Rourke slowed until the gap between the truck and the Ford was only half a block. Shayne adjusted the rearview mirror so he could see the truck without turning around. Its left-hand blinker was flashing.

“Left, Tim.”

At Forty-second, where Grand Central and the Pan Am Building interrupt the uptown flow, Rourke turned. The light was green at Vanderbilt, and he went through. The truck had time to follow but instead it swung toward the curb in front of Grand Central. A steady flow of passengers from the early commuting trains was pouring through the main entrance.

Shayne said, “The one place in town where you can carry a suitcase and nobody sees you. Not bad.”

The truck’s faulty brakes failed to halt it in time, and it drifted up to kiss bumpers with a police car standing there. The cops in the front seat were from the Traffic Division and had nothing to do with Shayne. One of them yelled at the Sanitation driver before moving on.

“Leave the motor running?” Rourke asked.

“No, shut it off. This is as far as we go.”

They got out. The Sanitation driver had shifted in his front seat to unlatch the door on the inner side. A woman came through the crowd and handed a suitcase up to him.

“Michele!” Rourke exclaimed. “If she went to Portugal, she had a fast trip.”

“She didn’t go to Portugal,” Shayne said bleakly. “She should have, but she didn’t.”

They had a minute while the truck driver, alone in the high cab, opened the suitcase to see how much he was being paid. The Walk sign flashed, and Shayne and Rourke crossed Vanderbilt. Shayne was wishing he didn’t have an arm in a sling. The other three cars had closed in and he had plenty of assistance for a change, but there were things he preferred to do himself.

The truck driver came out of the cab, bringing the suitcase with him. Another man in the same uniform took his place, to drive the truck away as soon as the transaction was completed. It was Szigetti, Shayne saw, finally getting his chance to show how well he could handle a heavy truck. He craned over in the seat to get the sign from Michele. She was standing at the curb, apparently waiting for the light to change so she could cross Forty-second- easily the loveliest girl in an area which has a high concentration of good-looking girls.

“And here’s where it hits the fan,” Rourke said in a low voice.

The Sanitation workman in the dark glasses opened the side hatch. Michele looked in. Frowning suddenly, she reached past the driver to move a carton, revealing the worthless trash behind it. Her lips moved. Shayne couldn’t hear the words, but from the way she shaped them he thought she was probably speaking in French.

The man’s dark glasses glinted. He pushed her aside and moved several more cartons. His back stiffened. He held that position for perhaps three seconds, during which he must have made a painful adjustment. Then he snatched up the suitcase and raced toward the entrance to Grand Central, running in the gutter, in the narrow space between the pedestrians and the moving cars. A man stepped out of the crowd, carrying the commuter’s badge, a dispatch case and a copy of the Times. He held out an arm toward the running man as if to stop him with the folded newspaper, and fired twice.

The runner went down as though he had been tripped by a wire. His glasses flew off.

“It’s Power!” Rourke exclaimed.

“Sure it’s Power,” Shayne snarled. “Who’d you expect?”

Michele grabbed the suitcase. With her usual deftness and grace she darted through the moving cars to her waiting convertible, parked on the other side of the street with the top down, the motor running. She flung the suitcase into the back seat.

Rourke called to Shayne as he ran to cut her off. She saw him coming. Her face glowed with excitement, which made her look like a girl in her teens.

“Darling! Get in!”

“You get out, baby,” Shayne said as he reached the door. “We’re starting over, with new rules.”

Her eyes widened. She looked up toward the Sanitation truck and gave him a hard push. He went back into the path of a charging taxi. The driver hit his brakes and veered abruptly. A front fender bumped Shayne and knocked him to one knee. In the high squealing of brakes he didn’t hear the shot. There was a look of amazement on Michele’s face. She slumped across the wheel.

Szigetti, in the high cab, had had another difficult downward shot. This time, seeing Shayne holding the door of Michele’s car, he had been shooting to kill. He had to lean far out, twisting. Michele had pushed Shayne at the exact instant Szigetti squeezed the trigger. The bullet caught her below the left breast.

Shayne came to his feet, his face a savage mask. Two narcotics agents had closed in on the car, but they stood out of his way as he swung over into the front seat without opening the door. He worked his right arm underneath Michele and laid her back gently against his injured shoulder. Her face and lips had lost their color.

“Darling, we almost-” she whispered.

Then Tim Rourke was beside the car. “Was she hit, Mike?” he demanded.

Her eyes left Shayne and swam toward Rourke. What she saw was the diamond dealer, Jake Melnick, who had apparently been robbed and slugged by Shayne in her presence three nights before. Something jumped in her face, as though she had been lightly flicked. Her eyes came back to Shayne, who returned her look unflinchingly.

“That’s right,” he said. “The whole time.”

There was disbelief in her eyes. Then, without words, moving only the corner of her mouth and a fraction of one eyebrow, she contrived to send him a complicated message. It told him that life sometimes played peculiar tricks, but she regretted nothing.

She moved her head so her cheek was against the back of his hand, and died before he could say anything more.

CHAPTER 18

The chief narcotics man, a rangy, outspoken individual named McIntosh, had begun to lose his temper with Shayne.

They were on the third floor of the huge incinerator at the foot of West Fifty-sixth Street in Manhattan. It was hot in the immense room. Two yellow Sanitation trucks were drawn up at the edge of a rectangular opening in the floor. One of the trucks had a vertical dent in its left front fender. Both front fenders and the grill of the other had been bashed in. The trucks were being unloaded through the side hatches. As each carton was brought out by Sanitation Department workmen, the nine-by-twelve envelopes it contained were shaken onto a folding table. A small army of uniformed cops from the Police Department’s Property Division checked each envelope against duplicate lists before consigning it to the hole in the floor.

Shayne watched the envelopes flutter down a steep chute into the main incinerator, which occupied the whole of the first two floors. A fire burned there twenty-three hours a day. Each morning the grates were pulled and anything left unconsumed was loaded into scows for eventual dumping far at sea.

The marks on Shayne’s face were deeply etched. At this point he trusted nobody. The final burning of the narcotics was something he had had to witness with his own eyes. He was holding a fresh bottle of brandy in a paper bag. He drank occasionally, without offering it to any of the men around him.

“If you want to tell us about it here instead of in an air-conditioned bar, it’s OK with me,” McIntosh said, mopping his face. “You’re calling the shots. But let’s get on with it, Shayne. We’ve got some tidying up to do.”

“I’m not stopping you,” Shayne said evenly.

Tim Rourke put in, “I know how you feel, Mike. But it’s all new to these guys. Power kept the whole thing under his hat. They can’t talk to me because I’m an innocent bystander. They can’t talk to Power or Michele or Herman Kraus-they’re all dead. Mr. A., if there actually is anybody called that, is out of the country.”

“Did you say Mr. A.?” McIntosh said quickly. “Now listen, Shayne. Rourke’s a reporter. This is going to be off the record.”

Shayne turned on him. “Tim knows what to print and what not to print. He’s no maiden.”

“I can’t print a story I don’t understand,” Rourke said. “Climb down, will you? That’s not tap water you’re drinking. You’re one of the greatest drinkers I ever saw, but you can’t put away a fifth of cognac in two hours

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