of
Ponti's desk.
His expression suggested he appreciated my cautiousness. "Are
you nervous, Mr. Hammer?"
"Just careful."
"You take big chances."
"Not really."
"Oh?"
"I could have blown those goons you have downstairs right out
of their socks if they had tried to play guns."
"You could have lost."
For 30 seconds I stood there staring at him, then moved around the
chair and sat down. "Go ahead and ask it," I said.
The don played his role magnificently. He pulled his padded
leather desk chair back on its rollers, sat down easily and folded his hands in
his lap. When he was ready his eyes met mine and he said, "Did you kill my
son Azi, Mr. Hammer?"
There was no waiting time here either. "I shot him right in
the head, Don Ponti. He was about to give me one in the face when I squeezed a
.45 into his head. You're damn right I shot him, and if you have any more like
him who want to try it, I'll do the same thing again."
I didn't know what to expect, certainly not the look of calm
acceptance he wore. He seemed to be mentally reviewing the details of that night,
and when all the pieces fit into the puzzle, he seemed oddly satisfied. "I
do not blame you, Mr. Hammer," he told me quietly. "He's dead now and
that is that. You want something from me, then say it."
"I want who killed Marcos Dooley."
"Dooley was a nice man," he said, the accent coming
back.
"Yeah, I know."
"Then why did he die, Mr. Hammer?"
"Somebody thought he knew more than he should."
"What could he know?"
"He mentioned trouble in your organization, Don Ponti."
"There is no trouble. Everything has been legal for
years."
"Screw the legalities. It's the distribution of wealth that
causes a ruckus."
"Do you think I look like a rich man, Mr. Hammer?"
"Cut the crap, Don." I pushed out of the chair.
"All I want is the guy who killed Dooley. This time it isn't just me.
Captain Chambers is part of this package, and he's got the NYPD behind him.
That's one big load of professionalism to buck up against."
"Somehow I think you have a person in mind," Ponti said.
I started toward the door, then turned and said, "I'd keep a
close watch on your boy Ugo. He hasn't got the expertise we old-timers
have."
Ponti nodded again, but a frown had creased his forehead and I
knew his brain was doing mental gymnastics trying to figure out the hidden
meaning to my words.
# # #
Willie the Actor was a skinny little guy with a strange, kidlike
voice, a deep love for any kind of booze and no money at all. The job I held
out for him was easy and meant a week in a bar if he could handle his money
properly. It took a whole morning to get the scene staged, and when I was sure
he had it, we got in a cab, went to a certain address and made a call from a
cellular phone.
He didn't know who he was talking to, but he said his lines fast
and clearly, sounding like a 12-year-old street kid half out of breath and real
excited. He didn't even wait for the person on the other end to answer him. He
said, "Ugo . . . Ugo . . . that you? You know that place where you guys
meet? Some guy is watching it. I think he's gonna bust in there. You better get
over here, Ugo." He stopped a moment and I could hear shouting in the
phone. Then he said, "Gee, he's lookin' over this way. I gotta go."
When he hung up I handed him his pay, let him get out of sight
around the corner and went back to the waiting cab. We didn't have to wait very
long. Ugo Ponti came out of the garage under his house in a dark blue Buick and
took off, screeching his wheels. My driver followed him without difficulty. In
New York there are cabs all over the city and one looks just like another.
Twice we rode right alongside him, and I got a good look at the glowering face
of the prince of the local family.
We got to a part of Greenwich Village where new businesses have
renovated dilapidated old areas. There was room at the curb for Ugo's car, so
he parked and hopped out. I paid off the cabbie down the block and saw Ugo scan
the street, enter a narrow alley between two buildings and disappear. The door
was a heavy wooden leftover from a different century. I backed off and waited
inside the lobby of a publishing firm until I saw Ugo step out, his face tight
with anger. He looked around, shook his head and went back to his car, probably
silently cursing the "kid" who passed on a bad tip to him, and drove
off.
The lock was as easy as I expected, and I closed the door behind
me, locking it again. A pile of empty cardboard boxes and assorted trash
blocked the way, so I used my tools on the lock in the door to my left. Enough
light came in from the old round window in the wall to let me see what I was
doing, and in two minutes I was inside.
