All Shot Up_ The Classic Crime Thriller - Chester Himes [27]
Now Lady Gypsy was seldom seen outside the junk-crammed five-room apartment where she contacted the spirits and sometimes gave messages to the initiate that were out of this world.
It was a normal five-minute drive on open streets from the 126th Street precinct station, but Grave Digger made it in his allotted three. Sleet blew along the frozen streets like dry sand, making the tires sing. The car didn’t skid, but it shifted from side to side of the street, as though on a sanded spot of slick ice. Grave Digger drove from memory of the streets, with the bright lights on, more to be seen than to see, because sighting through his windshield was like looking through frosted glass. His siren was silent.
A prowl car was parked in front of Lady Gypsy’s but no sign of the Buick.
“Anderson jumped the gun,” Coffin Ed said.
“They might have got ’em,” Grave Digger said without much hope.
The little car skidded when he tamped the brake, and it banged into the rear bumper of the prowl car. They hit the street without giving it a thought.
Coffin Ed went first, overcoat flapping, pistol in his hand. Grave Digger slipped as he was rounding the back of the car and hit the top of the luggage compartment with the butt of his pistol. Coffin Ed wheeled about to find Grave Digger rising from the gutter.
“You’re sending telegrams,” Coffin Ed accused.
“It ain’t my night,” Grave Digger said.
A prowl car rounded the distant corner, siren wide open and red eye blinking.
“Makes no difference now,” Coffin Ed said disgustedly, taking the dimly lit stairs two at a time.
They found a uniformed cop standing beside the door at the head of the staircase with a drawn pistol, another in the shadows of the stairs, leading to the upper floors.
“Where’s the car?” Coffin Ed asked.
“There wasn’t any car,” the cop said.
Grave Digger cursed. “What are you doing here?”
“Lieutenant said to seal up this joint and wait for you.”
“What’s going to stop them from going out the back?”
“Joe and Eddie got the back covered.”
Grave Digger couldn’t hear him over the screaming of the siren down below.
“How’s the back?” he shouted.
“Covered,” the cop shouted back.
“Well, let’s see what gives,” Grave Digger said.
The siren died to a whimper, and. his voice filled the narrow corridor like organ notes.
“Hold it!” a voice cried from below.
Two cops pounded up the stairs like the Russian Army.
“This beats vaudeville,” Coffin Ed said.
The cops came into sight with guns in their fists. They halted at sight of the assemblage, and both turned bright pink.
“We didn’t know anybody was here,” one of them said.
“You were making sure just in case,” Coffin Ed said.
Grave Digger fingered the buzzer beside the door. From inside came the distant sound of a bell ringing.
“These doorbells always sound like they’re miles away,” he said.
The cops looked at him curiously.
No one came to the door.
“Let me shoot the lock off,” a cop said.
“You can’t shoot these locks off,” Grave Digger said. “Look at them; there are more locks on this door than on Fort Knox and there’re more inside.”
“There’s a chance that only one is locked,” Coffin Ed said. “If somebody left here who didn’t have a key—”
“Right,” Grave Digger agreed. “I’m too tired to think.”
A cop raised his eyebrows, but Grave Digger didn’t see it.
“Stand back,” Coffin Ed said.
Everyone backed off to one side.
He backed to the opposite wall, leveled his long-barreled .38 and put four bullets