Fergus MacMurdie went to a hotel, too. But not to the same one Smitty had entered, though Mac was every bit as important to The Avenger’s small but deadly crime organization as the giant Smitty was. Their separate residences did not mean a difference of rank, but a desire to keep low and unknown as long as possible.
Two hours after Mac had checked in, the New York bus arrived at the Ashton City terminal. In the cold gray dawn, among a dozen others, a girl got off swinging a suitcase.
She was as dainty-looking as a Dresden doll, blond-haired, pink and white complected, with helpless and appealing-looking blue eyes. So feminine and soft — but Nellie Gray could take a very large man, who tried to lay hands on her, and upset him as swiftly and forcefully as a female Jim Londos. She was expert at jujitsu, wrestling and boxing, and could have taken a marksman’s medals with a gun.
In the last of the crowd, a Negro couple got off. They paid no attention to Nellie Gray, and apparently, Nellie didn’t see them. But they were very, very well acquainted.
The man, tall and thin, with shovel feet and a sleepy-looking, placid face, was Joshua Elijah Newton. He could fight like a black tiger when necessary, but to look at his skinny length, you’d think a child could break him in two — if a child could ever get angry enough at the drawling, easy-going Negro to try it.
The pretty Negress with him was Rosabel, his wife. She didn’t look it — made a point of not looking it — but she was college-educated, intellectual, and as resourceful in tight places as that wiliest of animals, a weasel.
“Heah, honey-chile,” drawled sleepy-looking Josh Newton as they passed the deserted waiting room of the bus terminal, “lemme carry yo’ bag.”
Josh didn’t have to talk like that. He was a graduate of Tuskegee Institute, an honor man. But when not among friends, he used the thick drawl that was expected of a slow-moving Negro.
He and Rosabel went to a boarding house near the terminal.
And then they all reported to their white-faced, dynamic chief. The manner of the reporting was noteworthy.
Each of them had a special little radio of Smitty’s devising. It was no bigger, batteries and all, than, a small shirt-box. But its short-wave transmitter, set permanently to just one secret station, could function clearly for a score of miles.
The one station was the receiving apparatus on Dick Benson’s own pocket radio.
They reported, and The Avenger gave them their orders.
“Nellie, there is a man named Sisco who owns a nightclub named the Gray Dragon. He is rich, powerful, very dangerous. Try to get a job in his nightclub as a singer. Your voice is quite good enough. But watch yourself, and if there’s the slightest hint of trouble, leave at once.”
One of the many things that made The Avenger’s aides so devoted to him was his constant care of their safety. It also, of course, led them into the wildest kind of dangers, simply because they were so devoted.
“Smitty,” Benson said to his giant aide, “there is a trucking war going on in this town. Rackets against a few big, fearless owners. The mob is fighting a company called the White Transportation Corporation at the moment. Get a job driving one of their trucks, if you can. If there is trouble, let yourself be taken by the racketeers. Try to find out who is running the racket.”
Benson crackled short-wave orders to Josh.
“In the north residence section there is a Judge Broadbough. He has a Negro servant. Try to take that servant’s place. Get all the information you can around the house. Anything at all. Particularly, try to get something on the murder two weeks ago of a judge named Martineau. Rosabel, if Nellie Gray is successful in getting a nightclub job, you will be hired as her maid.”
And to Fergus MacMurdie:
“Mac, two weeks ago Judge Martineau, a man a little too honest for Ashton City’s rulers, was shot at the Friday the Thirteenth Club, a place which is a wide-open gambling spot. I believe if we could find out who killed him, we’d have a handle against all the crime ring misruling this city. Investigate that murder.”
And to all of them, as a sort of postscript along the same line:
“The Martineau murder is most important. Circumstances lead me to think that solution of that murder is the entire key to the situation here.”
Orders given, Benson started, first thing in the morning, to check on the information given him by Oliver Groman, in whose lavish apartment he was making his own headquarters.
From the pockets of the two gunmen whom he’d rendered unconscious, Benson had taken all papers. But only one had any possible significance. That was a slip of paper with a phone number on it, and the notation, “call at noon.”
The number was Spring 9858. Benson had traced that number. It belonged to a Mr. John M. Singell. The Avenger knew nothing about him; but the fact that a known gunman had his phone number in his pocket with a notation to call him next noon was enough to focus attention on him.
He called first on Police Commissioner Cattridge, a big, square-set man with graying hair and a tired look around his firm mouth. He started a little when Benson introduced himself, then stared curiously at The Avenger’s awesome, white face and flaming, pale eyes.
A great many patrolmen and detectives, of the rank and file over the country, did not know of Benson. But there wasn’t a police chief in the United States who did not know The Avenger.
When Benson had quietly stated his reasons for being in Ashton City, Cattridge looked hopeful. But not too hopeful. Cattridge had been trying for a long time to do something about the conditions in his town, and had failed. Apparently, he didn’t think an outsider could do much.
Even if that outsider were The Avenger himself.
“I’m glad you checked in here,” he said to Benson. “I’ll give you all the help I possibly can. But I want to warn you — that won’t be much.”
“Why won’t it be much?” said Benson quietly. “You’re head of the law-enforcement department of Ashton City.”
“There are others over me.”
“Such as?”
“The mayor, for one.”
The Avenger’s pale, icy eyes took on their diamond-drill look. Cattridge didn’t meet their flaming stare.
“I’m convinced that his honor, the mayor, is honest,” the commissioner said, gazing out the window. “But they’ve got something on him, I think. Some terrible hold. I have a hunch that his two daughters have been threatened.”
Benson nodded, and got up to leave. He hadn’t expected to get promises of help; he didn’t need them, really. The Avenger was his own army, his own police force.
“Is there any organized group against the crime ring in this city?” he asked.
“Yes!” said Cattridge. “Some of the more courageous business men have organized a group they call the Civic League. The man at the head of the league is Arthur Willis, our leading banker. You might have a word with him—”
Cattridge’s phone buzzed. He picked it up, grunted “Yes” into it, then put it back on its cradle. In a moment his door opened and a man came into the office.
The man was dapper, about fifty, but with the walk and body of a man much younger. He had a neat Vandyke beard and wore glittering spectacles.
“I’m putting on a new crusade,” he began. “I called to get your cooperation, Cattridge—”
He stopped, as he noticed the man with the white, set face and the colorless eyes.
“Mr. Benson,” said Cattridge, “meet Mr. Norman Vautry. Mr. Vautry owns the Ashton City Bugle, our biggest newspaper. He is a member of the Civic League, and his paper has put on some fine crusades against rackets and such. Not, I’m sorry to say, with much result.”