Here I could use the lights. The windows were completely blacked
out so that whatever was done here was done in secret. The tables were plywood
on sawhorses, soda boxes were used for chairs and cardboard cartons were the
containers for all the paper that ran through the computers and copiers that
lined the room. There was a fortune in electronics and exotic machinery.
There was nothing I could understand. Twice, I made a circuit of
the room, poking into anything that might contain what I wanted. Nothing.
I was all set to leave when I heard the stairs outside creak. I
flipped the lights off, then squeezed behind a four-drawer filing cabinet just
before a key went into the lock and the door opened. The .357 came in first,
with Ugo right behind it.
I was in a darkened corner and didn't move, so his eyes went past
the cabinets. I stayed as immobile as I could. I could hear his footsteps, the impact
as his shoe booted something aside. When he was right up to the cabinet he
stopped dead. He saw the possible area, the only place in the room that could
conceal a person, and he was about to earn his bones once more.
It was too bad he was right-handed. Had he shifted the .357 to his
other hand and come around the corner, he would have nailed me. But he led with
a stiffened right arm and before he knew what had happened I had twisted the
rod out of his fingers, spun him around and held the muzzle of his own gun to
the back of his neck. His breath was sucked in and he couldn't talk, but I
could smell the fear that oozed out of him and knew when he wet his pants. I
felt his body begin to twitch. Ugo Ponti was looking down his own black alley.
I said, "So, your inheritance is down the drain, kiddo. Even
the computer whiz kids don't know where it went. No transactions, no deposits
just a big nothing." I let my words sink in, let him measure the timbre of
my voice. "But I'm going to find it, Ugo, baby."
I eased the gun away from Ugo's skin and let it run down his back,
pressing against his spine. His mind was wondering if he'd feel the shot, not
knowing whether or not to hope he'd die fast but realizing that if anything
took out his spinal cord he was going to be strapped in a wheelchair for a long
time. No parties, no broads, no booze, and just maybe somebody he'd kicked
around might come up and plant a slug right in his face where he could see it
coming.
Before he could faint on me I belted him in the head with his gun
and let him drop. The blood from the gash above his temple made a puddle on the
floor. I stuck Ugo's .357 in my belt. Pat could do a ballistics check and maybe
get some brownie points if it had been used at a crime scene earlier.
Downstairs, Ugo's Buick was back at the curb, and I looked at the
license plate. The first three numbers were 411.
# # #
On the other side of the George Washington Bridge, Velda and I
headed for Route 9W, the scenic trip along the Hudson River. When we passed
through Newburgh I pinpointed the marina where Marcos Dooley had kept his boat.
The marina was still there, dilapidated and overgrown with weeds, but it had a
pier and docking facilities for half a dozen boats. Two well-used sailboats
were still in the slips.
A sign outside a small house read JAMES BLEDSOE, PROP. The porch
was apparently the office, and the living quarters were behind it. I knocked
and waited patiently until an old guy munching on an apple came hobbling out,
his knobby knees sticking out of stained khaki shorts. "You don't look
like boat people," he said.
"We're not." It didn't surprise him at all. He sat down
on a box and laced his fingers behind his head. "You don't want to rent a
boat, do you?"
"Not today."
"Didn't think so."
"Mr. Bledsoe, did you know Marcos Dooley?"
His eyes brightened and he took his hands down, leaning on his
knees. "Sure did. We had a lot of good times together. Haven't seen him
for a few years."
"He's dead, Mr. Bledsoe."
"Damn," he said, frowning. "What happened?"
"He was murdered, but that's kind of an old story now. I
understand he had a boat here."
"It's still here," he said. "She's all dried out
and needs a lot of work on her, but if you got a few months and some money, it
can be done."
"I'd just like to see it."
"Pretty dirty out there."
"That's OK."
And he was right. The old barn held three antique boats with open
seams, glass falling out of the frames and rust stains leaking from all the
exposed metal parts. Chocks held Dooley's boat upright, streamers of cobwebs
and layers of dust making it look like the Flying Dutchman. The hatch cover was
off and candy wrappers were scattered around.
