The Mike Hammer Collection - Mickey Spillane [52]
“I don’t know,” I told her. “His name has been coming up a little too often to be coincidental.”
“Mike—” She bit her lip, thinking, then: “I have Leo’s effects in the house. Do you think you might find something useful in them? They might make more sense to you than they do to me.”
“It sure won’t hurt to look.” I held out my hand to help her up and that was as far as I got. The radio between us suddenly burst apart almost spontaneously and slammed backward into the pool.
I gave her a shove that threw her ten feet away, rolled the other way and got to my feet running like hell for the west side of the house. It had to have been a shot and from the direction the radio skidded I could figure the origin. It had to be a silenced blast from a pistol because a rifle would have had either Laura or me with no trouble at all. I skirted the trees, stopped and listened, and from almost directly ahead I heard a door slam and headed for it wishing I had kept the .45 on me and to hell with Pat. The bushes were too thick to break through so I had to cut down the driveway, the gravel crunching under my feet. I never had a chance. All I saw was the tail end of a dark blue Buick Special pulling away to make a turn that hid it completely.
And now the picture was coming out a little clearer. It hadn’t been a tired driver on the Thruway at all. The bastard had picked me up at Duck’s stand, figured he had given me something when he had handed me the paper, probably hired a car the same time I did with plenty of time to do it in since I wasn’t hurrying at all. He followed me until he was sure he knew where I was headed and waited me out.
Damn. It was too close. But what got me was, how many silenced shots had he fired before hitting that radio? He had been too far away for accurate shooting apparently, but he could have been plunking them all around us hoping for a hit until he got the radio. Damn!
And I was really important. He knew where I was heading. Even since I had started to operate I had had a tail on me and it had almost paid off for him. But if I were important dead, so was Laura, because now that killer could never be sure I hadn’t let her in on the whole business. Another damn.
She stood over the wreckage of the portable she had fished from the pool, white showing at the corners of her mouth. Her hands trembled so that she clasped them in front of her and she breathed as though she had done the running, not me. Breathlessly, she said, “Mike—what was it? Please, Mike—”
I put my arm around her shoulder and with a queer sob she buried her face against me. When she looked up she had herself under control. “It was a shot, wasn’t it?”
“That’s right. A silenced gun.”
“But—”
“It’s the second time he’s tried for me.”
“Do you think—”
“He’s gone for now,” I said.
“But who was he?”
“I think he was The Dragon, sugar.”
For a few seconds she didn’t answer, then she turned her face up toward mine. “Who?”
“Nobody you know. He’s an assassin. Up until now his record has been pretty good. He must be getting the jumps.”
“My gracious, Mike, this is crazy! It’s absolutely crazy.”
I nodded in agreement. “You’ll never know, but now we have a real problem. You’re going to need protection.”
“Me!”
“Anybody I’m close to is in trouble. The best thing we can do is call the local cops.”
She gave me a dismayed glance. “But I can’t—I have to be in Washington—Oh, Mike!”
“It won’t be too bad in the city, kid, but out here you’re too alone.”
Laura thought about it, then shrugged. “I suppose you’re right. After Leo was killed the police made me keep several guns handy. In fact, there’s one in each room.”
“Can you use them?”
Her smile was wan. “The policeman you met the last time showed me.”
“Swell, but what about out here?”
“There’s a shotgun in the corner of the bathhouse.”
“Loaded?”
“Yes.”
“A shotgun isn’t exactly a handgun.”
“Leo showed me how to use it. We used to shoot skeet together at the other end of the property.”
“Police protection would still be your best bet.”
“Can it be avoided?”
“Why stick