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THE SIMPLE ART OF MURDER by Raymond Chandler Copyright ...

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emotely with a glass in his hand, staring at them coldly.<br />

He moved his hand carelessly, looked the girl up and down.<br />

"Ah, yes, the man the police had here. Of course. Something I can do for you? I heard they made a mistake."<br />

Pete Anglich turned a chair a little, pushed Token Ware into it. She sat down slowly, stiffly, licked her lips and stared at Vidaury with a<br />

frozen fascination.<br />

A touch of polite distaste curled Vidaury's lips. His eyes were watchful.<br />

Pete Anglich sat down. He drew a stick of gum out of his pocket, unwrapped it, slid it between his teeth. He looked worn, battered,<br />

tired. There were dark bruises on the side of his face and on his neck. He still needed a shave.<br />

He said slowly, "This is Miss Ware. The girl that was supposed to get your dough."<br />

Vidaury stiffened. A hand holding a cigarette began to tap restlessly on the arm of his chair. He stared at the girl, but didn't say<br />

anything. She half smiled at him, then flushed.<br />

Pete Anglich said: "I hang around Noon Street. I know the sharpshooters, know what kind of folks belong there and what kind don't. I<br />

saw this little girl in a lunchwagon on Noon Street this evening. She looked uneasy and she was watching the clock. She didn't belong.<br />

When she left I followed her."<br />

Vidaury nodded slightly. A gray tip of ash fell off the end of his cigarette. He looked down at it vaguely, nodded again.<br />

"She went up Noon Street," Pete Anglich said. "A bad street for a white girl. I found her hiding in a doorway. Then a big Duesenberg<br />

slid around the corner and doused lights, and your money was thrown out on the sidewalk. She was scared. She asked me to get it. I<br />

got it."<br />

Vidaury said smoothly, not looking at the girl: "She doesn't look like a crook. Have you told the police about her? I suppose not, or<br />

you wouldn't be here."<br />

Pete Anglich shook his head, ground the gum around in his jaws. "Tell the law? A couple of times nix. This is velvet for us. We want<br />

our cut."<br />

Vidaury started violently, then he was very still. His hand stopped beating the chair arm. His face got cold and white and grim. Then<br />

he reached up inside his dinner jacket and quietly took the short automatic out, held it on his knees. He leaned forward a little and<br />

smiled.<br />

"Blackmailers," he said gravely, "are always rather interesting. How much would your cut be--and what have you got to sell?"<br />

Pete Anglich looked thoughtfully at the gun. His jaws moved easily, crunching the gum. His eyes were unworried.<br />

"Silence," he said gravely. "Just silence."<br />

Vidaury made a sharp sudden gesture with the gun. "Talk," he said. "And talk fast. I don't like silence."<br />

Pete Anglich nodded, said: "The acid-throwing threats were just a dream. You didn't get any. The extortion attempt was a phony. A<br />

publicity stunt. That's all." He leaned back in his chair.<br />

Vidaury looked down the room past Pete Anglich's shoulder. He started to smile, then his face got wooden.<br />

Trimmer Waltz had slid into the room through an open side door. He had his big Savage in his hand. He came slowly along the<br />

carpet without sound. Pete Anglich and the girl didn't see him.<br />

Pete Anglich said, "Phony all the way through. Just a buildup. Guessing? Sure I am, but look a minute, see how soft it was played<br />

first--and how tough it was played afterward, after I showed in it. The girl works for Trimmer Waltz at the Juggernaut. She's down and out,<br />

and she scares easily. So Waltz sends her on a caper like that. Why? Because she's supposed to be nabbed. The stake-out's all<br />

arranged. If she squawks about Waltz, he laughs it off, points to the fact that the plant was almost in his alley, that it was a small stake at<br />

best, and his joint's doing all right. He points to the fact that a dumb girl goes to get it, and would he, a smart guy, pull anything like that?<br />

Certainly not.<br />

"The cops will half believe him, and you'll make a big gesture and refuse to prosecute the girl. If she doesn't spill, you'll refuse to<br />

prosecute anyway, and you'll get your publicity just the same, either way. You need it bad, because you're slipping, and you'll get it, and<br />

all it will cost you is what you pay Waltz--or that's what you think. Is that crazy? Is that too far for a Hollywood heel to stretch? Then tell me<br />

why no Feds were on the case. Because those lads would keep on digging until they found the mouse, and then you'd be up for<br />

obstructing justice. That's why. The local law don't give a damn. They're so used to movie build-ups they just yawn and turn over and go<br />

to sleep again."<br />

Waltz was halfway down the room now. Vidaury didn't look at him. He looked at the girl, smiled at her faintly.<br />

"Now, see how tough it was played after I got into it," Pete Anglich said. "I went to the Juggernaut and talked to the girl. Waltz got us<br />

into his office and a big ape that works for him damn near strangled me. When I came to I was in an apartment and a dead girl was<br />

there, and she was shot, and a bullet was gone from my gun. The gun was on the floor beside me, and I stank of gin, and a prowl car<br />

was booming around the corner. And Miss Ware here was locked up in a whore house on Noon Street.<br />

"Why all that hard stuff? Because Waltz had a perfectly swell blackmail racket lined up for you, and he'd have bled you whiter than an<br />

angel's wing. As long as you had a dollar, half of it would have been his. And you'd have paid it and liked it, Vidaury. You'd have had<br />

publicity, and you'd have had protection, but how you'd have paid for it!"<br />

Waltz was close now, almost too close. Vidaury stood up suddenly. The short gun jerked at Pete Anglich's chest. Vidaury's voice<br />

was thin, an old man's voice. He said dreamily: "Take him, Waltz. I'm too jittery for this sort of thing."<br />

Pete Anglich didn't even turn. His face became the face of a wooden Indian.<br />

Waltz put his gun into Pete Anglich's back. He stood there half smiling, with the gun against Pete Anglich's back, looking across his<br />

shoulder at Vidaury.<br />

"Dumb, Pete," he said dryly. "You had enough evening already. You ought to have stayed away from here--but I figured you couldn't<br />

pass it up."<br />

Vidaury moved a little to one side, spread his legs, flattened his feet to the floor. There was a queer, greenish tint to his handsome<br />

face, a sick glitter in his deep eyes.<br />

Token Ware stared at Waltz. Her eyes glittered with panic, the lids straining away from the eyeballs, showing the whites all around<br />

the iris.<br />

Waltz said, "I can't do anything here, Vidaury. I'd rather not walk him out alone, either. Get your hat and coat."<br />

Vidaury nodded very slightly. His head just barely moved. His eyes were still sick.<br />

"What about the girl?" he asked whisperingly.<br />

Waltz grinned, shook his head, pressed the gun hard into Pete Anglich's back.<br />

Vidaury moved a little more to the side, spread his feet again. The thick gun was very steady in his hand, but not pointed at anything<br />

in particular.<br />

He closed his eyes, held them shut a brief instant, then opened them wide. He said slowly, carefully: "It looked all right as it was<br />

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