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Authors: 1923-1985 Carter Brown

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BOOK: Terror comes creeping
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I heard the hammering sound as somebody fired and the slug smacked into the earth about six mches from Tolvar's head. With one bound, Boyd was on his way, zigzagging back toward the car. I heard two more shots fired before I made the car, and one of the slugs went past my head so close, my brains could've reached out and shook hands with it.

Selector to drive, headlights off and hope to hell the sudden absence of brilliant light throws his eyeballs out for a few seconds, another tight turn—and I sat hunched over the wheel, my naked spine quivering in anticipation until I reached the gates and made a squealing turn onto the road in the direction of Providence again.

It was some time later when I nearly didn't make a sharp lefthand curve that I looked at the speedometer and saw it was steady on 80 m.p.h. I drove the rest of the way into Providence at a steady 35 after that.

My watch said five of four when I parked by the hotel, and I felt if ever a guy deserved his sleep right then, it was me. Getting out of the car, I glanced casually at the back seat, and there was the Magnum on the seat looking right back at me.

It figured—when Tolvar had told me to drive off, he'd 70

been sure I wasn't going very far before he killed me. So he could leave the Magnum inside the car and pick it up afterwards. I grabbed the gun and slid it into the harness. If I'd thought about it before—the gun being left in the car when Tolvar got out—it could have saved a hell of a lot of violent exercise.

Ten more minutes and I was in my hotel room, in bed —and fast asleep. Sure, I know, but that's what violent exercise can do to any guy—putrify his reasoning capabilities.

Eigkt

I WOKE UP AROUND ELEVEN, LIFTED THE PHONE AND

told room service to send up some coffee and two raw eggs; then I called room service beverages and said to send up a double Scotch.

By the time they'd delivered, I was out of bed with a robe draped around my aching muscles. I slid the eggs into the Scotch, closed my eyes and drank the lot down in one gulp. My stomach would've yelled "Uncle!" but it had nothing left over for yelling.

I drank some of the coffee quickly and lit a cigarette just as a loud knock sounded on the door. Maybe room service gave a bonus to raw egg and whisky drinkers? I opened the door to find out I was wrong—two tall, hefty characters stood there with cop written all over them.

"Mr. Boyd?" the nearest guy said.

"Sure," I nodded. "Something wrong?"

"Pohce," he said. "You mind if we come m?"

"Help yourself," I said politely.

They sat down heavily and looked at me while I poured myself another cup of coffee.

"Fm Sergeant Tighe," the blond one said. "And this is Detective Karnak."

"You already know me, obviously," I said. "What's it all about?"

Tighe thumbed through his notebook, quoted my license plates number, and I agreed they did belong to my car.

"Would you account for your movements last night, Mr. Boyd?" he asked in a bored, remote voice.

"I guess so," I said. "But—" Then I didn't need to ask him why. It belted me over the head with more force than even Tolvar could have used. Like I said—violent exercise can make a moron out of a guy like me, even!

There was just one thing I'd forgotten last night when I drove away from the farm—that body was still in the trunk!

"You registered at the desk around eight-thirty last night," Tighe said patiently. "Maybe you'd like to take it from there?"

"I went out to Newport for dinner," I said. "To the seafood place—Cristy's. Then I came back into Providence afterward, drove my girl friend home, came back to the hotel. I guess that's about it."

"What time did you get back?"

The night clerk had seen me—I'd had to pick up my room key. "Around 4:00 a.m." I said.

"What time did you leave Newport?"

"Around ten-thirty, I'd say."

"Five and a half hours driving?" He raised his eyebrows a fraction. "Where does your girl friend live— north of Boston some place?"

I tried a grin. "We were a long time saying good night."

"Where does she live exactly?" There was no answering grin.

"On a farm about twenty miles out." I gave him the name and location.

"What time did you leave her to return to Providence?" 72

"Just after three."

"It took an hour to drive twenty miles?"

"I was in no hurry."

"Before—or after it happened?"

"What happened?"

Tighe*s face was stony. "You're way out of luck, Boyd—there was a witness."

"To what?"

"You'd better get dressed," he said. "Come with us. You killed him but I guess you know that already?"

