could be. He has a pistol permit. I’ll have it checked.” His eyes searched English’s face. “I don’t think there’s much doubt that it was suicide, Mr. English.”
English moved around the room, his hands still in his pockets. The fragrant smell of his cigar followed him as he moved.
“What makes you say that?”
Morilli hesitated; then, moving into the room, he closed the door behind him.
“Things I’ve heard. He was short of money.”
English stopped walking up and down and fixed Morilli with his cold, hard eyes.
“Don’t let me hold you up any longer, Lieutenant. You’ll be wanting to get some action in here.”
“I thought I’d wait until you came,” Morilli said uncomfortably.
“I appreciate that. But I’ve seen all I want to see. I’ll wait in the car. When you’re through here, let me know. I want to look the place over, have a look at his papers.”
“It could take an hour, Mr. English. Would you want to wait that long?”
English frowned.
“Have you told his wife yet?” he asked, jerking his head at the still body across the desk.
“I’ve told no one but you, Mr. English. Would you like me to take care of his wife? I could send an officer.”
English shook his head.
“I guess I’ll see her.” He hesitated, his frown deepening. “Maybe you don’t know it, but Roy and I haven’t exactly hit it off recently. I don’t even know his home address.”
“I’ve got it here,” Morilli said, his face expressionless. He picked up a wallet on the desk. “I went through his pockets as a matter of form.” He handed English a card. “Know where it is?”
English read the card.
“Chuck will.” He flicked the card with his finger nail. “Did he have any money on him?”
“Four bucks,” Morilli said.
English took the wallet from Morilli’s hand, glanced into it, then put it in his pocket.
“I’ll see his wife. Can you get one of your men to clean up here? I may be sending someone down to check his files.”
“I’ll fix it, Mr. English.”
“So you heard he was short of money,” English said. “How did you hear that, Lieutenant?”
Morilli scratched the side of his jaw, his dark eyes uneasy.
“The commissioner mentioned it. He knew I knew him, and he told me to have a word with him. I was going to see him tomorrow.”
English took the cigar from between his teeth and touched the ash off onto the floor.
“A word about what?”
Morilli looked away.
“He had been worrying people for money.”
English stared at him.
“What people?”
“Two or three clients he had worked for last year. They complained to the commissioner. I’m sorry to tell you this, Mr. English, but he was going to lose his licence.”
English nodded his head. His eyes narrowed.
“So the commissioner wanted you to talk to him. Why didn’t the commissioner speak to me instead of you, Lieutenant?”
“I told him he should,” Morilli said, a faint flush rising up his neck and flooding his pale face. “But he isn’t an easy man to talk to.”
English smiled suddenly; it wasn’t a pleasant smile.
“Nor am I.”
“What I’ve told you, Mr. English, is off the record,” Morilli said quickly. “The commissioner would have my hide if he knew I…”
“All right, forget it,” English broke in. He looked at the body. “It won’t bring him back to life, will it?”
“That’s right,” Morilli said, relaxing a little. “Still off the record, he would have lost his licence at the end of the week.”
“For trying to raise money from old clients?” English asked sharply.
“I guess he was pretty desperate for money. He threatened one party. She wouldn’t bring a charge, but it was near blackmail as damn it.”
The muscles either side of English’s jaw stood out suddenly.
“We’d better have a talk about this some other time. I won’t hold you up now. I’ll see you in the morning.”
“Yes, Mr. English,” Morilli said.
As English crossed to the door, Morilli went on, “I hear your boy won his fight. Congratulations.”
English paused.
“That’s right. By the way, I told Vince to put a bet on for you. A hundred’s brought you three. Look in tomorrow and see Vince. He’ll pay you cash.” His eyes met Morilli’s. “Okay?”
Morilli flushed.
“Why, that’s pretty nice of you, Mr. English. I meant to lay a bet…”
“Yeah, but you didn’t have the time. I know how it is. Well, I didn’t forget you. I like to look after my friends. Glad you won.”
He walked into the outer office, and into the passage. He jerked his head at Chuck and stepped into the elevator.
Morilli and the two detectives stood in the doorway and watched the elevator descend.
“Didn’t seem to care much,” one of the detectives said as he walked into the office again.
“What did you expect him to do?” Morilli said coldly. “Burst into tears?”
III
English had only met Roy’s wife once, and that casually at a cocktail party more than a year ago.
He remembered he hadn’t thought much of her, but was prepared to admit prejudice. She had struck him as a dolly-faced girl of nineteen or twenty with a strident voice and an irritating habit of calling everyone “darling.” But there was no doubt at the time that she had been very much in love with Roy, and he wondered, as he sat hunched up in the Cadillac, whether that love had survived.
It was characteristic of English not to let Morilli break the news to her of her husband’s death. He never allowed himself to shirk any unpleasant task. It would have been easy to have let a police officer see her first, and then call on her, but he had no wish to avoid his responsibilities. Roy was his brother, and Roy’s wife was entitled to hear the news from him, and from no one else.
He glanced out of the window.
Chuck had turned off the main road, and was driving with easy assurance down an avenue lined on either side by small, smart bungalows. Chuck had a brilliantly developed sense of direction. He seemed to know instinctively whether he was driving north or east as if his brain housed a compass. He never appeared to consult a map nor had English ever known him to ask the way.
“This is the joint, boss.” Chuck said suddenly. “The white house by the lamp post.”
He slowed down, swung the car to the curb and pulled up outside a small, white bungalow.
A light showed in one of the upper rooms through the drawn curtains.
English got out of the car, hunching his broad shoulders against the cold wind. He left his hat and coat in the car, and tossed his cigar into the gutter. For some seconds he looked at the bungalow, conscious of surprise and irritation.
For