Shayne turned his head slowly. Chairs had been knocked over. An uncorked bottle of Johnny Walker lay on the floor. Continuing his slow inventory, he saw two feet in pointed shoes. LeFevre, the one-armed Frenchman, lay sprawled on his back between an overturned chair and the bed. His body was unnaturally twisted. The side of his head was bloody.
“Dead?”
“Very much so,” Rourke said.
Now it was essential for Shayne to come forward onto his hands, then to bring his knees under him and push himself erect. His body followed directions sluggishly.
“Need any help?” Rourke asked.
Shayne rocked and almost fell. A thirty-eight caliber revolver with blood and tissue on the barrel lay near the dead man’s head. Shayne blinked at Rourke.
“Caviar. Pate.”
“Caviar-are you out of your skull? What do you want with caviar at a time like this?”
The room whirled like a chuck-a-luck cage, and Shayne caught at a bedpost. “He was feeding himself crackers and pate. There was a bowl of caviar in ice. Where is it?”
“I’ll look around, if you’re really dying for a snack,” Rourke said sarcastically.
Shayne picked his way to the bathroom, where he filled his cupped hands with cold water from the tap and splashed it in his face. He repeated this twice more, then toweled himself off. His reflection in the mirror was still misty, as though seen through frosted glass.
“Not a thing to eat in the place,” Rourke reported from the bedroom. “I don’t want to be repetitious or anything, but let’s split. You can get a hamburger at a dog wagon.”
“Hand me the cognac.”
“Better not, buddy,” Rourke said doubtfully. “Let’s get it analyzed first.”
“No, the Mickey was in the food. What time did you say it was?”
“It’s still two-thirty.”
Shayne emptied a glass of cognac while Rourke watched anxiously.
“Don’t pass out again, Mike. Please. How do you feel now?”
Shayne didn’t reply until the cognac hit him.
“Better. How long has he been dead?”
“I’ll let you decide. Mike, you really don’t want to be too cool about this. I notice you’re wearing an empty shoulder holster. That’s your thirty-eight on the floor, right? Let’s hold the post-mortems someplace else.”
“This was rigged.”
“I know that, for God’s sake. You’re a very old friend of mine, and I know you don’t get impatient with visiting French cops and slap them dead with the barrel of a thirty-eight.”
“That’s not what I mean.”
He went down on one knee beside the dead man and checked the soft flesh beneath the jawbone. It was firm but rubbery.
“More than a couple of hours,” he said, sitting back on his heels. “So there’s no hurry. How many people know you’re here?”
“Will Gentry. Has your memory come back yet? Do you remember the last time I saw you? A Japanese was about to take your picture when I noticed he didn’t have any lens in his camera, just a hole. This was observant of me. And did I hesitate? No, it all went through my mind in a flash-all the times we’ve got drunk together, all the murder cases we’ve worked on. The least I could do was save your life.”
Shayne grinned at him. “That was reflex, Tim.”
“To a certain extent,” Rourke admitted. “But you ought to be glad I have a good reserve supply of adrenalin. I moved like a snake. They had me under the anesthetic for over an hour. Everything’s going to grow back together, thanks for asking.”
Shayne put out a hand. Rourke pulled him to his feet.
The reporter went on, “And when they said I could go home, naturally the first thing I asked myself was how my old friend was making out. I’d hate to think I went to all that medical expense for nothing. Nobody seemed to know where you were. Gentry said you had a meeting with a Frenchman at the Sans Souci. The guy wasn’t answering his telephone. It’s in the wastebasket, incidentally. How do you explain that? Well, I worried. I kept calling and kept getting no answer, and finally I decided I had to do a little ad hoc research. It’s lucky you gave me that lesson in how to get into locked hotel rooms with a strip of celluloid and a nail file. If you really want to take a chance on that cognac, bring the bottle with you. I suggest we leave through the basement.”
“Not yet.” Shayne poured himself more cognac. “I don’t want to think of something when it’s too late to check it. This may look like a murder frame, but it’s more than that. They want me to take a trip to Latin America, for some Goddamn reason.”
“All very clear,” Rourke said, looking around nervously. “Who is ‘they’?”
“I don’t know yet. Shut up for a minute. I want to see if I can remember what he told me.”
Rourke swore under his breath. “Don’t take too long, Mike. I took a sleeping pill, and I’m fighting it.”
Shayne sipped at the cognac, concentrating hard. His mind was still working at only twenty-five percent of capacity, with unexpected skids and lurches.
“Wash the blood off the gun,” he told Rourke. “Don’t use any towels, and let’s start being careful about fingerprints.”
“Fine. And what good that’s going to do if we get caught in here-”
The passport LeFevre had prepared still lay on the coffee table. Shayne put it in his pocket. He checked the Frenchman’s wallet for a second time, finding one thing he didn’t remember seeing before-a small square of gray blotting paper. He thought about it.
When Rourke came out of the bathroom, he said abruptly, “Tim, can you get the paper to give you a few days off?”
“I think so. Why? They’re getting a nice page-one story tomorrow-ace News reporter saves Mike Shayne’s life. Whenever a reporter breaks a bone in the line of duty, they usually give him a day off.”
“I wonder if that Jap was actually trying to kill me,” Shayne said slowly. “Yeah-I think that part was probably legit.”
“Damn right he was trying to kill you!” Rourke said indignantly. “That was a real bullet. I can show it to you. They gave it to me for my collection.”
“Don’t get excited. You know more about these things than I do. How do the dealers handle LSD and so on these days? They used to put it on sugar cubes.”
“Not any more. The minute a cop sees a cube of sugar he begins thinking in terms of a narcotics pinch. Lately the boys and girls have been dropping it on a scrap of newsprint or blotting paper.”
“That’s what I heard. There’s a square of blotting paper in LeFevre’s wallet. I’m pretty sure it wasn’t there before I conked out. He told me a fancy story about a big gold shipment that’s leaving the country on a plane tomorrow morning. He wanted me to ride shotgun on it. I turned him down. With the facts I had then, it would have been a stupid move. I thought he was a little too anxious. What do they want me to think now? That somebody killed him to keep him from telling me about the gold? It’s a possibility. I don’t know.”
“Can we talk about it at your place, Mike? LSD-that’s a wonderful piece of news. No wonder you’re not your usual self. He wanted to try it, and being the soul of hospitality, you went out and bought him some. Those damned synthetics do funny things. This isn’t the first LSD killing and it won’t be the last.”
“You’re right about one thing, Tim-Petey Painter would love it.”
“As I keep reminding you.”
“But if all they wanted was a frame, the cops would be here by now. That wouldn’t be hard to arrange. They must want me to think there’s only one way I can get off the hook-to take the plane and find out who really did the killing. They obviously figure I’ll decide I have to go.”
“I think I’m following you,” Rourke said dubiously. “But you’re one step ahead of them, right? So you’re not going.”
“Don’t be silly,” Shayne snapped. “Of course I’m going. Let’s find a photographer who’s still awake. I need a passport picture.”
CHAPTER 5
Most of the passengers were already aboard by the time Michael Shayne arrived at the loading port, tie-less and in need of a shave, wearing dark glasses and carrying an attache case.