"I still don't know what you're talking about," I said.

"Push it all you want," he sighed gently. "Hit-and-run. There was a witness saw it happen, got your number and everything."

"Are you out of your mind?" I said coldly. "How could a four-day old corpse that's just been dug up out of the ground be a victim of a hit-and-run?"

Tighe blinked slowly then looked at Kamak who blinked slowly back at him.

"I knew he'd been murdered," I said. "I called the State troopers and told them where to find the body, but the people who killed hun got smart and put Sweet William into another pen."

"Pen?" Tighe repeated in a hollow voice,

"Pigpen," I explained.

Tighe looked at Kamak and they went through their blinking routine again.

"This Sweet WiUiam character," Kamak said slowly. "That's his alias, huh? What's his real name?"

"That is his real name!" I said. "He's a boar."

"I know a lot of guys give me a pain in the neck, too," Tighe said seriously. "But they still got a sumame."

"Cheez!" I muttered. "I'm talking about a pig—bacon on the hoof—a grunting type thing, you know, like ham?"

Kamak shrugged his shoulders and retired from the fight.

"Strain," Tighe said. "Nervous tension builds up and up—and something's gotta give."

"O.K.," I tried again wearily. "Let's start at the begin ning—right?"

"Right," he said warily.

"The corpse was a guy called Philip Hazelton and yoi found it in the trunk of my car—right?" I said.

Tighe shook his head slowly. "The corpse belonged t< a guy called Carl Tolvar, a New York private eye, anc we found it on the road about half a mile up from you; girl friend's farm."

I just stood there, staring at him blankly. If there wa; anything I could say to him, I couldn't figure out what i was right then.

"You'd better get dressed," he said. "Make it fas as you can, Boyd, I almost can't wait to get down to you: car again and take a look inside the trunk!"

I had a nasty feeling this just wasn't going to be m} day.

Tighe and Kamak had gone out on a routine hit-and run assignment and come back with a first-degree homi cide, so then everybody got into the act.

By three that afternoon I'd lost interest—all I wantec was to give my throat a two-months' vacation. I'd talkec and talked and talked. I figured that when I started, thej thought I was trying to be cute, and by the time I'c finished they were convinced I was candidate for the funny-farm—and maybe they were right. I wasn't toe sure myself any more.

A Lieutenant called Greer had taken over where Tighe and Kamak left off. He looked like a real good Joe, i pal in need; Uke Pete would say, a buddy. Then you took another look and saw the cold fire in his eyes and jusi how tight the mask of good fellowship was drawn across his face.

At three in the afternoon, Greer quit asking questions and left, taking Tighe with him. Kamak took over the questions for another hour, but he didn't come up witt any originals so he finally lost interest. He sent out foi

coffee and let me buy a couple of packs of cigarettes— when the cop gave me the change I almost handed him a dime without thinking.

By six in the evening, Lieutenant Greer was back, alone. Kamak went out happily, leaving me alone with the Lieutenant. Greer sat opposite me and tilted his hat onto the back of his head wearily.

"All right," he said. "I'll give you what I've got so far, and you try and think up some more answers, Boyd."

"A breeze!" I said bitterly. "What are you trying to pull—death by exhaustion, or something?"

"The body in the trunk of your car did belong to Philip Hazelton," he said. "We got an identification from the lawyer, Houston, and the father flew in around noon. The doctors say he was stabbed through the left lung, and the corpse had been buried for some time after death. So you were telling the truth about that anyway.'* "I'm glad to hear it," I told him.

"Hazelton was murdered sometime between last Sunday midnight and early Monday afternoon," he went on, "as near as the doctors can figure it." "I was in New York," I said. "Can you prove it?"

"Sunday night I played a little poker," I remembered. "The game broke up kind of late, between three and four. I went back to my apartment to sleep. I got into my ofl&ce just after nine on Monday morning. My secretary can verify that—there weren't any visitors that morning but I had three or four phone calls—she'd have them listed, so you could check that also."

"You want to give me the names and addresses of the poker players?"

"Sure." I listed them for him.

"in see it gets checked out," he said. "If it does, it sounds like you're off the hook for the homicide at least You couldn't drive up here, murder Hazelton, and drive back inside five hours."

