City of Dark Corners by Jon Talton (easy novels to read .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Jon Talton
Read book online ยซCity of Dark Corners by Jon Talton (easy novels to read .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Jon Talton
That much was true, even though we were on different sides of the law.
โSo why pick my lock?โ
After savoring his Cuban, he spoke. โI didnโt expect to find you at home. I supposed you were off with your girlfriend. See, I have a problem. I foolishly got involved with a girl who got herself killed. She went by Cynthia, but I learned her name was really Carrie Dell. I gave her a loan to help get her business started, and she paid me back in more ways than one. But something went wrong and she was murdered. A little birdie at police headquarters told me you were investigating that killing, even though youโre officially off the force. I assumed you might have some of her records that might be embarrassing to me.โ
I set the .45 beside me and lit a nail. โThat might implicate you as her killer?โ
โNot at all. Killing is bad for business, especially the way the poor girl was sawed apart.โ
I had to admit the Dell homicide was more like a lust murder, like the University Park Strangler, than an organized crime hit.
I said, โMaybe I can help if I know what youโre looking for?โ
He chuckled. โYouโd like to help put me in the gallows for killing her. Nevertheless, Carrie might have written down my name and phone number. Iโd prefer that not become public record.โ
โWhy do you care?โ
โBecause Iโm enjoying becoming part of respectable Phoenix. I like this little city. Itโs going places. The truth is I was going to find this information and pilfer it.โ
โIs that so, Big Cat?โ
He looked confused enough that I knew he was not Big Cat.
I said, โMy problem, Gus, is that somebody set off a smoke bomb below my office and used that distraction to steal the records I found from Carrie.โ I lied about his phone number in the list from the answering service. โSo whatever worries you was taken. My expectation is that whoever took it has already stuck it in an incinerator. I donโt think theyโre going to give it to the newspapers, and what if they did? Carrie is still classified as a suspicious death, not a homicide.โ
โOr theyโre going to try to blackmail me. Look, Gene, Iโm a married man. A divorce lawyer could make sure my wife could take half of what I own. I donโt need that distraction. And I answer to people in Chicago who wouldnโt like it at all.โ
It was such a prosaic answer that I almost believed it. โA guy like you could arrange an โaccidentโ to eliminate your wife. Otherwise, I expect you know how to handle blackmail, Gus. But if you hear from someone in that racket trying to lean on you, let me know. I can help.โ
He set the cigar in the ashtray.
โI expect you could.โ He leaned forward. โNow, if you wonโt plug me, Iโd like to stand and leave and thank you for the conversation.โ
โNot quite yet,โ I said. โYou know how Carrie was murdered. Please donโt tell me about your buddies on the force feeding you information. I know all about Frenchy as your bagman. He went off the reservation and got quite a hammering for it.โ
โThat was Cyrus Cleveland, my man on the South Side. I agreed something had to be done. But Frenchy pinning a murder on a Negro didnโt sit well with Cyrus, so I let him set Navarre straight. Whatโs your point?โ
I said, โWho murdered Carrie Dell?โ
He shrugged. โA psycho. This was deeply personal. The year I was born, 1893, Chicago held a worldโs fair to celebrate Columbus reaching the New World. A very big deal, the White City. Only trouble was a guy named Dr. Holmes who built a hotel catering to single women. And he murdered them there. Iโm told it had soundproof rooms and mazes. He confessed to murdering twenty-seven, but it might have been two hundred. He dissected some. Maybe Carrie ran into a Dr. Holmes, and if thatโs true you have more victims. Orโฆโ
I studied his face but it was grim, unreadable.
โOr?โ I prompted.
โThere is no โor,โ Hammons. Just a figure of speech. Carrie ran into a maniac. Phoenix is turning into a real city.โ
After he was gone, I locked the door and propped a chair against it. A long hour passed before I fell asleep, the pistol under my pillow. I dreamed of taxicabs.
Twenty-Six
Friday, June 28th, 1929. Juliet took in a double-feature at the Fox and walked west on Washington in a crowd as the other theaters let out. I followed half a block behind. It looked to be another fruitless night, and McGrath would shut down my attempt at baiting the killer.
Then a taxi pulled up and paced her.
I heard the driver lean out and call. โMay I take you somewhere, pretty lady?โ
She came two steps closer to the curb. I thought: Do not get in that cab!
It might have been innocent, but I realized here was one thing that had evaded our attention: a driver and vehicle that could go anywhere without raising suspicion.
Suddenly, he opened the door and started to wrestle her inside. She yelled and kicked him.
Then I was there with my Detective Special out. Don was soon at my side and we braced him against the taxi with difficulty. Although he had a meek face and average build, he was strong as hell. It took both of us to get him in cuffs, with a nipper for good measure. He argued, then begged to be let go. But the game was up.
In the back seat were ropes, barbed wire, a sock, and a rag soaked in chloroform. A penknife was in his front pocket.
We sweated him for twelve hours until finally, under my continued questioning, catching him stumble through lie after lie, as he told and retold his activities on the dates of the murders, he broke. It happened when I lied to him and said
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