Read Farewell, My Lovely Online
Authors: Raymond Chandler
Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Los Angeles, #Marlowe, #Private investigators - California - Los Angeles, #Private Investigators, #Philip (Fictitious Character), #Fiction, #General, #Mystery Fiction, #California, #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Hard-Boiled
"All right," Brunette said. "Who are you and what do you want?"
"I'm a private detective and I want to talk to a man named Moose Malloy."
"Show me you're a private dick."
I showed him. He tossed the wallet back across the desk. His wind-tanned lips continued to smile and the smile was getting stagy.
"I'm investigating a murder," I said. "The murder of a man named Marriott on the bluff near your Belvedere Club last Thursday night. This murder happens to be connected with another murder, of a woman, done by Malloy, an ex-con and bank robber and all-round tough guy."
He nodded. "I'm not asking you yet what it has to do me. I assume you'll come to that. Suppose you tell me how you got on my boat?"
"I told you."
"It wasn't true," he said gently. "Marlowe is the name? It wasn't true, Marlowe. You know that. The kid down on the stage isn't lying. I pick my men carefully."
"You own a piece of Bay City," I said. "I don't know how big a piece, but enough for what you want. A man named Sonderborg has been running a hideout there. He been running reefers and stickups and hiding hot boys. Naturally, he couldn't do that without connections. I don't think he could do it without you. Malloy was staying with him. Malloy has left. Malloy is about seven feet tall and hard to hide. I think he could hide nicely on a gambling boat."
"You're simple," Brunette said softly. "Supposing I wanted to hide him, why should I take the risk out here?" He sipped his drink. "After all I'm in another business. It's hard enough to keep a good taxi service running with out a lot of trouble. The world is full of places a crook can hide. If he has money. Could you think of a better idea?"
"I could, but to hell with it."
"I can't do anything for you. So how did you get on the boat?"
"I don't care to say."
"I'm afraid I'll have to have you made to say, Marlowe." His teeth glinted in the light from the brass ship's lamps. "After all, it can be done."
"If I tell you, will you get word to Malloy?"
"What word?"
I reached for my wallet lying on the desk and drew a card from it and turned it over. I put the wallet away and got a pencil instead. I wrote five words on the back of the card and pushed it across the desk. Brunette took it and read what I had written on it. "It means nothing to me," he said.
"It will mean something to Malloy."
He leaned back and stared at me. "I don't make you out. You risk your hide to come out here and hand me a card to pass on to some thug I don't even know. There's no sense to it."
"There isn't if you don't know him."
"Why didn't you leave your gun ashore and come aboard the usual way?"
"I forgot the first time. Then I knew that toughie in the mess jacket would never let me on. Then I bumped into a fellow who knew another way."
His yellow eyes lighted as with a new flame. He smiled and said nothing.
"This other fellow is no crook but he's been on the beach with his ears open. You have a loading port that has been unbarred on the inside and you have a ventilator shaft out of which the grating has been removed. There's one man to knock over to get to the boat deck. You'd better check your crew list, Brunette."
He moved his lips soffly, one over the other. He looked down at the card again. "Nobody named Malloy is on board this boat," he said. "But if you're telling the truth about that loading port, I'll buy."
"Go and look at it."
He still looked down. "If there's any way I can get word to Malloy, I will. I don't know why I bother."
"Take a look at that loading port."
He sat very still for a moment, then leaned forward and pushed the gun across the desk to me.
"The things I do," he mused, as if he was alone. "I run towns, I elect mayors, I corrupt police, I peddle dope, I hide out crooks, I heist old women strangled with pearls. What a lot of time I have." He laughed shortly. "What a lot of time."
I reached for my gun and tucked it back under my arm. Brunette stood up. "I promise nothing," he said, eyeing me steadily. "But I believe you."
"Of course not."
"You took a long chance to hear so little."
"Yes."
"Well--" he made a meaningless gesture and then put his hand across the desk.
"Shake hands with a chump," he said softly.
I shook hands with him. His hand was small and firm and a little hot.
"You wouldn't tell me how you found out about this loading port?"
"I can't. But the man who told me is no crook."
