Mission to Siena Read online

Page 15


  “Splendid.” Alsconi examined his finger-nails, a bland expression on his fat face. “Where is Willie?”

  “He’s still at the villa. I told him to wait until Jacopo relieved him,” Felix said.

  Alsconi scratched the side of his nose while he looked at Felix.

  “So you have the report only from Lorelli, and no confirmation yet from Willie?”

  Felix stiffened.

  “Confirmation? I don’t understand. I haven’t yet talked to Willie, but he won’t have anything to tell me. Are you suggesting we can’t trust Lorelli any more?”

  Alsconi lifted an eyebrow.

  “Certainly not. It is always better to have confirmation of any report. For all we know Lorelli might have lost her nerve at the last moment. She might not have gone to the villa. I am quite sure she did go, but it will be more satisfactory not only for me but for her if Willie confirmed what took place at the interview.”

  “Willie was watching from the outside,” Felix said. “He wouldn’t have heard what was said.”

  Alsconi picked up the telephone receiver.

  “Carlos? Send Jacopo at once to the Trioni villa to relieve Willie. Willie is to report to me immediately he comes in.”

  He replaced the receiver. “Don’t let us assume anything, Felix. It is a fatal mistake. I’ll talk to Willie.”

  Felix shrugged angrily.

  “If that’s the way you want it.”

  “Yes. We have agreed that Lorelli is inclined to get flustered. I want to be sure that she has handled the assignment well. Very soon I shall have a special job for her. Crantor has a large amount of sterling that should be brought here. I want Lorelli to go to London and bring this money back.” Alsconi played a soundless tune on the edge of his desk.

  “You are satisfied that she is still reliable? The money is in cash, and there is a lot of it. I wouldn’t want her to run off with it.”

  “She wouldn’t do that,” Felix said. He had to make an effort to meet Alsconi’s probing eyes. “Of course she is reliable, but we can’t send her on that job. The London police have a description of her. It would be risky to send her to London again.”

  “Ah, yes. I had forgotten that. Well, someone must get the money. I need it. Would you trust Willie to do it?”

  Felix shook his head.

  “No. Willie’s all right for the day-to-day work, but I wouldn’t trust him with money.”

  “Then I’ll have to see if Crantor can suggest anyone,” Alsconi said. “We had better find some other work for Lorelli to do. She is rather lost here, I feel. No scope for her.” He paused, then went on, looking fixedly at Felix. “I have been thinking that we might begin limited operations in South America: Buenos Aires, for instance. Would she mind going there, do you think?”

  Felix very nearly betrayed himself. He covered his confusion by taking out a cigarette and lighting it. Was this a coincidence or had Alsconi somehow overheard their conversation?

  “Buenos Aires? I don’t know. I can ask her.”

  Alsconi smiled.

  “Leave it for a moment. When I have more time I will talk to her myself. It is a long time now since I have had a chat with her. Sometimes I wonder if it is wise to employ women in the organization. They have their uses, of course, but they can be unpredictable. I don’t like unpredictable people.”

  “You can’t say Lorelli is unpredictable,” Felix said hurriedly. “You seem to have lost faith in her, but you have no reason for it. After all she is one of the original members of the organization. She deserves better treatment. I have always found her reliable when it comes to carrying out orders.”

  “You are in a better position to judge her than I am,” Alsconi said. “But I think a change would be good for her: new faces, new routines. Would you be interested in going with her to Buenos Aires and handling my business there?”

  “If you told me to go, I’d go,” Felix said, aware that he was beginning to sweat. “But I should have thought I was more useful to you here. I’ve handled the set-up for you for two years now.

  It isn’t an easy set-up to run. If I had the choice I would stay here.”

  Alsconi lifted his eyebrows.

  “That would mean losing Lorelli. I thought you were attached to her.”

  “No woman has her hooks that deep into me,” Feliх said. “Do you intend sending her to Buenos Aires?”

