Читаем Manhunt. Volume 2, Number 10, December, 1954 полностью

And now, sprawled against the stove, what I did next was just as aimless. It was a big, old-fashioned stove, with an open grill top and no pilot lights; my hands were against the handles, and I just turned on as many of them as I could reach, then I lurched back through the swinging door before he’d have time to notice. Maybe later, if one of them went to investigate the smell of gas, I’d get a chance for another break.

<p>9</p>

After that things were pretty bad for a while. I don’t know how long it took; but when Vednick finally stopped to breathe, my left eye was swollen shut and I could barely see through the right. I don’t know how many teeth were loose in my mouth, or whether my nose was broken or just too swollen and clogged with blood to breathe through. “Where,” Vednick demanded, “is that money?”

“Go to hell.” I’d lost track of how many times I’d said that.

Vednick stared at me sprawled against the sofa, as he peeled off his blood-soaked gloves and lit a cigarette.

I couldn’t smell any gas, but it must be getting thick in that small kitchen. When it got thick enough, anything might set it off — the motor in the electric refrigerator starting up, if it was an old enough model; or the doorbell ringing, if the bell was in the kitchen; the spark of the light switch, if one of them went in there to investigate. A lot of things could set it off, but an “if” went with every one of them.

But I couldn’t take much more of this beating. If I could talk, maybe I could stall him a while. I opened my one eye, and Dobleen was still showing that tight little smile, like he was enjoying this part of it. Later on, when and if I broke and told where the money was, he’d probably enjoy emptying his gun into my face too. Now talk. Stall...

“It was those hands tucked so neatly under the guy’s body that cooked you,” I told him.

“Smart,” Dobleen said in his gentle, acid voice. “So smart I got you two years in prison. And framed you for murder.”

“And you’re smart — facing a prison term for income tax evasion, and probably a longer term for swindling an old lady out of a hundred thousand dollars. No wonder you figured it was time you died. You and your charities, your work at the Rescue Mission — that’s where you picked out the guy who was going to do your dying for you, wasn’t it?”

“Get on with it, Vednick,” Dobleen said, bored.

“In a minute.” Vednick drew on his cigarette.

“And you,” I told Vednick. “If I’d known what department you worked in, I’d have tumbled a lot sooner. Fingerprints, isn’t it?”

Vednick laughed like that was funny, blowing smoke out.

“The drunk driving thing was faked for the sole purpose of getting Dobleen’s prints on record — only it wasn’t his prints that went into the record; it was the prints of some poor bum that was unlucky enough to look like Dobleen. After that, it wasn’t hard. The house in the name of Rogers was because he wanted to buy a getaway car under a phony name, and there had to be an address to send the registration certificate and pink slip to.”

“Smart.” Dobleen’s eyes were bright with hate. “Now tell us where the money is. You will sooner or later, you know.”

I knew. There comes a time when death becomes a release, and that time would come for me, as he said, sooner or later. Unless I could stall.

I could smell the gas now, but that was because I was expecting it. Vednick, smoking, probably wouldn’t smell it for a few minutes yet; and Dobleen was on the other side of the room.

“The fire,” I went on in a queer voice that didn’t even sound like mine, “was to burn off the hair, char the skin, but it was important to preserve the fingerprints, so the guy’s hands were put under his belly where the fire wouldn’t destroy them. But what really cooked you, Dobleen, was me grabbing your getaway car with all the dough. Even so, you didn’t lose your head. You lit the fire before you set out to follow me in your Cadillac; and you called the fire department a few minutes later from that mobile phone in the Cadillac. But you didn’t dare trying to bluff me with an empty gun after I ran you to the curb later.”

My laugh sounded crazy. “The bullets were in the Ford. If you tried to reload the gun, I’d jump you. If you’d tried to knock me out to get time to reload, you wouldn’t have had a chance — a dried-up runt like you.”

The smile had twisted to a snarl. “Get on the job, Vednick.”

“Let me finish,” I said. “Let me show you how clever I am. After you got away from me, you phoned Vednick and he hustled down to the Rogers’ house on the off chance that I might check there after reading the certificate in the Ford — if I’d gone to the cops with it, he’d have slipped out the back door when they showed up.”

The smell of gas was bad now. It’s a wonder Vednick didn’t smell it. And I knew something for sure now — it wasn’t going to go off by any accident. Maybe it was thick enough to explode in the kitchen, but Vednick would smell it and put out that cigarette long before the gas would be set off from in here.

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