VII
When I arrived at the agency at nine o’clock, one of the clerks had just finished decoding a night letter from the Los Angeles operative who had been sent over to Nogales. It was a long telegram, and meaty.
It said that Tom-Tom Carey was well known along the border. For some six months he had been engaged in over-the-line traffic—guns going south, booze, and probably dope and immigrants, coming north. Just before leaving there the previous week he had made inquiries concerning one Hank Barrows. This Hank Barrows’ description fit the H. F. Barrows who had been cut into ribbons, who had fallen out the hotel window and died.
The Los Angeles operative hadn’t been able to get much of a line on Barrows, except that he hailed from San Francisco, had been on the border only a few days, and had apparently returned to San Francisco. The operative had turned up nothing new on the Newhall killing—the signs still read that he had been killed resisting capture by Mexican patriots.
Dick Foley came into my office while I was reading this news. When I had finished he gave me his contribution to the history of Tom-Tom Carey.
“Tailed him out of here. To hotel. Arlie on corner. Eight o’clock, Carey out. Garage. Hire car without driver. Back hotel. Checked out. Two bags. Out through park. Arlie after him in flivver. My boat after Arlie. Down boulevard. Off crossroad. Dark. Lonely. Arlie steps on gas. Closes in. Bang! Carey stops. Two guns going. Exit Arlie. Carey back to city. Hotel Marquis. Registers George F. Danby, San Diego. Room 622.”
“Did Tom-Tom frisk Arlie after he dropped him?”
“No. Didn’t touch him.”
“So? Take Mickey Linehan with you. Don’t let Carey get out of your sight. I’ll get somebody up to relieve you and Mickey late tonight, if I can, but he’s got to be shadowed twenty-four hours a day until—” I didn’t know what came after that so I stopped talking.
I took Dick’s story into the Old Man’s office and told it to him, winding up:
“Arlie shot first, according to Foley, so Carey gets a self-defense on it, but we’re getting action at last and I don’t want to do anything to slow it up. So I’d like to keep what we know about this shooting quiet for a couple of days. It won’t increase our friendship any with the county sheriff if he finds out what we’re doing, but I think it’s worth it.”
“If you wish,” the Old Man agreed, reaching for his ringing phone.
He spoke into the instrument and passed it on to me. Detective-sergeant Hunt was talking:
“Flora Brace and Grace Cardigan crushed out just before daylight. The chances are they—”
I wasn’t in a humor for details.
“A clean sneak?” I asked.
“Not a lead on ’em so far, but—”
“I’ll get the details when I see you. Thanks,” and I hung up.
“Angel Grace and Big Flora have escaped from the city prison,” I passed the news on to the Old Man.
He smiled courteously, as if at something that didn’t especially concern him.
“You were congratulating yourself on getting action,” he murmured.
I turned my scowl to a grin, mumbled, “Well, maybe,” went back to my office and telephoned Franklin Ellert. The lisping attorney said he would be glad to see me, so I went over to his office.
“And now, what progreth have you made?” he asked eagerly when I was seated beside his desk.
“Some. A man named Barrows was also in Nogales when Newhall was killed, and also came to San Francisco right after. Carey followed Barrows up here. Did you read about the man found walking the streets naked, all cut up?”
“Yeth.”
“That was Barrows. Then another man comes into the game—a barber named Arlie. He was spying on Carey. Last night, in a lonely road south of here, Arlie shot at Carey. Carey killed him.”
The old lawyer’s eyes came out another inch.
“What road?” he gasped.
“You want the exact location?”
“Yeth!”
I pulled his phone over, called the agency, had Dick’s report read to me, gave the attorney the information he wanted.
It had an effect on him. He hopped out of his chair. Sweat was shiny along the ridges wrinkles made in his face.
“Mith Newhall ith down there alone! That plath ith only half a mile from her houth!”
I frowned and beat my brains together, but I couldn’t make anything out of it.
“Suppose I put a man down there to look after her?” I suggested.
“Exthellent!” His worried face cleared until there weren’t more than fifty or sixty wrinkles in it. “The would prefer to thtay there during her firth grief over her fatherth death. You will thend a capable man?”
“The Rock of Gibraltar is a leaf in the breeze beside him. Give me a note for him to take down. Andrew MacElroy is his name.”
While the lawyer scribbled the note I used his phone again to call the agency, to tell the operator to get hold of Andy and tell him I wanted him. I ate lunch before I returned to the agency. Andy was waiting when I got there.
Andy MacElroy was a big boulder of a man—not very tall, but thick and hard of head and body. A glum, grim man with no more imagination than an adding machine. I’m not even sure he could read. But I was sure that when Andy was told to do something, he did it and nothing else. He didn’t know enough not to.
I gave him the lawyer’s note to Miss Newhall, told him where to go and what to do, and Miss Newhall’s troubles were off my mind.
Three times that afternoon I heard from Dick Foley and Mickey Linehan. Tom-Tom Carey wasn’t doing anything very exciting, though he had bought two boxes of .44 cartridges in a Market Street sporting goods establishment.
The afternoon papers carried photographs of Big Flora Brace and Angel Grace Cardigan, with a story of their escape. The story was as far from the probable facts as newspaper stories generally are. On another page was an account of the discovery of the dead barber in the lonely road. He had been shot in the head and in the chest, four times in all. The county officials’ opinion was that he had been killed resisting a stickup, and that the bandits had fled without robbing him.
At five o’clock Tommy Howd came to my door.
“That guy Carey wants to see you again,” the freckle-faced boy said.
“Shoot him in.”
The swarthy man sauntered in, said “Howdy,” sat down, and made a brown cigarette.
“Got anything special on for tonight?” he asked when he was smoking.
“Nothing I can’t put aside for something better. Giving a party?”
“Uh-huh. I had thought of it. A kind of surprise party for Papadoodle. Want to go along?”
It was my turn to say, “Uh-huh.”
“I’ll pick you up at eleven—Van Ness and Geary,” he drawled. “But this has got to be a kind of tight party—just you and me—and him.”
“No. There’s one more who’ll have to be in on it. I’ll bring him along.”
“I don’t like that.” Tom-Tom Carey shook his head slowly, frowning amiably over his cigarette. “You sleuths oughtn’t outnumber me. It ought to be one and one.”
“You won’t be outnumbered,” I explained. “This jobbie I’m bringing won’t be on my side more than yours. And it’ll pay you to keep as sharp an eye on him as I do—and to see he don’t get behind either of us if we can help it.”
“Then what do you want to lug him along for?”
“Wheels within wheels,” I grinned.
The swarthy man frowned again, less amiably now.
“The hundred and six thousand reward money—I’m not figuring on sharing that with anybody.”
“Right enough,” I agreed. “Nobody I bring along will declare themselves in on it.”
“I’ll take your word for it.” He stood up. “And we’ve got to watch this hombre, huh?”
“If we want everything to go all right.”
“Suppose he gets in the way—cuts up on us. Can we put it to him, or do we just say, ‘Naughty! Naughty!’?”
“He’ll have to take his own chances.”
“Fair enough.” His hard face was good-natured again as he moved toward the door. “Eleven o’clock at Van Ness and Geary.”