Читать книгу The Folded Paper Mystery - Footner Hulbert - Страница 5
I
ОглавлениеFinlay Corveth hustled in the direction of the Lackawanna Terminal. When it was a question of getting the low-down on anything in Hoboken, he immediately thought of Henny Friend, Big Boss, and proprietor of the Boloney Bar. Fin was not more hard-hearted than the run of young men; he was genuinely sorry for his friend lying dazed and half-sick amidst the wreck of his poor belongings, but... Gosh! what a situation was opening up! What a chance for a free-lance writer! Ought to make his everlasting reputation if he handled it right. He thrilled with the possibilities of mystery and danger. “Dearer to me than life!” Nick Peters had muttered. Naturally, a woman was suggested.
Fin took Hudson Street because it was less crowded than Washington. He had not gone a hundred paces before he discovered that he was being followed. It was the first time in his life so far as he knew, that anybody had ever considered it worth while to follow him. It gave you a feeling like no other. Not exactly fear. Fin did not consider there was much danger of being shot down in the open street. Just wants to see what I’m after, he told himself.
And if there was a sensation of fear mixed with his excitement, he wasn’t going to let anything on. He coolly stopped in front of a small haberdasher’s, and made believe to admire the satin ties in the window. His trailer could not stop because the pavement was empty at the moment, and there was no other convenient store window. Slowing down, the man passed behind Fin. Whereupon Fin went on and, passing him, got a good look. A weird foreign-looking cuss, tall and excessively lean; dressed in black broadcloth like the deacon of some outlandish church. Fin was reminded of the portraits of Robespierre with his greenish complexion and lank black hair.
He wondered if this was the man who had struck down Nick Peters, and anger made his throat tight. However, this one had not the look of a hired spy, such as Nick had described; there was too much crazy fire in his sunken eyes. Perhaps this was the Principal then, the chief of Nick’s enemies. Why go to Henny for information if the man himself was in his grasp? But if I grabbed him without evidence I’d only make a fool of myself, thought Fin. I’ve got to beat him at his own game. Lead him on.
The Boloney Bar is on River Street near the Lackawanna ferries. There it functions exactly as in the old days, with its long mahogany bar to pound the seidels on, brass foot-rail, sawdust-covered floor, and free lunch counter displaying every variety of the delicacy which gave it its name. Behind the bar is a long range of mirrors covered with a film of soap as a protection from fly specks. In the soap Ed Hafker, the chief bartender, is fond of tracing toasts with a flowing forefinger, such as: Prosit! Here’s How! Drink Hearty! Never Say Die!
Fin’s trailer did not follow him inside, but remained watching from across the street. The Boloney Bar is always crowded, for men will make a long pilgrimage nowadays to plant their elbows on the veritable mahogany. Fin was well known there and his friends, the bartenders, greeted him jovially as he passed down the line: “ ’Lo, Fin! ... Howsa Boy! ... What’s the good word, Fin? ... What’ll you have?”
To which Fin replied: “See you later, fellas. I’m lookin’ for Henny.”
“Well, you know where to find him.”
Henny Friend’s sanctum was in the corner room upstairs. Like other magnates his days were spent in “conferences.” A diverse collection of humanity passed unobtrusively in and out every twenty-four hours. The door was always locked. Fin knocked, and Henny’s thick voice was heard from within.
“Who is it?”
“Fin Corveth.”
“Half a mo’, Fin.”
When he was ready, Henny pressed a button and the latch clicked. As Fin entered somebody left by another door. Henny never allowed his callers to meet unless he had an object in it. A huge, toad-like hulk of flesh planted in an over-size chair behind a desk, with an over-size cigar elevated from one corner of his mouth. Notwithstanding his name, he was certainly Italian; swarthy, smooth and expressionless. “Henny Friend” had been adopted for professional purposes in a German community. His brown eyes were as bright and hard as agate.
“Well, kid, how’s tricks?”
Fin wasted no time in beating around the bush. With his tough friends he sported a tough accent. “I run into a damn queer story up the street just now,” he said. “I only got the half of it, and I thought maybe you could piece it out.”
“Well, shoot!” said Henny, leaning back in his swing chair.
On the way down Fin had naturally figured out what line he would take; tell Henny the whole truth, but omit any reference to the missing brass ball from Nick’s bed.
“In my business I got all kinds of friends ...” Fin began.
“Just like me,” said Henny with a fat chuckle.
“Sure! ... Well, up on Fourth Street off Washington, there’s guy I know named Nick Peters has a little store where he repairs watches and jewellery. It’s a real poor little place, that’s what attracted me inside in the first place, I thought there would be a story in it. He hasn’t even got a safe, but he says when anybody brings him a valuable piece to fix he tells them to come back for it the same night. The rest of the stuff he puts under his pillow.
“He’s a foreigner, but of what kind I don’t know. Never would talk about himself. Lives all alone in a room back of his store. He’s a damn good workman, I’ve watched him often; too good for the cheap jobs he gets. When I asked him why he didn’t go to work for one of the big houses he said he made more on his own. I reckon it’s a fact, because he seems to have all he can do. Works day and night. He’s a good head, Henny; me and him has had many a talk together; he’s what you call a philosopher.”