"I could make you tell," he said, and immediately shook his head. "No. I believed you once. I'll believe you again. Sit still and have another drink."
He pushed a buzzer. The door at the back opened and one of the nice-tough guys came in.
"Stay here. Give him a drink, if he wants it. No rough stuff."
The torpedo sat down and smiled at me calmly. Brunette went quickly out of the office. I smoked. I finished my drink. The torpedo made me another. I finished that, and another cigarette.
Brunette came back and washed his hands over in the corner, then sat down at his desk again. He jerked his head at the torpedo. The torpedo went out silently.
The yellow eyes studied me. "You win, Marlowe. And I have one hundred and sixty-four men on my crew list. Well--" he shrugged. "You can go back by the taxi. Nobody will bother you. As to your message, I have a few contacts. I'll use them. Good night. I probably should say thanks. For the demonstration."
"Good night," I said, and stood up and went out.
There was a new man on the landing stage. I rode to shore on a different taxi. I went along to the bingo parlor and leaned against the wall in the crowd.
Red came along in a few minutes and leaned beside me against the wall.
"Easy, huh?" Red said softly, against the heavy clear voices of the table men calling the numbers.
"Thanks to you. He bought. He's worried."
Red looked this way and that and turned his lips a little more close to my ear. "Get your man?"
"No. But I'm hoping Brunette will find a way to get him a message."
Red turned his head and looked at the tables again. He yawned and straightened away from the wall. The beak-nosed man was in again. Red stepped over to him and said: "Hiya, Olson," and almost knocked the man off his feet pushing past him.
Olson looked after him sourly and straightened his hat. Then he spat viciously on the floor.
As soon as he had gone, I left the place and went along to the parking lot back towards the tracks where I had left my car.
I drove back to Hollywood and put the car away and went up to the apartment.
I took my shoes off and walked around in my socks feeling the floor with my toes. They would still get numb again once in a while.
Then I sat down on the side of the pulled-down bed and tried to figure time. It couldn't be done. It might take hours or days to find Malloy. He might never be found until the police got him. If they ever did--alive.
39
It was about ten o'clock when I called the Grayle number in Bay City. I thought it would probably be too late to catch her, but it wasn't. I fought my way through a maid and the butler and finally heard her voice on the line. She sounded breezy and well-primed for the evening.
"I promised to call you," I said. "It's a little late, but I've had a lot to do."
"Another stand-up?" Her voice got cool.
"Perhaps not. Does your chauffeur work this late?"
"He works as late as I tell him to."
"How about dropping by to pick me up? I'll be getting squeezed into my commencement suit."
"Nice of you," she drawled. "Should I really bother?" Amthor had certainly done a wonderful job with her centers of speech--if anything had ever been wrong with them.
"I'd show you my etching."
"Just one etching?"
"It's just a single apartment."
"I heard they had such things," she drawled again, then changed her tone. "Don't act so hard to get. You have a lovely build, mister. And don't ever let anyone tell you different. Give me the address again."
I gave it to her and the apartment number. "The lobby door is locked," I said. "But I'll go down and slip the catch."
"That's fine," she said. "I won't have to bring my jimmy."
She hung up, leaving me with a curious feeling of having talked to somebody that didn't exist.
I went down to the lobby and slipped the catch and then took a shower and put my pajamas on and lay down on the bed. I could have slept for a week. I dragged myself up off the bed again and set the catch on the door, which I had forgotten to do, and walked through a deep hard snowdrift out to the kitchenette and laid out glasses and a bottle of liqueur Scotch I had been saving for a really highclass seduction.
I lay down on the bed again. "Pray," I said out loud. "There's nothing left but prayer."
I closed my eyes. The four walls of the room seemed to hold the throb of a boat, the still air seemed to drip with fog and rustle with sea wind. I smelled the rank sour smell of a disused hold. I smelled engine oil and saw a wop in a purple shirt reading under a naked light bulb with his grandfather's spectacles. I climbed and climbed up a ventilator shaft. I climbed the Himalayas and stepped out on top and guys with machine guns were all around me. I talked with a small and somehow very human yellow-eyed man who was a racketeer and probably worse. I thought of the giant with the red hair and the violet eyes, who was probably the nicest man I had ever met.
