CHAPTER 12
Behind the glass, heavy wire mesh had been nailed
to the window frames, white metal venetian blinds drawn shut in
back of that. Both front and rear doors were studded with carriage
bolt heads where the interiors had been reinforced with some
heavier material. It had been enough to slow down the killer who
knew a forced entry could trigger the man inside into some
unpredictable action and he had preferred to wait until he could
gain entry at his leisure.
I took the pick out, inserted one in the keyhole of
the lock and tried it. The tumblers didn’t budge. I went through
four of them before getting a response from the mechanism. Then, by
manipulating it easily, I forced the tumblers back one at a
time.
Whoever had installed the chain hadn’t done it
right. Enough slack was there so I was able to slip it out of
position with a business card from my wallet. It swung down,
clinking there as I pushed the door open. Inside a radio was
playing softly, crackling with static as the storm moved between it
and the station broadcasting.
The .45 was in my hand again, ready. I stepped in,
closed the door and let my eyes become adjusted to the gray dusk in
the room, picking out pieces of furniture, searching for the one I
wanted so badly.
From the corner where the radio played was the
barely perceptible glow of a dial, its circular face bisected by
the back of a chair that faced the ocean. The crook of an elbow
jutted out over the arm as the motionless figure there sat watching
the sea through the partially opened slats of the blinds.
He never heard me. I had kicked off my shoes and
sidled around to the side, each step calculated to take me into
position for a clean winging shot if I had to.
And then I could see him, the odd box in his lap
that had a pair of minute glowing red lights set in its side. He
never turned his head, simply sitting there with the
cigarette-sized control in his left hand, his thumb poised over one
of the two buttons in its top.
I aimed the .45 at his head and said softly, “Louis
...”
There was no reaction ... no movement at all.
I took a step closer, ready for the slightest
motion of his finger before I took his whole hand off. Only the
slightest pressure now on the trigger would do it.
Sweat trickled down the center of my spine. Outside
was the world. Here was its destruction.
“Louis Agrounsky,” I said again. I was almost on
top of him by now. I could see his eyes, wide open, the weird smile
on his face as if he were watching the greatest show of his
life.
I could see something else too.
He was dead.
The syringe was lying beside him, the needle jabbed
into the cushion. The rest of his kit was on the table beside the
radio, the three empty capsules, the spoon with the bent handle and
the stub of a candle on a saucer. Louis Agrounsky had made a
decision, all right. He finally had reached it. He had been ready
to carry it out, whatever it was, and mainlined himself for the
event and mainlined himself right into the big black with an
overdose of the heroin he had craved so badly.
I didn’t touch anything. That would be handled by
the experts. I left him as he was, shoved the .45 back in the
holster, the crazy relief turning my legs weak a second. I looked
at my watch, saw the time and swore into the darkness.
The phone was on a side table and alive. I gave the
operator the number of the apartment in New York and waited while
it rang twice, then Rondine said simply, “Yes?”
“Tiger, kitten.”
Her voice echoed the relief I had felt moments ago,
then came back with the fright real and imperative. “Tiger ... Ohl
But ... where are you?”
“I found him, baby. You can wrap the world up
again. It’s safe for a little while longer. You can come off it
now.”
“No! No, Tiger ... listen. I found it ... the
letter Doug Hamilton mailed. He sent it to an old address of his
deliberately, knowing it would be rerouted through all of his other
forwarding addresses before it was returned to him. He wrote it all
down and ...”
“But it’s finished, kid.”
“Tiger ... it’s Camille Hunt!”
It was like having the wind blow out of the
north and chill you to the bone.
“Camille?” I repeated tonelessly.
Her voice crackled in the phone. “This Henri Frank
came to Belt-Aire supposedly to get a job, but what he was doing
was making contact with Camille Hunt to tell her about Louis
Agrounsky. Hamilton checked him out and found out he was an active
Communist. Later he accidentally saw Camille and this Frank person
together and suspected something, so he followed her to where she
made contact with a man he described in detail ... it was Vito
Salvi. The address was right there. He mentioned he was going to
investigate Salvi further to see what the connection was.”
