The blonde who looked after the big horseshoe cigar counter wasn’t young any more and her eyes were cynical from standing off cheap dates. De Ruse leaned on the glass and pushed his hat back on his crisp black hair.
«Camels, honey,» he said in his low-pitched gambler’s voice.
The girl smacked the pack in front of him, rang up fifteen cents and slipped the dime change under his elbow, with a faint smile. Her eyes said they liked him. She leaned opposite him and put her head near enough so that he could smell the perfume in her hair.
«Tell me something,» De Ruse said.
«What?» she asked softly.
«Find out who lives in eight-o-nine, without telling any answers to the clerk.»
The blonde looked disappointed. «Why don’t you ask him yourself, mister?»
«I’m too shy,» De Ruse said.
«Yes you are!»
She went to her telephone and talked into it with languid grace, came back to De Ruse.
«Name of Mattick. Mean anything?»
«Guess not,» De Ruse said. «Thanks a lot. How do you like it in this nice hotel?»
«Who said it was a nice hotel?»
De Ruse smiled, touched his hat, strolled away. Her eyes looked after him sadly. She leaned her sharp elbows on the counter and cupped her chin in her hands to stare after him.
De Ruse crossed the lobby and went up three steps and got into an open-cage elevator that started with a lurch.
«Eight,» he said, and leaned against the cage with his hands in his pockets.
Eight was as high as the Metropole went. De Ruse followed a long corridor that smelled of varnish. A turn at the end brought him face to face with 809. He knocked on the dark wood panel. Nobody answered. He bent over, looked through an empty keyhole, knocked again.
Then he took the tabbed key out of his pocket and unlocked the door and went in.
Windows were shut in two walls. The air reeked of whiskey. Lights were on in the ceiling. There was a wide brass bed, a dark bureau, a couple of brown leather rockers, a stiff-looking desk with a flat brown quart of Four Roses on it, nearly empty, without a cap. De Ruse sniffed it and set his hips against the edge of the desk, let his eyes prowl the room.
His glance traversed from the dark bureau across the bed and the wall with the door in it to another door behind which light showed. He crossed to that and opened it.
The man lay on his face, on the yellowish brown woodstone floor of the bathroom. Blood on the floor looked sticky and black. Two soggy patches on the back of the man’s head were the points from which rivulets of dark red had run down the side of his neck to the floor. The blood had stopped flowing a long time ago.
De Ruse slipped a glove off and stooped to hold two fingers against the place where an artery would beat. He shook his head and put his hand back into his glove.
He left the bathroom, shut the door and went to open one of the windows. He leaned out, breathing clean rain-wet air, looking down along slants of thin rain into the dark slit of an alley.
After a little while he shut the window again, switched off the light in the bathroom, took a «Do Not Disturb» sign out of the top bureau drawer, doused the ceiling lights, and went out.
He hung the sign on the knob and went back along the corridor to the elevators and left the Hotel Metropole.
SIX
Francine Ley hummed low down in her throat as she went along the silent corridor of the Chatterton. She hummed unsteadily without knowing what she was humming, and her left hand with its cherry-red fingernails held a green velvet cape from slipping down off her shoulders. There was a wrapped bottle under her other arm.
She unlocked the door, pushed it open and stopped, with a quick frown. She stood still, remembering, trying to remember. She was still a little tight.
She had left the lights on, that was it. They were off now. Could be the maid service, of course. She went on in, fumbled through the red curtains into the living room.
The glow from the heater prowled across the red and white rug and touched shiny black things with a ruddy gleam. The shiny black things were shoes. They didn’t move.
Francine Ley said: «Oh — oh,» in a sick voice. The hand holding the cape almost tore into her neck with its long, beautifully molded nails.
Something clicked and light glowed in a lamp beside an easy chair. De Ruse sat in the chair, looking at her woodenly.
He had his coat and hat on. His eyes shrouded, far away, filled with a remote brooding.
He said: «Been out, Francy?»
She sat down slowly on the edge of a half-round settee, put the bottle down beside her.
«I got tight,» she said. «Thought I’d better cat. Then I thought I’d get tight again.» She patted the bottle.
De Ruse said: «I think your friend Dial’s boss has been snatched.» He said it casually, as if it was of no importance to him.
Francine Ley opened her mouth slowly and as she opened it all the prettiness went out of her face. Her face became a blank haggard mask on which rouge burned violently. Her mouth looked as if it wanted to scream.
After a while it closed again and her face got pretty again and her voice, from far off, said: «Would it do any good to say I don’t know what you’re talking about?»
De Ruse didn’t change his wooden expression. He said: «When I went down to the street from here a couple of hoods jumped me. One of them was stashed in the car. Of course they could have spotted me somewhere else — followed me here.»
«They did,» Francine Ley said breathlessly. «They did, Johnny.»
His long chin moved an inch. «They piled me into a big Lincoln, a limousine. It was quite a car. It had heavy glass that didn’t break easily and no door handles and it was all shut up tight. In the front seat it had a tank of Nevada gas, cyanide, which the guy driving could turn into the back part without getting it himself. They took me out Griffith Parkway, towards the Club Egypt. That’s that joint on county land, near the airport.» He paused, rubbed the end of one eyebrow, went on: «They overlooked the Mauser I sometimes wear on my leg. The driver crashed the car and I got loose.»
He spread his hands and looked down at them. A faint metallic smile showed at the corners of his lips.
Francine Ley said: «I didn’t have anything to do with it, Johnny.» Her voice was as dead as the summer before last.
De Ruse said: «The guy that rode in the car before I did probably didn’t have a gun. He was Hugo Candless. The car was a ringer for his car — same model, same paint job, same plates — but it wasn’t his car. Somebody took a lot of trouble. Candless left the Delmar Club in the wrong car about six-thirty. His wife says he’s out of town. I talked to her an hour ago. His car hasn’t been out of the garage since noon … Maybe his wife knows he’s snatched by now, maybe not.»
Francine Ley’s nails clawed at her skirt. Her lips shook.
De Ruse went on calmly, tonelessly: «Somebody gunned the Candless chauffeur in a downtown hotel tonight or this afternoon. The cops haven’t found it yet. Somebody took a lot of trouble, Francy. You wouldn’t want to be in on that kind of a set-up, would you, precious?»
Francine Ley bent her head forward and stared at the floor. She said thickly: «I need a drink. What I had is dying in me. I feel awful.»
De Ruse stood up and went to the white desk. He drained a bottle into a glass and brought it across to her. He stood in front of her, holding the glass out of her reach.
«I only get tough once in a while, baby, but when I get tough I’m not so easy to stop, if I say it myself. If you know anything about all this, now would be a good time to spill it.»
He handed her the glass. She gulped the whiskey and a little more light came into her smoke-blue eyes. She said slowly: «I don’t know anything about it, Johnny. Not in the way you mean. But George Dial made me a love-nest proposition tonight and he told me he could get money out of Candless by threatening to spill a dirty trick Candless played on some tough boy from Reno.»