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Murder Is My Business ms-11 Page 11
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Somehow, they all tied together. Along with, Shayne told himself morosely, Lance Bayliss, who had been a Nazi sympathizer; a racketeer and former smuggler named Manny Holden; a Mexican girl who had a yen for American soldiers on the wrong side of the Rio Grande, and was also the daughter of Towne’s Mexican paramour; and an Austrian refugee named Larimer, who ran a secondhand clothing store; plus Neil Cochrane, who had once loved Carmela Towne and now hated both her and her father and, presumably, Lance Bayliss, who had won her love while Neil was courting her.
It all added up into a hell of a tangle. That was the only thing he was positive about. But there had to be a connecting link somewhere. There were soldiers in the Big Bend, and there was a silver mine. The soldiers were stationed there to protect American property from the depredations of bandits from across the border.
Shayne didn’t know whether that was important or not. He had a hazy idea that it might be.
He was glad when the little sun-baked cowtown of Marfa showed against the horizon ahead. The army post was in plain view on the flats south of town. Shayne turned off before reaching the business district, drove through the Mexican section out to the post.
A bored sentry stopped him at the entrance. Shayne showed his credentials and explained that he was cooperating with the El Paso police in clearing up the murder of an army man, and asked to speak to the commanding officer.
The sentry waved him on toward post headquarters and advised him to ask for Colonel Howard. Shayne parked in front of a one-story concrete building and went in. An orderly directed him along a corridor to the open door of a large, plainly furnished office. An erect, military figure sat behind a flat desk. He was broadshouldered and middle-aged, with brown eyes and a clipped mustache.
He looked up from some papers and nodded pleasantly enough when Shayne walked in. The detective introduced himself and explained that he represented the civilian authorities in El Paso, who were investigating the death of one soldier and the possible death of another.
“A second body was found in the Rio Grande last night, stripped to the skin,” Shayne explained. “He was murdered at approximately the same time the other soldier was killed, and in a somewhat similar manner. We think he may have been stripped to hide the fact that he was wearing a uniform and to deter identification.”
Colonel Howard was interested. He knew of Michael Shayne by reputation, and had read press reports of the Private Brown case. He asked why Shayne had come to see him.
“To learn whether any of your men have been missing since last Tuesday — or before that.”
The colonel shook his head and said he didn’t think so, but he would have the matter checked. He called in a corporal and issued instructions. The corporal promised to have the report in a few minutes and disappeared into an inner office. “But why come to Marfa, Mr. Shayne?” Colonel Howard asked interestedly. “There are many larger army posts nearer El Paso.”
“I happened to be in this vicinity,” Shayne explained, “and didn’t want to pass up any bets.” He paused to light a cigarette. “Do you still maintain any sort of border patrol? Have any squads or troops on detached duty along the Rio Grande?”
“Not as a regular thing. The old posts up and down the river at Candelaria, Ruidosa, Presidio, and so forth have been abandoned for many years. We send out patrols only in case of a raid or some unusual disturbance.”
“Then — patrolling the border to prevent smuggling or illegal entry isn’t part of your routine?” Shayne persisted.
The colonel told him it wasn’t. “There are Customs men at the Ports of Entry, of course, and Texas keeps a few rangers stationed in the Big Bend. But there hasn’t been any serious trouble here for years.”
Shayne’s blunt fingertips drummed impatiently on the colonel’s desk. “Any spy scares in this vicinity, or even a hint of subversive influences?”
The colonel laughed gently. “We’re a small unit, completely isolated here, Mr. Shayne. I’m afraid a spy wouldn’t learn much of value in Marfa.”
The corporal returned to report that their records showed no men A.W.O.L.
Shayne thanked the colonel and started to get up. He asked casually, “Has Jefferson Towne ever requested troops to guard his mine ore shipments?”
“The Lone Star mine near the border? I haven’t heard of any trouble there.”
“Are any of your troops stationed near there — or is it on a main road traveled by your patrols?”