"Kids," Bledsoe explained. "They come in and play.
I can't keep them out."
I pointed to a ladder that ran up the side. "Mind if I look
around?"
"Be my guest."
The ladder was handmade but sturdy enough. I went up slowly, threw
a leg over the rail and got on the deck, brushing the cobwebs out of my face.
The kids had broken into the small cabin and pulled out anything that would
come loose. Light fixtures had been smashed, and dried turds made a mess in the
ceramic head. The wheel in the cabin was intact, but behind it were only holes
where instruments had been screwed into the mahogany. Old Dooley would have
turned green if he could see his boat now.
I shook my head in disgust and looked over the mahogany dashboard
where the kids had scratched their names. I had almost turned away when I saw
something. Not a scrawl or a scratch, but eight numbers carefully inscribed
with an awl so they couldn't be rubbed out.
They were the same eight numbers as on Dooley's urn, his serial
number. Damn, those weren't ID digits, they were latitude and longitude
markers.
I climbed down, brushed myself off and told Bledsoe there wasn't
much we could do but we'd let him know.
When we got to Albany I stopped at a survey outfit.
The guy was young and friendly, glad to see somebody from the Big
Apple. When I showed him the numbers he looked up something in a book, then
waved us to a wall map. "That wasn't hard," he said.
"You know the place?"
"Sure. Everybody does. There was an old bootlegger ran an
operation out there during Prohibition. Not much left up there now. The big
house rotted out a long time ago and some old caretaker lives in an
outbuilding. Once in a while he cuts some choice slate out of there. You
looking to buy the place?"
"It's possible."
Driving there wasn't that simple. After four wrong turns we found
the narrow, single-lane dirt road that twisted and turned through the trees
toward the rise of the Catskills that marked the area.
We went around a turn and there were no more trees, just a big,
empty field on the edge of an overpowering mountainside with three old
buildings nestling in the shadows. Small mounds of gray slag dotted the
acreage, insolently decorated with purple thistles. The single roadway branched
out in five different directions, all but one in total disrepair, so I stayed
on the passable road. It brought us to a weather-worn building that had been
patched and repatched but still looked livable. There was a brick chimney
running up the side, and a shimmer of heat distortion against the clouds, so I
knew someone was there.
Rather than take a chance on stirring some irritable old
mountaineer waving a shotgun, I beeped the horn and waited. The screen door
with paint so thick you couldn't see through it whipped open and the
mountaineer was there, all right, old, but not at all irritable. "Y'all
step down and come right in," he yelled. His voice was crackly but happy.
"Saw you comin' a mile away and put on coffee."
Velda slid out and introduced herself. "You sure a
looker," the old man said. "I'm just Slateman. Got a real name, but
nobody calls me that." He took my hand too, shook it and squinted up at
me.
"What we want to do is see the old bootleg operation."
"Better get your cameras then."
For a minute I felt stupid, but Velda winked at me and went back
to the car. She came back with a small 35mm Minolta with a flash attachment.
Slateman got an oversize flashlight with a strap that slung over one shoulder,
and he led us through the house to the back door.
We followed a path to a ridge of bushes, then around them to where
the ground soared up like an overturned teacup and melted into the mountain behind
it. When Slateman pointed, we saw the cleft in the side of the hill. He pulled
a rack of bushes aside and there was an opening a man on horseback could go
through. "Used to have a big, wooden barn door here," Slateman
explained. "Couldn't see it, of course. Always kept it covered with real
growth. A truck could go in and out easy."
He led the way, flicking on his torch, and we stayed close behind.
It was a great natural cave, cool and dry. The dirt under our feet was packed.
The cave was so big that we could see only one wall to our left.
Velda's voice had a quaver to it. "Any bats?"
"No bats," Slateman reassured her. "Some caves have
'em, but this one don't. Can't figure it out."
We walked until we reached the perimeter of the space and followed
the curve of the walls around it. Even after all these years you could tell
what had been there. Old tools and the remains of a truck seat were like
artifacts in an antique shop. At the back side we had to circle around a heap
of boulders Slateman said had come down from the wall and overhead years ago.