  “Perhaps not. It’s an idea that occurred to me.” Aisconi shrugged his shoulders. “I’m still thinking about it. I should have to be very sure that Lorelli could do the work and wanted to do it. Let us continue to think about it.” He waved his hand the gesture of dismissal.

  Felix was glad to escape from the staring, probing eyes.

  He was badly rattled and he went to his room» took from a cupboard a bottle of whisky and poured himself liberal shot.

  Then he sat down, holding the glass in his hand while he considered the situation.

  After some thought, he told himself that AlsconVs reference to Buenos Aires must have been a coincidence. ft ^Vent only to show how crazy and irresponsible Lorelli’s ideas. If he had thought, it was obvious that a town with so muc)i money as Buenos Aires would eventually come on Alsconi’s schedule. Besides, if Alsconi had overheard Lorelli trying to persuade him to clear out, he wouldn’t have put him on his guard to this. He would have struck. He knew how Alsconi worked, he was quick and ruthless.

  He finished his drink and set down the glass. tfe decided the situation wanted careful watching, but it wasn’t d^gerous.

  The great point in his favour was there was no one to tAce his place. The organization didn’t run itself and he had purpose underlined that to Alsconi. There were a hundred and one details to be watched and Felix had all these details at his fingers’ end.

  Alsconi wouldn’t be so stupid as to get rid of him, he told himself. He would only saddle himself with all the dirty work that Felix now shouldered. But from now on, he would be on his guard. He would watch Carlos who carried out Alsconi’s instructions.

  His hand went inside his coat and his fingers touched the butt of his .45. Carlos was quick and big, but a .45 slug would stop him.

  He had another drink and then got to his feet. He would go along and talk to Lorelli. He’d throw a hell of a scare into her.

  She must stop this yammering about leaving the organization once and for all. That kind of talk could be fatal.

  He went over to the mirror and straightened his tie. He grinned at his reflection. The whisky gave him a feeling of security. He was still smiling as he went out of the room.

  But he wouldn’t have felt so secure if he had known that at that moment Alsconi was talking to Crantor who sat in his hotel bedroom straining to hear Alsconi’s voice that came to him over the crackling telephone line.

  “I want you to fly out here at once,” Alsconi said. “Take route 3 and bring the goods with you. You know what I mean?”

  “Yes,” Crantor said, scarcely believing his ears. This was the first time he had heard Alsconi’s voice. It was a big moment for him.

  “Be here by midnight tonight,” Alsconi went on. “I am making changes here. I may find a better job for you.”

  “I’ll be there,” Crantor said, his nightmare of a face lighting up.

  “Good,” Alsconi said and replaced the receiver. He reached for the house telephone. “Carlos? Who is down there with you?”

  “There’s Menotto, Mr Felix and Miss Lorelli,” Carlos said. “Jacopo has gone to get Willie.”

  “Send Menotto to me, then turn the current off,” Alsconi said. “No one is to leave. Do you understand? Let me know if anyone does try to leave.”

  “Yes, boss,” Carlos said; the surprise in his voice made Alsconi grin evilly.

  A faint sound behind him as he sat with his back to the tree, made Willie’s hand fly to the inside of his coat and jerk out his .38. He rolled over, bringing the gun into a firing position.

  Jacopo who had come out from behind the shrubs came to a
n abrupt standstill.

  “That’s the way numbskulls get shot,” Willie snarled. “Why didn’t you call out, you dimwit?”

  ” I didn’t see you,” Jacopo said, moving forward again. “What’s the matter with you -jumpy?”

  Willie slid the gun back into its holster that was strapped under his armpit. He got to his feet.

  “Nothing’s the matter with me. You taking over now? You’re early for a change, aren’t you?”

  “The old man wants you,” Jacopo said; his eyes showed his curiosity. “Rather you than me. What have you been up to?”

  Willie stared at him, his thin, rat-like face questioning. “You mean Alsconi wants me?”

