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Authors: J.A. Johnstone

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Chapter 12
 
The redheaded, mustachioed Dugan was on bodyguard duty again the next morning when Conrad opened the door to Claudius Turnbuckle’s knock. Conrad nodded and smiled at Dugan and ushered Turnbuckle into the suite. “Coffee?”
“Don’t mind if I do,” Turnbuckle replied.
Conrad had been eating breakfast, which had been delivered to the suite by a waiter from the hotel dining room. He had also been reading that morning’s issue of the
San Francisco Chronicle
, which had been brought up with the food and coffee. Tucked away in the paper’s rear pages was a small story about a brawl at a saloon in the notorious area known as the Barbary Coast resulting in the death of two men, one from a gunshot wound and the other from injuries inflicted with a hatchet, which had been found still lodged in the victim’s body. The presence of the hatchet led the author of the story to speculate that perhaps one of the tongs from nearby Chinatown had been involved in the violence.
The same possibility had occurred to Conrad once he had time to think over the events of the evening. The criminal societies known as tongs had ruled San Francisco’s Chinatown for more than four decades, ever since the Chinese began to arrive in the gold rush days along with everyone else. The rulers of the tongs used assassins known as hatchet men to maintain their iron grip on the neighborhood and also to battle each other in bloody wars over who controlled what in Chinatown.
The big man in black who had come to Conrad’s aid certainly fit the description of a hatchet man, but for the life of him Conrad couldn’t see why such an individual would invade a “round eyes” saloon to rescue him. He had no connection with the tongs whatsoever.
Conrad poured coffee for Turnbuckle, who put his hat and overcoat on a side table and took the steaming cup gratefully. “Anything to report?” Conrad asked as he sat down at the table again.
Turnbuckle shook his head and looked weary. “No, I’m afraid not, perhaps by the end of the day. Until we know something my men will continue to investigate.” He took a sip of the coffee. “Any problems here last night?”
“How could there be, with your man Morelli on duty?” Conrad asked with a bland smile. “And in the finest hotel in San Francisco, to boot.”
Turnbuckle grunted. “Nothing about this affair surprises me anymore.”
Conrad smiled to himself. He suspected if Turnbuckle knew everything that had happened the previous night, he would be surprised, all right.
The lawyer was a friend who had gone to great lengths to help him on more than one occasion, and Conrad felt bad for withholding information, but thought he might have more luck investigating the latest lead by himself. He could always bring Turnbuckle in when he knew more.
They talked rather aimlessly for a few more minutes, then Turnbuckle asked, “What are you going to do today?”
Conrad picked up the folded newspaper. “I thought I might go down to the
Chronicle
offices.”
“Why?” Turnbuckle asked with a puzzled frown.
“Newspapermen are famous for knowing what’s going on. I want to talk to a journalist I know who works there.”
Turnbuckle shook his head. “No offense, Conrad, but that’s a bad idea. You wanted to keep this matter quiet if possible. That’s why we haven’t brought the police in on it. Talking to a reporter is like asking to have your personal affairs shouted from the rooftops.”
“You’re probably right in most cases, but I believe the man I’m thinking of will respect my wishes if I ask him for privacy.”
“Never trust a newspaperman, that’s my motto,” Turnbuckle said stubbornly.
Conrad smiled. “Some people say the same thing about lawyers,” he pointed out.
Turnbuckle grunted. “Of course you should do whatever you think is best. I’ve given you my advice. That’s my job.”
“And you’re excellent at it.”
“If you go out, at least take Dugan with you.”
“I don’t think the estimable Mr. Dugan would have it otherwise.”
Turnbuckle finished his coffee and left. Conrad dressed in his black suit and flat-crowned black Stetson. When he stepped out of the suite, Dugan stood up immediately from the armchair.
“Goin’ somewhere, Mr. Browning?” the bodyguard asked.
“I am, and you’re coming with me,” Conrad answered. “Do you know how to get to the offices of the
San Francisco Chronicle
?”
“I sure do. You need to put an advertisement or a notice in the paper?”
“Something like that.”
They left the hotel and walked several blocks to the impressive redbrick building that housed the offices of the
Chronicle
. A woman at a counter in the lobby directed Conrad and Dugan to the third floor, where they found a large open area littered with desks where men sat pecking at typewriters. Conrad spotted the slender, balding man he was looking for and walked over to that desk, trailed by Dugan.
The reporter glanced up as they approached, then looked again with eyes grown wide with surprise. “Conrad Browning!” he exclaimed as he came to his feet. “I heard rumors you were in town, but I hadn’t been able to confirm them yet.”
“Hello, Jessup.” Conrad shook hands with the man. Despite the lack of hair on the reporter’s head, he was about Conrad’s age. In fact, they had been in college together for a while before Jessup Nash had decided he had no interest in running the textile mills his family owned and had disappointed them severely by going into journalism.