“No,” the colonel answered. “The mine is located in a rough and isolated section of the mountains. So far as I know, none of my men have been near the mine.”
Shayne thanked him for his help. He went out and drove back to Marfa, and headed southward into the mountains on a rough dirt road. The road became winding and dangerous as it climbed upward into the low mountains, and it was mid-afternoon when he came to a railroad crossing paralleled by a wider and smoother road. Two pointed pine boards were nailed to a tree. One pointed to the left and read LONE STAR MINE. The other pointed to the right and read VAN HORN 50 MI.
Turning to the left, he climbed steeply for a little more than a mile, stopping in front of high steel gates padlocked together with a heavy chain. When opened, the double gates were wide enough to accommodate both railroad track and the automobile driveway. A twelve-foot woven-wire fence led away from the gates in both directions, surmounted by three strands of barbed wire leaning outward at a forty-five degree angle.
A sign on one of the gates read KEEP OUT.
Shayne cut off his motor and sat with his big red hands gripping the steering wheel. Through the steel gates he could see an unpainted shed about fifty feet beyond the gate. Farther up the slope were several low buildings that appeared to be bunkhouses and tool sheds. On the left was a huge loading bin on high stilts with the rails leading beneath in order that gondolas could be spotted there to receive their load of ore fed to the bin from the mine entrance by a gravity chute down the hillside.
The whole place was unaccountably deserted. He listened intently for some sound of miners at work, then realized that production was probably at a lower level and any sounds of activity would be muffled.
He got out of the car after a moment and sauntered toward the padlocked gates. A man came out of the nearby shed and looked at him. He wore a greasy black Stetson and corduroy pants, and the wide cartridge belt around his waist sagged with the weight of a bolstered six-shooter on his right hip. He took cigarette papers and a sack of Bull Durham from his shirt pocket and began to roll a cigarette. Shayne stopped in front of the gates and shouted, “Hey!” The guard licked his brown-paper cigarette and stuck it between his lips. He lit it and hooked his thumbs in his gun belt and strolled forward. “Whatcha want?”
“Unlock this damned gate so I can drive in.”
“Gotta permit?”
“A what?” Shayne asked incredulously.
“A permit.” The guard stopped on the other side of the gates, peering at him suspiciously.
Shayne said, “For God’s sake! I’m not going to steal any of your damned silver ore.”
“Ain’t got no permit, huh?” The man shook his head disapprovingly.
“What kind of a permit?” Shayne demanded.
“One that’s signed by Mr. Towne. That’s what kind.” The guard tugged the brim of his hat lower over his eyes and started to turn away.
“Wait a minute,” Shayne said. “I’m a friend of Mr. Towne’s. He sent me out here to look over some machinery.”
“What machinery?”
“The hoisting engine,” Shayne hazarded. “It’s getting old and needs some repairs.”
The man shook his head and spat contemptuously. “That won’t work, Mister. Not without you gotta permit signed with Mr. Towne’s name.”
“What in the name of God is all the secrecy about?”
The man shrugged. “Guv’ment orders,” he said vaguely. “Silver’s a mighty important war material an’ we’re clost to the border here. Them’re my o
rders, anyhow, an’ no amount of fast talkin’ won’t get you in.”
Shayne said, “Mr. Towne will fire you when he hears about this.”
The man spat again and then walked back toward his shack. Shayne stared after him impotently. The man went inside, and that seemed to be an end to it.
Shayne went back and wheeled his coupe around and sped back toward El Paso.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
It was less than a three-hour drive back from the mine. Shayne drove straight to police headquarters and went in. He found Chief Dyer with his hat on ready to go out to eat. The chief looked tired and disgusted. He grunted, “Where’ve you been hiding all afternoon?”
“Around and about.” Shayne eyed him speculatively. “Things been happening?”
Dyer nodded. He took off his hat and looked at it as if surprised to find it on his head. He threw it down on his desk and said, “Plenty.”
