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The Killer is Mine
Talmage Powell
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eBook - ePub
The Killer is Mine
Talmage Powell
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The dirtiest killer of the year was the man private investigator Ed Rivers had to save from the chair.Wally Tulman, Florida socialite, had been convicted of molesting and murdering a young girl.Tulman's lovely wife begged Rivers to take his case - to prove him innocent.Rivers wouldn't touch it with a ten-foot pole.Then somebody tapped him over the head, just to make sure.Ed Rivers got the message. Somebody didn't want him on the case.So he waded into it - with both fists flying.
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Sujet
LiteratureSous-sujet
Crime & Mystery LiteratureCHAPTER
1
SHE WAS the kind whoâd make the whole trip for a man, right to hellâs front door.
Even a guy in his spot.
It took me a while to realize that. Sheâd called me twice. Each time I refused to see her.
As far as I was concerned the man in Stateâs Prison at Raiford would get what was coming to him. Heâd been found guilty in a court of law and justice, and I donât cotton to people who, without cause, kill other people. Especially children. Most especially little girls.
I thought I was through with Laura Tulman. She sounded like a nice person over the phone, and I admire loyalty. But twice-times-no should discourage anybody, and I dropped her and her doomed husband from my mind.
It had been a hot day, even for Tampa. The heat was a shimmering white wool shroud cloyed over the river, the shopping crowds on Franklin Street, the rancid tide flats along the Bayshore, the holes and hovels in Ybor City, the Latin Quarter. I have been down here going on sixteen years, but I never got used to the heat. I donât know why I didnât leave a long time ago. I just got here, got a job, and I stayed. Thatâs all there is to it. So donât get critical. Why the hell donât you go looking for paradise instead of plodding through something you may be stuck with?
On the way to my apartment on the edge of Ybor City I stopped at a fly-specked market. The usual dusky kids were playing in the street and shrilling at each other in Spanish. The usual sharp, slicked-up characters were lounging around the corners, and at the domino club where the old men played for hours and the young ones devised plans involving women, money and women.
The usual smell of spice and pepper slapped me across the face when I walked in the store. I bought some Cuban sausage, eggs, half a dozen cans of cold beer.
I went up to my apartment in a creaking, gloomy old house and cooked my dinner over the gas plate. I was finishing off the sausage and eggs and the third beer when somebody rapped on the door. I grunted and got up to answer it.
A beautiful young woman was standing in the twilight of the hallway. She had tanned, smooth skin, great dark eyes and jet-black hair. There was character in the bold bones of her face. Her body was slender and her figure fine. She wore a white linen suit and carried a matching purse.
She looked up into a sweating face thatâs seen forty-three years of living. âMr. Ed Rivers?â
âYes.â
âMay I come in?â
âSure.â
She moved easily past my slope-shouldered, six-foot, hundred and ninety pounds.
I closed the door. She didnât belong here. She belonged on plush Davis Island, the man-made development pumped out of the guts of Tampa Bay.
She didnât turn up her nose when she glanced around. She simply looked the place over, at the day bed where I sweat like a hog when I sleep, at the second-hand TV set I watch sometimes, at the bookcase piled with old books and magazines and a few newspaper clippings that have come from being a cop of one kind or another nearly all my life. At the kitchenette where the remains of my dinner were still on the table.
She looked at me.
Slowly.
From my shoes. Up my baggy slacks. Across the sport shirt blackened and matted with sweat against my chest. To my face.
Her eyes rested there.
âYouâre not a very pretty man, Mr. Rivers,â she said. âBut I believe you are capable.â
âThanks.â
âI have a considerable knowledge of you to bolster my opinion,â she said. âYou were once a city policeman in New Jersey. You came here about fifteen years ago, broken up by some kind of trouble up north. You just about went to the dogs for a while. Then you became a private agent for Nationwide Detective Agency. Youâve held down the job ever since. Your loyalty and basic honesty are legend.â
âThanks again,â I said. Sheâd left out a few of the details. Even now I didnât like to remember the reason Iâd drifted south. Iâd had a girl up in Jersey City, where I was born and where I walked my first beat as a cop. I was in plain clothes when I met this girl. I thought she was mine, but she ran off with a punk I was trying to nail. Their car got in the way of a fast-moving freight train at a crossing.
I thumbnailed a drop of sweat off my face and said slowly, âI donât mind people checking on me, but youâve wasted your time, Mrs. Tulman.â
Laura Tulman didnât seem surprised that Iâd recognized her. She was getting used to it. Her husbandâs hadnât been the only picture smeared all over the newspapers.
âPlease give me a few moments, Mr. Rivers.â
âI told you on the phone. I donât take this kind of case.â
She tilted her head. In the dim light of the dying day, her eyes were touched with loneliness and black fear. âYouâre very adept at saying no, Mr. Rivers.â
âI only try to say what I mean.â
I wished sheâd leave. I also wished there was something I could do for her. Not her husband. Her. Seeing her, talking to her, I felt she had a quality rare among people. It was driving her. Causing her to fight a fight she couldnât win. And it might break her heart.
I drew my gaze from her. Just leave, I thought. So I can take a cold bath, relax, get rid of the weight of the .38 and knife for a while, tools of my trade. I wear the knife in a sheath at the back of my neck. Insurance. In fifteen years Iâve used the knife twice, and if I hadnât had it the first time I wouldnât have been around to need it the second.
âWere you at my husbandâs trial?â she asked.
I turned to face her again, shook my head.
âI donât fool around courts more than I have to.â
âThen you donât know my husband.â
âI read the papers.â
âThe papers crucified him.â
âIâve learned to read between newspaper lines. But there was a case against him. Strong enough to buy him a ticket to the chair.â
She went white around the lips. âThe papers and resultant public opinion ruled out any recommendation for mercy. The little girlâs grandmother had a lot to do with that.â
âThe Wherry family is one of Tampaâs oldest and most respected.â
âSo is mine, Mr. Rivers, but we tried to fight cleanly.â
âThat was a mistake. When your lifeâs at stake there are no rules. Anything that cuts your chances is not clean. Itâs so stupid itâs dirty.â
âI know that now,â she said. âBut I thought our fight would be enough. He was convicted on circumstantial evidence, you know.â
âThat hasnât much to do with it. A lot of people donât understand circumstantial evidence. Itâs as good as any other kind if it determines that only one person could not have been innocent. If youâve got any other evidence, take it to the cops.â âI havenât got it. I want to get it. I want you to get it.â âLet the cops get it.â
âItâs all over as far as the police are concerned. Closed. Like a book they donât want or intend to read any more.â
âThatâs right,â I said.
âBut you could use methods they canât to get this evidence.â
âIâm no back-alley thug, Mrs. Tulman.â âIâm sure of that, but you get results. Iâve looked into the records of every private detective in the state. Youâre the man I want. The man Wally needs.â
âWally needs to say his prayers,â I said. âThatâs all Wally needs.â
âYouâre cruel,â she said softly...