My voice sounded cold and far away. “Did he back it
up with any evidence?”
“Henri Frank was from the Eau Gallie area and she
made several trips there. He had photostats of the tickets enclosed
in the letter.”
It all wrapped up beautifully. Wait until Martin
Grady found out he had personally recommended a Soviet agent and
planted her in his own critical organization. What had been her
background? The publications field—a great spot where a trained
operative could twist the printed word to meet the demands of the
slave state. And she was invited into a supersensitive industry
where she could be held in abeyance until the proper time came. The
only things that stymied the effectiveness of more direct moves
were the double checks put on everybody’s activities by government
directive.
She’d have to be high in the organization, a
liaison operative who could call into operation the full forces
lying in wait if the grand moment came. And that it did. One man
fell out of line with a momentous scheme to crush the world his
tortured mind wouldn’t let him accept any longer, and she was
ready. She had the cover identity of Helen Lewis prepared in
advance as she would have several others in key places, ready for
immediate use. She made sure of Agrounsky’s aberration with
personal contact. She was trained to read people, analyze and judge
them. It wouldn’t take much to alter her appearance ... makeup on a
woman could make her almost anybody. When she was sure, the trap
was built. Total narcotics addiction for Agrounsky, curtailing his
supply, directing him to sources leading to New York where they
could buy his will and his knowledge with heroin and pick his
brains piece by piece.
“Camille Hunt,” I murmured absently.
I never heard Rondine’s reply because the voice
behind me said, “That’s right, Tiger. I’m surprised you guessed.
Put the phone up, please.” Her voice had a hoarse, nasal quality to
it and I stopped seeing her in the soft red glow of the heater, her
flesh white and lovely. Now it fitted the personality that was
truly hers—the spider in the web, poised and deadly, one appetite
sated, another about to be satisfied.
Slowly I dropped the receiver back and turned
around, knowing she’d have the gun in her hand, an efficient
Belgium Browning hammerless automatic, and the hole in the muzzle
was staring directly into my eyes.
“You amaze me, Tiger. Where is ... the other
one?”
“I drowned him.”
It didn’t seem to shock her at all. “I see. He was
warned.”
“And he was ready. Just not ready enough.”
“Not as ready as I am.”
I nodded once. “How did you get here,
Camille?”
“Money is something we find valuable too. There was
a helicopter and a man willing to fly it here. If you’re
interested, it wasn’t much of a task locating the right Leesville.
It was only a matter of elimination and remembering the few things
he mentioned. The ocean, for instance.”
“Your luck’s running high.”
“This time. There was a break in the clouds. We ...
landed not far from here.” She smiled at me, but there was no humor
in the twist of her mouth at all. “Your friendly aircraft
cooperated nicely with all their noise.”
“The pilot?” I asked her.
She shrugged indifferently.
“He went like Doug Hamilton,” I suggested.
“Fortunately for him, much quicker.”
“Why Doug at all?”
She glared at me then, her eyes partially bloodshot
and filled with hate. “That one knew too much. But he talked. Vito
Salvi made sure he talked.” She stopped and frowned. “But he may
have been lying. He said there was a report on me in his personal
file. Oh, there was one, but simply a routine check.”
“He had another,” I said. “It turned up.”
“It doesn’t really matter now.”
I went to ask her something else but she shook her
head. Quickly, her eyes roved through the room, caught sight of the
figure in the chair and didn’t have to be given any
explanations.
“No, Tiger, talk is needless. I don’t want to be
distracted by anything from doing ... this.” The gun made a small
up and down motion, never leaving a vital area of my body.
One way or another I was going to have to take
her. I’d never make it ... the distance was too great between us.
She’d get that single shot in and it would be enough, but I was
going to have to make the try. It would have to be a fast draw from
a bad position, the only chance I had.
