The Ravagers

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Authors: Donald Hamilton
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was another area of uncertainty and possible conflict.
    Nobody seemed to be watching me as I came abreast of Number 14. I was just about to commit myself by turning that way when I saw, out of the corner of my eye, a slight movement of the knob, as if someone inside had been about to open the door but had decided against it upon hearing my footsteps outside. Somewhere in my head the warning lights went up on the control board and the sirens began to scream, figuratively speaking. I reminded myself that I was an agent on a mission, not a schoolboy bringing his girl a bunch of posies.
    It could, of course, be Elaine herself preparing to fling open the door and greet me with loving arms, but if so why didn’t she do it? I moved on without pausing, to the soft-drink machine in the corner of the patio. It took me a while to find a Canadian dime and a little longer to extract the bottle and pry off the cap. The door to Number 14 remained closed.
    I walked back deliberately the way I had come, past Elaine’s door, taking an occasional swig of the stuff in the bottle, some local preparation that tasted like a certain cough syrup of my childhood, diluted with carbonated water. Around the next corner was the office, with a big picture window. I went inside and found a magazine rack strategically located nearby. I stood there browsing and drinking my medicated-tasting drink, and presently a man came into view at the big window. He walked past, looking neither right nor left.
    He could have been any man from any unit in the motel, of course, except that he fit a description I’d recently memorized. He was about five eleven, about thirty-five, he had dark, wavy hair with a touch of gray at the temples, and he had regular, distinguished-looking features. He also had a neat, narrow, dark mustache that was not part of the description, but mustaches are easy to grow.
    When he had gone by, I looked up from the magazine I’d been pretending to examine and watched him walk out across the general parking lot that served the office and restaurant. If he looked around, he’d see me through the glass, but I knew that if he was Hans Ruyter he wouldn’t look around. He was a trained man—not one of their best, Mac had said, but competent—and he knew better than to give himself away by glancing over his shoulder in a furtive manner, particularly if he had something to be furtive about.
    He walked straight to a parked car. In keeping with his distinguished appearance it was a distinguished car: a big, tan Mercedes sedan, its dignity only slightly marred by the cute curly fins the German designers had stuck on it in belated imitation of the American practice of a few years back. I made a note of the license, a California number. Well, if you want to blend with the tourists on any highway on the continent, you get yourself a set of California plates. I don’t think anybody in that state ever stays home.
    I watched him drive away smoothly in his expensive imported car. I didn’t try to follow. My own car was two blocks away. Anyway, I didn’t think that as Dave Clevenger, private dick, I was supposed to ever recognize Mr. Ruyter, let alone tail him. And as Matt Helm, agent of the U.S. government, I was under strict orders not to interfere with him, quite the contrary. The fact that I was anxious to stay and find out what he’d been up to in Elaine’s room had, I hope, no influence on my decision, since it was more or less a private worry.
    I forced myself to give the Mercedes plenty of time to get clear, while I bought the magazine I’d been examining, finished my drink, and asked the lady at the desk where she wanted me to dispose of the bottle. She graciously consented to take care of it for me. I went out of the office and walked slowly back to the door I had passed twice before. I don’t suppose I really expected an answer to my knock. There had been a certain stiffness in Hans Ruyter’s bearing, a desperately strained naturalness, that

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