Ken stiffened and dropped his pen.

'The cops?'

'Yes. Must be a raid. Suppose I had gone around there without calling her first?'

'How do you know it was the police?' Ken asked, groping on the floor for his pen.

'The guy who answered the phone said he was Lieutenant Adams of the City Police. He wanted to know who I was.'

'You didn't tell him?'

'Of course not! I hung up on him while he was talking. Phew! What the hell does it mean? I've never known the police raid a call-girl's place before. They might have arrived when I was there.'

'Lucky you called first.'

'I'll say.' Parker continued to mop his face. 'You don't think they'll trace my call, do you?'

'Why should they?' Ken asked, and he suddenly saw the danger he was in. The police were likely to trace the call. If they came here with a description of him from Sweeting, they would catch him red-handed with the blood- stained suit still in his possession!

'Maybe she's been robbed or assaulted,' Parker said nervously. 'Maybe that's why they are there. Maybe someone's murdered her.'

Ken felt a trickle of cold sweat run down the side of his face. He didn't trust his voice to say anything.

'These girls run a hell of a risk,' Parker went on. 'They don't know who they are taking on. She could have been murdered.'

Before he could develop his theme a depositor came in, and then another followed. For some minutes both Ken and Parker were kept busy.

Ken was thinking of the blood-stained suit in his locker downstairs.

Damn Parker! If the police traced that call and came down here...! He looked anxiously at his wrist-watch. He had another hour before he went to lunch. The police might be on their way over now. But before he could make up his mind what to do, a steady flow of customers began, and for the next half-hour he was too rushed to think of himself. Then there was a pause again.

Parker said sharply, 'There's a guy just come in who looks like a cop.'

Ken's heart stopped, then raced.

'Where?'

He looked around the big hall. Standing, half-concealed by one of the pillars, was a tall, heavily built man in a brown suit and a brown slouch hat.

He did look like a cop. His big fleshy face was brick-red and his small, green eyes had a still, intent quality about them that alarmed Ken.

'He must be a cop,' Parker said, lowering his voice.

Ken didn't say anything. He watched the big man cross the hall to the pay booth.

'Do you think anyone saw me use the telephone?' Parker muttered.

'I don't know. It's out of sight of the door.'

'If he asks me I'll tell him I called my wife, but I couldn't get an answer.'

'He may not ask you.'

'I hope to hell he doesn't.'

They watched the big man come out of the pay booth and go over to speak to the messenger at the door.

The messenger looked startled as Ken saw the big man show him something he carried in his hand. They talked for some minutes, then the big man turned and stared directly at Ken.

Ken felt himself turn hot, then cold. He forced himself to continue to write in his ledger.

'He's coming over,' Parker said softly.

The big man came up to the counter and his hard eyes went from Parker to Ken and back to Parker again.

'City Police. Sergeant Donovan,' he said, his voice a harsh growl. 'I'm making enquiries about a guy who used that pay booth about a half-hour ago. Did either of you see him?'

Ken looked at the hard, brick-red face. Donovan wore a close-clipped ginger moustache. A row of freckles ran across the bridge of his thick, short nose.

'No, I didn't see anyone,' Ken said.

'I used the telephone a little while ago, sergeant,' Parker said smoothly. 'I was calling my wife. You don't mean me, do you?'

Donovan stared at Parker.

'Not if you called your wife. Did you see anyone else use the booth?'

'Well, there was a girl and an elderly man,' Parker lied glibly. 'But that would be about an hour ago, I guess. We've been busy, and I didn't notice anyone recently.'

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