'I hate to break this up,' he said, 'but I have a short call to make; and I have to deliver you back to the Blue Goose in time to catch the next influx of salesmen.'
'Whatever you like,' she replied calmly. 'I don't have to be exactly on time though, so you do whatever you want to do.'
It was impossible to stir her even with virtual insult.
But he drove the Ford himself this time, knowing that it could have seemed a much better moment for ambush than before dinner. Yet even then nothing happened, in such a way that the mere failure of anything to happen was a subtle rebuke in exactly the same key as all her refusals to rise to his varied provocations.
His sleepless sense of direction enabled him to drive without a mistake to the offices of the Times-Tribune; and he arrived there with no more alarm than a slight stiffness in muscles which had been poised too long on an uncertain fuse. But then, the egregious efficiency of Detective Yard had still conspired to blind him to the shift of concealing newspapers which had punctuated his exit from the Alamo House.
'I have to complain to my editor about the size of nry headlines,' he said. 'It's a union rule. Do you mind waiting a little while?'
'Of course not,' she said with that sublime and demoralising pliability. 'Waiting is an old Russian pastime.'
Simon went up to the editorial floor, and this time he swept through the interceptor command without interference, powered by the certainty of his route and destination.
The city editor saw him, and took his feet off the desk and crammed a discolored and shapeless panama on to the small end of his pear-shaped head.
'I'll have to go with you myself,' he explained. 'Not that I think you'd sell out to the UP, but it's the only way I could fix it. Let me do the talking, and you can take over when we get your man.'
'What's he in for?'
'Passing a rubber check at his hotel. I hope you have some idea what strings I had to pull to arrange this for you.'
Simon handed him the note that had been delivered to the Alamo House. The editor read it while they waited for the elevator.
'Smuggled out, eh? . . . Well, it might come to something.'
'Is there a back alley way out of the building?'
'When I was a copy boy here, we used to know one. I haven't noticed the building being altered since.' The city editor turned his shrewd sphinxlike face towards Simon with only the glitter of his eyes for a clue to his expression. 'Are we still expecting something to happen?'
'I hope, yes and no,' said the Saint tersely. 'I left Olga in my car outside, for a front and a cover. I'm hoping she's either fooled herself or she'll fool somebody else,'
He knew that he had seldom been so vulnerable, but he never guessed how that flaw in his guard was to mature. He just felt sure that a prisoner in the City Jail couldn't be the trigger of any of the potential traps that he was waiting to recognise. Provided he took the obvious precautions, like leaving Olga Ivano-vitch in his car outside the newspaper building while he slipped out through a back alley . . .
The Times-Tribune man's dry bulbous presence was a key that by-passed tired clerks and opened clanging iron doors, and exacted obedience from soured disinterested jailers, and led them eventually into a small barren and discouraging office room with barred windows where they waited through a short echoing silence until the door opened again to admit Mr Vaschetti with a turnkey behind him.
The door closed again, leaving the turnkey outside; and Mr Vaschetti's darting black eyes switched over the city editor's somnolent self-effacement and made one of their touch landings on the Saint.
'You're Templar,' he stated. 'But I said this had to be private.'
'This is Mr Beetlespats of the Times-Tribune,' said the Saint inventively. 'He published the article you read, and he organised this meeting. But we can pretend he isn't here. Just tell me what you've got on your mind.'
Vaschetti's eyes whirled around the room like small dark bugs exploring the intricacies of a candelabra.
'I can tell you,' he said, 'you were dead right about Matson. 'I've been a courier for the Bund for a long time. I took a letter to Matson in St Louis, and I brought a letter to your Mr Blatt and other people in Galveston too.'
7 He was a rather small man, spare and wiry, with the heavy eyebrows and hollow cheeks which so often seem to go together. His hair needed combing and his chin needed scraping. His clothes were neither good nor bad, but they were rumpled and soiled as if they had been slept in, which they doubtless had.
The Saint gave him a cigarette and said: 'I don't think there are any dictographs planted here, so just keep talking. What made you write to me?'
'Because I don't like cops. I see where you've made suckers out of the cops plenty of times, and I'd like to see you do it again. Especially to those sons of bitches who threw me in here.'
'You did pass a bum check, didn't you?' Simon mentioned.
'Yeah, but only because I had to, because Blatt didn't come through with my dough and I was broke. I wouldn't have squawked just for that, though. I've taken raps before. I've stood for a lot of things in my time, but I don't want any part of this.' Vaschetti puffed at his cigarette shakily, and moved about the room with short jerky strides. 'Not murder. No, sir. I don't want to sit in the hot seat, or dance on the end of a rope, or whatever they do to you in this state.'
Simon kindled a cigarette for himself, and propped himself on the window sill.
'Why should anyone do things like that to you? Or were you one of the three fire-bugs?'
'No, sir. But that Kinglake might find out any time that I'd seen Blatt and been asking for him at the Blue Goose, and what chance would I have then? I don't want Blatt gunning for me either, and I guess he might be if he thought I might put the finger on him. I'd rather squeal first, and then if they know it's too late to shut my mouth maybe they won't bother with me.'
'I see your point,' said the Saint thoughtfully. 'Suppose you sit down and tell me about your life as a courier.'
Vaschetti attempted a laugh that didn't come off, licked his lips nervously, and sat down on a creaky chair.
'I met Fritz Kuhn when I was doing time in Dannernora. We got on pretty well, and he said if I wanted to make some money when I got out I should see him. Well, I did. I got this job carrying packages from place to place.'
'How did that work?'
'Well, for instance, I'd have a package to deliver to Mr Smith at the Station Hotel in Baltimore. I'd go there and ask for him. Maybe he'd be out of town. I'd hang around until he showed up --sometimes I'd have to wait for a week and more. Then I'd give Smith the package; and he'd pay me my dough and my expenses, and maybe give me another package to take to Mr Robinson at Macfarland's Grill in Miami. Any time there wasn't anything more for me, I'd go back to Jersey and start again.'
'These Smiths and Robinsons weren't anything to do with the joints you met them in?'
'Mostly not. I'd just ask a bartender if he knew Mr Smith, and he'd point out Mr Smith. Or sometimes I'd be hanging around and Mr Robinson would come in and say he was Robinson and had anyone been asking for him.'
'How much did you get for this?'
'Seventyfive a week and all my expenses.'
'You got paid by the Smiths and Robinsons as you went 'along.'
'Yeah.'
'You knew that this was obviously connected with something illegal.'
Vaschetti licked his lips again and nodded.
'Sure, sure. It had to be things they didn't want to send through the mail, or they didn't want to chance having opened by the wrong person.'
'You knew it was more than that. You knew it was for the Bund, and so it was probably no good for this country.'
'What the hell? I'm an Italian, and I got brothers in Italy. And I never did like the goddam British. This was before the war got here. So what?'
'So you still went on after Pearl Harbor.'