A Deadly Shade of Gold (37 page)

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Authors: John D. MacDonald

Tags: #Private Investigators, #Detective and mystery stories, #Mystery & Detective, #McGee; Travis (Fictitious character), #Private investigators - Florida - Fort Lauderdale, #Political, #Hard-Boiled, #General, #Fort Lauderdale (Fla.), #Fiction, #Detective and mystery stories; American

BOOK: A Deadly Shade of Gold
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Claude Boody stood with an ugly gun aimed toward us, and I turned the sun bunny quickly into the line of fire. But there was the faintest whisper of sound behind me, and before I could move again, a segment of my skull went off like a bomb and I fell slowly, slowly, like a dynamited
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tower, with the girl underneath. I was vaguely aware of landing on her, and of her strangled yawp as my weight drove the air out of her, and of tumbling loosely away.

I was not out. I retained ten percent of consciousness, but I could not move. The room was at the far end of a tunnel, and the voices seemed to echo through the tunnel.

"Oh God," a girl whined. "I'm all busted up inside. Oh God."

"Shut up, Dru."

"Both of you shut up," an older male voice said, enormously weary. "You let him get a look at me. It's a brand new problem."

"I'm hurt bad," the girl moaned.

Hands fumbled at my pockets, shifting and hauling. Down in my trauma drowse I had the comfy awareness they would find nothing. I was entirely clean, just in case. My cheek was against a softness of rug. They hitched and tugged at my clothing.

"Nothing," the tired voice said. "This stuff must belong to the Melgar woman."

"It's a Miami label in the suit. That mean anything?"

"Chip, I could be dying! Don't you care?"

"Lie down on the bed, Dru. And shut up, please." Chip, Claude and Dru. Three voices from far away. I heard the click of a lighter. A moment later, I felt a little hot area near the back of my hand.

"What are you doing?" Chip asked.

"Let's see how good you got him. Let's see if he's faking."

Heat turned into a white stabbing light that shoved itself deep into my brain. Pain was like a siren caught on a high note. Pain cleared away the mists, but I would not move. I caught a little drifting stink of my own burned flesh.

"He's out," Chip said. "Maybe I got him good enough so there's no problem."

"Or a worse one, you silly bastard," Claude said. "Depending on who he is."

"Isn't anybody going to do anything?" Dru wailed.

They were kneeling or squatting, one on each side of me, talking across my back. The girl was further away.

"You slipped up on this one," Claude said. "I don't mean here and now. I mean down there."

"I told you, I wondered about him down there. So I had Dru check him out. She's no dummy.

She has a feeling for anything out of line. You should know that. She threw the Garcia name at him and didn't get a thing back. He was with a woman down there. Gardino. And that was what
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it looked like, to be there to be with the woman and she looked worth it. And that was the same woman who had the bad luck. Honest to God, it was a one in a million chance, but she caught it.

I'm still sick about that. It seemed like a hell of a big charge to me when I wired it in, but your expert was supposed to know what he was doing when he put it together. We were long gone by then, but still that woman didn't have any part of...."

"Shut up! The problem is finding out who this bastard is and what he. wants."

"Honest to God, Claude, when Dru spotted him and pointed him out to me about forty minutes ago, you could have knocked me over with a pin."

"Shut up and let me think. This is beginning to go sour. I don't like it. He's no fool. Coming here with the Melgar woman was almost perfect cover. And he made some good moves in this room.

He nearly got out of hand. And he had good cover down there too, good enough to fool you and Dru, boy. So who is he working for? How did he trace it back to here? I thought we closed the door on that whole operation. I thought everybody who could make any connection was gone-Almah, Miguel, Taggart. But now this son of a bitch comes out of nowhere. I don't like it."

"And you know who else isn't going to like it."

"Shut up, Chip, for God's sake!"

"Why don't you drop it in his lap?"

"Because he doesn't like things fouled up. Let's come up with some kind of answer before I tell him."

"One answer," Chip said, "is to make this character talk about it. The name he used down there was McGee. Tonight it's Smith. God knows what it really is."

The girl made a groan of effort, as though struggling to sit up. "Jesus, he ruined me. Chipper, you get him tied up and let me get at him with that little electric needle thing, and I'll make him talk about things he never heard of."

"Shut her up," Claude said.

