The Gangster (Isaac Bell 9)
Page 29
In her family’s Dupont Circle mansion, Bell had seen Helen wear the latest styles of one-color, single-piece shirtwaist suits. Here, she wore the traditional young office girl’s separate shirtwaist tucked into a trumpet skirt.
“That bulge is me.”
“Not that. That pocket pistol under the pleats. Hand it over.” He opened a big hand and waited for her to put the gun in it. “You know that Van Dorn apprentices are not allowed to carry guns.”
“It’s my father’s.”
“I’ll return it to him next time I’m in Washington.”
She checked the hammer was on an empty chamber and handed Bell the pocket pistol, butt first.
“Just for the record,” said Bell, “interns are not even permitted a nail file.”
“What if I break a fingernail?”
“Rub it on a brick wall.”
“Mr. Bell?”
“What?”
“Are you going to tell me that you never hid a gun when you were an apprentice?”
“I didn’t get caught. Go! Show Lynch . . . And Helen?”
“What is it?”
“See if you can find out something that Lynch really wants.”
“He wants to take me to Coney Island.”
Bell grinned. “Something he wants from us. Some business Van Dorns can do for him. I have a funny feeling about this counterfeiting.”
He returned to Tetrazzini.
“I will escort you personally to San Francisco on the train. When we get to San Francisco, our field office will take good care of you. Mr. Bronson, the detective in charge, is a top-notch man and happens to be a great fan of the opera. I’m told he took to his bed when you left San Francisco.”
“Mille o tante grazie, Isaac. I’m not afraid, but who can say . . . Isaac? Don’t you have a fiancée in San Francisco?”
“As a matter of fact, I do.”
As soon as she left, Bell telephoned Enrico Caruso. “Would it be convenient for me to come up and see you?”
Ten minutes later, Caruso welcomed him into his suite. They had met recently in the hotel’s lower lobby bar, where residents knew to find a quiet drink in the afternoon. The tenor was only a few years older than the detective, and they had hit it off when they discovered they both had survived the earthquake uninjured.
Caruso was wearing a woolen dressing gown and had his throat wrapped in three scarves to Tetrazzini’s one. His drawing room housed an eight-foot Mason & Hamlin grand piano and a wheezing machine of tanks and nozzles that emitted clouds of steam to moisten the air. “La Voce!” he said, stroking his throat. “Do feel free to remove your coat.”
Bell did so, gratefully. Panama jungles were cooler and drier than Caruso’s suite.
The singer stubbed out his cigarette and lit a fresh one. “I missed you at my Pagliacci!”
“I was busy getting dynamited.”
“All work and no play . . .”
“Tetrazzini got a Black Hand letter.”
“I know. I told her to go to you.”