Read Tough as Nails: The Complete Cases of Donahue From the Pages of Black Mask Online
Authors: Frederick Nebel
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Collections & Anthologies, #Private Investigators
“Who are you?”
“Donahue. Interstate Agency. Take this guy’s guns. He’s not hurt bad. Only his wind’s knocked out.”
Donahue rose and ran out into the street. He dropped down beside Roper. The dick was dead. His throat was torn out and there was blood on his stomach.
“How’s Roper?” the cop yelled.
Donahue stood up and went towards the cop, saying, “He’s dead.”
There was another cop coming down the street.
The precinct captain was a tough nut with a reputation and a clean record. He sat on his desk with arms folded and one foot planted on the seat of the swivel-chair. Roper had gone to the morgue. Tubba Klem had been taken to the hospital.
“Roper,” said the precinct skipper, “dropped in here just this afternoon. He was lookin’ for Tubba Klem.”
“He must have figured the same way I did.”
“I don’t know you, Donahue. Roper knew you well. He said you were the world’s worst pest. A guy that hated city cops—”
“Ah, bologney!” Donahue laughed. “That was Roper’s version of it. Listen, skipper—ask some other guys: Billy Ames, down at Times Square; Captain Hafferkamp at Old Slip; Inspector Kaltenheimer.”
“Anyhow,” the captain said, “I’ll have to take that hunk of ice you took from Tubba Klem.”
Anger leaped into Donahue’s round brown eyes. “After I got it!” He stood up and glared at the captain. “Not on your natural, skipper. This diamond goes in the Agency’s safe. We return it to the European Indemnity company that hired us to get it.” He chuckled brittlely. “You must take me for a two-year-old!”
The captain thinned his gray eyes. “You heard me, Donahue. Stolen property when regained goes into the hands of the police for safe keeping.”
“Now don’t read me the law. I know the law. There are exceptions to every law, and this is one. The Agency has a rock-bound reputation, and you just don’t get the ice.”
“Donahue,” said the captain grimly, “I want that diamond. Hand it over.”
Donahue said, “Mind if I use the phone?” He picked up the instrument and called Headquarters. He got Inspector Kaltenheimer on the wire, then handed the phone to the captain.
The skipper tightened his lips, spoke into the mouthpiece. A minute later he hung up, twisted his lips and put down the phone.
“Okey, Donahue. Thanks for going over my head.” He got off the desk, turned his back on Donahue and walked to a window, staring bitterly out into the street.
“The trouble with a lot of you guys,” said Donahue, “is that you’re not grateful. I give your precinct Tubba Klem, and still you yap.”
The skipper said nothing. Donahue put on his hat, started a cigarette, and went out.
At a corner drug-store he made a telephone call.
“Billy Ames?… Hello, Billy. Donahue. Listen, I got Tubba Klem…. I’m sorry, kid, but a couple of bulls took him over, up here in Harlem…. Yeah, I’m up here now. I thought I might be able to give you the pinch, but there was no go. But listen, Billy. I’ll do right by you…. Well, it’s this way. Some jane was after the ice, too. She’s got a boy friend. The jane handed me a tough line in Julie’s tonight and said I was on the spot. Now you can take this tip or leave it…. Yeah, it sounds good to me. She and the guy are living at number——Waverly Place. Third floor, front, left—as I saw it from the street. I’d go heeled, Billy—and maybe I’d take some boys along…. Roper? Oh, Roper got his throat shot out by Tubba Klem…. Yeah. I’ll tell you about it when I see you…. Sure. Good-bye, Billy.”
He hung up, went out and entered a downtown subway kiosk.
It was eleven o’clock when he entered the lobby of his hotel. He went to a writing desk, sat down and drew out the diamond. Cold fire in the palm of his hand! He took a half a dozen sheets of note paper, folded one four times around the stone, then doubled the other five around that. He slipped the lot into an envelope and sealed it. He went over to the desk and said:
“Hello, John. Put this in the safe till morning, will you?”
“Will you write your name on it, Mr. Donahue?”
“I forgot.” He picked up a pen and dashed off his name.
John took a key and a letter from one of the cubbyholes behind. He said, “A lady left this note for you, Mr. Donahue.”
“Thanks.” Donahue tore it open while John went to the safe and put away the letter Donahue had given him. Donahue read:
Dear Donahue,
Forget about that row tonight, will you? I was off my head. I came around to apologize but you weren’t in. If you will meet me at that place in Tenth Street tomorrow night, I’ll explain.
