He took the curling iron from its box which he dropped to the floor. The girl stared at him and then, quite suddenly, giggled. The man just looked. Ulado reached up and plugged the curling iron into the double socket that held the light. Holding the iron in his right hand, he turned to Mbwato.
“Which do you think we should begin with, sir?”
Mbwato seemed to give the question serious consideration. “I’m not sure, Mr. Ulado. What do you think, Mr. St. Ives, the gentleman or the lady?”
I shrugged. “The girl, I think.”
“Very well, Mr. Ulado, the young lady.”
Mr. Ulado nodded, spat on his finger, and touched it to the curling iron. The spit sizzled. “If you will just hold this for me, sir, while I prepare the woman.” He handed the curling iron to Mbwato and turned to the girl.
“You’re not going to stick that in me!” she screamed.
“Not if you tell us the whereabouts of the shield,” Mbwato said in a genial voice. “Otherwise,” and he made a slight gesture with the iron.
The girl turned her head toward the man. “I’m going to tell him.”
“Shut up,” the man said. “They’re not going to do anything. They’re just bluffing.” I noticed that there was a sheen of moisture on his forehead.
“Continue, Mr. Ulado,” Mbwato said.
“I will have to remove her slacks first,” he said.
“Get on with it then.”
“It would be better if we had a table.”
“Improvise, man, improvise,” Mbwato said.
“First the slacks,” Ulado said, and approached the girl.
“Get away from me, you black bastard!” she yelled. “Get him away.” She started to sob, deep, harsh sobs that seemed almost like coughs. “We don’t have it,” she screamed, “we don’t have the goddamned shield.”
Mbwato reached up to the light fixture, unplugged the curling iron, glanced at it distastefully, and then looked around for someplace to put it. He decided on the floor.
“Where is the shield?” Mbwato said to the girl, spacing his words carefully.
“We don’t know,” she said, her voice almost a moan, “we haven’t got it.”
“But you stole it from the museum?” Mbwato said.
“Yes, the nigger guard got it out for us. But we haven’t got it. We only had it for a few minutes anyway.”
Mbwato turned to the man. The thin coating of moisture that I’d seen on his forehead had turned into drops of sweat that ran down into his eyes. He tried to blink them dry.
“From the first, Jack,” Mbwato said softly. “From the very first.”
“Fuck you,” Jack said again.
Mbwato’s open palm landed against the man’s cheek with a loud, wet smack. The man’s stiff features seemed to crumple, and I realized that he was crying. “All right,” he said, “all right.” He snuffled some more and turned to look at the girl. “Dumb ones,” he said bitterly. “I always get dumb ones.”
“From the very first,” Mbwato said.
“Spellacy,” the man who claimed that his name was Jack said. “He got me onto it. He knew a guy in Washington who had a real sweet one. Just walk up to a back door and somebody would hand us something worth ten thousand bucks.”
“Ten thousand?” I said.
“That was our cut at first, in the beginning. Spellacy got us in touch with this guy in Washington. Wingo. A real junkie. He told us the deal. He had the guard all set up by then and the four of us met here in Washington. Those two were so junkie that you couldn’t tell how they’d fly. And then Wingo started talking about two hundred and fifty thousand bucks. The ransom. So I called Spellacy and said what kind of a deal is this where my cut is ten grand out of two-fifty. So we talked it over and decided to get rid of Wingo. We just gave him an extra dose one night and let him roll down the side of the road. But then we had a problem. Wingo had been supplying the guard with H and now we had to supply him. Spellacy bought it in New York and we kept him going. The guard, I mean.”
“Where was Wingo getting his stuff?” I said. “From what I hear he needed five hundred bucks a day to keep him, Sackett and Sackett’s wife happy.”
“I don’t know where he got it,” the man said. “I asked him once but he just laughed and said he had a private supply. A very private supply, he said and then laughed some more like he was crazy.”
“Continue, please,” Mbwato said.
“Well, shit, you know the rest. We got the shield and then we got rid of the guard. It was down to a three-way split then, me, Spellacy, and dumbie here. But what’s Spellacy done? Nothing.”
“So you got rid of him,” I said.
“Where is the shield?” Mbwato asked.
“I don’t know.”
“What did you do with it?”
“It was part of the deal, the one that Wingo set up. We got it, drove about six blocks, and put it in the back seat of a car. That’s the last I ever saw of it.”
“The shield of Komporeen,” the girl said, and giggled.
“Whose car?” Mbwato demanded.
“Christ, I don’t know whose car. It was a car that was supposed to be parked at a certain place and was. I just put it in the back seat.”
“I see,” Mbwato said, and sighed. He turned to me. “We seem to have solved a few murders and a theft, Mr. St. Ives. But we are no closer to the shield.”
“I’m not so sure,” I said. “As long as he’s in a talkative mood, I’d like to clear up something. What about Lieutenant Ogden, Jack? How’d he get on to you?”
“Spellacy,” he said dully. “Ogden found out about you being interested in Spellacy and he figured that Spellacy was in on the deal. And if he knew Spellacy was in, he knew I was in. Spellacy and me worked together a lot. And Ogden knew me, too. Christ, he should have. I paid him off enough times because of dumb broads like her.”
“Did he get in touch with you?”
“He tried to; he got the word around that he was looking for me. Ah, to hell with him. He’s dead.” He looked up and smiled at me. “We sure had you on the run though, buster, didn’t we?”
“That’s right,” I said, “you sure did.”
“All on account of some goddamned shield.”
“The shield of Komporeen,” the girl said, and gave us the pleasure of listening to another one of her giggles.
Chapter nineteen
Mbwato and I left Mr. Ulado to look after his two charges while we went downstairs to sample the town-house owner’s Scotch. I carried the suitcase in my right hand. It didn’t seem to weigh as much as it once had and I wondered whether I should count the money, but decided not to because there wasn’t much I could do about it if some were missing — certainly not replace it.
Mbwato mixed two drinks and we sat in the comfortable living room that contained some more pictures, some better than average furniture, and a large number of books. I sat on the couch, Mbwato in the largest chair he could find, which still seemed too small for his bulk.
“So, Mr. St. Ives, what shall I do with our two young friends upstairs?”
“Turn them over to the cops.”
“Do you think they’re sane?”
“The man is, I think. I don’t know about the girl. She seems a little kinky, but maybe it’s like he said, she’s just dumb.”
“Rather coarse, too,” Mr. Mbwato murmured.
“Well, not quite as coarse as a hot curling iron. Tell me something, is Ulado really your torture expert?”
Mbwato chuckled. “Good heavens no, man. Couldn’t you see that he was absolutely petrified? He got the idea from one of your more lurid magazines, I think. Still, it proved quite effective, didn’t it?”
“Suppose they hadn’t talked. Suppose they were stubborn. Would you have used it?”
Mbwato gave me a long, speculative look. “Let me reply in this fashion: would you have tried to stop me?”