happens if you die in here?” he asked conversationally.
“Every Wednesday and Saturday,” the voice repeated.
“Um,” said Harry Morgan.
“’Cept once in a while,” the voice whispered. “Like a couple days ago. When was it? Yeah. Monday that’d be. Guy they had in here for a week or so. Don’t remember how long. Lose tracka time here. Yeah. Sure lose tracka time here.”
There was a long pause, and Morgan, controlling the tenseness in his voice, said: “What about the guy Monday?”
“Oh. Him. Yeah, well, they took him out Monday.”
Morgan waited again, got nothing further, and asked: “Dead?”
“’Course he was dead. They was tryin’ to get somethin’ out of him. Somethin’ about a cable. He jumped one of the guards, and they blackjacked him. Hit ’im too hard, I guess. Guard sure got hell for that, too. Me, I’m lucky. They don’t ask me no questions.”
“What are you in for?” Morgan asked.
“Don’t know. They never told me. I don’t ask for fear they’ll remember. They might start askin’ questions.”
Morgan considered. This could be a plant, but he didn’t think so. The voice was too authentic, and there would be no purpose in his information. That meant that Jack Latrobe really was dead. They had killed him. An ice cold hardness surged along his nerves.
* * * *
The door at the far end of the corridor clanged, and a brace of heavy footsteps clomped along the floor. Two men came abreast of the steel-barred door and stopped.
One of them, a well-dressed, husky-looking man in his middle forties, said: “O.K., Morgan. How did you do it?”
“I put on blue lipstick and kissed my elbows—both of ’em. Going widdershins, of course.”
“What are you talking about?”
“What are you talking about?”
“The guy in your hotel suite. You killed him. You cut off both feet, one hand, and his head. How’d you do it?”
Morgan looked at the man. “Police?”
“Nunna your business. Answer the question.”
“I use a cobweb I happened to have with me. Who was he?”
The cop’s face was whitish. “You chop a guy up like that and then don’t know who he is?”
“I can guess. I can guess that he was an agent for PMC 873 who was trespassing illegally. But I didn’t kill him. I was in…er…custody when it happened.”
“Not gonna talk, huh?” the cop said in a hard voice. “O.K., you’ve had your chance. We’ll be back.”
“I don’t think I’ll wait,” said Morgan.
“You’ll wait. We got you on a murder charge now. You’ll wait. Wise guy.” He turned and walked away. The other man followed like a trained hound.
* * * *
After the door clanged, the man in the next cell whispered: “Well, you’re for it. They’re gonna ask you questions.”
Morgan said one obscene word and stood up. It was time to leave.
He had been searched thoroughly. They had left him only his clothes, nothing else. They had checked to make sure that there were no microminiaturized circuits on him. He was clean.
So they thought.
Carefully, he caught a thread in the lapel of his jacked and pulled it free. Except for a certain springiness, it looked like an ordinary silon thread. He looped it around one of the bars of his cell, high up. The ends he fastened to a couple of little decorative hooks in his belt—hooks covered with a shell of synthetic ruby.
Then he leaned back, putting his weight on the thread.
Slowly, like a knife moving through cold peanut butter, the thread sank into the steel bar, cutting through its one-inch thickness with increasing difficulty until it was half-way through. Then it seemed to slip the rest of the way through.
He repeated the procedure thrice more, making two cuts in each of two bars. Then he carefully removed the sections he had cut out. He put one of them on the floor of his cell and carried the other in his hand—three feet of one-inch steel makes a nice weapon if it becomes necessary.
Then he stepped through the hole he had made.
The man in the next cell widened his eyes as Harry Morgan walked by. But Morgan could tell that he saw nothing. He had only heard. His eyes had been removed long before. It was the condition of the man that convinced Morgan with utter finality that he had told the truth.
CHAPTER VII
Mr. Edway Tarnhorst felt fear, but no real surprise when the shadow in the window of his suite in the Grand Central Hotel materialized into a human being. But he couldn’t help asking one question.
“How did you get there?” His voice was husky. “We’re eighty floors above the street.”
“Try climbing asteroids for a while,” said Commodore Sir Harry Morgan. “You’ll get used to it. That’s why I knew Jack hadn’t died ‘accidentally’—he was murdered.”
“You…you’re not carrying a gun,” Tarnhorst said.
“Do I need one?”
Tarnhorst swallowed. “Yes. Fergus will be back in a moment.”
“Who’s Fergus?”
“He’s the man who controls PMC 873.”
Harry Morgan shoved his hand into his jacket pocket “Then I have a gun. You saw it, didn’t you?”
“Yes. Yes…I saw it when you came in.”
“Good. Call him.”
When Sam Fergus came in, he looked as though he had had about three or four too many slugs of whiskey. There was an odd fear an his face.
“What’s th’ matter, Edway? I—” The fear increased when he saw Morgan. “Whadda you here for?”
“I’m here to make a speech Fergus. Sit down.” When Fergus still stood, Morgan repeated what he had said with only a trace more emphasis. “Sit down.”
Fergus sat. So did Tarnhorst.
“Both of you pay special attention,” Morgan said, a piratical gleam in his eyes. “You killed a friend of mine. My best friend. But I’m not going to kill either of you. Yet. Just listen and listen carefully.”
Even Tarnhorst looked frightened. “Don’t move, Sam. He’s got a gun. I saw it when he came in.”
“What…what do you want?” Fergus asked.
“I want to give you the information you want. The information that you killed Jack for.” There was cold hatred in his voice. “I am going to tell you something that you have thought you wanted, but which you really will wish you had never heard. I’m going to tell you about that cable.”
Neither Fergus nor Tarnhorst said a word.
“You want a cable. You’ve heard that we use a cable that has a tensile strength of better than a hundred million pounds per square inch, and you want to know how it’s made. You tried to get the secret out of Jack because he was sent here as a commercial dealer. And he wouldn’t talk, so one of your goons blackjacked him too hard and then you had to drop him off a bridge to make it look like an accident.
“Then you got your hands on me. You were going to wring it out of me. Well, there is no necessity of that.” His grin became wolfish. “I’ll give you everything.” He paused. “If you want it.”
Fergus