look out of their front windows, doctors frown, doctors show nervousness, doctors have things on their mind and show the strain. Doctors are just people, born to sorrow, fighting the long grim fight like the rest of us.
But there was something about the way this one behaved that intrigued me. I looked at my watch, decided it was time to get something to eat, lit another cigarette and didn’t move.
It took about five minutes. Then a green sedan whisked around the corner and bore down the block. It coasted to a stop in front of Dr. Almore’s house and its tall buggywhip aerial quivered. A big man with dusty blond hair got out and went up to Dr. Almore’s front door. He rang the bell and leaned down to strike a match on the step. His head came around and he stared across the street exactly at where I was sitting.
The door opened and he went into the house. An invisible hand gathered the curtains at Dr. Almore’s study window and blanked the room. I sat there and stared at the sun-darkened lining of the curtains. More time trickled by.
The front door opened again and the big man loafed casually down the steps and through the gate. He snapped his cigarette end off into the distance and rumpled his hair. He shrugged once, pinched the end of his chin, and walked diagonally across the street. His steps in the quiet were leisurely and distinct. Dr. Almore’s curtains moved apart again behind him. Dr. Almore stood in his window and watched.
A large freckled hand appeared on the sill of the car door at my elbow. A large face, deeply lined, hung above it. The man had eyes of metallic blue. He looked at me solidly and spoke in a deep harsh voice.
“Waiting for somebody?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” I said. “Am I?”
“I’ll ask the questions.”
“Well, I’ll be damned,” I said. “So that’s the answer to the pantomime.”
“What pantomime?” He gave me a hard level unfriendly stare from his very blue eyes.
I pointed across the street with my cigarette. “Nervous Nellie and the telephone. Calling the cops, after first getting my name from the Auto Club, probably, then looking it up in the city directory. What goes on?”
“Let me see your driver’s license.”
I gave him back his stare. “You fellows ever flash a buzzer—or is acting tough all the identification you need?”
“If I have to get tough, fellow, you’ll know it.”
I leaned down and turned my ignition key and pressed the starter. The motor caught and idled down.
“Cut that motor,” he said savagely, and put his foot on the running board.
I cut the motor again and leaned back and looked at him.
“God damn it,” he said, “do you want me to drag you out of there and bounce you on the pavement?”
I got my wallet out and handed it to him. He drew the celluloid pocket out and looked at my driver’s license, then turned the pocket over and looked at the photostat of my other license on the back. He rammed it contemptuously back into the wallet and handed me the wallet. I put it away. His hand dipped and came up with a blue and gold police badge.
“Degarmo, detective-lieutenant,” he said in his heavy brutal voice.
“Pleased to meet you, lieutenant.”
“Skip it. Now tell why you’re down here casing Almore’s place.”
“I’m not casing Almore’s place, as you put it, lieutenant. I never heard of Dr. Almore and I don’t know of any reason why I should want to case his house.”
He turned his head to spit. I was meeting the spitting boys today.
“What’s your grift then? We don’t like peepers down here. We don’t have one in town.”
“Is that so?”
“Yeah, that’s so. So come on, talk it up. Unless you want to ride down to the clubhouse and sweat it out under the bright lights.”
I didn’t answer him.
“Her folks hire you?” he asked suddenly.
I shook my head.
“The last boy that tried it ended up on the road gang, sweetheart.”
“I bet it’s good,” I said, “if only I could guess.