There was a sudden movement, a solid and meaty slapping sound, and then the girl's muffled and hopeless sobbing. "Goddam you, Chip," she sobbed.

"Hasn't he been trying to work out something with the Melgar woman?" Chip asked.

"Just to get some shots of her in action. Send them down to Venezuela for mass distribution."

"Why?"

"Use your head, you silly bastard. They know her face down there. Two brothers-in-law in the government. Notorious heiress having fun in the United States. But he hasn't been able to trap her."

"Did he give up?"

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"Chipper, baby, he never gives up. Some day he'll juice up a couple of her drinks, and she'll go wobbling in there like a lamb, with spit on her chin, and give a hell of a performance."

"So if she brought this guy here, why not now? Two birds with one stone. Like the time with that state senator and that ambassador's wife."

After a silence, Claude Boody said, "We certainly got mileage out of that little session. You know, sometimes you show vague signs of intelligence. What he'll want done is keep this character and the Melgar woman stashed until the last drunk leaves. If he approves."

"I don't see how he has too much choice."

"I should get to a doctor," Dru said plaintively. "Every breath is like knives."

"What I'll do," Claude said, "you sit tight here and I'll go lay it on for him, which I think we should have done in the first place."

"He makes mistakes too."

"How often? How big?"

''Look, he can punish me. He can give me the Melgar broad."

"You're very very funny."

I gave a weak, heartbreaking groan and moved very feebly. I needed to manage a sudden change in the odds. And I couldn't do it face down.

"He's coming out of it," Chip said.

I writhed over onto my back, then started up suddenly. They stood up and moved back. I got halfway to a sitting position, eyes staring, then fell back with a long gargling sound, held my breath, let my mouth sag open, left my eyes half closed.

"Jesus H. Christ!" Chip whispered.

"You hit him too goddam hard with that thing!"

I wondered how long they would take. I hadn't oxygenated, but I thought I could manage two minutes of it. They moved in again, squatting close. I felt fingers on my wrist.

"He isn't breathing, but his heart's still going good," Claude said. He released my wrist.

I snatched Claude by the windsor knot, and I hooked a hand on the back of Chip's neck, and slammed their heads together as hard as I could. I had fear and anger and a desperate haste working for me. It was like using a simultaneous overhand right and a wide left hook. Bone met bone with quite a horrid sound, much like smacking two large stones together underwater. Bone met bone hard enough to give a rebound that sent them both spilling over backward, settling slowly into the floor, both heads split and bleeding.

I glanced at the girl, slapped at Claude, pulled the weapon out from between belt and soft belly.

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It was oddly light for such a large and ugly caliber. She had pushed herself halfway up, and she stared at me, eyes and mouth wide open. We were in a sizeable and elegant bedroom. I let her look down the barrel and she said, "Wha-wha-what are you going to do?"

I moved back to the door, stepping over new acquaintances. There was an inside bolt and a chain. I fastened them. There was a vent, a continuous whisper of washed air. The windows were closed and looked sealed. I had the idea sound would not travel far from that room. My conversational acquaintances hadn't seemed concerned about it. If any did get out of the room, it would have to fight that ubiquitous Hawaiian cotton candy music.

There was an object in the side pocket of Chip's green blazer. I took it out. I imagine our limey cousins would term it a home made cosh. It was an eight inch section of stubby pipe wrapped with a thick padding of black friction tape. I put Boody's hand gun in my jacket pocket and went over to the bed and sat on the edge of it, facing the sun bunny. Her eyes were puffed and apprehensive, her bland little face tear-stained.

"What do you want anyhow?" she demanded with false bravado.

I gave her a light touch across the ribs with the piece of pipe. She gave a thin whistling scream, the noise a shot rabbit will sometimes make. She lay back and said, "Oh, don't. Oh, golly, there's something all broke. I can feel it kind of grind. You fell with your whole weight on me."

"I have a headache, Dru, and a nasty burn on the back of my hand, and you were very anxious to play around with some sort of an electric needle. I lost a very marvelous woman in that clambake down there, and I am going to ask questions. Whenever I don't like the answer, I'm going to give you another little rap, with this."

"What if you ask something I don't know?"

"You get a little rap for luck. Chip wired the explosive into Menterez's boat. Why?"

