Joe Gores - Hammett

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Hammett: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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He fell straight backward from his sitting position on the edge of the bed. His head hit the wall a resounding thump. The bottle hit the floor with a like thump as his hand let it go. Bottle empty. He lay still, eyes shut, as if he’d passed out again.

Drunk on the outside. Outside only. Wish my head was empty, like the bottle. Hope you know what you’re doing, Dash.

He knew. Dying. Dying of rotgut and a head that wasn’t empty and a gone marriage and a lot of fictions he’d never write.

Head full of jumbled ideas, thoughts, intuitions, fears.

Full of facts, too. Facts about the ambush of Hymie Weiss in 1926, for instance. Capone had been seen countless places during the two days Crystal had him holed up in that rooming house. So… her story had been a lie. Why? What had she been covering?

No way to find out now.

Crystal. Thought you could handle him. Thought he…

He. Didn’t know who he was. Not for sure. Few clues. Silk scarf instead of wool. Dan Laverty doing what Dan Laverty probably had done, pushed on by… God, the man’s control!

Tomorrow. Soon enough, tomorrow, to decide whether he believed that the evil which was unthinkable was, did exist.

Tomorrow. Nobody left to die tonight anyway. Was there?

When he woke again, it was icy and black; one of those predawn hours when sick people die in their beds. Dark. Cold. God the cold! But some guardian angel was working the cool delightful neck of a bottle between his teeth.

He sucked thirstily at it. No whiskey came out. His furry tongue tasted metal.

Someone had shoved the muzzle of a revolver so far into his mouth that it touched the back of his throat, making him want to retch.

Then the voice came from the darkness above him. It was not unexpected. And somehow, though it had nothing to do with the owner of the voice, he knew — knew — that he was right and that all the whiskey in the world couldn’t drown that knowledge.

Then the voice grated, ‘Okay, wise guy, let’s move. You’re all out of time.’

31

Goodie paused to look around her suddenly bare little apartment. She was dog-tired. But she was packed. Finally, at three in the morning.

Without warning, she burst into tears. She put her face in her hands. So bleak, so depressing, stripped of everything that had made the apartment uniquely her own. She wiped away the tears with the heel of her hand, like a little girl, smearing the dust on her nose. She’d made the call to Biltmore hours ago, when she’d fled Sam’s apartment. Her mind was made up. If only he’d told her! A wife and children. Now, one more phone call…

Oh, damn anyway!

She went through to the tiny cramped bathroom.

By the medicine-chest mirror she fitted on her close-bobbed golden head the Copenhagen blue sport tam she’d bought that day. The girl at H. Liebes had said that Clara Bow wore just such a ribbed velveteen cap in her latest Paramount picture.

She could afford to buy things like that now. With the new job as Mr Biltmore’s secretary starting on Monday. And the watch he’d given her, the new negligee and the dresses and the fancy dinners and…

She turned quickly away from the mirror. She tore the tam from her head and went back to the kitchen. She sat down and finished her coffee and lit a cigarette. Her hands were shaking and her feet were cold.

The clothes and the job and the dinners meant the same thing as the phone call she was about to make. Harry the chauffeur was waiting for it. He would come and pick her up. Biltmore had promised to stay at the Bohemian Club for a few days, until she was used to his town apartment, until she was ready to… ready to be…

If only Sam had… no! Josie is a woman… She hated the very name Josie, she…

She looked around the stripped apartment again. The carefully packed bag held everything she owned. Well, next week she could throw out all those awful cheap working-girl frocks. She’d have what every small-town girl who came to the big city dreamed of! A lovely apartment, and servants, and… and…

She started to cry again. As she did, there was an echoing thump as something heavy fell against the outside of her apartment door. She stifled a scream, stood wet-faced and stiff-legged in the center of the little apartment, heart pounding wildly. Who was it? Some drunk, trying to…

Sam!

She crossed quickly to the door and without hesitation twisted the knob and pulled it open. Sam awaking, coming out of his apartment still drunk and shambling, falling…

His door was open, but he was not lying unconscious in the hall. Should she go in, see if…

She whirled when the elevator rattled behind her down the long hall. Two men were just entering the cage. One was heavyset, his hat jammed down on his head to hide his features. The other was Hammett. Hatless, coatless, wearing the same white collarless shirt he’d been wearing when he’d passed out. His face was haggard, and he almost fell as the other man shoved him into the elevator.

‘Sam!’ she cried.

But the door was already closed. Neither man had heard her.

Hammett’s arms had been pulled back and his wrists handcuffed behind his back. Was the other man a policeman? Only policemen used handcuffs, didn’t they? But then she remembered Sam saying that it might have been a policeman who killed Atkinson and that man who ran the speakeasy and kidnapped…

She ran back through her apartment to the kitchen window overlooking Post Street. Hammett and his captor were just crossing to a black Reo.

The fat little sleepy-faced man! He would know what to do. But.. his name? She rummaged desperately through her mind. No name surfaced. She’d taken a phone call for him, had gone into Hammett’s apartment, had said…

Wright! Jimmy Wright!

The sound of the Reo’s starter jerked her eyes back to the window. The engine caught, popped, smoothed as the man behind the wheel adjusted the mixture. The car pulled away, out Post Street. No way to see the license plate.

Jimmy Wright. But how to reach him? He was in a hotel somewhere, that she knew, but she’d never heard the name of it, or the phone number, or… Think, girl, think. Like Sam and the dead Atkinson he’d been a Pinkerton operative before…

She was sobbing again before the idea hit her. She ran to the phone, sniffling, to leaf through the gray-covered directory while waiting for the operator. ‘Give me FRanklin three-four-one-oh, the Weller Hotel,’ she said in a breathless voice. ‘And for God’s sake, hurry!’

Hammett’s teeth were chattering so hard that he put his chin on his chest in a vain attempt to stop them. Cold air whistled through the gaps in the canvas top. The Reo panted up the rise beyond Van Ness Avenue, going very fast through the silent deserted midnight streets.

Preacher Laverty turned craggy features toward him.

‘Cold?’

‘Ye-ye-yeah.’

‘I hope you freeze to death, you bastard.’

He returned to his driving. Hammett wasn’t sure where they were going. Then he thought bitterly, to hell. That’s where. He shot a quick glance over at the big cop.

‘Going to kick my balls off, too, Preacher?’

He looked over at Hammett. His big hands convulsed around the steering wheel. ‘I’d like to.’

They entered the rich broad streets of Pacific Heights: thirty-room stone mansions and rich green yards trimmed with exotic plantings nurtured and pampered by Japanese gardeners.

‘Poor old Dan Laverty, fall guy to the end.’

‘You would see it that way.’ Laverty’s eyes were wolfish. ‘To you, anyone who doesn’t help spread the corruption…’

‘So that’s how he did it,’ muttered Hammett.

He was sure now. He’d caught up with the subtle mind it had bothered him that the Mulligans didn’t possess. He felt a momentary sense of peace, even knowing that in minutes or hours he would be dead. It was possible that Laverty didn’t realize he was driving Hammett to his death.

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