“Jessup, this is Patrick Dugan,” Conrad went on, having asked the big bodyguard his first name earlier. “Dugan, meet Jessup Nash.”
Dugan grunted as his hairy paw all but swallowed Nash’s smaller hand. “I’ve seen the name in the paper. Never thought I’d be meetin’ the fella it belongs to.”
“It’s a pleasure, Mr. Dugan.” Nash turned back to Conrad. “What brings you to San Francisco? Business or pleasure?”
“For some people it’s the same thing,” Conrad pointed out.
“Yes, I remember when it was like that for you. But from everything that I’ve heard, ever since—” Nash stopped short and looked horrified. “Damn it, Conrad, I was so glad to see you that for a minute I forgot ... I’m sorry. I’m so sorry for your loss. I couldn’t believe it when I heard about your wife, and then everybody said you were ... I mean—”
“I know what you mean”—Conrad nodded—“and I appreciate the sentiments, Jessup. But sympathy’s not why I’m here. I’m looking for information.”
“Of course.” Nash pulled a chair from an empty desk over beside his desk. “Why don’t you sit down?”
“You want me to stay, Mr. Browning?” Dugan rumbled.
“I think it would be all right for you to go down to the lobby where you’ll be comfortable. I’m confident no one will try to assassinate me here in the
Chronicle
’s editorial offices.”
Dugan frowned. “Sounds good, but I’m supposed to keep my eye on you.”
“I’m not going anywhere,” Conrad promised. “I’ll come get you when I’m ready to leave.”
“If you’re tryin’ to trick me, you know I’ll lose my job over this.”
Conrad smiled. “I wouldn’t do that to those four redheaded little ones of yours.”
“I’ll hold you to that,” Dugan said ominously. He walked back to the stairs and disappeared down them.
As Conrad and Nash sat down, the reporter said, “Your friend Mr. Dugan has the appearance of someone who’s been hired to look after you. By Claudius Turnbuckle, say?”
“Jessup, before I tell you anything, or ask you anything, I have a request.”
Nash looked pained. “You don’t want me to print anything that we’re about to discuss.”
“That’s right.”
“That’s a very difficult thing for a journalist to promise, Conrad. Our business is finding things to print.”
“I know that. And I can give you a good story—maybe a better story than you’ve ever had—but only when the time is right.”
“You’ll promise me an exclusive in return for my discretion and cooperation now?”
“Exactly.”
Nash thought about it for a moment before saying, “Normally I wouldn’t agree to such a thing. But since we’re old friends ... and since I have a hunch you’re right about it being quite a story ... I’ll take a chance. What is it you want to know?”
“I have your word you won’t write anything about this until I tell you it’s all right?”
Nash nodded, although he still looked a little reluctant. “My word.”
“What can you tell me about a place in the Barbary Coast called the Golden Gate?”
“The Golden Gate what? Walk around this city and you’ll find everything from the Golden Gate Saloon to the Golden Gate Laundry. You mentioned the Barbary Coast, which leads me to think you’re more likely talking about the saloon.”
“There is such a place?”
“Oh, yes. One of the biggest drinking and gambling establishments in the area. Other things go on there as well, if you get my drift.”
Conrad reached in his pocket and took out the ivory token. “Is this from there?”
Nash barely glanced at the token before he nodded. “Sure. How did you get hold of one?”
“Never mind that now. What’s its purpose?”
“Twofold, actually. All the people who work at the Golden Gate carry them, and the owner also hands them out to certain customers so they can gain entrance to the second floor, where the real drinking and gambling and those other things I mentioned go on.”
“The owner,” Conrad repeated.
“That’s right. If you have one of those tokens, you must know him. His name’s Dex Lannigan.”
Dex Lannigan.
The name echoed in Conrad’s head.
He had found D.L.
Chapter 13
 
Conrad tried to keep the reaction he felt from showing on his face. “Dex Lannigan, eh?”
“Are you telling me you
don’t
know him?” Nash asked with a puzzled frown.
“That’s right.”
“Then how did you get that token?”
“That’s part of the story I’ve promised you when the time is right. What can you tell me about Lannigan?”
Nash grunted and spoke quietly. “He owns a successful saloon on Grant Street, smack-dab between the Barbary Coast and Chinatown. That ought to tell you everything you need to know about the man. Despite a veneer of smoothness, Dex Lannigan is no more honest than he has to be. He’s shrewd, ruthless, and dangerous. I suspect some of his competitors found that out to their regret. Before their bodies were dumped in the bay or out at sea, that is.”
“So you think he’s a killer?”
Nash leaned back in his chair. “I don’t know if he’s ever killed anyone personally, although it wouldn’t surprise me if he had. But I’m confident he’s ordered plenty of executions. So are the police, but they haven’t been able to prove it.”