No signature. Donahue crammed the letter in his pocket and went to a telephone booth. He called a number and when the connection was made, he said:
“Billy Ames there?… When did he leave?… I see…. No; no message.”
He slammed the receiver into the hook and rolled out of the booth scowling. Ames had left the precinct half an hour ago. That meant he was already at the address in Waverly Place.
Donahue sighed, got in the elevator and was whisked upward. He stepped out into a quiet corridor, walked on thick green carpet. He took out his keys inserted one in the lock of his door. He entered and pressed the light switch just inside the door.
“Put ’em up, brother.”
Donahue froze.
A man was standing in the center of the room holding a big automatic pistol. The woman was sitting on the divan, smiling.
“Why, you dirty—”
“Cut it!” bit off the man. “Close that door! Lock it!”
Donahue kicked the door shut but did not lock it. He turned and looked at the man.
“Lock it, I said!”
“Lock it yourself.”
The man jerked his head. “Lock it, Clio.”
The woman got up, sauntered across the room and turned the key. Donahue eyed her narrowly.
He said, “How the hell did you punks get up here?”
“Simple,” she said. “I went back to the speak after you left and got talking with that drunken reporter. He told me where you lived. I came over and asked for you. You weren’t in. I wrote the note and watched where the clerk put it. I could see the room number on the cubbyhole. Then I got”—she nodded to the man—“my husband, and we sprung the lock. My husband—”
“Without benefit of clergy,” sneered Donahue.
“That’s enough juice outta you!” barked the man. “Take his gun, Clio.”
She tapped Donahue’s hip pockets, then his coat pockets. She wore a puzzled look.
“Look under his arm,” coached the man, and moved around to Donahue’s left side.
She got the gun and stepped away.
The man with the gun came closer. “Now that ice, brother.”
Donahue bit him with a contemptuous eye. “Ah, lay off that. I haven’t got any ice.”
“Frisk him, Clio.”
The man moved around behind Donahue, pressed the muzzle of his gun against Donahue’s back. The woman went through Donahue’s vest pockets. She went through his coat pockets. She went through his pants pockets. Then she emptied his wallet on the table.
“Nothing, Jess,” she said.
The man came around to face Donahue. He was a big-shouldered man, the same one Donahue had seen yawning in the room in Waverly Place. His eyes were glacier blue, his nose battered, his lips wide and thick. He bared a row of teeth, two of which were gold.
“I want that ice, Donahue. You got it. You switched it when you got it from Bonalino, when that Poore rat was sent up. I know you private dicks. You’re a lot of crooks, and a hunk of ice like that was worth more to you than any job could pay you for a lifetime. I tell you, I want it!”
“Well, if I had it, guy, I’d give it to you. But I haven’t got it. That’s on the up and up.”
“You know where it is, then! Where is it?”
Donahue grinned. “Sure I know where it is.”
“Then where is it?”
“At a precinct in Harlem.”
The man’s eyes narrowed. “Yeah?”
“Yeah. You sap, you’ve been on a blind trail. I had the ice. I had it tonight. I took it from Tubba Klem. He was Poore’s cell-mate in the Big House. He got it from Friedman, the pawnbroker. I put a bullet in Tubba’s guts, and I had to leave the ice with the precinct captain. Tubba smoked out Roper, a precinct dick, before I got him. You’ll see it in the first editions.”
“That’s just a line, Jess,” the woman said. “He’s stalling for time. Don’t swallow that.”
Jess jabbed the gun hard against Donahue’s stomach. “Listen, baby. You’re in a hell of a tough spot—”
“I know I am, Jess. And I’m trying to get out of it. So help me God, I’m telling the truth.”
The woman laid Donahue’s gun on the divan and said, “Jess, if you swallow that you’re a jackass. This guy is as two-faced as they come. Let’s take him for a ride.”
Jess said, “How would you like to go for a ride, Donahue?”
“Come on, be your age,” Donahue said. “Don’t you suppose I’d cough up if I had the ice? I told you where it is. Call the hospital and see if Tubba Klem isn’t there. There’s the phone.”
“What hospital?”
“The Harlem Hospital on Lenox Avenue.”
“Look up the number, Clio.”
The woman found a telephone book, nipped the pages, found the number.
“Call it,” said Jess.
“What, I should call from this room? Don’t be that way. Make this bright boy do it.”
“Go ahead, Donahue.”
Donahue put the call through, and while he was waiting for the connection Jess told Clio to take it over. Donahue handed her the phone.