"To kill Alconedo. Miguel Alconedo. He'd goofed somehow. I don't know how. You see, we took down his orders for him. He was supposed to kill Almah, then take the boat up to Boca del Rio, ten miles off shore, where he thought we'd be waiting for him. He thought it was all set so we could take him someplace where he could go from there back to Cuba and be safe. But there wasn't any intention of that. The other three kids aboard, they didn't know anything about anything. Chip sneaked off the night before we left, after midnight when a lot of the lights went out, and fixed the boat."

"Who did you think I might be? Why did you try to check me?"

"Chip wondered about you. You sort of didn't look like a tourist. You see, Almah couldn't be trusted any more. She told Taggart too much about things. And she got too anxious about getting that money. She was okay up until the time of the Mineros thing, and then she started cracking up. They thought that if she told Taggart too much, maybe she told somebody else too, maybe the wrong people, and maybe some C.I.A. was down there. Chip thought that's what you might be. Who are you anyhow?" She attempted a small shy friendly smile.

"Who got Taggart?"

"Gee, I don't know. I mean I'm not sure. I heard them making a joke about it. About the
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monkey's paw. It could have been a man named Ramon Talavera. They laughed a lot about Taggart. I know they picked him up before he had made any contact. They knew where he was.

So when they made a date with him, to make arrangements about selling those statues to them, nobody showed up at the meeting place and when he went back all the others were gone, and all he had left was the one he'd taken along to prove he really had them. Then they got the last one back too, after somebody killed him."

"Tomberlin gave the orders about Almah and about the explosive?"

"I guess he told Claude what to do and who to pick to do it. Nobody meant for that woman with you to be...."

"Why do you do what they tell you to do, Dru?"

"Me?" She looked astonished. "Golly I guess it's about the same with me as it was with Almah and a lot of other people. Those pictures of me, if they ever sent a print of even one of the cleanest ones to my daddy I swear it would kill him. You don't know about the first pictures they take, and then they use those to make you do things for more pictures. Rather than have my daddy ever see me doing anything like that, his own daughter, I'd cut my wrists first. I'd do anything they ask. I think where Almah got out from under, her mother died while she was down there."

I remembered the untidiness of Almah Hichin, the look of soil and wear and carelessness. It was easy to see now why she had ceased to value herself. And it was an ancient gambit, using the threat of the most horrid scandal imaginable to tame people to your will and use. And the son of a bitch had so casually mentioned his photo lab.

"You know what Tomberlin is? And Claude Boody?"

"I can't help that. I don't think about that."

"Baby, you are going to have to think about it. You are an accessory to murder. And your dear daddy is going to have to know the whole filthy mess, and you are going to have to talk and talk and talk to save your sweet skin, sun bunny. Even so, you may spend ten years in a Mexican rest camp, living on tortillas and frijoles."

"Leave me alone, you son of a bitch! I think I'm bleeding inside. You can't do anything to me. I bet you can't even get back through the gate out there."

I turned and looked at the two slumberers. Chip was still bleeding. Boody had stopped, though his gash looked bigger. I had a sudden idea about him. I went over and put my ear against his chest. When I was still a foot away from him, I realized there wasn't much point in it. I was aware of the girl moving from the bed to go and bend over Chip. I listened to utter silence. All I could hear was my own blood roaring in my ear, like listening to a sea shell. Boody didn't live in there any more.

As I slowly got to my feet, there was a sharp brisk sound, like somebody breaking a big dry stick. The sun bunny had backed over toward a dressing table. She had a little automatic in her hand, a little more weapon than my shiny bedroom gun. She held it at arm's length, aiming it at me. She was biting her lip. She had one eye closed. The small muzzle made a wavering circle. It cracked again and I felt a little warm wind against my ear lobe.

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"Cut it out!" I yelled, fumbling for Claude's gun, tugging it out of my pocket. She fired again, and I knew she was going to keep right on, and I knew she couldn't keep on missing at that range, particularly if it occurred to her to stop trying to hit me in the face. The third shot tingled the hair directly on top of my head, and Claude's pistol was double action, and I tried to get her in the shoulder. It made a ringing deafening blam, and the slug took her just below the hairline on the right side of her head, and the recoil of that light frame jumped the gun up so that it was aiming at the ceiling.

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