“How long has he been around?”
Nash cocked his right ankle on his left knee and toyed with a pencil on the desk. “That’s an interesting question. He bought the Golden Gate about three years ago. Old Cletus Snyder owned it before that, but Snyder was in bad health and wanted out of the game. Lannigan came out of nowhere and took over the place. Some of us looked into his background afterward and found he’d been involved with some of the gangs along the Barbary Coast, but only as a low-level hoodlum. There was nothing in his history to indicate he had the money to buy a place like the Golden Gate or the skill to run it. Obviously he had both, since he’s made it more successful than it already was.” Lowering his voice he went on. “Some important people in San Francisco have been known to patronize the private rooms of the Golden Gate. I suspect Lannigan has a pretty good blackmail racket going on.”
Conrad nodded. He was intensely interested in everything Nash had said so far. The timing of Dex Lannigan’s rise to power was very suspicious. Pamela had arrived in San Francisco about three years ago, Conrad thought. If she had somehow made contact with Lannigan, she could have bankrolled his purchase of the Golden Gate Saloon. She wouldn’t have done that without getting something in return, though, such as his promise to send killers after Pamela’s former fiancé if Conrad showed up in the city by the bay looking for his missing children.
It was also possible Pamela had enlisted Lannigan’s help in finding a place to hide the twins. Conrad knew he was going to have to have a faceto-face talk with Mr. Dex Lannigan, and soon.
“What else can you tell me about him?”
Nash shrugged. “There’s not much else to tell. His wife’s a bit of a social climber. He’s managed to get them invited to some parties where a cheap sharper like him has no business being. That’s another reason I think he indulges in a little blackmail. Sometimes instead of money he demands at least an illusion of respectability for himself and his wife.”
That was an interesting angle. “You don’t know if Lannigan’s going to be attending one of those society parties any time soon, do you?”
“Not my department,” Nash replied with a shake of his head. He smiled. “But I know how we can find out. Come on.”
They stood, and Nash led him out of the big editorial room and into a corridor lined with smaller offices.
“Where are we going?” Conrad asked.
“To see Francis Carlyle. I’m sure you remember her.”
As a matter of fact, he did. Francis Carlyle wrote a popular column for the
Chronicle
about the doings of San Francisco’s high society. Not many women were involved in journalism, but Mrs. Carlyle, a widow, held an important and respected position among the city’s elite. Conrad had met her on several occasions when he’d accompanied his mother to San Francisco, before Vivian Browning’s vicious murder at the hands of an outlaw gang ... a murder which had later been avenged by Frank Morgan.
Conrad didn’t like to think about those days. Some of those same outlaws had kidnapped and tortured him, mutilating one of his ears before Frank was able to rescue him. He kept his hair long enough to hide that deformity.
If he had found himself in such a situation now, he would have figured out a way to kill those varmints himself, rather than relying on Frank to save him. He had changed a great deal since then.
But not enough to keep Francis Carlyle from recognizing him when Nash ushered him into her office after knocking on the door and being told to enter. Mrs. Carlyle, a still-attractive woman in her late forties with a husky voice and dark, curly hair only lightly touched with gray, stood up behind her desk. “Well, for heaven’s sake. If it’s not Conrad Browning himself.” She came around the desk and extended a hand. “Conrad, my dear boy, how are you?”
Conrad took her hand and bent to brush his lips across the back of it in the courtly European manner. He recalled that while Mrs. Carlyle was quick to use her column to cut through what she regarded as pretense and hypocrisy, she enjoyed being played up to. He held her hand in both of his as he straightened. “I’m fine, Mrs. Carlyle. You haven’t changed a bit, as beautiful as ever.”
She smiled, obviously pleased, then grew solemn. “My deepest condolences on your loss.”
Conrad nodded. “Thank you.”
“I was very happy when I heard you were alive after all. That blasted Claudius Turnbuckle was tight-lipped about it for a long time.”
“At my request,” Conrad said.
“Yes, well, I’m accustomed to people talking to me. I maintain a position of absolute trustworthiness.”
Mrs. Carlyle could be trusted, all right ... trusted to gossip—which, of course, was exactly why Conrad was in her office. He understood why Jessup Nash had taken him there.
“Sit down and tell me what brings you to San Francisco,” Mrs. Carlyle went on. She waved a hand at Nash. “Thank you for bringing Conrad to see me, Jessup. You can go now.”
Nash looked pained, but didn’t argue. “Stop by my desk on your way out,” he told Conrad, who nodded in agreement.
After Nash left, Conrad settled on the opposite side of the desk. “I’m relying on your absolute discretion here, Mrs. Carlyle.”