In a few seconds she said, “Harlem Hospital?… I want to know how Mr. Klem is?… All right. Thanks.” She hung up, scowled. “He’s resting.”
Donahue smiled. “As I told you.”
The woman spun on him, her green eyes murderous. “So you think you’re out of it, eh?” Her nostrils quivered, her whole body began to vibrate.
Jess snarled, “Snap out of it, Clio!” but his tone smacked of indecision.
She snapped at Jess, “Are you turning la-de-da?”
The man’s jaw hardened, but he said nothing.
The woman clenched her hands and jerked her green stare back to Donahue. “No, you’re not out of it! You’re going for a ride, brother! You’re going to get your guts blown out!”
Now Donahue was baffled.
Her voice rose, quavering hysterically. “You hear me! You’re going for a ride!”
“What the hell good will that do you?”
“Good? A lot of good, you——damn’ dick! A lot of good! All right… the ice is safe in the precinct. But you get yours anyhow. You know what you did to get this ride? Do you?”
“No,” dully.
Blue veins stood out on her forehead. “You sent my sister up for ten years.”
“You’re—”
“My sister! Irene Saffarrans!”
“Good God, Clio!” growled Jess. “Calm yourself!”
Donahue’s brown eyes opened wide.
“Shut up, Jess!” she cried. “You’ve got to go through this with me. You promised. That’s what we came here for. If we didn’t get the ice, then we were to get this louse. You promised, Jess! You can’t let me down!”
“Wait a minute,” broke in Donahue. “For God’s sake, sister, you’re crazy—”
“And you shut up, big boy!” she snarled. “You’ve said all you’re going to say! You hounded her. You sent her up for ten years. Ten years! You’re a sneak, a dirty double-crossing yellow dog—”
“And you’re a liar!” Donahue broke in hotly. “I sent her up. Yes, I did. But I managed to get her ten years instead of fifteen, which she deserved. She double-crossed every man she ever traveled with. She caused the deaths of Crosby, Babe Delaney, Bruhard, and the little old Adler. And because of her Poore went to the Big House. Don’t tell me! That sister of yours was a crook—and a dirty one—from the word go! I know you janes—the whole lot of you! I wouldn’t wipe my feet on you! And I know how to treat a lady, sister, when I meet one. But this lousy business I’m in—”
“That’s enough,” she snapped. “Jess, we’ll take this guy. Down the stairs and out the side entrance. We’ll walk him to the car and ride him up First Avenue and pitch him from the Willis Avenue Bridge.”
Jess’s eyes flickered, and muscles bulged alongside his jaw. His voice was muffled when he said, “Okey, Clio…. Put your hat on, Donahue.”
“Listen, Jess—”
“Put it on!” choked Jess.
Donahue picked up his hat. His face turned gray, a humid look came into his brown eyes.
Clio went over and listened at the door. Then she unlocked it. Opened it. Jess jerked his chin, and Donahue walked past him slowly into the corridor, his lips hueless.
Clio whispered, “Past the elevator to the stairway!”
“Go ahead, Donahue,” said Jess.
Donahue had taken two steps when the elevator door opened.
The three stopped. Jess slipped his gun into his pocket. The elevator door was open, but no one came out. The girl looked at Jess and Jess looked at the girl. Donahue looked towards the elevator. None of them could see its door, but all knew that it had opened.
Then it closed. It was a silent elevator. You could not hear its movement in the shaft.
Jess drew out his gun. “Mosey along, Donahue.”
The girl led the way to the end of the hall, opened a door that led to a cement stairway. Their feet echoed on the way down. It was really a fire exit. Jess walked behind Donahue, his big hand white-knuckled on the gun.
Presently the girl stopped. “The next landing is the last, Jess. Shove the rod in your coat pocket. If he makes a break let him have it.”
“Okey, Clio.”
They went out into a marble corridor where a few lights burned. They started down an arcade lined by exclusive little shops—all dark at this hour. Glass swing-doors were at the end leading into Ninth Street. Donahue marched between the man and the woman.
Clio moved ahead when they neared the swing-doors. She pushed one open and held it open while Jess prodded Donahue into the street. Then she let the door swing shut on its silent spring, and they started east on Ninth Street towards University Place.
“Hey, you!”
The woman flung a look over her shoulder. Jess hugged his gun tight and twisted.
There was a man standing on the sidewalk in front of the hotel entrance. Even in the gloom Donahue recognized Billy Ames.
Said Billy Ames, “Put ’em up!”
“It’s a frame!” the woman muttered. “That guy was waiting for us! Donahue knew it!”