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Peter Rabe - Stop This Man!

Here you can read online Peter Rabe - Stop This Man! full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2008, publisher: Hard Case Crime, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Peter Rabe Stop This Man!

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matter of fact Who are the two guys just came in the door Paar turned and - photo 1

matter of fact. Who are the two guys just came in the door?

Paar turned and glanced toward the entrance. They come quite often. Local detectives.

Catell rose slowly. He put his hands in his pockets, turned his back to the cops, and looked casual. Hear this, Paar. Keep them and anybody else you know out of my way. If you dont, Ill get you.

Then he walked away, slowly, without turning. He went through an empty kitchen, then down a long hall. He picked a door, opened it, and found himself in a small cubicle without windows. A naked light bulb made a hard light, and under it stood Lily.

She had taken her shoes and stockings off and her hands were at her back, trying to undo the black corset. Catell closed the door behind him and she looked up.

Fancy meeting you here, Lily. She didnt answer. Only her eyes moved. If you were going to scream, dont, Catell said. He turned the catch of the door. Im just staying a minute.

She looked at him, frowning, and put a hand to her breasts. Please, she said. Please leave.

Catell heard footsteps in the hall and leaned lightly against the door, both hands on the knob. Not a word, kid.

Please, mister, I

Catell moved across the small room fast and clapped one hand over her mouth, holding her up against him with his other arm. He didnt have to say any more. She saw his face grow stiff, mean, and she stayed very still

Twenty-four Chester Street was a rooming house. Every morning at eight, weather permitting, the old woman from Room 4 stepped out on the porch, dragged a wicker chair to the railing, and sat.

This one morning she didnt show until eight-thirty. She stood for a moment wheezing the fine spring air into her lungs and patting her frizzy hair. Then she patted her cheek, doing it gently, as if the bright color of her face gave her pain. She dragged the wicker chair to the railing and sat.

The old woman had a trick she did with her upper lip, curling it back and giving a frightful view of her false teeth. That happened every few minutes, like clockwork, except this time. She suddenly got up from her chair, not quite fast enough, and vomited.

At a quarter to nine the two girls from Room 11 found her there on the porch. The old woman started to twitch a little when they dragged her back into the house, and by the time they had her under the light that hung by the staircase she was struggling to get free.

Lemme go, for heavens sake, lemme

Mrs. Tucker, you fainted. Lie still now, Mrs. Tucker.

Get your hands offen me, you! I never been sick a day in my life. Get your hands offen me, and she started to screech the way she always did.

They left her sitting on the stairs, under the twenty-five watt bulb, because they had to be at work ten minutes later.

Mrs. Tucker tried to get up but another retch tightened her insides and she doubled over. When the spasm had passed, she looked up. The landlady stood there, a big shape wrapped in a pink housecoat that was meant for a much more beautiful woman.

You sick or something? said the landlady. You trying to mess up my front hall?

I never been sick a day in my life, and the old woman tried to get up.

Thats when she fainted the second time.

With a fat mans grunt Dr. Junta hauled himself up the porch steps. He eyed the woman in the pink wrapper who was sloshing water over the planks of the porch and said, Im the doctor. Did somebody

Number Four. End of the corridor on the left. And if she got something catchy, the landlady yelled after him, get her out of here.

Number 4 was right next to Number 5; in fact, the two rooms had been one. There was a dividing wall, beaver-board on one side and the bare studding showing on the other, where the old woman had her bed.

I dont want no doctor, she said when Junta came in. I never been sick a day in my life and I didnt call for you.

I understand you fainted. Dr. Junta put his satchel down.

You got no call comin in here like that. I didnt ask for you and I dont want you.

If youre worried about the money, Im from the Relief Board. Now, what happened? You threw up?

The old woman did the trick with her teeth and gave Dr. Junta a cold stare.

Indigestion is all. I know how to take care of myself.

When did it start?

Just this morning. Im all right now, so theres no need to hang around.

Dr. Junta sighed and opened his satchel. He wasnt a very enthusiastic man, but there were certain routine things that he always did. He shook down the thermometer and walked up to the bed. Thats when he noticed the color of the womans face.

Whered you get that sunburn this time of year?

I aint got no sunburn. Where would I get a sunburn, anyways, holed up in this rat trap?

If you dont like the place, the landlady said from the door, you can git any time, Mrs. Tucker. Any time!

All right, both of you, said Dr. Junta. Now, once more, Mrs. Tucker, try to remember how youve felt the last few days. Any complaints, any discomforts.

Nothing. I been fine.

She been fine like a sick dog, said the landlady. Sickish for days, borrowing my aspirin and lying in that bed of hers.

Shes wrong. Listen, Doctor

How long has this been going on? asked Dr. Junta.

Lemme see now. The landlady rewrapped herself and looked up at the ceiling. Right after that one-nighter was here. Smith, he said his name was. Middle-aged guy, real pale face, wore a blue overcoat. Right next door, he stayed, in Number Five.

Was his bed behind this wall here? Dr. Junta tapped on the thin partition.

No. Thats where the closet is.

Was Smith sick, as far as you could tell?

Smith, the pale man in the blue overcoat, hadnt been sick as far as any of them knew, but the hot, sore color of Mrs. Tuckers face wasnt a simple rash, as the old woman was trying to say, and Dr. Junta couldnt decide just what it might mean. That night, playing it safe, he committed Mrs. Tucker to the Hamilton City Hospital.

Jack Herron threw his cigarette on the floor and stepped on it. Then he picked it up and put it in the ashtray on his desk. He looked at his watch, then at the phone next to his elbow. He had been doing this all day, but nothing had happened. No news.

Stiff from sitting, Herron walked up to the dark window and looked at his reflection in the glass. He looked properly nondescript. An FBI man looks like anybody else and makes an effort to stay that way. He patted his thin hair into place self-consciously, wishing the early balding didnt show so much.

Herron smoked another cigarette and then he couldnt stand the waiting any longer. He grabbed his hat off the hook, clicked the safety lock, and slammed the door behind him. Lettering on the door said, Federal Bureau of Investigation, District Office, St. Louis, Mo.

A few blocks from the office Herron turned up a broad flight of stairs and walked into the Central Police Station. Maybe something had come through since he left the office.

There was a little room right off Communications smelling of varnish and sweeping compound. Herron walked in and said hello to the two men at the table. They were sitting in shirtsleeves and the older of the two was pouring black coffee into paper cups. The young one was wearing a shoulder holster.

Hello, yourself, said the one with the holster. If you want coffee, we got. If you want news, we aint got.

The old one who worked in the next room put a cup before Herron and poured from a tin percolator. I know what he wants, said the old one, but hes going to get coffee.

Herron sat down, sipped from his cup, and said, Thats too bad, Starkey.

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