Camille read my mind and said, “There’s a lamp on
the table beside you. Light it. Only your hand moves and very, very
slowly.”
So I lit the scene for my own death. Very, very
slowly.
“Now your gun, Tiger. Just pick it out with your
fingers and drop it. It means a few seconds more you can live and
think.”
I felt for the gun, half turning, then realized
that it was no use at all. The hole in my side from Hoppes’ .22
Magnum had numbed half my body and any motion at all sent a violent
shiver of blinding pain right into my brain. I let the gun hit the
floor and stay there.
“Now empty your pockets. Everything. Turn them
inside out so I can see them. I’ve heard of the devices you have
used, Tiger. They are methods we use ourselves and I don’t want any
used against me.”
One by one I turned my pockets out and dumped their
contents on the table top. She was going to be disappointed. A
wallet, spare clips, change, a ring of picklocks, and a gimmick
that was totally useless now, the Bezex inhaler that had been
designed for Niger Hoppes.
Her eyes went up in mock astonishment.
I said, “Why delay, Camille?”
She smiled again, her watery eyes even more like a
spider’s than ever behind the cold that had her in its grip. “I
told you once. I enjoy studying people. I’m interested in their
reactions. The dossier the committee has on you is so thick, the
record of your actions so impressive that I want to see what you
are like when you know you are the one dying.”
“I’ve faced it before.”
“Ah, but this time you can be sure!” she
rasped at me. “Move back, one step at a time. Stay in the middle of
the room.”
I did as she told me to. If I went near anything I
could throw she wouldn’t wait. I’d die on the spot, and as she
said, each moment was one for living and thinking.
She reached the table where I had been, the gun
telling me to stop where I was. From there she had a clear view of
the body of Louis Agrounsky, confirming all she thought. She could
see the red dots of the control unit and knew it was operative.
Later her own technicians could examine it and make use of its
deadly potential.
“Why didn’t you move in on him faster,
Camille?”
She coughed quietly and blinked, then said
candidly, “Simply because we didn’t know the secret of the by-pass
control. He had it well hidden. Perhaps even booby trapped. We
needed the whole unit. We had hoped to get Agrounsky too, but I
doubt if he’ll be missed now. Our engineers will know what to do, I
assure you.”
“We’ll all be dead. You know that, don’t
you?”
She shook her head, still smiling. “Only you for
now. The rest we will control nicely. They will learn how to serve
the state and there will be very little protest. After all, we’ve
had a great deal of experience with what you people like to term
‘captive nations.’ This country will be no different.”
Camille held the gun in her left hand, the other
idly toying with the things I had dumped on the table. I had to
force myself to keep my eyes steady where they were, just looking
at her and not about to plead or beg. She would have liked that. It
would have made what she was planning even more enjoyable. She
would have gloried in the spider role even more than ever.
She frowned, eyes squinting, wrinkling her nose
against a sneeze, and fought it back. In a way it was even funny.
“I’ve suffered because of you, Tiger, but it helped me weave a
stronger web than ever.”
“Tough.”
“You thought it couldn’t be done. I was right in
the first place ... you are a fly. A typical fly lured into a web
and dying at the greatest moment of pleasure, isn’t that so?” “Is
it?”
She frowned again and breathed in hard, the air
making a small whistling sound in her nostrils and her eyes showed
the annoyance she felt. Only for a second did she look away, then
picked up the inhaler and unscrewed the cap. She held it with a
derisive gesture and said, “Thank you, fly ... before you die, my
thanks.”
And she breathed in to clear her head, one side
first, then moved to the other and her hand stopped midway and for
one long second her eyes seemed to clear and widen as the deadly
cyanide gas she had activated by the simple motion of removing the
cap flooded her lungs, and she knew she had lost it because she
pulled the trigger of the automatic, only by then it was pointed at
the floor and she went down to join the one outside in the great
lonely cave of death.
She was dead when I reached her and she never heard
me say, “I told you I was the mud-dauber type, spider.”