  “Who else? You’d better get moving. He said he wanted to see you at once, and he’s waiting.”

  Willie wiped his sweating face with his dirty handkerchief. He had only spoken to Alsconi once in two years.

  Excitement and fear jostled his mind. Here was his chance to get his bonus. He wouldn’t have to rely on Felix. He could give Alsconi the dope about Lorelli direct. He felt a twinge of fear. But what did the old man want him for? Had he done something wrong?

  Jacopo, who took a pride in his appearance, regarded Willie with contempt and disgust. Willie hadn’t shaved that morning. His shirt was filthy and his shabby black suit was stained and creased.

  “You’d better clean up before you see him,” he said. “You look like a tramp.”

  “Never mind what I look like,” Willie snarled. “Did he say what he wanted me for?”

  “Is it likely; but you can guess, can’t you? He wants to kick your teeth in for doing nothing for the past months,” Jacopo said. “Or maybe Englemann’s persuaded him to let him have you.”

  Willie cursed him.

  “You’d better not keep him waiting,” Jacopo said, grinning. “He said at once and that means at once.”

  “I’m not scared of him,” Willie said untruthfully. “I’ve got something to tell him that’ll get me a sack of dough. You’ll stop grinning like an ape when you see the car I’m going to buy.”

  “Got a touch of the sun?” Jacopo asked blankly.

  “You wait and see,” Willie said darkly. “I keep my eyes and ears open. I’ve got information that the old man will pay big money for.”

  “What information?” Jacopo demanded.

  “He’ll tell you if he wants you to know,” Willie said. “Where’s the car?”

  “Down the lane. What have you got to tell him?”

  “Go jump in a lake,” Willie said and set off at a run through the trees.

  For the first time in his life Willie did not obey an order, and it was to prove fatal to him. Jacopo had said that Alsconi wanted to see him at once. Willie was anxious to make a good impression on Alsconi. He decided to sneak back to his room, have a shave and a wash and put on his best suit. The old man wouldn’t know he had spent ten minutes sprucing himself up before reporting to him, and the effect of his new suit might have good results, Willie told himself.

  He left the Citroen at the bottom of the drive and made his way through the shrubbery to the back entrance of the palazza. He entered the underground quarters by the concealed door a few seconds before Carlos threw the switch that put the door out of operation. Unaware that the exit was now sealed off, Willie scuttled quickly along the corridor to his room. He was opening the door when Felix appeared.

  “The old man wants you,” Felix said. “Have you seen him?” “Not yet,” Willie said uneasily. “Thought I’d have a wash first. What’s up?”

  “You’d better get a jerk into it. He wants to see you right away.” “I can’t go looking like this,” Willie whined. “What’s he want?”

  Felix crowded him into the small, fusty room Willie regarded as his home.

  “Nothing to get excited about,” Felix said, grimacing at the smell in the room. “It smells like a pig-sty in here.”

  “I can’t smell anything,” Willie said, stripping off his coat. He hung his gun holster over the back of a chair, then pulled off his shirt. He ran hot water into the toilet basin. “I’m not in trouble, am I?” He looked anxiously over his skinny shoulder at Felix.

  “No. He only wants to know what happened at the villa when Lorelli delivered the letter.”

  Willie stiffened and the cake of soap slipped out of his hand. The old man was smart, he thought, as he bent to pick up the soap; nothing seemed to escape him.

  Felix watching him, saw his start, saw the startled look on his rat-like face and suddenly felt an ice-cold chill creep up his spine.

  “You saw Lorelli?” he said, making his voice sound casual.

  “I saw and heard her,” Willie said and tried unsuccessfully to conceal a leer. He splashed his face with water, and began to lather his prickly stubble.

  “She didn’t see you?”

  “No.” Willie hesitated. He was undecided whether to tell Felix what he had overheard. He didn’t want to make an enemy of Felix. He would have to work with him long after Lorelli was forgotten, and Felix wouldn’t be pleased if Willie told Alsconi the news without first telling him. It wasn’t as if Felix could now stop him tilling the old man.

