“He’s plenty hot,” he told Beatrice. “He was wanted for the murder of Haskell. Now, besides, he’s wanted for a bank stick-up and the murder of the Pinkley man.”
“That’s all right,” said Beatrice, studying one crimson-tinted fingernail. “I’ll see that no one ever gets an idea he’s here.”
“I noticed you have a new maid.” Luckow jerked his head toward the bedroom door. Beyond that was the person referred to: a pretty, young Negress with liquid, dark eyes.
“Yes. Name’s Rosabel. But she’s all right.” Beatrice studied another crimson nail, with the hard lines around her pretty mouth more apparent than ever. “I’ll take care of Tom, the young sap. Don’t bother any more about it.”
Thus lightly she dismissed the new maid, Rosabel, who happened to be the wife of Josh Newton, and like the Negro, an aide of Richard Henry Benson.
Later in the same day, the powerful Town Bank began running around in little circles.
The Avenger was one of the wealthiest men in the world, though few knew that. Benson kept huge sums of cash in various banks. He needed a lot. His bill for wrecked planes and cars alone was enough to bankrupt a rich man. He needed expensive equipment constantly.
Millions on deposit in many banks. One of them was Town Bank.
His opening shot was to withdraw $1,100,000 from Town Bank, and to have several close friends of his take out $4,500,000 more. It was all done swiftly; and even a big bank can be embarrassed by such large withdrawals without notice.
His next maneuver was to drive far below par the shares in three concerns in which he knew Rath, Birch, Grand and Wallach were heavily interested. Thus the directors were unable to come personally to Town Bank’s aid if such aid became necessary.
Finally, rumors began to be whispered around that the bank wasn’t as sound as it looked. In starting those rumors, The Avenger wasn’t being heedlessly cruel. The assets of the bank were enough so that no depositor would lose, in a crash. If any did, Benson would have made up the loss out of his own pocket. All he was after was the executives.
The lesser employees of Town Bank scented that some titan was after them, and wondered who. The directors did not wonder. They knew!
“We’ve got to get Benson,” snarled Grand, at his home that night. “It’s our skins if we don’t.”
Wallach and Birch and Rath were there. They weren’t meeting at the bank any more, after that had been used as an entrance for thieves. But if they had been still meeting there, they’d have ducked it tonight. That was because they would have been afraid someone would see them with the fifth man in the group at Grand’s home.
This fifth man was thin and wiry and Latin-looking. He was not at all like the four businessmen. He was Louie Fiume.
Now and then, a smaller city produces a major gangster. Louie Fiume was such. From Denver, he was a smoother, more streamlined killer than any of the biggest cities had produced.
He had been brought in here by Grand and Wallach. It was his car that had rammed The Avenger’s the night before. It was his men who had nearly killed the white-haired scourge of the underworld. It was Louie, according to Grand’s next words, who had the whole proposition in his lap, now.
“You’ve got to get him, Fiume!”
Louie’s Latin darkness was moved by a sardonic grimace.
“The guy’s a ghost,” he said. “He slips out of stuff nobody else could. We wire a bomb to his self-starter. So what? So he comes up to the car with some kind of electrical dingbat or something. Maybe it rings a bell, or shows a red light, I don’t know what. Anyhow, he just opens the hood, takes off the bomb, and drives away.
“We ram him twice, once with a bomb we throw and the second time along the cliff near where old Maisley got his. What happens? The first time some goofy hooks stick out from his car and hook onto the boys’ can. They have to drag him away from the bomb when they drag themselves away. The second time he just happens to be in a can that nobody can knock over. That sedan must weigh five or six tons. All the boys got was a smashed front end, and he drives on.
“Then we lay for him at the door to that joint of his on Bleek Street. And what do we get? A thing like a glass cake-cover in a delicatessen slides down over him, and our slugs bounce off it like something out of a pea shooter.”
“It all looks,” said Grand, with a vague idea of taunting the slick gangster into more earnest action, “as if you aren’t as tough as is generally thought.”
Louie Fiume’s cold eyes swung steadily to Grand’s, and stuck there, getting colder and colder.
Grand cleared his throat and changed his mind.
“We think you’re tough, of course,” he said hastily. “That’s why we hired you. But we can’t afford to have any more delay in getting the man.”
Louie lit a long, specially-made cigarette.
“I got an idea on that,” he said. “We can’t seem to touch this guy with a face that looks like something dug up out of a cemetery. But he’s got helpers, see? A man-mountain called Smitty, and a funny-looking Scotchman, and a Negro called Josh. Now, Benson’d go through hell for any of ’em. That’s well known.”
“I don’t understand.”
“You’re not so bright yourself, are you?” said Louie, arrogantly. “It’s like this. We can’t get Benson, but we can get his gang. Then we hold ’em and tip Benson they’re in trouble. Benson does what we can’t do — gets himself in a spot. Then we spring the trap and rub out the whole lot of ’em.”
Grand nodded. Birch licked dry lips and shivered, but nodded too. Wallach rubbed dry, lean hands together. Rath gulped and looked hastily away from the gangster’s face — but said no word of protest.
It was an illustration of the way crime deteriorates character — and also of the desperate plight of these men — that they could now listen to plans to kill four or five people where a little while ago the murder of two had made them physically ill.
“Go to it!” said Grand, sticking out his big jaw. “But whatever you do, do it fast.”
“It’ll be fast,” grinned Louie. “In fact, some of it will be done in about three minutes, if calculations are right. The big guy they call Smitty—”
The big guy called Smitty wasn’t far from the clandestine meeting at that moment. He was across the street from Grand’s home, in a doorway dark enough and big enough to shroud even his gigantic bulk.
He had been detailed by Benson to watch every move of Lucius Grand.
Similarly, Mac had been set on Rath’s trail, Josh on the trail of Birch, and Nellie Gray ordered to watch Wallach.
With all the directors at one spot, now, all Benson’s aides were, too. They were all near Grand’s home, each waiting for his man to come out. But they weren’t together. That might have tipped off their play. Each had a hiding place similar to Smitty’s doorway.
Wallach came out. Smitty didn’t see Nellie go after his car, but knew she had. He shook his huge head, troubled as always by the thought of how reckless the little blonde was.
Rath emerged, and Smitty knew, though he could not see, that Mac was slipping in his wake. Birch shook hands at the door with Lucius Grand, and left. And, after him, almost as black as the night, itself, Josh padded soundlessly.
Another man came out, after a short wait. Smitty was in a dilemma about this one.
He had seen him go in. The man looked like a rat. And Smitty liked to smash men who looked like rats. Now, he was coming out. He looked very rattish indeed. The giant wondered if he ought to disobey orders and trail him, or do as Benson had said and stick around where Grand was.
Not being able to see into the future, he decided loyally to obey orders to the letter. And thus he made true Louie Fiume’s prophecy that something “would be done in about three minutes.”