“Never mind that. What made you call?”
“I wanted to talk to you. How was I supposed to know you weren't there officially?”
“How did you know I was there at all?”
“Do I ask you how you know what's going on around the precinct house? This is my territory. I'll give you a tip, though-it's your fatal beauty. You're too good-looking for the detective business. Go out and get your nose broken a few times. Any woman that ever saw you can spot you at five miles on a rainy night.” To retain the initiative he continued quickly. “You probably weren't even makin' a dent in that glacier, anyway. You scoutin' Russo?”
The detective looked at him carefully. “Why should I be scouting Russo?”
“Couple of murders. He's at the head of my list.”
The slender man shook his head. “He didn't kill Sanders. He's ironclad on that one.”
“So how ironclad is ironclad? Who's his alibi?”
“You know better than to ask me that. He satisfied us.”
“He may have satisfied you. He hasn't satisfied me. The same guy killed them both.” Johnny paused. “Or don't you characters think so?”
“There could be a difference of opinion. Let me ask you this-what's your interest?”
Johnny opened his mouth, closed it and started over again. “An intellectual exercise.”
The hazel eyes measured him. “Cuneo turned in a bad report card on you, Johnny. My name's not Cuneo, but I'm warning you-be careful. I mean it. If you get caught in the machinery you're going to be chewed, and Lieutenant Dameron won't lift a finger.”
“An' whatever gave you the idea I'd ask Joe Dameron for the right time, even? He's so square you can cut ice with the edges, and I don't mean it as any compliment, either. I told him where to head in twice a month for three and a half years; you don't need to worry about me runnin' to him. I wouldn't give him the satisfaction.”
“I'm not worrying about anything, Johnny. I'm telling you don't get caught in a rowboat with a canoe paddle. I know that you feel personally involved; it makes no difference. I'll charge this one this morning to one of those days, but I don't want to see your tracks anywhere in the neighborhood I happen to be from now on.”
“You own the town?” Johnny bristled. “I thought you were a right guy, Jimmy. You're gettin' to sound just like the rest.”
“Just so you listen to the sound, Johnny.”
Johnny drew in his breath, but his explosive comment was stifled by the ring of his phone. He looked at Detective Rogers and picked it up a little gingerly. “Yeah?”
“This is Lorraine, Johnny. Hope I didn't wake you. I forgot to give you Roberta Perry's address last night.”
“Oh. Yeah. Shoot.”
“It's 219 Vernon Street. It's-”
“Right. Thanks. I'll be talkin' to you later.” He hung up under the bright-eyed inspection of Detective Rogers and shrugged. “Newspaper boy. Wants my version on the double-header.”
“I hope you know better than to threaten the police department with the newspapers, Johnny.”
“Threaten? You can only threaten someone who's already scared. Isn't that right, Jimmy?”
Tight-lipped, the slender man walked to the door and turned with a hand on the knob. “Remember,” he said and departed.
Johnny rinsed out the orange juice glasses and retired thoughtfully to the bed. He had a lot to think about. He thought about Lorraine Barnes, but his mind drifted to Detective Rogers. He smiled; he would have given a hundred dollars to see the look on Jimmy Rogers' face when that platinum blonde took out after him.
The laughter struck at him again, deep inside. It clawed at him internally; he rolled over on his side and stuffed a corner of the sheet in his mouth to control the smothered yips.
Exhausted, he wiped his eyes; he sighed deeply, turned onto his stomach and fell asleep between two ragged breaths.
Johnny stepped out of the cab and looked up at 219 Vernon Street. It was a tenement neighborhood; he absorbed the dreary and depressing sameness as he crossed the sidewalk. A tired hedge bordered the bumpy, flagstoned walkway from the street to the building whose yellow brickwork presented a sooty, brindled decolletage.
He pushed open the street door and bent to look at the mailboxes. He caught the name at once-Perry, R. 2-B. So there you are, Killain. Find her at home and get her to talk. Nothing to it.
He tried the inner door and found it locked. At least it wasn't the type of place with free wheeling access to anyone. He rang the bell and had to ring it again after an interval before it was answered by a red-faced woman in a baggy apron, with her graying hair caught up in a kerchief. She had a broom in one hand, a degree and a half from the ready, and as she opened the door a cautious six inches Johnny found himself under the careful scrutiny of two washed-out blue eyes. The woman didn't say a word.
“Miss Perry,” Johnny said into the little silence. “2-B.”
“She expectin' you?”
“Not today, maybe. Insurance man.”
The flat blue eyes looked at him. “You're no insurance man.” It was an unimpassioned statement of fact.
“Maybe I should have said insurance investigator.”
“Maybe you should have.” The look enveloped him again. “Investigator, maybe. Salesman, no. With that face, mister, you couldn't sell cut-rate dollar bills.” The broom pivoted as she swung toward the stairs he could see behind her. “Bobby!”
He could hear high heels overhead. “Yes, Mrs. Carson?”
“Man here to see you says he's an insurance man.”
The voice upstairs was doubtful. “I'm not expecting… what's he look like?”
“Face like a broken-down roller coaster,” Mrs. Carson replied promptly. She favored Johnny with an unexpectedly amiable, gap-toothed smile. “Looks like he's lost about three more fights than my Charlie.”
“Well, send him on up,” the voice said. “I'll take a look.” The high heels retreated.
“You heard her, bud,” Mrs. Carson said briskly. “Second floor on the left at the top.” She opened the front door wider and pointed to the stairs with her broom. “She'll let you in.”
“You guarantee it?” Johnny asked her as she closed the door and received the wide-spaced smile again.
“Confidentially, she goes for big men.”
Johnny climbed the stairs in silence as Mrs. Carson turned away from him to the back of the building. At the top of the stairs he saw at once that it was going to be a very circumspect audition. Roberta Perry was behind the second door on the left, all right, and the door was open on the chain latch a conservative three-quarters of an inch. Through the narrow opening he could get an impression only of dark hair; he noticed that there were two chains on the door-one below the other, one dull and tarnished, one shiny and new. He wondered when Roberta Perry had put on the new chain.
“I don't know you,” the voice said positively.
“We can fix that,” Johnny suggested. “The password is Ellen.”
There was a little silence. “What about Ellen?”
“Listen, Bobby,” he said rapidly. “We can't talk like this. Go in and call Lorraine Barnes and tell her a guy named Killain's on your doorstep. Ask her to describe me, and ask her anything else you want. Then let's see if we can't talk.”
“I don't have time.” Indecision had crept into the voice, though. “I have an appointment… You know Lorraine Barnes?”
“Call her. Then give me five minutes.”
“Well-” Curiosity struggled with doubt. “I'll be right back.”
He retreated the width of the corridor, where he braced himself with a bent knee and a heel on the wall behind him and lit a cigarette. He savored the smoke and looked appraisingly up and down the dingy hall. He wondered about a girl like Roberta Perry living in a place like this-not that he'd ever seen her, but her job must pay pretty for money…
She was back at the door. “She doesn't answer. She's not at the office, either; I tried there, too.” The doubt had returned to the voice, intensified.