Murderers' Row

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Authors: Donald Hamilton
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wounded from one car to the other, I stepped into the little Ford and took off.
    The mirror showed me an argument behind me. The driver obviously wanted to drop everything and come after me. In a 3.8 Jag sedan he could have run circles around what I was driving. But Dr. Perry had sworn an oath to Aesculapius, and his primary concern, after all, was Alan, not me. When last seen, they were loading the patient carefully into the imported sedan with the buggy-whip antenna.
    Driving away, I tried to guess what Mac would do when he got my message. He’d get mad, of course, but that didn’t matter; he wasn’t a man to let temper affect his course of action. On the other hand, if he really thought I’d flipped and was an active menace—Come to think of it, I had been kind of casual about slipping that knife into Alan without even waiting for identification.
    I shook my head quickly. Whether my brain was running smoothly on six cylinders or limping along on five, it was all the brain I had available. And there’s a kind of unwritten rule in the organization that goes: nobody dies for nothing. It doesn’t apply to sentimental schnooks like Alan, who get perforated making like damn fools on their own time. But Jean had been on duty when she died, grimly sticking out a lousy assignment.
    And I’d been there. She’s got to survive, of course, Mac had said. Those had been my orders. Exactly why she had died wasn’t very important, in this connection. It had been my job to see that she didn’t. The least I could do was take over where she’d left off, so her death wouldn’t be, let’s say, wasted.
    It was very quiet at the Tidewater Motel when I reached it. The pool was deserted again. The water still looked blue-green and cold. The window of unit seventeen was dark. I knocked softly. The light came on, footsteps approached the door and it opened to show me the small face of Teddy Michaelis, yawning.
    â€œYou took long enough,” she said. “Come in.”

9
    She was a pajama girl, which, if I’d come for pleasure instead of business, I’d have found disappointing: nighties are much nicer. With her short, blonde hair, in her loose blue-flowered silk coat and tapering blue trousers, she looked like a small, sleepy, barefoot boy.
    â€œWell, get inside before somebody sees you, stupid,” she snapped when I didn’t move at once. I moved past her. She closed the door and locked it, saying, “I hope you had sense enough to make sure you weren’t followed.”
    The room had unpleasant associations for me. It was almost an exact duplicate of Jean’s, a few doors down. There was the same beige wall-to-wall carpet, the same blond furniture, and the same TV set on the same revolving stand. Only the feminine debris was different; Teddy Michaelis would never take any prizes for immaculate housekeeping, either.
    I walked to the closet and looked inside. I inspected the bathroom and found it empty. I turned to look at the small, boyish figure standing by the door, watching me warily. Despite the aggressive attitude with which she’d greeted me, she was obviously scared. I could hardly blame her. From her point of view, it must have been kind of like inviting a man-eating tiger to tea.
    â€œLet’s not play cowboys and Indians, doll,” I said. “Every cop in the state knows my car after the alarm that went out. What was I supposed to do, take it out in the woods and paint it pink, just for you?” She looked disconcerted, and I went on, “As far as I know, I came here clean. But I’m not guaranteeing how long it will last.”
    â€œOh.”
    â€œNow,” I said, “say something that makes it worth my trouble.” I glanced around once more, and decided to take a chance on a mike. It didn’t seem likely, under the circumstances, that she was in league with the police; and if anybody else was setting traps for me, I

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