  Alsconi was waiting for him, and that would be more than Felix dared do. And since the old man was waiting for him, Felix wouldn’t dare get tough with him either. He decided to tell Felix. Two moments of sensation were better than one, he reasoned. In his position of safety he was tempted to see Felix’s face when he heard his girl was selling him out. “If she had seen me,” he said and leered, “she wouldn’t be here now.”

  Felix’s reaction was so quick Willie hadn’t a chance to grab his gun. He found himself caught by his throat and slammed against the wall.

  “What the hell do you mean?” Felix snarled, his face livid with rage and fear.

  Willie caught hold of Felix’s wrists and tried to lever his hands from his throat. His grotesque face covered with white lather turned purple as the steely fingers sank into his windpipe. Felix shook him, then slackened his grip.

  “What do you mean?” he repeated.

  Willie drew in a long, shuddering breath.

  “Let go of me!” he gasped. “I’ll tell the boss. Get away from me!”

  Felix slapped his face very hard with his open hand. The lather flew in an explosion of wet whiteness and splashed the wall.

  “Why shouldn’t she be here?” he demanded. “Come on; spill it before I knock your teeth down your throat.”

  “She’s double-crossed us,” Willie panted, tears of pain starting from his eyes. “She’s sold us out.”

  Felix lifted his clenched fist, then stopped. His face had turned the colour of snow.

  “You lying rat!” he said viciously.

  “I heard her,” Willie gasped, trying to grind himself into the wall to get away from Felix. “She said she wanted to quit the organization. She wanted money. She said she would get Micklem out for two hundred and fifty grand.”

  Felix remembered what Lorelli had said: You and I have to get out of this racket before it’s too late. Sooner or later the police are going to get on to us. We’ve got to get out!

  The crazy little fool! She was committing suicide.

  He stepped away from Willie.

  “You heard her say that?”

  Willie put his hand to his face and wiped off the lather.

  “Yes. You’ve got no right to hit me…”

  “Shut up!” Felix snapped. “Let’s have it. Every scrap of it.”

  Willie told him how he had seen Lorelli enter the villa and how he had gone after her in case she ran into trouble.

  “I did what you told me,” he said, his voice snivelling. “There were three of them in the room: the guy who got away the other night, a fat old bloke they called Cherry and this girl Rigby. She said she would go to New York right away.

  Then Lorelli said she was going to tell them something she wasn’t supposed to tell them. She said Micklem would never be released and we were after all his doug
h. She said if they promised to pay her two hundred and fifty grand, she would get him out.”

  “Did they agree?” Felix asked.

  “Of course they did, but it’s my bet she’ll never see the dough. She said she would work out a plan how to get him out.

  She’s going to see them again Thursday night. She’s going to show them where the alarms are and tell them about the guards.”

  Felix leaned forward. There was sweat on his face.

  “Listen, Willie, if you’re lying, I’ll kill you,” he said in a low vicious voice.

  Willie flinched and cringed back.

  “I’m giving it to you straight’,” he whined.

  Felix took out his handkerchief and wiped his face.

  “What are they going to do — tell the police?”

  “No. Lorelli made them promise to keep the police out of it.”

  Felix moved away from Willie.

  “You haven’t told anyone about this?” he asked.

  “No,” Willie said.

  “You didn’t tell Jacopo?”

  “Of course I didn’t. It’s not his business.” Willie began to feel a little more sure of himself now that Felix seemed to have got over the shock. He picked up his safety razor and began to scrape the stubble off his chin. “The old man ought to be pleased when I tell him. I’m going to ask him for a raise. He ought to come across.”

  Felix scarcely heard him. This was the end of Lorelli, he thought. Alsconi would hand her over to Englemann. The thought turned him sick. He suddenly realized just how much Lorelli meant to him; the realization came as a shock.

