time and-'

'Uh-huh, sure',' Tug interrupted. 'I know all that. Maybe I'd better lay it on the line for you, huh?' 'Maybe you'd better.'

'The racing season starts the week after next. All the big bookies will drift in next week. They'll want to look over the track, study the early workouts, and so on. They'll be loaded with cash. There's no damned guess work about it, see? They'll have the dough, and with the hours they keep, they'll have to bank with the hotel. So we make 'em for their keys, say, six or seven of the biggest operators, and we hit the jackpot. We knock down a couple hundred grand, maybe a quarter of a million, in five minutes.'

'Yes, but…' Dusty licked his lips. 'How do you mean, make 'em for their keys? You mean you'd – you'd-'

'Naah.' Tug nudged him jovially. 'Nothing like it, kid. I'll just throw a little party for 'em up in my suite; hell, they've been to plenty of my parties in the past. Then, me and the boys will give 'em a little surprise. Knock them out and hogtie them, y'know. Take 'em out of circulation for a while.'

'Well…' Dusty hesitated. 'But that still leaves the hotel keys. Bascom' – he paused again. 'God, I can't do that, Tug! Bascom will be right there; and there's no way I could use the keys without-'

'Hold it. Hold it!' said Tug. 'You ain't going to use them. Bascom is. All you're going to do is take the dough and lock it up in the checkroom. Put it in a satchel I'll give you and check it, just like it was a regular piece of baggage. I-'

'But Bascom! What about him?'

'- don't want it with me, see, in case of a foul-up. My boys might get a little excited, know what I mean? They might get to quarreling over the split. So you check it and tear up the stub – memorize the number first, of course – and I'll get in touch with you as soon as the heat dies down.'

'Yes, but-'

'I'll split the take with you, kid. A full half for you and the other for me and the boys. You hang on to yours a few months, and then you get yourself fired, and-'

'I asked you about Bascom!' Dusty insisted. 'Now, what about him?'

Tug's eyes shifted for a moment. He looked out into the brilliant sunlight, gaze narrowed musingly, and then he again looked at Dusty.

'All right, kid. I guess I'd better spread it all out. But you don't know from nothing, see? You don't know nothing about Bascom. He don't know that you and me got a deal.'

'I understand.'

'One of my connections tipped me off to Bascom three-four months ago. He's on the lam from a pen back east, crashed out with twenty years to serve of a thirty-year bank-robber rap. One word from me, and he'll be back doing time again.'

'Well… oh,' said Dusty, and he nodded, remembering.

'They asked you about it, huh?' Tug grinned out of the corner of his mouth. 'You know why I wrote that letter to the management, kid? Because of the way he was treating you. Yeah, I noticed it all right – I notice plenty. You did everything you could to get along with him, and all he could do was make it tough for you. I spoke to him, and he covered up while I was around. But I knew he hadn't stopped. So I figured I'd better give him a real jolt.'

'Well,' Dusty said, 'that was, uh, certainly nice of you. But I still-'

'I know. I know just what you're going to say. You're going to say that Bascom can't play ball on this deal. If he does, he'll do his twenty years and maybe twenty more on top of it. But here's the angle, see? He plays, but it don't look like he does. He has a gun drawn on him and he loses his nerve, acts like a goddamned dope instead of-'

'He'll never get away with it.' Dusty shook his head. 'He just can't, Tug! A man on the outside of the cashier's cage couldn't cover a man on the inside with a gun. The window opening is too small. The cashier, the man on the inside, could just drop down to the floor or move a little to one side and he'd be out of range.'

'He could if he thought fast enough. If he wasn't scared out of his pants.'

'You can't make it look good,' Dusty said doggedly. 'They're bound to know that it was an inside job.'

'Huh-uh. Maybe they think it is but they can't prove it. All they can.prove i? that Bascom ain't much of a hero, that he didn't use good judgment.'.

'I can't see it,' Dusty frowned. 'They'll never – I mean, I don't think they'll ever believe he was held up. Not from the outside. Now if there was a guy on the inside – one of the lobby porters, say – it would be different. He could be working in there and suddenly stick a gun in Bascom's ribs, and Bascom would have to come across. He couldn't get away, and – and-'

He swallowed, leaving the sentence unfinished. There was a long moment of silence, with Tug staring at him steadily, and then he found his voice again.

'Bascom. He's willing to take that kind of chance?'

'It's a chance,' Tug shrugged. 'If he don't take it, he doesn't have any chance at all. I see that he goes back to the pen.'

'Well… 'Dusty said. 'And what about me? Where am I supposed to be while all this is going on?'

'Right there in the cashier's cage with him. Helping him with the work like you always are around two-thirty in the morning. You've got to be there, see? That money satchel will be too big to squeeze through the window, and there won't be time to chase all the way around the counter. You'll have to grab it and get rid of it fast.'

'But that leaves me on the spot, too! If I'm right there-'

'How does it? You're just a bellboy; Bascom's your boss. You're supposed to try to stop him, risk getting yourself killed, if he's willing to open the boxes? Huh-uh, they couldn't expect it of you, kid. They'd think you was a damned fool if you tried it.'

'Well,' Dusty nodded, 'maybe. I suppose you're right about that. But – well, what about the other? When I take the satchel and check it? You said that Bascom wasn't supposed to know anything about me, that I was in on the deal. But-'

'He don't. He won't. And you don't know anything, get me? Nothing about him, and nothing about what's coming off'

'But if I take the money right in front of him-'

'Kid,' Tug sighed. 'Dusty, boy. Jesus Christ, ain't there any goddamned little thing you can leave to me? You think I just dreamed up this caper five minutes ago?'

'No. But-'

'Bascom won't see you! When he gets back up near the window I grab him by the tie and slug him. Knock him unconscious. He'll hold still for it, see; it helps to make the thing look good. I knock him out cold, and he'll still be out when you get back from checking the dough and lock yourself into the cage again. So far as anyone knows you never left the cage.'

'But if the satchel won't go through the window opening, he's bound to-'

'Goddammit, I -! It goes through when it's empty, don't it? It's got to, don't it? So on the return trip, I maybe take out part of the dough. Stuff it into my pocket or down the front of my shirt.'

Glaring, his face molded with irritation, Tug snatched another bottle from the pail. He almost slammed the cap against his teeth, jerked it with a grunt of pain. And drank. He did not lower the bottle until it was emptied.

'Sorry, kid' – he forced an apologetic laugh. 'I don't blame you for wanting to know the score, of course. But, Jesus, every damned little thing! It kind of sounds like you thought I was a boob. Like maybe you didn't trust me.'

'No,' Dusty said hastily. 'No, I don't feel that way. Its just – well, mixed up. There's so many things that might go wrong, and if anything does-'

'Nothing will.' Tug dropped a friendly hand to his shoulder. 'Let me tell you something, Dusty. It always seems that way when a guy's going on a, caper. Always, particularly if it's his first one. He gets to thinking that everyone knows what he knows, that they see all the little holes he sees and that they're liable to reach through and grab him. But it ain't that way, y'understand! He's the guy with the answers, the only guy. The others – they don't see nothing or know nothing, or if they do it don't mean nothing to 'em.'

Dusty nodded reluctantly. He hadn't said what he wanted to, he hadn't got' to the heart of his concern, and

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