“Have you got time to bring me up to date?”
Chief Dyer sighed and sat down in his swivel chair. “I haven’t any place to go,” he confessed. “I just wanted to get away from this damned office before a couple of gremlins sneak in to inform me that there haven’t been any murders or dead bodies or any other damned thing.”
“Is it that bad?” asked Shayne.
“Just about. The whole thing’s blown up. We’re all the way out on a limb, and I’m wailing for it to be sawed off.”
Shayne draped himself on a chair and said, “Give.”
“First thing is the Bartons. They came down about two o’clock with a note they’d just received in the mail from their son. It was postmarked last Tuesday. Mailed in a downtown box.”
“With ten onehundred-dollar bills?”
“That’s right. Just like Towne said.”
“What the hell has it been doing in the mail ever since Tuesday?”
“One of those things,” Dyer groaned, “that walk up and slap us in the face sometimes. I don’t live right, Shayne. That’s all there is to it. What happens to me shouldn’t happen to a dog.”
Shayne said, “I’m listening.”
“The envelope was addressed wrong. In his hurry or excitement, Jack Barton neglected to put a ‘South’ in front of the street name. So it went out by the wrong carrier. Came back to the main post office, where they looked in the directory and found the Bartons lived on South Vine. So it didn’t reach them until the afternoon delivery today.”
“No doubt about its authenticity?”
“None at all,” Dyer sighed. “They recognized their son’s handwriting, and I had it checked by an expert with the other note he left. In it, he told them he was leaving town hurriedly and for them to tear up the other note he’d left behind without reading it. Exactly what Towne told us he dictated to him.”
“I wondered about that,” Shayne admitted. “It sounded like the sort of thing Towne would do. He couldn’t afford to ship Jack Barton out of the city without taking some precaution to prevent the other letter from reaching us. He figured the grand would tie the old folks’ hands — that, and the knowledge that their son was a blackmailer. It seems to me that arrival of the note clarifies things,” he added encouragingly.
“You haven’t heard half of it yet,” Dyer growled. “I insisted that they look at the body anyway, with some crazy idea, I guess, that Cochrane had gotten mixed into it after Towne made the payoff.”
“And the body isn’t Jack Barton?” Shayne guessed easily.
“Definitely not. They’re both absolutely positive. I watched their faces while they looked at it, and I’m convinced they were telling the truth.”
Shayne shrugged. “It really couldn’t have been Barton. It didn’t make sense that way. Towne would know a body thrown in the river would have to show up eventually. If he killed Barton he certainly would have disposed of the body so it couldn’t ever be identified again.”
“I don’t know about that,” Dyer argued. “Getting rid of a corpse isn’t that easy. Plenty of murderers have tried it and failed. All sorts of elaborate schemes. You know that.”
“Sure, it’s difficult,” Shayne agreed. “But he could have devised something a lot better than just stripping the body and throwing it into the river. No, after I heard Towne’s story this morning, I felt sure the naked body wasn’t Jack Barton.”
“Who is it, then?” Chief Dyer demanded hoarsely.
“If I knew that, I’d know the rest of the story. I suppose you checked the other angles Towne gave us this morning?”
“Sure. And they all proved out just like he said. He withdrew ten thousand dollars from his bank Tuesday in hundred-dollar bills. He specified old bills without consecutive serial numbers. A bus leaves for Frisco at six P.M. and the ticket seller vaguely remembers a man like Towne buying a ticket a short time before departure, and the driver remembers him hanging around until the bus pulled out. He couldn’t positively identify a picture of Jack Barton as a passenger, but thinks he was probably aboard.”
“Were you able to get anything more out of Towne on his reason for paying blackmail?”
“Not a damned thing. He insists that’s his own business, and there’s no law to compel him to tell.” Chief Dyer spread out his hands morosely. “There you are. The whole damned thing blown up in our faces. Towne’s in the clear. He admits having an altercation with the boy and beating him up some, but hell, we can’t hang a charge on that.”
