The revolver went off twice with a heavy crash. Two slugs plunked into a wall. Plaster rattled.
Francine Ley slid down to the floor, on her hands and knees. A long slim leg sprawled out from under her dress.
The blond man, down on one knee with his .45 in his hand again, rasped: «She got the bastard’s gun!»
Zapparty stood with his hands empty, a terrible expression on his face. There was a long red scratch on the back of his right hand. His revolver lay on the floor beside Francine Ley. His horrified eyes looked down at it unbelievingly.
Parisi coughed once on the floor and after that was still.
De Ruse got up on his feet. The little Mauser looked like a toy in his hand. His voice seemed to come from far away saying: «Watch that panel, Nicky…»
There was no sound outside the room, no sound anywhere. Zapparty stood at the end of the desk, frozen, ghastly.
De Ruse bent down and touched Francine Ley’s shoulder. «All right, baby?»
She drew her legs under her and got up, stood looking down at Parisi. Her body shook with a nervous chill.
«I’m sorry, baby,» De Ruse said softly beside her. «I guess I had a wrong idea about you.»
He took a handkerchief out of his pocket and moistened it with his lips, then rubbed his left cheek lightly and looked at blood on the handkerchief.
Nicky said: «I guess Big George went to sleep again. I was a sap not to blast at him.»
De Ruse nodded a little, and said:
«Yeah. The whole play was lousy. Where’s your hat and coat, Mister Zapparty? We’d like to have you go riding with us.»
NINE
In the shadows under the pepper trees De Ruse said: «There it is, Nicky. Over there. Nobody’s bothered it. Better take a look around.»
The blond man got out from under the wheel of the Packard and went off under the trees. He stood a little while on the same side of the street as the Packard, then he slipped across to where the big Lincoln was parked in front of the brick apartment house on North Kenmore.
De Ruse leaned forward across the back of the front seat and pinched Francine Ley’s cheek. «You’re going home now, baby — with this bus. I’ll see you later.»
«Johnny,» — she clutched at his arm — «what are you going to do? For Pete’s sake, can’t you stop having fun for tonight?»
«Not yet, baby. Mister Zapparty wants to tell us things. I figure a little ride in that gas car will pep him up. Anyway I need it for evidence.»
He looked sidewise at Zapparty in the corner of the back seat. Zapparty made a harsh sound in his throat and stared in front of him with a shadowed face.
Nicky came back across the road, stood with one foot on the running board.
«No keys,» he said. «Got’em?»
De Ruse said: «Sure.» He took keys out of his pocket and handed them to Nicky. Nicky went around to Zapparty’s side of the car and opened the door.
«Out, mister.»
Zapparty got out stiffly, stood in the soft, slanting rain, his mouth working. De Ruse got out after him.
«Take it away, baby.»
Francine Ley slid along the seat under the steering wheel of the Packard and pushed the starter. The motor caught with a soft whirr.
«So long, baby,» De Ruse said gently. «Get my slippers warmed for me. And do me a big favor, honey. Don’t phone anyone.»
The Packard went off along the dark street, under the big pepper trees. De Ruse watched it turn a corner. He prodded Zapparty with his elbow.
«Let’s go. You’re going to ride in the back of your gas car. We can’t feed you much gas on account of the hole in the glass, but you’ll like the smell of it. We’ll go off in the country somewhere. We’ve got all night to play with you.»
«I guess you know this is a snatch,» Zapparty said harshly.
«Don’t I love to think it,» De Ruse purred.
They went across the street, three men walking together without haste. Nicky opened the good rear door of the Lincoln. Zapparty got into it. Nicky banged the door shut, got under the wheel and fitted the ignition key in the lock. De Ruse got in beside him and sat with his legs straddling the tank of gas.
The whole car still smelled of the gas.
Nicky started the car, turned it in the middle of the block and drove north to Franklin, back over Los Feliz towards Glendale. After a little while Zapparty leaned forward and banged on the glass. De Ruse put his ear to the hole in the glass behind Nicky’s head.
Zapparty’s harsh voice said: «Stone house — Castle Road — in the La Crescenta flood area.»
«Jeeze, but he’s a softy,» Nicky grunted, his eyes on the road ahead.
De Ruse nodded, said thoughtfully: «There’s more to it than that. With Parisi dead he’d clam up unless he figured he had an out.»
Nicky said: «Me, I’d rather take a beating and keep my chin buttoned. Light me a pill, Johnny.»
De Ruse lit two cigarettes and passed one to the blond man. He glanced back at Zapparty’s long body in the corner of the car. Passing light touched up his taut face, made the shadows on it look very deep.
The big car slid noiselessly through Glendale and up the grade towards Montrose. From Montrose over to the Sunland highway and across that into the almost deserted flood area of La Crescenta.
They found Castle Road and followed it towards the mountains. In a few minutes they came to the stone house.
It stood back from the road, across a wide space which might once have been lawn but which was now packed sand, small stones and a few large boulders. The road made a square turn just before they came to it. Beyond it the road ended in a clean edge of concrete chewed off by the flood of New Year’s Day, 1934.
Beyond this edge was the main wash of the flood. Bushes grew in it and there were many huge stones. On the very edge a tree grew with half its roots in the air eight feet above the bed of the wash.
Nicky stopped the car and turned off the lights and took a big nickeled flash out of the car pocket. He handed it to De Ruse.
De Ruse got out of the car and stood for a moment with his hand on the open door, holding the flash. He took a gun out of his overcoat pocket and held it down at his side.
«Looks like a stall,» he said. «I don’t think there’s anything stirring here.»
He glanced in at Zapparty, smiled sharply and walked off across the ridges of sand, towards the house. The front door stood half open, wedged that way by sand. De Ruse went towards the corner of the house, keeping out of line with the door as well as he could. He went along the side wall, looking at boarded-up windows behind which there was no trace of light.
At the back of the house was what had been a chicken house. A piece of rusted junk in a squashed garage was all that remained of the family sedan. The back door was nailed up like the windows. De Ruse stood silent in the rain, wondering why the front door was open. Then he remembered that there had been another flood a few months before, not such a bad one. There might have been enough water to break open the door on the side towards the mountains.
Two stucco houses, both abandoned, loomed on the adjoining lots. Farther away from the wash, on a bit of higher ground, there was a lighted window. It was the only light anywhere in the range of De Ruse’s vision.
He went back to the front of the house and slipped through the open door, stood inside it and listened. After quite a long time he snapped the flash on.
The house didn’t smell like a house. It smelled like out of doors. There was nothing in the front room but sand, a few pieces of smashed furniture, some marks on the walls, above the dark line of the flood water, where pictures had hung.
De Ruse went through a short hall into a kitchen that had a hole in the floor where the sink had been and a rusty gas stove stuck in the hole. From the kitchen he went into a bedroom. He had not heard any whisper of sound in the house so far.