“Yeah?” said Henny good-humouredly. He cocked the cigar at a steeper angle.
“Well, to-day, after I left the Three-Hours-for-Lunch Club,” Fin went on, “I fluffed up there to have a talk with Nick, and I found the store closed and the blinds pulled down. The kids in the street said he’d been closed all day. I didn’t know what to make of it, because that guy was always working. I went through the hall of the tenement house to try to get into his room at the back. The door opened in my hand, and—Gosh! Henno, when I looked inside, the place was completely wrecked!”
Henny shrugged cynically, and flicked the ashes off his cigar.
“It was like a madman had been let loose in there,” Fin continued. “The table was turned over, the shelves swept bare, and all Nick’s stuff lying on the floor and trodden on. I couldn’t see Nick first-off, but I smelled a sweetish smell on the air. Chloroform. The store in front was just the same. The fellow had even torn the paper from the walls and knocked holes in the plaster. Some of the boards of the floor had been pulled up. Certainly looked like a crazy man’s work, because the watches and bits of jewellery Nick had been repairing was scattered on the floor with the rest.
“I heard a groan from the back room and run in there again. I found Nick lying on the floor between the bed and the wall. He was just coming to, and I laid him on the bed. He looked bad, all bruised and bloody about the head. Made me hot, I can tell you such a good little guy, never harmed nobody. Well, I gave him water to drink and washed his head. I found he wasn’t hurt bad, but only knocked silly.
“When he was able to talk, either he couldn’t or he wouldn’t tell me what the fellow was after. He said he must have come in by the window and chloroformed him while he slept. The window opened on an air shaft. Easy enough to climb up that way. Nick said when he came to in the morning the fellow was still there looking. He snatched a brass bell offen the foot of the bed and crocked Nick over the head with it. That was all he knew. The fellow must have let himself out into the hall then. As I told you, the door was unlocked when I came. That’s the story.”
“Yeah?” said Henny coolly. “I’m sorry for the guy if he’s a friend of yours; but what’s remarkable about it? It happens ev’y day.”
“There’s two things funny about it,” said Fin. “The fellow that beat him up didn’t take anything. The watches and jewellery and all was still lying around the place. And secondly, Nick’s going to keep his mouth shut about it. Made me promise to keep away from the police.”
“What do you make out of that?” said Henny.
“This fellow was after something special,” said Fin. “Nick let on as much, but he wouldn’t tell me what. The fellow didn’t get it because, as Nick said, he had it safely put away somewheres outside.”
“What do you come to me for?” asked Henny with a hard look. “Do you think I beat up this bozo?”
Fin affected to laugh heartily. Like many a lad with an open and honest face he made it work for him when he had need of it. “Quit your kidding!” he said. “I came to you because you know everything that happens this side of the river, or you can find out if you want.”
Henny was silent for a moment or two twisting the big cigar between his lips. “You better keep out of this, kid,” he said at last. “ ’Sall right for me to tell you stories of what’s past and gone. That don’t hurt nobody. But you can’t use this story. It’s too new. The police would get on to it.”
“How could they?” persisted Fin. “They don’t know nothing and they won’t know. Nick Peters won’t say a word, and I’ll change it round like I always do. You know me, Henny. I treat it as fiction.... Aw, there’s a swell story in this,” he went on cajolingly, “and I need it for my Sunday article in the Recorder. Don’t be a crab, Henny.”
“Did this guy give you a description of the guy what hit him?” asked Henny.
Fin shook his head. “He couldn’t see him good.”
“Well, I’ll ask around,” said Henny cautiously. “Go down and have a drink and come back in fifteen minutes.”
From the bar Fin could see Robespierre (as he termed him to himself) still loitering in front of the bank across the street. That’s all right, old fella, he thought; this joint has a door on the alley!
When Fin was admitted to Henny’s room for the second time, the big man was not alone. Beside his desk sat a comely, well-dressed lad like Henny of Italian extraction, and like Henny with a smooth, blank face and wary eyes. Quick work! thought Fin. However, he dissembled his excitement.
“This is my friend Tony Casino,” said Henny. “Meet Fin Corveth, Tony.”
Fin shook hands. The Italian lad got up and sat down with a bit of a swagger.
“Well, spill your stuff, Fin,” said Henny.
Fin felt embarrassed in having to speak of burglary and assault in such company, however he plunged ahead. “Fellow I know, a watchmaker was beaten up to-day,” he said. “I just wanted to get the rights of it.”
Tony cocked an inquiring eye in Henny’s direction. “ ’S all right,” said the latter, with a comfortable grin. “Fin ain’t lookin’ for revenge. He on’y wants the story. He’s one of these new, fiction writers. He’ll change the names and all.”