"I'm glad you appreciate that, Lieutenant," I said sincerely.

"You got a long way to go yet, boy!" he grunted. "The blood and cloth fiber fragments on your front bumper belong to Tolvar all right."

"What else have you got?"

"The eye-witness, Peter Rinkman."

"That's Pete, the strong-arm?"

"The handyman," Greer said patiently. "He was walking back to the farm along the roadside around 3:30 A.M. when he saw a car coming toward him stop a couple of hundred yards away, and a guy got out and lifted the hood, obviously trying to fix some kind of motor trouble. Then he saw another car coming down the road at high speed. The first guy got out in the center of the road, waving his arms for the second car to stop, but it didn't. Didn't even slow down, he said, but the driver must've seen Tolvar out there in the center of the road. He heard the sound of the impact and saw Tolvar tossed into air; he managed to get the license number of the car as it went past him."

"A bright boy, that Pete!" I said. "He estimate the speed of the second car?"

"Over seventy," Greer said coldly.

"The first car stops two hundred yards away from him," I repeated. "He sees the guy climb out, lift the hood, start fooling around with the works. He sees the second car coming—the guy run out into the center of the road and wave his arms—and then get hit. From the time the first car stopped until the time of impact would have been how long. Lieutenant?"

Greer shrugged. "Fifteen seconds maybe."

"And Pete's walking toward the car, getting closer all the time," I said. "After the impact, he's got time to watch Tolvar tossed into the air before he picks up the license number of the second car. He must have narrowed the distance by twenty-five yards anyway. The second car's doing seventy, he figures—that would mean

somewhere about four seconds elapsed from the time Tolvar was hit until the time the second car would have passed Pete."

"You can't put a stopwatch on human reactions," Greer grunted. "A split-second glance could be enough for him to memorize the Ucense plate."

"O.K.," I said sourly. "What else?"

"Sylvia West checks your story of dinner at Newport, then back through Providence to the farm. She says you left her just after 2:00 a.m."

"Sure," I said. "And found Tolvar waiting in the back seat of my car for me. I told you that."

He nodded coolly. "So you did—^you also told me how she wanted you to check on the pigpens because the boar had been moved and that was why the troopers never found the body when they looked for it."

"Check," I said.

"Miss West doesn't remember anything about that," he said softly. "She blushingly remembers being in the hayloft with you, but the pigpens—no!

"Neither of the Hazelton girls think they're being kept on the farm against their will. Accordmg to them, their father, Houston, their attorney, and Rinkman, the handyman, you've been annoying them consistently over the last few days. So much so, that Houston hired a private detective to protect the Hazelton family against your intrusions. The private detective was Tolvar, of course."

I was too beat to argue any more. "O.K.," I said. "I dreamed up the whole thing—that Martha Hazelton hired me in the first place-—I even dreamed up that two thousand dollar check I banked yesterday. Ah, what's the use!"

"We're holding you on the hit-and-run, for the time being," he said. "The homicide can wait untU we see how your aUbi checks out. Do you want to call a lawyer?"

"Not now," I said. "It's too late to reach my secretary at the ofiBce and—I just don't have the energy. How about the morning?"

"Sure," he said. "Right now you've got nothing but time to play with—so what's your hurry?"

I spent the night in a cell. The bunk was hard but I slept too soundly to worry. In the morning I got a shave before breakfast. It would have been nice to get a toothbrush, shower, and a clean shirt, but I figured I had to get used to a drastically altered standard of living.

Around eight-thirty. Lieutenant Greer appeared in front of the cell. He gestured impatiently at the key-keeper to unlock the door and then beckoned me to step out.

"I want you to come with me, Boyd," he said, and headed down the corridor at a galloping pace.

"What's the deal?" I asked when I caught up with him. "Did the revolution happen last night and they made an amnesty for all the guys in jail this morning?"

"Save it till we get into the car," he said tersely.

We walked out into the beautiful free air and slid into the back seat of a prowl car. Tighe was sitting in front, with Kamak driving. As soon as we were in, the car pulled away from the curb at a fast clip.

BOOK: Terror comes creeping
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