The stairway, taken alone, was a dark trap through which poured air, heavy and hot like an animal's breath. Something seemed to move in a doorway back of the stairs, and Crane's heart went thump-thump, thump-thump, thump-thump. He went up the stairs and into the room marked MEN. Then he had a drink from the fountain and finally walked over to where the two reporters were in conversation with a stocky Italian.
“I'm willin' to play ball wid youse guys, if you'll play ball wid me,” the Italian was saying. “It's just that the big ⦠the guy I rep'esent don't want this dame I'm tellin' you about to know he's worried about her.” He had on a violet shirt which sweat had turned to purple. “If it's her down there, O.K. The papers can have the whole story. But if it ain't her he don't want no story, because this dame I'm telling you about will find out he's worried about her. D'ya see?”
Greening said, “But how are we going to know if it is the right girl? There's nothing to prevent the man you represent from walking in here, looking at the girl, recognizing her and saying, âNo, that's not the right one.'”
“If it's her he'll identify her, all right.” The Italian caught sight of Crane, scowled fiercely at him. “Who's this mug?”
“He's all right,” said Johnson. “He's the
Associated Press
man.” He gave Greening a warning glance.
“Well, how about it, then?” asked the Italian, still looking at Crane.
“I've seen you somewhere before,” said Johnson to the Italian.
“Naw, you haven't.” Rivulets of perspiration flowed crookedly through the forest of black hair on his arms. “You never seen me before.”
“All right. I never saw you before.”
The Italian nodded to Johnson, said, “You got tha idea.” He repeated, “How about it, then?”
“Sure. Go get the fellow you represent.”
The Italian went out the wide corridor to the front door. “What's the idea?” asked Greening. “We can't protect his boss, can we?”
“We aren't going to.” Johnson leaned against the oak rail, rested his elbows on it. “We can't lose anything by having the guy come in to look at the body. If he identifies it then we got a story. If he doesn't then we're no worse off than we were.”
“He'll have to give his name to the attendant, anyway,” said Crane. “That'll give you something to work on.”
Johnson grinned, showing strong, irregular teeth. “He don't have to give his right name.”
The Italian came back. His face was puzzled. “I don't know whas th' matta,” he said. “He's gone. He musta drove around th' block.” He looked at Johnson. “I think I take a look at her myself.”
“I've seen you somewhere before,” said Johnson.
“Naw,” said the Italian. “Not me.” He turned to Crane. “Which way you go?”
Crane led them down the stairs. The big steel door was ajar and a stream of cold air poured out of the storage room. The lights were still on, but the attendant wasn't there. None of the vaults were open. They halted and Johnson called:
“Hi, Augie.”
The words beat back on their eardrums.
“Where they got her?” asked the Italian.
“Over there,” said Johnson. He called again: “Augie ⦠Oh, Augie-ee.”
There was no answer.
“That's funny,” said Johnson. “Where the hell could he have gone?” He shouted, “Augie!”
They paused in front of Vault Number 27. The silence was threaded with the faint, shrill laughter of the insane woman in the Psychopathic Hospital, feverish and excited and mocking.
“Well, here she is,” said Johnson. He grasped the handle of the vault, swung his shoulder in a half pivot to the right.
Up at them, from the depth of the steel box, stared a man. He had on a white coat and there was a smear of heavy blood on his yellow forehead. It was Augie, the morgue attendant, and there was no need to touch him to know that he was dead.
“What the hell!” Johnson stepped back two paces.
The Italian asked, “Whassa matta? Where's the dame?”
Johnson pulled open the bottom vault, but it was empty. The huge Negro was still in the one to the right, and there was an old woman in the one to the left. “She's gone!” Frantically, he began opening other vaults. “Somebody got her.”
The Italian exclaimed, “That sonabitch Frankie French!” He turned and ran clumsily down the corridor and up the stairs.
“Hey!” yelled Johnson. “Wait a minute!”
The Italian's footsteps sounded above their heads. He was still running. “For Christ's sake, let's get the police,” said Johnson.