I stopped thinking. Lights moved behind my closed lids. I was lost in space. I was a gilt-edged sap come back from a vain adventure. I was a hundred dollar package of dynamite that went off with a noise like a pawnbroker looking at a dollar watch. I was a pink-headed bug crawling up the side of the City Hall.
I was asleep.
I woke slowly, unwillingly, and my eyes stared at reflected light on the ceiling from the lamp. Something moved gently in the room.
The movement was furtive and quiet and heavy. I listened to it. Then I turned my head slowly and looked at Moose Malloy. There were shadows and he moved in the shadows, as noiselessly as I had seen him once before. A gun in his hand had a dark oily business-like sheen. His hat was pushed back on his black curly hair and his nose sniffed, like the nose of a hunting dog.
He saw me open my eyes. He came softly over to the side of the bed and stood looking down at me.
"I got your note," he said. "I make the joint clean. I don't make no cops outside. If this is a plant, two guys goes out in baskets."
I rolled a little on the bed and he felt swiftly under the pillows. His face was still wide and pale and his deep-set eyes were still somehow gentle. He was wearing an overcoat tonight. It fitted him where it touched. It was burst out in one shoulder seam, probably just getting it on. It would be the largest size they had, but not large enough for Moose Malloy.
"I hoped you'd drop by," I said. "No copper knows any thing about this. I just wanted to see you."
"Go on," he said.
He moved sideways to a table and put the gun down and dragged his overcoat off and sat down in my best easy chair. It creaked, but it held. He leaned back slowly and arranged the gun so that it was close to his right hand. He dug a pack of cigarettes out of his pocket and shook one loose and put it into his mouth without touching it with his fingers. A match flared on a thumbnail. The sharp smell of the smoke drifted across the room.
"You ain't sick or anything?" he said.
"Just resting. I had a hard day."
"Door was open. Expecting someone?"
"A dame."
He stared at me thoughtfully.
"Maybe she won't come," I said. "If she does, I'll stall her."
"What dame?"
"Oh, just a dame. If she comes, I'll get rid of her. I'd rather talk to you."
His very faint smile hardly moved his mouth. He puffed his cigarette awkwardly, as if it was too small for his fingers to hold with comfort.
"What made you think I was on the _Monty_?" he asked.
"A Bay City cop. It's a long story and too full of guessing."
"Bay City cops after me?"
"Would that bother you?"
He smiled the faint smile again. He shook his head slightly.
"You killed a woman," I said. "Jessie Florian. That was a mistake."
He thought. Then he nodded. "I'd drop that one," he said quietly.
"But that queered it," I said. "I'm not afraid of you. You're no killer. You didn't mean to kill her. The other one--over on Central--you could have squeezed out of. But not out of beating a woman's head on a bedpost until her brains were on her face."
"You take some awful chances, brother," he said softly.
"The way I've been handled," I said, "I don't know the difference any more. You didn't mean to kill her--did you?"
His eyes were restless. His head was cocked in a listening attitude.
"It's about time you learned your own strength," I said.
"It's too late," he said.
"You wanted her to tell you something," I said. "You took hold of her neck and shook her. She was already dead when you were banging her head against the bedpost."
He stared at me.
"I know what you wanted her to tell you," I said.
"Go ahead."
"There was a cop with me when she was found. I had to break clean."
"How clean?"
"Fairly clean," I said. "But not about tonight."
He stared at me. "Okey, how did you know I was on the _Monty_?" He had asked me that before. He seemed to have forgotten.
"I didn't. But the easiest way to get away would be by water. With the set-up they have in Bay City you could get out to one of the gambling boats. From there you could get clean away. With the right help."
"Laird Brunette is a nice guy," he said emptily. "So I've heard. I never even spoke to him."
"He got the message to you."
"Hell, there's a dozen grapevines that might help him to do that, pal. When do we do what you said on the card? I had a hunch you were leveling. I wouldn't take the chance to come here otherwise. Where do we go?"
He killed his cigarette and watched me. His shadow loomed against the wall, the shadow of a giant. He was so big he seemed unreal.