Jordan started back toward the telephone. What if Crider had burned the canvas? But that would not have been so easy. Anyway, if he had, the burning would have left traces — ash or smell — that Eglin’s men would never have missed. No, the canvas was hidden somewhere. If they could find it—
“Hello, Ron,” said Gloria Hume. She stood in the doorway, smiling. She walked on in. “Nobody answers at Elsa’s, but the lights were on when I came up the street. Do you know what’s the matter?”
“Hi, baby!” Jordan had to get her out and make his phone call. He took her arm and turned her around. “They’re home. Go knock again.”
She let him lead her only a couple of steps. “Am I getting the bum’s rush?”
“No, baby. I’ve got to talk on the telephone. Private talk.”
“You’re a strange one, Ron.” Her full, red, over-painted lips pouted. “I wouldn’t have come in, but I thought—”
She said the rest of it with her eyes. She said she thought he would like having a pretty girl walk into his apartment without knocking. She said something else with her eyes, too, that she didn’t intend him to see. She said she wouldn’t stand for a man not to rise to the lure she offered.
Standing there studying Gloria Hume, Jordan remembered how Eglin had ridden him, accusing him of trying to play detective. All he was in Eglin’s eyes was a lady killer with merely enough brains to be a traffic cop. If he told Eglin to pick Crider up again on the basis of what he knew, he’d really ride him.
“Didn’t I tell you that you were a pretty doll?” Ron put one arm around Gloria and pulled her to him. The pressure of her lips were not eager. “What’s this? Suddenly, you’re a marble statue.”
“Go on to your old telephone,” she said. “I’ll go and shut the door behind me.”
“Baby!” He drew it out so that it expressed hurt and pleading and had an underpinning of schmaltz. And at once he started nuzzling at her fleshy, powdered throat. “Who said anything about a phone?” He had to find that paint canvas on his own. No better starting place than with chubby, cuddly Gloria. “Am I forgiven? How about a drink?”
A smile came to her lips, seeped into them. She wriggled coyly. “You hurt my feelings, you did.”
“Like they say, you always hurt the one you love.”
She gave him a wet peck on the cheek for that. Before leaving her for the bottle he still had in his suitcase, he gave her a squeeze. If you’re playing the part of a lover boy, he told himself, you play it. He brought the drinks from the kitchen to the couch, where she sat waiting, obviously for more than a drink... The smooching and the hand-roaming was interspersed with tugs at the scotch. He tried to keep her drinking steadily, gambling that she had less tolerance for the scotch than he had.
Gloria cuddled to him. “St. Looie man,” she said.
“Rat killer.”
“No. You’re too damn sweet for that.”
“Let me freshen your drink.” He bent for the bottle on the floor in front of them, but her arms were around his neck. “Hey, baby, let me get to that bottle. Come on—”
She shook her head. She put her lips to his. Suction lips, Jordan thought. And he wondered how in the hell he was ever going to get any information out of her. Judging by the progress he was making, as a detective, he deserved to be in traffic.
“What’s between you and this Bart across the hall?” he asked. Pulling it cold out of the hat. “That young kid’s got it bad for you.”
She laughed; the soprano trill let him know she was flattered.
“Elsa told me. Said he tossed in his sleep. Gloria. Gloria. All through the night — out of his sleep — he keeps calling your name.”
“Men all over town do that,” Gloria said, making a wide, drunken gesture with her arm.
“He’s young, but he’s a handy man. You know. He can make anything. But you’re the one exception, baby.”
Gloria giggled.
“And he paints. Houses. Anything. Wants to paint a room for his sister, but he needs this big canvas thing that you put down on the floor—”
She reacted to that. A shot of electricity wouldn’t have had more of an effect. She sat poker-straight, her arms came from around Jordan’s neck. Alert, no longer drunk.
“What’s the matter, baby?” said Jordan.
She didn’t answer, didn’t move, sat glaring at him.
“Seems Bart lost this canvas,” he gripped Gloria’s wrist hard, thinking to hell with subtlety. “And he needs it now. Would you know where—?”
The hard jerk of her arm didn’t free her wrist. “Who are you?”
If the canvas was destroyed, Jordan thought, she wouldn’t be taking on so. And out of nowhere he remembered something — remembered Elsa saying that Bart had been fussing with their living room carpet, though he’d put that carpet down some time ago.
“You’re a cop!” Her accusation was venomous. With an abrupt, savage threshing of her arm, she freed herself from Jordan’s grip.
Jordan’s hand groped to recover its hold, but Gloria had sprung back from the couch and stood facing him. Her heavy breasts rose and fell with her hard breathing. The cleavage accentuated their flaccid heaviness. From her bosom, she drew a small automatic, as Jordan arose slowly from the couch.
All the time that canvas was under the carpet, he thought, right across the hall.
“I knew you was a cop! I knew you was a filthy cop right along!”
She moved carefully to the phone. She kept her eyes on Jordan as she dialed...
5.
Crider moved across to Gloria as soon as he came into the room and took the automatic from her. As the depthless stare of the man’s square lenses fixed on him, Jordan told himself that Ben Eglin would be furious with him. He’d flubbed it. That was the word Captain Sline had used that day.
“Hand over the gun, Crider,” Jordan said. “You’re all done.”
“You know me?” The blank eyes studied him. “You are a cop.”
“I told you!” Gloria wailed.
“Shut up, Gloria,” said Crider.
“I told you, Joe,” Gloria cried again. Her mind was fixed rigidly on that one idea, clinging to it as though it absolved her from all guilt. “He said he was a rat killer. I knew he was a phony.”
Jordan ached to reach for the revolver in his armpit, but his hands down at his sides seemed a million miles away. He heard a sob from Gloria.
Crider had used her to get hold of Garfield in some fashion. Jordan was sure of it — as sure as he was that Gloria, and not Elsa, was there the night Garfield had died. She was a creature who could not tolerate indifference in any man, yet used any man she got her hands on. She had seen murder once. She thought she was going to witness it again.
Yet there was something Eglin had said: Crider was too smart to kill a cop in cold blood. Eglin was right. That was why Crider had not yet pulled the trigger. Crider was trying to figure a way out.
A warning cry came out of Gloria, mingling with the voice of Elsa. She stood at the door, with Bart behind her. “Ron!” Elsa cried.
Crider fired once — an unintended shot — as he spun; reflex pulled the trigger. The bullet thudded into the wall to Jordan’s left. Ron got his pistol half out before Crider twisted back. Jordan felt a burning sting at his shoulder and then the pain came. His gun was falling and he was falling. He was hit. Crider had fired a second time.