“If it’s the cigar-store guy, I know who he is. I don’t know him.”
The silence between the two men at the desk started again. Ease worked through Jordan. No one was accusing him. Joe Crider was in jail for investigation of murder. The murder of a cop — Bob Garfield, a young beat patrolman. Joe Crider was the owner of the biggest cigar-store chain in town. Garfield had been found in an alley alongside of one of Crider’s cigar stores not a half-dozen blocks from the City Hall. There’d been a hole in his chest and a .32 slug in his spine.
For two days the papers had been full of it. Station talk centered around it. One drop of blood had put Joe Crider behind bars. One drop of the dead officer’s blood, dripped on the sidewalk an inch beyond the sill of the alley entrance to Crider’s cigar store. Everybody said Garfield must have been killed in the store and carried out that entrance and dumped in the alley.
Now that the captain had brought up Crider’s name, the names of the other two fell in place. Elsa and Bart Berkey, sister and brother, clerked for Crider. They were in jail, too.
The captain said slowly to Eglin. “If it went wrong I’d take the fall, not you.”
“Name another way,” challenged Eglin.
“A little faster footwork out of you and your boys might’ve helped. It might even have uncovered some blood inside that store.”
Eglin’s expression said that didn’t deserve an answer. Jordan wondered about Sline’s statement. No blood in the store? They hadn’t heard about any of this in Traffic.
“Suppose we flub it,” Sline went on. “We flub it and Crider — or somebody — kills young Berkey. We lose our only witness against Crider, unless the girl does know something — and I doubt it.”
“Name another way,” repeated Eglin inexorably. “And if Jordan here is as cute as he thinks he is, he’ll get something out of the dame that’ll be of some value to us. Let the three of them free to roam around. If we’re going to get something on any of them, it’s got to be under cover.”
Jordan didn’t get much of it. But the piece Eglin just recited was plain enough. It didn’t smell good. They needed a cop who was fast with women, and they thought Jordan was their man. They wanted him to con some dame; to be bait for the hook.
It was cheap stuff. Jordan liked women too much for that. It was no go. When they gave him a chance, he’d tell them so.
Eglin looked impatiently at his wrist watch. “Time’s running out,” he said. “Dammit, Frank, we settled this once.”
“I still don’t like it,” the captain said. “Young Berkey knows something and as soon as he walks out of here, his life’s in danger.”
“We gave him his chance to talk. What are we going to do? What do you want us to do, Sline? Tuck him in every night?”
“If there was any other way I wouldn’t touch it. Maybe, if it was anybody but a cop that was killed, I wouldn’t touch it. I don’t know...” His voice trailed off, then came back strong. “Let’s run ’em through. The girl first.”
Eglin shot out of his chair and through a door behind him, yelling somebody’s name as he went. Sline fired up a stubby pipe and looked at the wall, lost in thought. Time was running him to earth; a year, maybe two, and there would be a little retirement ceremony in the chief’s office and Captain Sline would be all done. When it’s that close, big decisions can come hard.
“Somebody’s got me wrong,” Jordan said. “I don’t cuddle tramps.”
“Keep your shirt on,” said the captain.
In a minute Eglin was back. The tension was out of him.
“I still can’t figure what women see in you,” he said to Jordan.
“Maybe he’s the quiet type,” said Sline. “The kind that slips up on their blind side.”
“Maybe he just talks a good game,” said Eglin.
“Maybe,” said Jordan, “you can go to hell.”
The captain looked up thoughtfully. Ben Eglin grinned.
A cop in plain clothes came through the door Eglin had used. He was about ten years older than Jordan; thirty-six, say. Well dressed, round-faced, with that cold expression all the others had.
Eglin spoke to him. “Tague, this is Jordan. He’s the one we picked for the girl.”
Tague seemed to know what was expected of him. He had Jordan follow him into the adjoining room.
Eglin called after Jordan, “Get yourself a good look.”
Tague held the door until Jordan came through, then moved over to its hinged side. He pulled the door toward him until a crack opened between door and jamb on the hinged side.
“This is your box seat,” he said.
He pulled up a chair, motioned Jordan into it and killed the light. Sitting down, Jordan found that by leaning his head to the right he could see through the crack to Sline at his desk, and Eglin beyond.
Jordan heard the captain say, “Garfield was a wrong one. He shouldn’t have been a cop.”
“But he was a cop. A cop on duty.” Eglin was unaccountably sharp.
“I know, I know,” said Sline irritably. “You’re not the only man in the department that feels it.”
Eglin grunted. Silence settled in the next room.
It gave Jordan time to think. He needed it. He was in trouble now, if he hadn’t been before. They were going to burn plenty when he told them no soap. He should have told the captain straight out. The way it sounded, Crider and the other two were going to be turned loose. And then Jordan was supposed to con the girl. If he did, he would be what Eglin and Sline thought he was, a hit-and-run guy with women.
Already, somebody else thought that. Sline’s search through the department looking for a smoothie with dames, and somebody told him Ron Jordan was his man. Well, they had him wrong. He wasn’t a chaser. He didn’t have to chase. Women liked him; he liked women. That was all, and what was wrong with that? He played with women who knew the score. The married ones, and the dewy-eyed innocents, he left strictly alone.
A door was opened in the next room. A voice said, “In here, Miss Berkey.”
He heard Captain Sline say, “Did the matron tell you this is bag and baggage for you?”
“Bag and baggage?” came Elsa Berkey’s low reply. “I don’t understand.”
There’s the tipoff on her, thought Jordan. It was her voice. Deep and husky. Not unpleasant. But that throatiness told it. He didn’t have to look at her to know she was a tramp. Gin and cigarettes did that to her voice. Mostly chain-smoking. It had put callouses on her vocal cords.
“It’s jail talk,” explained Sline. “Means you collect your things because you’re going free.”
She asked quickly, “Does that mean — are you freeing my brother, too?”
“We are,” said Sline.
Ben Eglin said, “Go on, Elsa. Ask us if Joe Crider goes out, too.” He wasn’t polite like Sline. “That’s what’s on your mind, isn’t it?”
“I wondered,” she said.
“He goes out,” said Sline. “All three of you. We can’t hold you any longer without filing a charge, and we haven’t the evidence. You knew that.”
“No,” she said. “I didn’t know that.”
She was lobbing them back quietly; there was something subdued about her that did not fit her voice. Jordan took a look. She was standing before Sline’s desk, legs together, body poised in natural balance. Long red hair that picked up a gleam from the light above her. A regular profile, with high cheekbones shadowing the hallows below, the lips compressed too tight. Something about her puzzled him.
Sline spoke again. “We never intended to file a charge against you. It’s Joe Crider we want. You could have helped us. You didn’t. We have to remember that.”
She pulled her eyes away from Sline’s and sent a quick, careful gaze about the room. Jordan got a glimpse of gray eyes. The voice and the eyes told Jordan enough. He had her pegged. The puzzling thing, the thing about her that Jordan couldn’t see though he knew he was looking right at it — what the devil was it?