Nick watched the lobby and dialed again. This time he called Hadway House and asked for Rita Jameson.
"Hello, Miss Jameson? Nick Carter. Sorry I'm late." Rita sounded strained.
"Thank God it's you." He could hear a sigh of relief, and her voice lightened just a little. "I thought you'd changed your mind."
"Not a chance. I was afraid
"Oh, God. Wasn't this morning awful? I can't get it out of my mind." The voice rose again. "That poor man! And the children and the screams and the blood. I can't
"Easy, now. Take it easy." Nick was alarmed by the familiar, siren-like sound of hysteria. But "I can't bear it" seemed a funny thing to say. Well, maybe not. The horror of it
"Do you intend to fall apart, or are you going to pull yourself together? Because if you disintegrate, you do it alone. If there's one thing I can't stand, it's an hysterical female."
He waited. They usually nibbled on that line.
"If there's one thing / can't stand," Rita answered coldly, "it's a man who thinks it matters worth a damn what
"That's better." He laughed aloud. "Those old hackneyed phrases nearly always do the trick."
There was a brief silence, then: "Oh." And a little laugh.
"What time shall I pick you up?" Nick asked briskly. "Let's see… it's now eight-thirty, and I'm afraid I still have one or two things to do. Do you think you can hold out until about nine, or nine-fifteen?"
"If you're thinking of food, I've never been less hungry in my life. But I'd just as soon you didn't pick me up at this place." She thought out loud. "We could meet at the Cafe Arnold, or at… no, I don't think I want to wait in a restaurant."
"A bar?"
"No, of course not. See you at nine-fifteen."
He hung up. There was one more call to make. His finger traced out the familiar numbers.
"Frankie? Nick."
If he had been tailed from the airport it seemed only fair to warn Frankie that someone might have an eye on his house. It was unlikely, but possible. He told him what had happened.
Frankie Gennaro cackled.
"Don't worry about me, kid. If I was a sitting duck for any tail I'd a been dead a dozen times over. And I don't mind a little action. Still got some gadgets need trying out. You know, like under real-life conditions, as you might say. But, you, fella! You need lessons. Good thing you're only working for the Government. You'd make a no-good hood!"
He cackled again and hung up.
Nick looked out into the lobby. A middle-aged man with a prosperous-looking executive paunch was settling himself into an easy chair. A youngish man with a crew cut waited for the express elevator. He carried a bag that looked as though it might contain sales samples. Nick knew that it was filled with the delicate tools of his specialized trade. Agents K-7 and A-24 were on the job.
Nick spent what was left of the short time before his appointment checking in at the Roosevelt. He bought a cheap one-suiter at Liggett's and walked to the hotel keeping an eye peeled for trailing shadows. If they had found him once, they could find him again. But if they had picked him up as he left the Biltmore, K-7 would have spotted a tail and they would have formed a neat little procession of three. As far as he could make out, though, he had drawn no tail.
A late edition of the New York
It was just a skeleton story, breathing unsolved mysteries and suggesting no official unraveling of the bizarre event, but it did offer one scrap of worthwhile information:
"…
Bullseye for Mr. Hawk, again.