He glanced at the spreading gasoline and then at the traffic light. Suddenly I knew why. Fumes, rising, would explode when they hit those control box switches! Like a bomb! I know bombs!
Heller had the driver out. Then he reached in and grabbed the man in the back.
Lugging two bodies, he sped over to the curb.
He looked back. He evidently decided he was not far enough. He went another fifty feet.
On the pavement, in the protection of a big concrete abutment, he laid the bodies out.
With a shattering blue crash, the wreck exploded!
The “cabby” was dead. But even though the top of his head was half off, he was obviously a Sicilian.
Heller turned to the other one.
The weird hue of the street light shone down upon the face of Torpedo Fiaccola!
The hit man’s eyelids fluttered. He was still alive!
A squad car chortled in the distance. Nobody could have missed that blast for a mile!
Torpedo opened his eyes. He saw Heller. He recognized him.
Torpedo said, “You ain’t going to kill my mother?”
Heller looked down at him. “I’ll think about it.”
“No!”
Heller reached into Torpedo’s coat and took his wallet. The money was only the five thousand that Heller had given him back. But there was a slip of paper. It said:
Valid with the evidence. Hand package to bearer.
Heller shook the paper at Torpedo. “Hand to who?”
Torpedo said, “You going to kill my mother?”
“I was thinking about it. Give me the name and address for this slip and I might reconsider.”
The hood was blinking hard. Then he said, “Mamie. Apartment 18F. Two thirty-one Binetta Lane. Downtown.”
“And the evidence?” said Heller.
“Look,” moaned Torpedo, “Bury is going to kill me!”
Heller said, “Mothers should be cherished.”
Torpedo shuddered. “Your baseball cap with blood on it and a lock of your hair.”
Heller took off his cap, turned it wrong side out and swabbed it through the mess that had been the driver’s head.
He said, “I hear an ambulance coming. Get yourself patched up in the hospital and then I’d advise you to take up residence at the North Pole.” He bent over him and put the wallet and five thousand back in his pocket. “I keep trying to give you this. Now take it and learn to speak polar-bear. I’m not a mother killer but I sure enjoy exploding torpedoes!”
The squad car had been drifting slowly closer, cautiously. The flames flickering from the wreck made a shifting patchwork on it. The cops got out.
“How come you drug the bodies from the wreck, kid?” said the first cop, threateningly.
“He just missed me,” said Heller. “I wanted to give him some advice.”
“Oh,” said the cop in sudden comprehension. “But I’ll have to give the driver a ticket all the same.” He got out his book and called to his partner. “What would you say the charge was, Pete?”
“Littering,” said the other cop.
“It’s that one that was driving,” said Heller. “He’s dead.”
“Gets the ticket all the same,” said the cop, writing.
The ambulance was whining up, probably called by the cops earlier.
Mortie Massacurovitch had brought the old cab down to the lower level. Heller got in. “Take me to 231 Binetta Lane.”
“That’s Little Italy,” said Mortie. “Wrong time of night. You got a gun?”
“I got another hundred,” said Heller.
They zipped downtown. They went from Eleventh Avenue to Tenth, shifted over on 14th Street, went down Greenwich Avenue, worked their way around Washington Square and were soon in Little Italy. They stopped across the street from the address. It was awfully dark.
Heller took out a knife, cut off a small lock of his own hair and pasted it into the baseball cap with the blood. Then he put the note in it.
He turned to Mortie. “Go to Apartment 18F and ask for Mamie. Give her this and she’ll give you a package.”
“In there?” said Mortie, looking at the ominously dark building. “And when you return,” said Heller, “I’ll give you another hundred.”
Mortie grabbed the cap and contents, leaped out, raced up the steps.
Three minutes later, he raced down the steps carrying a package. He threw it at Heller, started the car up and got out of there.
“Mamie was a man with a gun,” said Mortie. “But he took it with no questions.”
Heller told him to take him to the corner of First Avenue and 42nd Street. He shook the pack, listened to it and then sniffed it. Well, at last he was getting cautious for it well could have been a bomb. He pried up a corner and pulled something out.
“What’s a first class ticket to… Buenos Aires, Argentina, worth?” he asked Mortie.
“I dunno,” said Mortie. “Maybe three grand.”
“Can you cash one in?”
“Oh, sure,” said Mortie. “Just take it to the air terminal. What’s the matter, ain’t you going?”
Oh, if Heller only were!
Mortie let him out at First and 42nd. Heller said, “Now, do you think I really passed, or do I need more lessons?”
Mortie appeared to be thinking it over carefully. Then he said, “Well, kid, with experience you could become a top New York cabby. There’s more I could teach you about shortchanging customers and running up extra meterage but, otherwise, that’s about it. You pass. Yes, I’d say you pass.”
Heller counted him out six one-hundred-dollar bills. He instantly stuffed the money in his shirt and drove away at high speed.
Heller trotted along, clickety-clack, and soon arrived at the Gracious Palms.
In his room he opened the pack. Money in small old bills!
He counted it. ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS!
I shuddered. My Gods, Bury must be angry to offer such a price!
Heller put it in the paper sack his breakfast had come in. He went down to the personal safes and put it in.
Vantagio was in his office and saw Heller through the open door. He called to him, “Getting out some money, kid? You’ll need dough for school! Don’t blow all you got on night life. This is an expensive town!”
“It sure is,” said Heller, adding the hundred grand to his fifty thousand already in the safe. “Prices just keep going up!”
He went to bed and was shortly peacefully asleep.
I wasn’t! Bury had unlimited funds and I didn’t even have a clue on how to get that platen!
Some hours later, the next report of Raht and Terb didn’t help. It said:
He went to a place called the Tall Man’s Shop and they must have given him a job and a place to sleep. He’s still there! But we have our eyes on him.
The Hells they did! They were still spotting in on the bug we had sewn in his coat!
I was getting frightened that I might have to go to America myself to handle this. And I didn’t have the least idea what I could do even if I did.
Chapter 6
Heller was up bright and early the following day, the viewer alarm blasting me out of a sodden sleep.
He was being very industrious and purposeful. He brushed his new suit where it had been messed up on the girders, put on a clean white shirt with an Eton collar, put a new baseball cap on the back of his head and then packed a shoulder-strap satchel which looked, for all the world, like one of these kiddy schoolbook bags.
In the bag he put a spool of fish line, a multihooked bass plug, a tool kit, a dozen baseballs, a roll of tape and the New Jersey license plates. Was he going fishing?
Down to the lobby he went. It was early for a whorehouse: the desk clerk was asleep, a guard in a tuxedo was reading the Daily Racing Form, ball point in hand, and an Arab sheik was wandering drunkenly around, apparently trying to choose amongst several throw rugs as to which would be best to use for morning prayer.