He flashed the light above us to make sure we were still safe. Velda kept
popping pictures until she ran out of film, but by then we had completed the
tour and were back at the entrance.
"Too bad Prohibition went out of style," I remarked.
Slateman chuckled, and Velda and I looked at each other. It was
just a big, empty cave of dust and memories and a little old guy glad to have
some city slickers visit him. Velda reloaded the camera and shot some footage
around the property. We told Slateman so long, and started down the single-lane
road.
# # #
We turned south on the main highway and stopped at the first diner
we came to, went in and ordered up sausages and pancakes with plenty of real
maple syrup and mugs of steaming coffee.
Halfway through the pancakes Velda said, "What did we miss,
Mike?"
I shook my head in annoyance. "Dooley went through a lot of
trouble to plant those numbers. He wanted me to find them and locate the spot.
OK, I did both."
Velda sat there pensively a minute or so, idly tapping her teeth
with a thumbnail. "Mike . . . Don Ponti is a pretty hotheaded guy, isn't
he?"
"Yeah, when he was young."
"Then how come he's lying low? How come he hasn't sent
anybody out to put a hit on you? You challenged Ugo, he knows your connection
with Dooley – yet he lets you alone."
"Damn, Velda, you talk just like a street cop."
"I carry a gun, too. Now tell me, Mike."
"He's waiting to see how far I get." When we got back to
the thruway, I pulled into the left lane and turned onto the ramp heading
north. Velda's head jerked around, surprised. "Where are you going,
Mike?"
"Back to Slateman's place."
Velda said, "What's the matter?"
"Remember Slateman telling us he spotted the car a mile
away?"
"So?"
"The bootlegger probably cut a seethrough opening in the
trees."
"What difference does that make?"
"I don't like gimmicks, kitten."
We hadn't gone an eighth of a mile when she held out her hand and
said, "Stop!" I hit the brakes quickly, then, with the engine running,
got out of the car and walked around the front of it. Velda had spotted it just
in time. Running straight as an arrow up the side of the mountain was a path
through the tree line. The brush had grown headhigh, but the line of sight was
perfect. Anybody up there could spot movement on the road below. A car driving
past would never notice that strip of emptiness, and a beautiful ambush would
be waiting for him above unless he had a prearranged signal set up.
Very slowly I drove past the opening. It would be movement that
attracted the eyes, and at my pace nobody was going to notice. We passed the
wreckage of an old chain-drive Mack truck, carefully followed the ruts in the
road and finally came out on the edge of the estate.
We got to the door of Slateman's house and stopped. Nothing
happened. The only sounds were those of the wind whistling through the trees.
Over to the west was a rumble of faraway thunder.
I got out of the car and made Velda walk behind me. There was
something left in the old wood and fieldstone that seemed to radiate trouble.
The door was latched, the fire was out and the place was deserted.
There were no dirty dishes, the garbage can was empty and everything seemed to
be in place. There was just a feeling of aloneness that shouldn't have been
there.
Velda had taken it in too. She said, "He must have gone to
town, Mike. He didn't leave the stove going."
"That's a long walk, kid. Come on, let's go see the
cave."
Slateman had left his heavy-duty torch on the table. I took it and
gave Velda the one out of the car.
Finding the entrance was easy this time. Velda balked a moment
until I said, "No bats, remember?"
She took a deep breath and walked in behind me. We followed the
wall, stepping over the junk on the floor, kicking away things that made small
tinkling sounds and avoiding the broken remnants of whiskey bottles that had
been sampled, drained and dropped by workers getting a few perks for their
labors.
Three quarters of the way around we came to the place I had wanted
to see again. It was the rubble from the roof that had come crashing down many
years ago and had been pushed out of the way against the back wall. I ran the
light up at the ceiling and saw some scars in the stone, then lowered it to
cover the angled pile to my left. Dirt and dust were thick on everything. I
reached down, picked up a handful and let it sift through my fingers.
Odd, I thought. The dust wasn't dusty. It had an abrasiveness like
fine sand. Velda's light hit me right in the eyes.