“My goodness, call me Francis. It’s not like you’re a callow youth anymore. You’re a grown man.” The blatant interest in the woman’s gaze made it clear how aware of that fact she was.
Conrad smiled. “All right, Francis. I want to ask you about a man named Dex Lannigan.”
A look of surprise and distaste appeared on Mrs. Carlyle’s face. “Dex Lannigan?” she repeated. “Why are you interested in a cheap hoodlum like that?”
“From what I hear, he’s not all that cheap. He owns a very successful business.”
“A saloon. And a saloon in the Barbary Coast, at that.”
“And he’s become a member of San Francisco society.”
Mrs. Carlyle shook her head. “More of a pretender than a member. But for reasons I can’t fathom, he’s been issued invitations to a number of soirees the likes of him and that crass woman he’s married to never should have attended. I think she must be the one behind it. She has that desperate hunger for approval you find in women who come from a less than sterling background.”
As Conrad recalled, Francis Carlyle’s background wasn’t all that sterling itself. Her father had been a railroad conductor. But she had married a man who was a stockholder and an important executive with the Southern Pacific, and that had been her entry into society.
Conrad didn’t say anything about that. “Do you know if Lannigan is going to be attending any of those parties in the near future?”
“Why do you ask? Don’t tell me you want to meet the man!”
“It might be mutually beneficial for the two of us to have a conversation.”
It might be easier to do while they were on neutral ground, Conrad thought, rather than him trying to approach Lannigan at the Golden Gate. If Lannigan wanted to keep his wife’s position in society secure, he wouldn’t cause a scene at a party.
“You intrigue me.” Mrs. Carlyle’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “Something’s going on here, and I want to know what it is.”
“I’m sorry. I can’t tell you any more ... right now.” Conrad’s words held the promise of future information, as they had with Jessup Nash.

Quid pro quo
,” Mrs. Carlyle snapped. “I know you studied Latin. You’re familiar with the concept.”
“Of course. But my hands are tied at the moment. However, I can tell you this much. If my conversation with Lannigan goes as I hope, I can promise you there
will
be a story, and a good one.”
“And that story will be mine?”
Conrad shrugged and inclined his head, indicating agreement without actually saying as much.
Suddenly, Mrs. Carlyle laughed. “You’re trying to trick me, young man. It won’t work. I’m on to all the tricks young men use to make poor women like myself believe they’ve promised something when they really haven’t.” She picked up a copy of the newspaper lying on the desk and tossed it closer to Conrad. “I won’t haggle with you, especially since what you want to know is already in print. And you’d already know it
if
you had bothered to read my column this morning,” she added caustically.
Conrad picked up the paper, which was that morning’s edition folded back to Mrs. Carlyle’s column. He had scanned those pages that very morning while eating breakfast, but hadn’t noticed what seemed so obvious to him now.
One of the notes in the column was about a party to be held in four days at the Nob Hill mansion of Mr. and Mrs. Madison Kimball. Among a long list of guests expected to attend were Mr. and Mrs. Dexter Lannigan. The name had meant nothing to Conrad when he read it in the paper that morning, but he should have noticed the D.L. initials, he told himself.
It hadn’t occurred to him the man possibly responsible for trying to have him killed would be attending a high society ball.
He looked up at her. “Do you think you can arrange for me to be invited to that party?”
“I don’t think it’ll be any trouble at all,” Mrs. Carlyle said. “If Roberta Kimball knew you were in town, you would have already gotten an invitation, even if she had to deliver it personally. I’ll mention that I’ve seen you, and you should hear from her before the day’s over. Where are you staying?”
“At the Palace.”
“Of course you are. I’ll tell Roberta.”
“Thank you.” Conrad put the newspaper back on Mrs. Carlyle’s desk.
“Oh, a simple thank you isn’t going to be enough. Not by a long shot.”
“Then what can I do to repay you for your help?” he asked with a smile.
“Let me share the story with that little reporter Nash when the time comes. And have dinner with me.”
Conrad had a hunch Francis Carlyle’s plans for him included more than dinner. But he would deal with that when the time came. As for sharing the story with Jessup Nash, he was confident he could make some sort of arrangement.
“I think that’s fair enough.” He got to his feet. “Thank you for your help.”
Mrs. Carlyle came around the desk and laid a hand on his arm. “Don’t forget, we have a deal.”
“I won’t,” Conrad promised.
“If there’s anything else I can do for you while you’re in town, don’t hesitate to let me know.”
Conrad leaned closer and kissed her on the cheek. “Of course,” he murmured.
She was smiling when he left the office. As he eased the door closed, his thoughts immediately turned back to Dex Lannigan. Waiting four days to confront the man would be difficult, but that seemed like the best course of action. He would just have to be patient, Conrad told himself.
He had waited this long to find his children. A few more days wouldn’t hurt anything.
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