  This might be his end too. Alsconi might not believe he hadn’t anything to do with it. He might even think he had put Lorelli up to asking for the money. Fie glanced over at Willie who was now washing his face. There was nothing he could offer Willie that would make him hold his tongue. He knew that. Willie was a rat, and he’d be mad to trust him.

  He would take everything he was offered, and still go to Alsconi. If he was to save Lorelli, Willie had to be fixed, and he was suddenly determined to save her.

  As Willie began to diy his face on a grubby towel, he said, “What do you think will happen to her? Think Englemann will work on her?”

 

    Come Easy, Go Easy Read onlineCome Easy, Go EasyWhy Pick On ME? Read onlineWhy Pick On ME?The Dead Stay Dumb Read onlineThe Dead Stay DumbFigure it Out For Yourself Read onlineFigure it Out For Yourself1944 - Just the Way It Is Read online1944 - Just the Way It IsNo Business Of Mine Read onlineNo Business Of Mine1953 - The Sucker Punch Read online1953 - The Sucker PunchCade Read onlineCade1973 - Have a Change of Scene Read online1973 - Have a Change of SceneAn Ace up my Sleeve Read onlineAn Ace up my Sleeve1968-An Ear to the Ground Read online1968-An Ear to the Ground1950 - Figure it Out for Yourself Read online1950 - Figure it Out for Yourself1976 - Do Me a Favour Drop Dead Read online1976 - Do Me a Favour Drop DeadThe Flesh of The Orchid Read onlineThe Flesh of The Orchid1974 - Goldfish Have No Hiding Place Read online1974 - Goldfish Have No Hiding PlaceWhiff of Money Read onlineWhiff of Money1984 - Hit Them Where it Hurts Read online1984 - Hit Them Where it Hurts1971 - Want to Stay Alive Read online1971 - Want to Stay Alive1980 - You Can Say That Again Read online1980 - You Can Say That Again1978 - Consider Yourself Dead Read online1978 - Consider Yourself DeadThe Paw in The Bottle Read onlineThe Paw in The BottleSoft Centre Read onlineSoft CentreThe Guilty Are Afraid Read onlineThe Guilty Are AfraidThe Soft Centre Read onlineThe Soft CentreHave a Nice Night Read onlineHave a Nice Night1957 - The Guilty Are Afraid Read online1957 - The Guilty Are Afraid1979 - You Must Be Kidding Read online1979 - You Must Be KiddingKnock, Knock! Who's There? Read onlineKnock, Knock! Who's There?1958 - The World in My Pocket Read online1958 - The World in My PocketGet a Load of This Read onlineGet a Load of This1958 - Not Safe to be Free Read online1958 - Not Safe to be FreeThis Way for a Shroud Read onlineThis Way for a ShroudMore Deadly Than the Male Read onlineMore Deadly Than the MaleSafer Dead Read onlineSafer Dead1945 - Blonde's Requiem Read online1945 - Blonde's RequiemI'll Bury My Dead Read onlineI'll Bury My Dead1975 - The Joker in the Pack Read online1975 - The Joker in the Pack1972 - Just a Matter of Time Read online1972 - Just a Matter of Time1954 - Mission to Venice Read online1954 - Mission to VeniceStrictly for Cash Read onlineStrictly for CashA COFFIN FROM HONG KONG Read onlineA COFFIN FROM HONG KONGLady—Here's Your Wreath Read onlineLady—Here's Your WreathI Would Rather Stay Poor Read onlineI Would Rather Stay PoorEve Read onlineEveVulture Is a Patient Bird Read onlineVulture Is a Patient Bird1979 - A Can of Worms Read online1979 - A Can of Worms1949 - You're Lonely When You Dead Read online1949 - You're Lonely When You Dead1965 - This is for Real Read online1965 - This is for Real(1941) Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief Read online(1941) Miss Callaghan Comes To GriefWhat`s Better Than Money Read