“I don’t think we’ll find Camilla Steele tonight. Before Crowther shows up tomorrow, we can clear the public out of the corridor and saturate it with plainclothesmen. As soon as Camilla appears, we grab her before she can fire. The gun will be loaded with blanks, but she’ll get the publicity as a potential assassin, and probably a hospital commitment. How many people will believe that Crowther arranged it? I’m willing to make a statement, but would your editor be willing to print it?”
“Hmm,” Rourke said. “Those bullet holes. But if she’s really off her squash, maybe she did that herself, to make us think that Crowther-” He stopped. “In fact, Mike, while we’re talking about possibilities, isn’t that one? She sneaked in late one night, put the holes in the wall, sent herself the gun, and then tomorrow-wait a minute till I work this out-some smart head like Mike Shayne would find the holes and spread the wild tale that Crowther put them there. His career would be damaged, and she wouldn’t go to jail for murder.”
Shayne was shaking his head.
“A guy named Paul London has been following her for a few days, and she wasn’t in New York this morning checking a suitcase on a Miami flight. That could have been worked. But the main thing that’s wrong with the idea is that it doesn’t fit her condition. She’s not a politician and a manipulator, like Crowther. This is a Crowther type of thing. Her doctor has been seeing her three times a week for a year. He says she isn’t capable of carrying out anything complicated alone. She needs support all the way.”
Rourke objected, “I know psychiatrists who’ve made some really lousy diagnoses.”
“So do I, but this guy impresses me. He likes her and he’s worrying about her. He won’t make any prediction about her future, except that it can go either way. If something good happens, he thinks she could get well in a hurry. But if she has a setback at this point, if something she’s been counting on falls through, she’s gone. Think about it. She worked herself up to kill somebody, and the damn gun was loaded with blanks. She’ll realize that Crowther tricked her, made a fool out of her. In psychiatric language, she’s suffering from a poor self-image, and this would reinforce it. Suicide or permanent depression. That’s why I said Crowther can’t lose.”
“Then for Christ’s sake, let’s break it up. Tell him you found a couple of inconspicuous little holes in the plaster on the eighth floor of the St. Albans. He’ll call everything off. She can’t shoot him if he isn’t here.”
“He wouldn’t take a phone call from me.”
“Tell Abe Berger and let him pass it on. It would be a great moment for Abe.”
“No, I don’t think I’ll bother either of them. Here’s the scene as I see it. She must have a ticket to the luncheon under a different name. That part of the corridor, in front of the cameras, will be jammed with people. As Crowther comes out of the elevator she fires four or five shots. They all miss, but never mind, she’ll have the satisfaction of knowing she actually pulled the trigger.”
“She’ll run a risk of being shot herself.”
“I’m going to be there. I know exactly where she’ll be, and what to watch for. I’ll be in front of Crowther, and I’ll tackle her the second she fires. There’s a risk either way. And then we can report digging a bullet out of the wall the night before. If Camilla planned it herself, she wouldn’t do any actual shooting. Do you see that point? To prove it was a fake, to be able to blame Crowther for setting it up, there would have to be holes in the wall even though no shots were fired.”
“You’ve lost me.”
“Well, we’ve got the rest of the night. My scenario ends with Crowther being kicked out of the cabinet, Camilla throwing away her sleeping pills. Happy ending. We all congratulate each other.”
“So you’re going to let it happen?”
“That’s right. I’m going to let it happen.”
Rourke gave him a direct look. “You’re not exactly impartial on the subject of Crowther, are you, Mike?”
“I have no interest whatever in saving his skin,” Shayne said. “Either his political skin or his actual skin.”
CHAPTER 11
The news programs were filled with warnings of trouble. A cafe in the Latin district, owned by a right-wing politician, had been wrecked in the night. Two boys distributing leaflets had been set upon and beaten. Until long after midnight, 8th Street was alive with knots of people, arguing bitterly. Will Gentry kept a concentration of police cars moving back and forth between Miami Avenue and 27th.
In the morning several thousand people from the Latin community crossed the causeways to Miami Beach and assembled on Collins Avenue in front of the St. Albans Hotel. Dr. Galvez, already there with his band of black-clad pickets, was astonished and pleased. It was a peaceful crowd, including many children.
Galvez spotted no more than a dozen of Vega’s toughs. They circulated for a time, decided they would be clobbered if they started anything, and went home. Vega himself never appeared. It was reported that someone had presented him with an expensive sports car, as a price for agreeing to stay away; Vega himself had started this rumor.
The left organizations boycotted the Miami Beach demonstration. Their adherents drove to the International Airport to boo Crowther when he arrived. Michael Shayne, on the observation deck of the main terminal with Teddy Sparrow, watched the long line of cars coming out of the LeJeune interchange and up the ramp.
“God, will you look at that crowd?” Sparrow demanded. It was a cool morning, but he was already perspiring heavily. “What I wanted to do was close the lots, but the brass overruled me, on the grounds that public relations-wise it would be counterproductive. I can see that. And with five hundred combat infantrymen on the premises we should be able to handle anything. Don’t you agree with me, Mike?” he said anxiously.
Two companies of paratroops had been airlifted to the Bayshore Country Club in Miami Beach, to back up the police if the Collins Avenue demonstration got out of hand. The remainder of the battalion was being held at the airport in reserve. Directly below the tower, in the ramp area and along the front of the International Concourse, four big troop-carrying Sikorsky helicopters waited. The soldiers themselves were dispersed in the departure lounges.
Two Bell helicopters, much smaller than the Sikorskys, were parked on a grassy triangle near an intersection of a taxiway with the main northwest-southeast landing strip, several hundred yards from the terminal. These were to carry Crowther’s party into the city.
“If they’re bound and determined to demonstrate, damn it,” Sparrow went on, popping a digestive tablet into his mouth, “why don’t they demonstrate where they were given a permit? Not that I don’t think it was a mistake to issue that permit, but that’s Miami Beach business. An airport isn’t a street. It’s a mechanism. We’ve got to run a regular schedule of arrivals and departures here, VIP’s or no VIP’s. What if we get a landing emergency and people are yelling so loud we can’t hear the announcements? Lives could be lost.”
“I’m hitching a ride on one of the helicopters,” Shayne said. “Are you using soldiers to cover the transfer?”
“That’s General Turner’s responsibility. He worked it all out on the telephone with Abe Berger.” He touched Shayne’s sleeve. “Mike, this is kind of unorthodox, but it’s an unorthodox situation. While you’re looking around, if you see anything about my dispositions I ought to change, I hope you won’t hesitate to tell me. I don’t have a hell of a lot of flexibility. I’ve still got to think about the warehouses and the cargo area, I can’t forget those. I’ve pulled as many men off routine duty as I dare.”
“Nothing to worry about, Teddy,” Shayne said absently, scanning the crowd.
“I certainly hope you’re right. I’ve got a case of indigestion I wouldn’t want to wish on Eliot Crowther himself. People have been running to me with rumors all morning. It’s the army’s responsibility to load Crowther into a helicopter, and it’s my responsibility to protect the airport facilities. But in case of a political outburst, whose responsibility is it to break it up? That hasn’t been made clear to me.”