When she realized it was blinding me, she turned it down to the
ground and said, "What are you looking for, Mike?"
I was just about to answer her when another voice said,
"Yeah, Mike, tell her what you're looking for."
There was the faintest metallic click and I knew the hammer had
gone back on a gun.
Velda sucked in her breath with an audible gasp.
The voice was young and hard, the kind that had death right behind
it and wouldn't wait long at all to spring into a killing frenzy.
I said, "It's about time you got here, Ugo."
My tone slowed him down an instant. Ugo Ponti wasn't a fast
thinker.
"And why do you suppose that, Hammer?"
"You were chasing us."
"Sure I was. I'm not so dumb."
My legs were starting to cramp up, but I had to keep him talking.
"And now you're in a big, empty cave, Ugo."
"Yeah, but I got you and your woman here and you know where
the stuff is."
"You don't see it, do you? What makes you think I can get to
it?"
"Don't give me that crap, Hammer. Your buddy Dooley told
you."
Velda's light was still pointing at the floor. Both of us were in
the glow of our own torches and Ugo was in total darkness. Any movement either
one of us made would lay us out. There was no telling by that click whether he
had a small arm or a shotgun, but if it was a shotgun he could get us both with
the first blast.
Without asking, I uncrouched from the floor very slowly, my mind
racing, trying to line up the best odds.
Ugo said, "That's right, Mike. Nice and easy. Now, once more,
what were you looking for?"
Now if Velda would only get the drift of my thoughts. It had to
happen all at once and happen right or we were both dead. There was no way I
could flash a sign to her, so she had to work on reflexes and that state of
mind that exists between partners who have been together so long they can act
in total unison.
I said, "I'm not looking, Ugo. I already found it."
And as I kicked off the torch on the ground, she flipped her
switch and we both hit the dirt. Ugo pumped four shotgun rounds in our
direction before he knew he hadn't hit either of us. But by then I had my .45
out, the safety off and the hammer back, and I aimed right where I had last
seen the muzzle flash and let the deafening roar of the old Colt automatic
thunder in the cave. The single bullet smashed into something that clattered
but didn't kill, and when I flashed the torch light on, it caught Ugo
scrabbling in the dirt for the mangled shotgun my slug had smashed into useless
junk. When he saw what it was like, he let out a wild scream and raised the
shotgun like a shield. I triggered the .45 again and the slug smashed into the
metal breach of his weapon, which crashed into his chin. He went down with his
eyes bugging out and his breathing hoarse with pain.
I walked up to the slob and let the torch wash him over. Blood ran
from the cut on his chin, and his body made a few involuntary jerks before
realization came into his eyes. He didn't know what was coming next, but the
hatred that oozed from his pupils was filled with a violent venom that nothing
could diminish. His eyes finally dropped to the gun in my hand, and when I
started to raise it, his lips drew back with the fierceness of his crazy desire
to kill me one way or another while knowing that once I had him looking down
that .45, it would be the last thing he would see.
# # #
The dogs found Slateman. His body had been dumped in an old
stone-lined cistern not far from the main house. The weathered wooden cover had
been dragged back over the hole and loose dirt and rocks had been piled on top
of it. There was a huge contusion on the side of his head and blood matted his
hair. His body was hung up on an old oil drum that floated down there too.
It was a good, safe place to hide a body if nobody was going to
look for it. And it would be much better if the body were dead.
Slateman hadn't reached that point. The club that Ugo had laid on
him had almost but not quite killed him. There was hairline fracturing of his
skull, but the prognosis was good. He could still live out his years.
There wouldn't be much use for a commercial outfit to go in and
demolish the old buildings. The power of big government went to work and ripped
everything apart looking for clues to those billions of dollars. Any standing
structure was flattened, every rock pried loose and inspected, the grounds were
raked clean and gone over with metal detectors, and for all that work, all they
got was a trash pile of rusted cans, old chains from Mack trucks and debris.
A fortune was spent looking for a fortune they didn't find.
But did they ever try. A nice word, try. It meant they failed. I
hadn't.