onlineWhat`s Better Than MoneyThis is For Real Read onlineThis is For RealLay Her Among the Lilies vm-2 Read onlineLay Her Among the Lilies vm-2Knock Knock Whos There Read onlineKnock Knock Whos There1952 - The Wary Transgressor Read online1952 - The Wary Transgressor1951 - But a Short Time to Live Read online1951 - But a Short Time to Live1962 - A Coffin From Hong Kong Read online1962 - A Coffin From Hong KongTell It to the Birds Read onlineTell It to the BirdsWell Now, My Pretty… Read onlineWell Now, My Pretty…The World in My Pocket Read onlineThe World in My PocketA Lotus for Miss Quon Read onlineA Lotus for Miss QuonYou Find Him, I'll Fix Him Read onlineYou Find Him, I'll Fix HimLay Her Among The Lilies Read onlineLay Her Among The Lilies1951 - In a Vain Shadow Read online1951 - In a Vain ShadowMiss Shumway Waves a Wand Read onlineMiss Shumway Waves a Wand1953 - This Way for a Shroud Read online1953 - This Way for a Shroud1964 - The Soft Centre Read online1964 - The Soft CentreYou Can Say That Again Read onlineYou Can Say That Again1975 - Believe This You'll Believe Anything Read online1975 - Believe This You'll Believe Anything1954 - Safer Dead Read online1954 - Safer Dead1960 - Come Easy, Go Easy Read online1960 - Come Easy, Go EasyShock Treatment Read onlineShock Treatment1953 - I'll Bury My Dead Read online1953 - I'll Bury My DeadYou Find Him – I'll Fix Him Read onlineYou Find Him – I'll Fix HimDead Stay Dumb Read onlineDead Stay DumbJust Another Sucker Read onlineJust Another SuckerWell Now My Pretty Read onlineWell Now My PrettyYou've Got It Coming Read onlineYou've Got It Coming1972 - You're Dead Without Money Read online1972 - You're Dead Without Money1955 - You Never Know With Women Read online1955 - You Never Know With WomenNot My Thing Read onlineNot My ThingHit and Run Read onlineHit and Run1971 - An Ace Up My Sleeve Read online1971 - An Ace Up My Sleeve1970 - There's a Hippie on the Highway Read online1970 - There's a Hippie on the Highway1968 - An Ear to the Ground Read online1968 - An Ear to the Ground1955 - You've Got It Coming Read online1955 - You've Got It Coming1963 - One Bright Summer Morning Read online1963 - One Bright Summer Morning1967 - Have This One on Me Read online1967 - Have This One on MeHe Won't Need It Now Read onlineHe Won't Need It Now1953 - The Things Men Do Read online1953 - The Things Men DoBelieved Violent Read onlineBelieved ViolentYou Never Know With Women Read onlineYou Never Know With WomenMiss Callaghan Comes to Grief Read onlineMiss Callaghan Comes to GriefMission to Siena Read onlineMission to SienaWhat's Better Than Money Read onlineWhat's Better Than MoneyTrusted Like The Fox Read onlineTrusted Like The FoxI'll Get You for This Read onlineI'll Get You for ThisFigure It Out for Yourself vm-3 Read onlineFigure It Out for Yourself vm-3Like a Hole in the Head Read onlineLike a Hole in the Head1977 - I Hold the Four Aces Read online1977 - I Hold the Four Aces1969 - The Whiff of Money Read online1969 - The Whiff of Money1946 - More Deadly than the Male Read online1946 - More Deadly than the Male1956 - There's Always a Price Tag Read online1956 - There's Always a Price TagNo Orchids for Miss Blandish Read onlineNo Orchids for Miss Blandish1977 - My Laugh Comes Last Read online1977 - My Laugh Comes Last1958 - Hit and Run Read online1958 - Hit and Run1981 - Hand Me a Fig Leaf Read online1981 - Hand Me a Fig Leaf1966 - You Have Yourself a Deal Read online1966 - You Have Yourself a DealTiger by the Tail Read onlineTiger by the Tail