semi-darkness of the room lay a man, his topcoat bunched about his waist, his hat half on and half off his head.
Casey sucked in his breath and stepped forward, going to one knee. The man was on his side, his head on one outstretched arm. âFinell!â he breathed.
âGood God!â Wade said. âWhatâis heââ
He didnât finish the question but Casey knew what he meant and got the hat off and felt a wrist and said, âNo. Heâs alive.â
âWhatâs the matter with him?â
Worry and anxiety made Caseyâs voice ragged and stiff. âHow the hell do I know?â He got his arms under Finellâs knees and shoulder, lifted him easily. âGet his coat off.â
The manâs arms hung limp and it was a simple matter for Wade to slip off the topcoat; then Casey carried Finell into the lighted anteroom, ordered Wade to make a bundle of the coat, and stretched out the inert form on the floor, the coat under his head. That was when he saw the ugly bruise near the top of the skull and knew that Finell, the redheaded photographer that everybody liked, had been slugged.
âGet on the phone,â he said. âGet a doctor up here.â
And even as he spoke he knew that this thing that had happened to Finell was tied up with himâwith his stolen plate case, and jimmied desk, and the picture he had kept because he thought he was being so smart.
Chapter Seven: A COUPLE OF HOODS
T HEY WATCHED THE DOCTOR examine FinellâCasey and Wade and Blaine and the two ambulance men who stood in the doorway. Wade was hunched over in a chair, his elbows on his knees, his round face still pale and miserable. Blaine paced the floor in tight little circles, his hands behind his back and his thin, angular features tight and hard. Casey stood over the doctor, legs spread, fists thrust deep in his coat pocket. No one said anything; no one had said anything in the past three or four minutes.
âI think heâll be all right, but we never know about head injuries until we get some X-rays. Probably only a concussionâyou say he had his hat on and that may have saved him from a fractureâbut I canât be sure.â
âHow long will he be our?â Casey said.
âI canât tell that either. Five minutes, five hours, a day.â He shrugged and put on his coat, nodding to the ambulance men who came forward and lifted Finell gently to the stretcher.
âWeâll go with him,â Casey said. He looked at Wade. âYou take my car and Iâll go along in the ambulance.â
He started for his coat and Blaine took his arm. âWhy would anyone slug him?â
Casey looked down into the narrowed gray eyes. âHe must have walked in on somebody who didnât belong here.â
Blaine watched the stretcher being carried out. He told the doctor to see that Finell had the best of every-thing, but he still held to Caseyâs arm. âLet Wade ride the ambulance,â he said. âYou can go along in a few minutes.â
Casey thought it over and nodded to Wade. âOkay. Take his coat with you. Iâll be out.â
Blaine waited until they were alone. âWhat would anybody want to slug him for?â he asked again.
Casey thought he knew but he couldnât tell Blaine the whole story and there was another possibility. He asked about it. âWhat was his assignment? When did he leave here?â
âI called him about ten-forty. A fire in the South End.â
Casey went to Finellâs plate caseâthey had found it in the printing-roomâand opened it. There were two film holders exposed, indicating Finell had taken four pictures. That they were here proved that Caseyâs alter native was wrong; Finell had not been slugged because of them.
âSomebody broke into my desk tonight,â he said, and showed Blaine the damaged lock. âI think Finell walked in on the guyâor guysâthat did
Ian Rankin
Monica Alexander
Deryn Lake
David Bernstein
Raen Smith
Patrick Touher
Lisa Childs
Breanna Hayse
Dalton Fury
Michael Boatman