“So you released him?”
“What else could we do? The Barton story blows Riley’s accusation sky-high.” Dyer’s voice trembled with indignation. “Riley backed down completely when confronted with the facts. He admitted the man he saw Towne attack might have been dressed in khaki prospecting clothes instead of a uniform as he supposed, and that he wasn’t actually close enough to positively identify any features. Damn witnesses who tell one story and then crawl out of it,” he ended angrily.
Shayne settled back, lit a cigarette, and puffed thoughtfully. “No more dope on any other missing soldiers or any of those angles?”
“Not a single damned thing.” Dyer thumped his desk with an exasperated fist. “We’re right back where we started. I don’t see that the body in the river has anything to do with the other thing.”
“No identification yet?”
“None at all. We got a set of prints and sent them in to Washington after checking with our files. A thousand people have looked at him in the morgue this afternoon, and none of them ever saw him before. There is one thing, though,” he added grudgingly.
Shayne tugged at his left earlobe and waited.
“It isn’t much. Probably nothing. We’ve been tailing that Mexican girl, you know?”
“Marquita Morales?”
“Yes. And by the way, her mother seems to be a very decent sort. Thinks her daughter is a good girl going to school in Juarez. Doesn’t suspect her extracurricular activities.”
Shayne nodded gravely. “That doesn’t surprise me.”
“She made another pick-up this afternoon. Couple of young privates from Bliss with a three-day pass. She took them into a secondhand clothing store about an hour ago, and came out with two young fellows in civilian clothes.”
“Larimer’s shop?” Shayne asked sharply.
“No. Another one of the same type about two blocks away. My man had his instructions this time and didn’t ball things up by pulling a pinch. We notified Army Intelligence and they put a watch on the shop.”
“And the girl?”
“She went over to Juarez on a streetcar with her pick-ups.”
“How do they get away with it?” Shayne demanded. “Don’t persons crossing the border have to produce some sort of identification in wartime?”
“Sure they do. And they had it. My man was on the car with them. The two soldiers had registration cards all in order. 4-Fs, both of them.”
Shayne nodded slowly. His eyes were alight now. “It begins to look like a well-planned business. Renting civvies and fake identification cards to soldiers who w
ant to cross the border.”
“Looks like it,” Dyer agreed unemotionally. “Not too much harm in that, though. The boys have to blow off steam somehow.”
“If that’s all it amounts to,” Shayne agreed. “Is your tail still on Marquita and her two escorts?”
“That’s out of our jurisdiction. But he did turn her over to a Mexican detective on the other side. They’re keeping watch on her tonight — and on the two soldiers.”
“The Juarez police sound more cooperative than they used to be,” Shayne commented wryly.
“There’s a new municipal set-up over there. They’ve helped us all they could.”
Shayne asked, “How about putting me in touch with the right people on that side?”
“What for?”
“I’ve got a hankering to take a look at the seamier side of Juarez, and I imagine following Marquita around would be a good way to see it all.”
Dyer studied him suspiciously for a moment, but Shayne’s wide-mouthed grin gave no indication of the detective’s real thoughts. He lifted his telephone and gave a Juarez number. He talked to a Captain Rodriquiz for a time, and then hung up and nodded to Shayne.
“They’ve got a man on her. See Captain Rodriquiz at headquarters and he’ll arrange a contact. And I,” he added violently, “am going to buy a bottle of aspirin and a quart of whisky and go home to bed.”
Shayne’s grin widened, and he warned him, “Don’t hit either of them too hard. An inner voice tells me that things are ready to start popping again.” He went out with a blithe wave of his hand.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Captain Rodriquiz of the Juarez police force was a slim, elegantly clad young Mexican with flashing white teeth and a thin black mustache. He spoke impeccable English and looked intelligent. He greeted Shayne warmly at police headquarters, assured him it was an honor to be associated with the famous American detective on a case, and offered his services as a guide for the evening.