The Mike Hammer Collection - Mickey Spillane [143]
“It’s been done.”
“Blackie Conley could have done it,” I suggested. “He could have used a bite of the loot for expenses and he would have had the time and the know-how.”
“That’s what I think too.”
“Anything on Malek’s women?”
“Hold it a minute.” I heard him put the phone down, speak to somebody, then he picked it up again. “Got a note here from a retired officer who was contacted. He remembers the girls Malek used to run with but can’t recall the building. His second wife put in a complaint to have it raided for being a disorderly house at one time and he was on the call. Turned out to be a nuisance complaint and nothing more. He can’t place the building anymore though.”
“Hell,” I said.
“We’ll keep trying. Where will you be?”
“Home. I’ve had it.”
“See you tomorrow,” Pat said.
I hung up and looked at Velda. “Malek,” I said. “Nobody can find where he spent his time.”
“Why don’t you try the Yellow Pages?” Velda kidded.
I paused and nodded. “You just might be right at that, kid.”
“It was a joke, Mike.”
I shook my head. “Pat just told me he had a second wife. That meant he had a first. Let’s look it up.”
There were sixteen Maleks in the directory and I got sixteen dimes to make the calls. Thirteen of them told me everything from drop dead to come on up for a party, but it was the squeaky old voice of the fourteenth that said yes, she was Mrs. Malek who used to be married to Quincy Malek. No, she never used the Quincy or the initial because she never cared for the name. She didn’t think it was the proper time to call, but yes, if it was as important as I said it was, I could come right over.
“We hit something, baby,” I said.
“Pat?”
“Not yet. Let’s check this one out ourselves first.”
The cab let us out on the corner of Eighth and Forty-ninth. Somewhere along the line over one of the storefronts was the home of Mrs. Quincy Malek the first. Velda spotted the number over the darkened hallway and we went in, found the right button, and pushed it. Seconds later a buzzer clicked and I opened the door.
It was only one flight up. The stairs creaked and the place reeked of fish, but the end could be up there.
She was waiting at the top of the landing, a garishly rouged old lady in a feathered wrapper that smelled of the twenties and looked it. Her hair was twisted into cloth curlers with a scarf hurriedly thrown over it and she had that querulous look of all little old ladies suddenly yanked out of bed at a strange hour.
She forced a smile, asked us in after we introduced ourselves, and had us sit at the kitchen table while she made tea. Neither Velda nor I wanted it, but if she was going to put up with us we’d have to go along with her.
Only when the tea was served properly did she ask us what we wanted.
I said, “Mrs. Malek . . . it’s about your husband.”
“Oh, he died a long time ago.”
“I know. We’re looking for something he left behind.”
“He left very little, very little. What he left me ran out years ago. I’m on my pension now.”
“We’re looking for some records he might have kept.”
“My goodness, isn’t that funny?”
“What is?”
“That you should want them too.”
“Who else wanted them, Mrs. Malek?”
She poured another cup of tea for me and put the pot down daintily. “Dear me, I don’t know. I had a call . . . oh, some months ago. They wanted to know if Quincy left any of his business records with me. Seems that they needed something to clear up a title.”
“Did he, Mrs. Malek?”
“Certainly, sir. I was the only one he could ever trust. He left a large box with me years ago and I kept it for him as I said I would in case it was ever needed.”
“This party who called . . .”
“I told him what I’m telling you.”
“Him?”
“Well . . . I really couldn’t say. It was neither a man’s nor a woman’s voice. They offered me one hundred dollars if they could inspect the box and another hundred if I was instrumental in proving their claim.”
“You take it?”
Her pale blue eyes studied me intently. “Mr. Hammer, I am no longer