“Forget that part,” I said. “This is all I care about.” And I told him about the twenty-for-five offer.
He laughed. “That thing again!”
“Some old hustle that the Greeks pulled on the Egyptians?”
“No. Something the Americans pulled. And not a con game. During the Depression, a New York newspaper sent a reporter around the city with a twenty-dollar bill which he offered to sell for exactly one dollar. There were no takers. The point being that even with people out of work and on the verge of starvation, they were so intent on not being suckers that they turned down an easy profit of nineteen-hundred percent.”
“Twenty for one? This was twenty for five.”
“Oh, well, you know, Bernie, inflation,” he said, laughing again. “And these days it’s more likely to be a television show.”
“Television? You should have seen the way the guy was dressed!”
“Just an extra, logical touch to make people refuse to take the offer seriously. University research people operate much the same way. A few years back, a group of sociologists began an investigation of the public’s reaction to sidewalk solicitors in charity drives. You know, those people who jingle little boxes on street corners: help the two-headed children, relief for flood-ravaged atlantis? Well, they dressed up some of their students—”
“You think he was on the level, then, this guy?”
“I think there is a good chance that he was. I don’t see why he would have left his card with you, though.”
“That I can figure—now. If it’s a TV stunt, there must be a lot of other angles wrapped up in it. A giveaway show with cars, refrigerators, a castle in Scotland, all kinds of loot.”
“A giveaway show? Well, yes—it could be.”
I hung up, took a deep breath, and called Eksar’s hotel. He was registered there all right. And he’d just come in.
I went downstairs fast and took a cab. Who knew what other connections he’d made by now?
Going up in the elevator, I kept wondering. How did I go from the twenty-dollar bill to the real big stuff, the TV giveaway stuff, without letting Eksar know that I was on to what it was all about? Well, maybe I’d be lucky. Maybe he’d give me an opening.
I knocked on the door. When he said “Come in,” I went in. But for a second or two I couldn’t see a thing.
It was a little room, like all the rooms in that hotel, little and smelly and stuffy. But he didn’t have the lights on, any electric lights. The window shade was pulled all the way down.
When my eyes got used to the dark, I was able to pick out this Ogo Eksar character. He was sitting on the bed, on the side nearest me. He was still wearing that crazy rumpled Palm Beach suit.
And you know what? He was watching a program on a funny little portable TV set that he had on the bureau. Color TV. Only it wasn’t working right. There were no faces, no pictures, nothing but colors chasing around. A big blob of red, a big blob of orange and a wiggly border of blue and green and black. A voice was talking from it, but all the words were fouled up: “Wah-wah, de-wah de-wah.”
Just as I went in, he turned it off. “Times Square is a bad neighborhood for TV,” I told him. “Too much interference.”
“Yes,” he said. “Too much interference.” He closed up the set and put it away. I wished I’d seen it when it was working right.
Funny thing, you know? I would have expected a smell of liquor in the room, I would have expected to see a couple of empties in the tin trash basket near the bureau. Not a sign.
The only smell in the room was a smell I couldn’t recognize. I guess it was the smell of Eksar himself, concentrated.
“Hi,” I said, feeling a little uncomfortable because of the way I’d been with him back in the office. So rough I’d been.
He stayed on the bed. “I’ve got the twenty,” he said. “You’ve got the five?”
“Oh, I guess I’ve got the five, all right,” I said, looking in my wallet hard and trying to be funny. He didn’t say a word, didn’t even invite me to sit down. I pulled out a bill. “OK?”
He leaned forward and stared, as if he could see—in all that dimness—what kind of a bill it was. “OK,” he said. “But I’ll want a receipt. A notarized receipt.”
Well, what the hell, I thought, a notarized receipt. “Then we’ll have to go down. There’s a druggist on 45th.”
“Let’s go,” he said, getting to his feet with several small coughs that came one, two, three, four, right after one another.
On the way to the druggist, I stopped in a stationery store and bought a book of blank receipts. I filled out most of one right there. New York, N. Y., and the date. Received from Mr. Ogo Eksar the sum of twenty dollars for a five-dollar bill bearing the serial number..........”That OK?” I asked him. “I’m putting in the serial number to make it look as if you want that particular bill, you know, what the lawyers call the value-received angle.”
He screwed his head around and read the receipt. Then he checked the serial number of the bill I was holding. He nodded.
We had to wait for the druggist to get through with a couple of customers. When I signed the receipt, he read it to himself, shrugged and went ahead and stamped it with his seal.
I paid him the two bits; I was the one making the profit.
Eksar slid a crisp new twenty to me along the counter. He watched while I held it up to the light, first one side, then the other.
“Good bill?” he asked.
“Yes. You understand: I don’t know you, I don’t know your money.”
“Sure. I’d do it myself with a stranger.” He put the receipt and my five-dollar bill in his pocket and started to walk away.
“Hey,” I said. “You in a hurry?”
“No.” He stopped, looking puzzled. “No hurry. But you’ve got the twenty for a five. We made the deal. It’s all over.”
“All right, so we made the deal. How about a cup of coffee?”
He hesitated.
“It’s on me,” I told him. “I’ll be a big shot for a dime. Come on, let’s have a cup of coffee.”
Now he looked worried. “You don’t want to back out? I’ve got the receipt. It’s all notarized. I gave you a twenty, you gave me a five. We made a deal.”
“It’s a deal, it’s a deal,” I said, shoving him into an empty booth. “It’s a deal, it’s all signed, sealed and delivered. Nobody’s backing out. I just want to buy you a cup of coffee.”
His face cleared up, all the way through that dirt. “No coffee. Soup. I’ll have some mushroom soup.”
“Fine, fine. Soup, coffee, I don’t care. I’ll have coffee.”
I sat there and studied him. He hunched over the soup and dragged it into his mouth, spoonful after spoonful, the living picture of a bum who hadn’t eaten all day. But pure essence of bum, triple-distilled, the label of a fine old firm.
A guy like this should be lying in a doorway trying to say no to a cop’s night stick, he should be coughing his alcoholic guts out. He shouldn’t be living in a real honest-to-God hotel, or giving me a twenty for a five, or eating anything as respectable as mushroom soup.
But it made sense. A TV giveaway show, they want to do this, they hire a damn good actor, the best money can buy, to toss their dough away. A guy who’ll be so good a bum that people’ll just laugh in his face when he tries to give them a deal with a profit.
“You don’t want to buy anything else?” I asked him.
He held the spoon halfway to his mouth and stared at me suspiciously. “Like what?”
“Oh, I don’t know. Like maybe you want to buy a ten for a fifty. Or a twenty for a hundred dollars?”
He thought about it, Eksar did. Then he went back to his soup, shoveling away. “That’s no deal,” he said contemptuously. “What kind of deal is that?”