shut. Her head moved uneasily on the pillow. The bed looked as if an earthquake had hit it, but I wasn't going to waste my time tucking a baby like this in.
She suddenly snapped out of it, and tried to sit up. The look she gave me would have burnt a hole in a sheet of asbestos. I grinned at her. “Sorry to be so rough, sister,” I said, “but you certainly asked for it.”
She began to call me names again. Well, names don't break bones, but after a minute of it I got mad. That dame had about the dirtiest mouth I'd ever run into. I got out of the chair and grabbed a pillow. I slapped the pillow down hard on her face and held it there. I gave her a few seconds, then took if away.
“Cut that stuff out,” I said grimly, “or you'll get smothered.”
She lay there, her eyes stormy, and I could see by her wriggling she was doing her best to bust loose. I wasn't worrying about that. I knew how to tie a knot, and if she did get her hands free I could always put her out again. I wasn't having any more gentle stuff with this dame... she was poison.
I sat on the bed beside her.
“Now you an' I are goin' to have a little chat,” I said. “If you don't cough up what I want to know, it's goin' to be too bad for you. I've played ball up to now, but a floozie like you deserves to get the dirty end of any deal, an' I'm goin' to see you get it.”
“Don't start anything, Mason,” a voice said by the door.
I looked quickly over my shoulder.
Earl Katz was standing in the doorway. He was holding a blue-nose automatic in his hand, and the barrel was pointing right at me.
CHAPTER SIX
SURPRISED? I'LL SAY I was surprised! You could have knocked me down with a mangle. What the hell was Katz doing here? What connection had he with Vessi's moll?
I wasn't going to show him that he had pulled a quick one on me. I gave him a smile. “Still pushin' them into pockets, Bud?” I said.
“An' talkin' about pool, did you hear the one about the guy who was laying the red—?”
“Skip it, Mason,” Katz said out of the side of his mouth. That's another thing I love. These guys who've been to so many tough movies that they just have to talk out of the side of their mouths, because they think it's the thing to do. “Get her untied.”
I shook my head. “You're crazy,” I said. “You don't know what you're saying. If I took the rope off this dame she'd kill us both.”
The automatic jerked up. “Listen, wise guy,” Katz said, “you ain't goin' to get anywhere with this line. Untie that dame, an' make it snappy.”
Ackie had said this guy was as dangerous as a rattlesnake. To look at him now, I thought Ackie might be right. He didn't look the dope any more. There was a cold, vicious gleam in his eye, and I thought he'd love to have a crack at me. When a guy's got a gun I don't argue too long. Guns always did make me nervous, anyway.
“Turn over, Tootz,” I said.
I wasn't looking forward to the time when she got her hands free. The look she gave me didn't exactly reassure me that a love feast was on its way.
I got her hands free and stepped away from her. I reckoned that I'd sooner argue with Katz's gun than take anything from her.
She sat up, rubbing her wrists. “Give me a wrap,” she snarled at Katz.
Without taking his eyes from me, he pulled another wrap off the hook on the door and tossed it to her. She struggled into it and got off the bed. She looked a hell of a wreck. Blood from my nose was all over her shoulders and she'd got a big bruise on her jaw. I had left my fingerprints all over her arms, and the punch I had got in on her shoulder was already turning red and green.
She walked into the bathroom and shut the door. I could hear the water running.
“Sit down,” Katz said, jerking
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