Tony, assured there was no danger in it, swelled a little at the idea of seeing his exploit in print. “Yeah,” he said with a great air of unconcern, “that was my job all right. I didn’t aim to hurt the old Slovak, but it took longer than I figured to search the place, and he come out of the gauze before I was troo. So I hadda bump his bean. I didn’t hurt him much.” Tony spoke in an oddly husky voice for one so young, and dropped the words out of the corner of his mouth like a ventriloquist.
Fin held in his anger. It was no time to indulge private feelings. “Sure,” he said propitiatingly, “he wasn’t hurt much. Who hired you to do the job?”
“I don’t know the guy’s name,” said Tony coolly, “and I wouldn’t tell it if I did. I seen him hanging around town once or twice—he was a guy you wouldn’t forget easy, and one night he come into the bar downstairs. I seen him lookin’ at me, and I seen him askin’ Ed who I was. So I let him buy me a drink. After we had three or four we got friendly, and after he stalled around awhile he put it up to me, would I take on a little job for a hundred smackers paid down and a grand to follow.”
Fin perceived that he need have no delicacy in discussing these matters with Tony.
“I says sure I would,” Tony went on, “give me the dope; and he told me a story how years ago a Slovak jeweller stole an emerald off him that belonged to his family, and disappeared. The guy finally traced him here to Hoboken, and found him keeping a little repair shop. He couldn’t have the Slovak arrested he said, because he didn’t have no proof he stole the emerald, but he’d give me a hundred smackers to search his place, and if I found the emerald and brought it to him, it would be worth a grand to me.
“Maybe it was all hooey. What did I care? I saw a hundred in it anyhow, and I took it on. I prospected around the joint and I found the Slovak hadn’t no safe, so it looked like a cinch. I found I could get in easy through the cellar, and up the air-shaft to the window of his back room. He always left it open nights.
“I fixed on last night to pull it off. The Slovak worked late in his store ev’y night. I watched until he put his light out, then I waited an hour for him to go bye-bye and went in. I give him a whiff of chloroform to keep him quiet. Then I searched the place. Cheese! I near pulled it down, lookin’, because the New York guy told me if he had it he would hide it good. Well, I didn’t find no emerald at that. The rest of the stuff wasn’t worth lifting. I’m no small change artist.... Well, you know the rest,” Tony concluded; “the Slovak come to while I was there, and I had to put him to sleep again.”
“What did you hit him with?” asked Fin casually.
“Didn’t have nothing with me,” said Tony, “so I unscrewed a brass knob offen the bed, dropped it in my handkerchief and soaked him with that.”
“That was a neat one!” said Fin with a grin that concealed more than it expressed.
“Well, that’s all,” said Tony, with his conceited swagger. “I told you there was nothing to it.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” said Fin. “That was a good touch about the emerald. What like emerald was it, did he say?”
“It was in the shape of a heart the guy said,” answered Tony, “about so big.” He measured an inch with thumb and forefinger. “It was in two halves joined together with a gold band,” he said, “and there was a little ring in the top to hang it by. Been in his family hundreds of years, he said. All hooey, I guess. Said I was to bring it to him just as I found it if I wanted the grand.”
“What like guy was this New York guy?” asked Fin.
Tony shook his head. “I won’t furnish no description,” he said. “It ain’t professional.”
Henny nodded in agreement.
“Have you seen him since last night?” asked Fin.
“Sure. I met him on the ferry boat Bergen this aft. as agreed. He was sore as hell too, not to get the emerald, but what did I care? I already had the hundred off him.”
“Will you see him again?”
“Nah! Why should I?”
“It’s a good story all right,” said Fin. “I’ll have to fake up what we don’t know about it.... What did you do with the brass knob after?” he asked very carelessly.
“Cheese! I dropped it in me pocket and forgot all about it,” said Tony. “I found it there later, and I was for pitching it in the river first off, but it made an elegant dropper without being incriminating, get me? So I kept it. Just about that time I get Kid River, a pal of mine. He had a job over in Manhattan to-night and he was looking for a nice dropper, so I give it to him.”
Fin quietly absorbed this piece of information. There was nothing more he could say without showing his hand. He threw out a little smoke screen of flattery. “Cheese! Tony, you sure are one nervy kid! It’s a treat to hear you! You must tell me some more stories!” And so on.
Tony could take any amount of this. “Sure, any time you like,” he said condescendingly.
The meeting broke up.
Fin made his way down to the bar alone. He accepted a beer from Ed Hafker, and they fell into idle talk across the mahogany.
“Do you know a guy called Kid River?” asked Fin.
“Sure, he comes in here.”
“I’d like to know him. I hear he’s got a good story.”
“I’ll tell him when I see him.”
“Know where he lives?”
“In the old tenement at Second and River. One block up.”
“What’s his right name?”
“You can search me. Everybody calls him Kid River.”
Fin was in no haste to be gone. Ed must have one with him first. Robespierre was still loitering across the street. Fin naturally supposed that this was the man who had hired Tony Casino. He silently addressed him over his beer glass: “What wouldn’t you give to know that the emerald heart was inside the brass ball, old fella? Your man lifted it without knowing that he lifted it!”