Call in the Feds. Gordon Landsborough
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Название: Call in the Feds

Автор: Gordon Landsborough

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия:

isbn: 9781434447395

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ matter they didn’t like Gino. He looked what he was—scum. Something out of Italy, formless with soft fat—greasy-skinned, large-pored, a fat, flat, sallow face with a smear of moustache across it. He was a dandy with his rings and the silk scarf tucked into his shirt collar, though he hadn’t got round to shaving that day. That was like Gino—lazy. That was why he had taken to crime—working seemed tedious to the Italian immigrant.

      He and Eddy Eitel were running this gang between them, though neither had brains amounting to anything. They were just a pair of crude guns able to organise a stick-up....

      Bright came shoving his drooling, grinning, half-witted face round the corner. “I ain’t killed nobody so far. Ain’t nobody gonna be killed on this job?” he mouthed. Bright had killed a few men in his time, so he’d told them. He had been vague about the details, so they weren’t sure. Gino had picked him up recently because they’d lost a fellow when a mechanic in a filling station they were sticking up unexpectedly came at them with a gun. For a bank robbery it was safer to have four guns and a driver.

      Some of the tradesmen thought he was kidding, because it seemed too crude, that speech about killing someone. Then the loon fanned them with bad breath from between grinning, broken teeth and they saw the wildness in his wandering eyes and they weren’t so sure.

      Gino just grunted and said, “I got it all.” He took hold of the sack that had been stuffed with notes.

      Eddy said, quickly, “How much d’you reckon?”

      Gino shrugged. “Maybe twenty gee. Maybe more.” Then he wagged his gun at the crowding, silent bank customers. “Inside, you!” he ordered.

      They looked surprised. The bank clerks had started to come out of the big safe, but Gino’s gun stopped them. The four gangsters backed away and covered the little group with their guns.

      “Get inside,” Gino ordered, “else I’ll sic my dawg on you.” He indicated Bright, open-mouthed and expectant behind his gun. Bright with his finger straining eagerly at the trigger. And they understood and shuffled back hurriedly. The blue-lipped man was having to be held up; he was in pretty bad shape. Eddy saw the janitor and one of the bank employees in front of the big safe and said, “you, too,” and they stepped back quickly.

      Bright shambled forward a pace, disappointed. “Don’t we kill just one?” he pleaded. There was no doubt he meant it. It made Eddy Eidel look quickly across at Gino, but he didn’t seem to be bothered by it.

      The squat, shapeless Italian stepped forward when they were all inside the strong room. He put his shoulder to the massive door and started to close it. The men inside in the strong room panicked at that.

      “You can’t do that,” shouted one of the bank employees, probably the manager. “My God, you don’t know what you’re doing. There’s a time-lock on that door. If it’s closed, we can’t get out till eight tomorrow morning.”

      Gino said, casually, “That, brother, is the idea,” and moved the door faster.

      There was frenzied commotion at that. Suddenly every man inside the strong room found his voice. Above the commotion they heard the janitor’s voice suddenly appealing.

      “There’s a mighty sick man here. You gotta do something for him....”

      Bright slavered eagerly, “Let’s kill’m. Jes’ one shot, huh?”

      But Gino rushed the door to. There was a metallic, clicking sound, and immediately the bank was quiet. The door must have been soundproofed.

      Gino looked round. He scooped the small change out from the tills, put it in his pocket and then changed his mind and took most of it out again. It was chicken-feed and weighed too heavily in his coat.

      Then they walked across to the street door and Eddy briskly opened it. They came out into the sunshine in a group, Gino calling over his shoulder, “Sure, sure. And thanks a lot, bud. We won’t make it so late next time.”

      That was for the benefit of the few passers-by. It looked good, natural, and no one gave more than a glance at the stick-up men. The door shut and locked automatically behind them.

      They got into their car and Maxie drove steadily away. There was no hurry. Properly handled, a daylight bank robbery is a comparatively simple affair, and this was probably a better hold-up than most. Probably it would be several hours before the alarm was raised—it might not he until the following morning, in fact—and long before dark they expected to be within the friendly jungle of New York’s East Side.

      So they tooled steadily along the seaside resort’s tree-lined boulevard, obeying every traffic law like good citizens; and they felt at peace with the world because they had a sack full of notes that were probably untraceable because of their small value.

      Gino preened and felt himself a big-shot mobster. This was better than sticking up filling stations, with crazy mechanics running loose with guns.

      Only Bright was disconsolate. He said, vaguely, “We didn’t kill no one. You said to be ready to kill, Gino, but no one did nothin’ wrong. Ain’t we gonna have some excitement?”

      Eddy shot out of the corner of his mouth, “By cripes, Gino, the buzzard means it. Where in hell did you dig him up? He’s dangerous, that guy.”

      Gino was picking his teeth—the car was tooling along as smoothly as all that. They were coming out of the town now, and feeling better with every minute of that lovely afternoon that passed. He sucked a tooth clean and then said back, “Aw, Bright’s all right. He ain’t quite bright, maybe, but what the hell do you want on a job like this? Einstein?”

      Eddy muttered, “You can’t tell, with these bird-brains. You never know what they’ll do—”

      Maxie Christman ceased to he a living question mark over the driving wheel. His body straightened as he stood on the brake pedal, became instead an exclamation mark.

      They found themselves crashing forward as the car’s momentum was suddenly zeroed, heard Maxie’s voice bellow back at them, “A trap!”

      Just round the bend where the road joined the river valley a car was pulled across the highway. Men were climbing out. They wore uniforms.

      “Cops!” snarled Eddy, but there was bewilderment in his tone. How could the cops have got to know of the bank hold-up so quickly? Then he leaned forward. Speculation could be left till later; just now they were in a jam and had to get themselves out of it.

      Eddy could act quickly. Now he grabbed Maxie’s shoulder and rapped, “Ram that car, then turn and go back!”

      That was the programme. No good trying to turn here, within eighty yards of the cops. Those cops carried guns, and anyway, long before they’d got their car pointing back into Freshwater the cop car would have swung round and caught up with them.

      Put the cop car out of action—and hope to God it didn’t put their car out, too! That was the programme.

      Maxie opened up instantly and the heavy gang car leapt into violent acceleration. They saw the cops scatter, and it was obvious that the move was unexpected and they were thrown off their stride.

      Then the mobster’s car crashed head on into the side of the sleek, speedy police car. Glass splintered, metal tore. Above the noise Eddy shouted, “Back, Maxie. Reverse....”

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