Читаем Knock Knock Who's There? полностью

Dukes had now turned very hostile.

"If you want to know anything about Mr. Fuselli you go to the cops," he said. "Mr. Fuselli is a fine gentleman. You go to the cops: don't come here asking me questions."

Ernie sipped his beer and then laughed.

"You've got me all wrong, Mr. Dukes. Our job is to find Mr. Fuselli. We've been told what a fine man he is. We're trying to help him. Between you and me, a relative of his has left him some money: his aunt died last year and we're trying to clear up her estate."

Dukes hostility went away like a fist opening into a hand.

"Is that right? Mr. Fuselli has come into money?"

"He sure has. It's not my business to tell you how much," Ernie winked confidently, "but it's a nice slice . . . We've been told he lives around here, but we haven't his address. Like I said: we get all kinds of jobs. This is one of the nice ones."

Listening, Toni marvelled at Ernie's glib talk and envied him. He knew he could never talk as convincingly as this.

"Well, I'm glad. Mr. FuseIli is a good friend of mine," Dukes said. "Right now, he's away. What a shame! Left last week for a trip up north."

Ernie slopped some of his beer.

"Is that right? Do you know how long he'll be away?"

"No, sir. Mr. Fuselli goes north from time to time. Sometimes he comes back in a week . . . sometimes in a month, but he always comes back." Dukes grinned. "Just shuts up his little house and takes off."

"North? Where?"

Dukes shook his head.

"Mr. Fuselli never says. He'll come in here, have a beer, then he says to me, 'Well, Harry, I guess I'll go north for a while. See you when I get back.' Mr. Fuselli never talks about himself and I don't ask questions."

Ernie lit a cigarette while he thought.

"Doesn't someone look after his place while he's away?"

Dukes laughed.

"Not much of a place to look after. No, I guess no one goes near it. It's in a pretty lonely spot."

"Just where is it?"

"Out on Hampton's hill. You being a stranger here wouldn't know Hampton's hill, would you?"

Containing his impatience with an effort, Ernie agreed.

"Well, you go down Main street, take the dirt road to your left, drive up the hill for a couple of miles and pass Noddy Jenkin's farm. Then you go on for another mile and you'll see Mr. Fuselli's place on your right: a little clapboard house, but he keeps it nice."

"We'd better write to him," Ernie said and finished his beer. "The address is Hampton hill, Jackson?"

"Yeah. This is good news about him inheriting money. An aunt? Jesus! She must have been old. Mr. Fuselli is pushing seventy."

Ernie gaped at him.

"Seventy?"

"That's right. He had his seventy-second birthday last month, but he's tough. Make no mistake about that . . . spry as a man half his age."

"Well, I guess we'll be getting along. Nice meeting you, Mr. Dukes."

After shaking hands, Ernie followed Toni out into the sunshine. "Canned stuff and bread and a bottle of Scotch."

"What the hell for?" Toni demanded.

"Go get enough food to last us a couple of days," Ernie said. "Can't you see all these old creeps are watching us?"

Toni went down the street to the general store while Ernie got into the passenger's seat of the car. He pushed his hat over his eyes and rested.

After a while Toni came back with a big bag of groceries and a bottle of Scotch. He put the bag on the back seat, then got under the driving wheel.

"So now what?"

"We go to Hampton hill or whatever the hell it's called," Ernie said.

"Is that such a hot idea?"

"Use your nut. We flew down here. Johnny and Fuselli are driving down. We have four or five hours start ahead of them. It's my bet they'll bring the money here. When they arrive, we'll be all over them before they know what's hit them, but we could have a wait."

Toni thought about this, then grunted.

"Okay."

Engaging gear, he drove fast along the broad road, lined on either side with trees heavy with oranges and headed for Hampton hill.

FIVE

A cup of coffee before him, Johnny sat at a small table and looked around the crowded cafe. There was a steady roar of voices as long-haul truckers greeted each other, ate hamburgers, swigged numerous cups of coffee, then heaved themselves to their feet and went out into the pale sunshine as other truckers came in.

Johnny glanced at his watch. The time was 05.25. He had to get moving soon, he told himself, but up to now, he had held back as every trucker seemed to know every other trucker and he was uneasy about approaching a group of them. He had tried one man who stood near him while waiting for ham and eggs, but the man shook his head.

"No luck, pal. No passengers: against the Company's rules."

Then a powerfully-built man came in and Johnny noted with surprise no one greeted him. This man went to the bar and ordered pancakes and syrup and coffee, then looked around for a vacant seat.

Johnny waved to him and carrying the plate of food, the big man came over and sat down.

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