Chapter Two
SIREN SCREAMING, the squad car detailed to rove in the neighborhood of the morgue arrived first, poured out men with revolvers, sawed-off shotguns. Then came the homicide squad from police headquarters, the official police photographer, two special investigators from the coroner's office, an assistant state's attorney, photographers from all the newspapers, and four
Tribune
reporters. Everyone was occupied in getting in everyone else's way until Captain Grady, night chief of detectives, arrived in a Lincoln sedan with a uniformed chauffeur.
“Now, first of all,” he demanded; “who found the body?”
Crane said he and the two reporters had found it. He explained they had been looking at the woman's body when the morgue attendant had told them a man wanted to see them, and he related how they had taken the Italian down to view the body, but he didn't say anything about the game they had been playing.
“I think I've seen that Dago somewhere before,” Johnson added.
Captain Grady stared at him with pale blue eyes. “We'll take a look at the body,” he said. He was within two years of the retirement age and his hair was cotton white, but he rated ninety-three in the annual police physical examination. His face was crimson from years of John Jameson's Irish whiskey and Lake Michigan's wind, and his cheeks were filigreed with tiny blue veins.
The policeman guarding the storage room was glad to see them. He said, “'Tis a hell of a place, Captain.”
“Keep them other reporters and photographers out of here for a while, Officer,” said Captain Grady. “I'll talk to them in a minute.” He walked over and looked into the open drawer. “It was obliging of the murderer to lay him away like that.”
The police photographer was packing his bag. “Looks like somebody grabbed his wrists, Captain.” He pointed his tripod at the body.
There were maroon bruises about both the morgue attendant's wrists. Bending closer, Crane saw that there was hair between the thumb and forefinger of the left hand. He pointed it out to the Captain.
“It's red,” said Johnson. “The murderer must have been red-haired.”
Captain Grady grunted, plucked an envelope from his inside coat pocket and carefully put the hair in it.
Crane said, “One of the assailants must have tried to hold his wrists. That's how the bruises got there.”
Captain Grady looked at him. “The assailants?”
“There must have been two. You can't hold on to somebody's wrists with both hands and also sock him over the head.”
“Some sock, too, Captain,” said the police photographer. “Whole top of his skull is bashed in.”
The captain looked and saw that this was so.
“The proverbial blunt instrument,” said Johnson.
“I don't think they meant to kill him,” Crane said. “He had a nasty scar on his head that might have weakened his skull. They might have been trying to knock him out.”
“You seem to know a devil of a lot about this business,” said Captain Grady.
“I noticed the scar earlier in the evening.”
The officer at the door said, “Here's the assistant state's attorney, Captain.”
“Hello, Burman,” said the Captain. “Made out anything?”
The assistant state's attorney was a small, dark, alert man with glasses. “Not a thing,” he said. He was a graduate of the University of Chicago Law School and his family had wanted him to be a rabbi. He was troubled with indigestion.
The captain repeated what Crane had told him and added, “This fellow seems to be pretty smart. Maybe he can tell us who the girl was.”
“I don't know any more about her than you do, Captain,” Crane said. “Not that I would've minded knowing her beforeâ”
“Smart guy, eh?” said Burman. “Maybe you can tell us just how you happen to be here.” His voice sounded as though he wouldn't believe the explanation, whatever it was.
William Crane looked at him in quiet surprise, then down at the corpse again. “Sure, I'll tell you. I like it here because it's cool.”
Greening had edged around by the open vault. “He says he's a private detective.”
Captain Grady said, “Where's your permit?” Crane showed it to him. “All right,” said the captain. “But that doesn't mean you can't answer a
civil
question.”
“I'll be glad to answer a civil question.”
“Well, how do you happen to be here?”
“I work for Colonel Black in New York. I happened to be in Chicago last night, and I got this wire from him.”
Crane pulled a Western Union telegram from his coat pocket, unfolded it, handed it to Captain Grady. It read:
WILLIAM CRANE ⦠SHERMAN HOTEL ⦠CHICAGO ⦠6:34 P.M. LEARN IDENTITY OF WOMAN SUICIDE PRINCESS HOTEL NOW AT MORGUE
.
BLACK
.
Crane continued, “It seemed to me the best thing was to come to the morgue and wait until somebody showed up and identified her, so I did. That's all I know about the lady.”
“And you came right over to the morgue when you got that telegram?” asked the captain.
“He got over here a little before eight,” said Johnson. “I was here then.”
“I grabbed a bite to eat first,” explained Crane.
Burman stroked his cheek with his hand. “How do we know you didn't get another wire telling you to remove the body to keep it from being identified?” His words tumbled from his mouth. “This second wire could have been to cover you up.” Across his cheek his hand made a sandpaper noise.
Greening said, “He was down here alone with the attendant for some time while we were talking to the Italian.”
“You fat son of a bitch,” said Johnson.
“Sure, I murdered the attendant,” said Crane, “and carried the girl out in my hip pocket.” He slapped his hip. “I got her there now.”
Burman whirled around and faced the captain. “He could have done it with an accomplice.” His eyes were like horehound cough drops. “They could have murdered this poor fellow here, and the accomplice could have carried away the girl while Crane joined the others upstairs.”
“Nothing ventured, nothing accompliced,” said Crane.
“He might have,” said the captain, “but it doesn't seem likely.”
Burman's hand clung to his jawbone. “Why not?”
“Well, he wouldn't have stuck around like this.”
“That's exactly what he would have done to throw suspicion from himself.” The assistant state's attorney balled one hand, pounded it on the palm of the other. “I'm not saying he did kill this manââ”
“Not much you're not,” said Crane.
“I'm not saying he did, but he was on the scene; he had the chance to do it, and I'm telling you, Captain, I think you ought to lock him up.”
Crane said, “Sure. Have the captain lock me up. It won't be you that'll have to take the rap for it.”
Captain Grady glared at the police photographer. “What the devil are you hanging around for, man? Isn't your work done?” The photographer made a disorganized exit, his arms laden with partially packed plates, flashlight guns and a camera. Captain Grady continued: “I'll lock this fellow up if I feel like it, and I won't if I don't feel like it. Is that clear enough?”
“That's your prerogative, Captain,” Burman said. “I was merely suggesting.”
“Suggesting?” Crane asked.
“Let's get on with our business.” Captain Grady jerked at the craggy, salt-and-pepper brow over his right eye. “Mister Crane, do you have any idea who the girl was?”
“Not the slightest.”
Burman said, “Your boss must have had some idea, or he wouldn't have wired you to watch her.”
“Why don't you ask him, then?”
“I'll do the questioning for a time, Mister Burman.” Captain Grady's voice was brittle. “Your chance will come in the courtroom.”
Crane said, “It won't do you much good to question me. I've told you everything I know.”
“Have you an idea who the client your agency is representing is?”
“Not the slightest.” Crane decided he was getting tired of this. “But even if I did I woudn't tell you.”
Captain Grady said, “So that's your attitude, is it?”
“Of course that's my attitude.” Crane raised his voice. “You ought to know, Captain, that information about a private detective's client is confidential.” He could see the reporters outside the metal door were listening. He raised his voice still more. “If you want to arrest me, go ahead, and I'll get hold of a lawyer. If you don't, let's get this over with.”
“You seem bound and determined to be locked up,” the captain said, “but I don't see why I should please you.” He turned to the door, bellowed: “O'Connor!” The big sergeant of the homicide squad pushed through the crowd of reporters and cameramen by the storage-room door, said: “Yes, sir.” The captain said, “Take this man's name, and call the Hotel Sherman and find if he's registered there. If he is, let him go.” To Crane he added, “You'll have to come to the inquest.”
The sergeant crooked a finger at Crane. “Come on.” There was a button off the coat of his Oxford gray suit and the pants reflected the light shinily, as though they had been varnished.