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

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Carmady shook his head slightly. He said: "Maybe I'm not particular about that. If it does happen, you won't know anything about it."<br />

Conant stared at him, didn't move. He stared at him for quite a long time, stared at the blue gun. "Where did you get it? Didn't the<br />

heels frisk you?"<br />

Carmady said: "They did. This is Shenvair's gun. Your wop friend must have kicked it behind the bathtub. Careless."<br />

Conant reached two thick fingers forward and turned the Luger around and pushed it to the far edge of the table. He nodded and<br />

said tonelessly: "I lose this hand. I ought to have thought of that. That makes me do the talking."<br />

Jean Adrian came quickly across the room and stood at the end of the table. Carmady reached forward across the chair and took<br />

the Luger in his left hand and slipped it down into his overcoat pocket, kept his hand on it. He rested the hand holding the blue gun on<br />

the top of the chair.<br />

Jean Adrian said: "Who is this man?"<br />

"Doll Conant, a local bigtimer. Senator John Myerson Courtway is his pipe line into the state senate. And Senator Courtway, angel,<br />

is the man in your photo frame on your desk. The man you said was your father, that you said was dead."<br />

The girl said very quietly: "He is my father. I knew he wasn't dead. I'm blackmailing him--for a hundred grand. Shenvair and Targo<br />

and I. He never married my mother, so I'm illegitimate. But I'm still his child. I have rights and he won't recognize them. He treated my<br />

mother abominably, left her without a nickel. He had detectives watch me for years. Shenvair was one of them. He recognized my photos<br />

when I came here and met Targo. He remembered. He went up to San Francisco and got a copy of my birth certificate. I have it here."<br />

She fumbled at her bag, felt around in it, opened a small zipper pocket in the lining. Her hand came out with a folded paper. She<br />

tossed it on the table.<br />

Conant stared at her, reached a hand for the paper, spread it out and studied it. He said slowly: "This doesn't prove anything."<br />

Carmady took his left hand out of his pocket and reached for the paper. Conant pushed it towards him.<br />

It was a certified copy of a birth certificate, dated originally in 1912. It recorded the birth of a girl child, Adriana Gianni Myerson, to<br />

John and Antonina Gianni Myerson. Carmady dropped the paper again.<br />

He said: "Adriana Gianni--Jean Adrian. Was that the tipoff, Conant?"<br />

Conant shook his head. "Shenvair got cold feet. He tipped Courtway. He was scared. That's why he had this hideout lined up. I<br />

thought that was why he got killed. Targo couldn't have done it, because Targo's still in the can. Maybe I had you wrong, Carmady."<br />

Carmady stared at him woodenly, didn't say anything. Jean Adrian said: "It's my fault. I'm the one that's to blame. It was pretty rotten. I<br />

see that now. I want to see him and tell him I'm sorry and that he'll never hear from me again. I want to make him promise he won't do<br />

anything to Duke Targo. May I?"<br />

Carmady said: "You can do anything you want to, angel. I have two guns that say so. But why did you wait so long? And why didn t<br />

you go at him through the courts? You re in show business. The publicity would have made you--even if he beat you out."<br />

The girl bit her lip, said in a low voice: "My mother never really knew who he was, never knew his last name even. He was John<br />

Myerson to her. I didn't know until I came here and happened to see a picture in the local paper. He had changed, but I knew the face.<br />

And of course the first part of his name--"<br />

Conant said sneeringly: "You didn't go at him openly because you knew damn well you weren't his kid. That your mother just wished<br />

you on to him like any cheap broad who sees herself out of a swell meal ticket. Courtway says he can prove it, and that he's going to<br />

prove it and put you where you belong. And believe me, sister, he's just the stiff-necked kind of sap who would kill himself in public life<br />

raking up a twenty-year-old scandal to do that little thing."<br />

The big man spit his cigarette stub out viciously, added: "It cost me money to put him where he is and I aim to keep him there.<br />

That's why I'm in it. No dice, sister. I'm putting the pressure on. You're going to take a lot of air and keep on taking it. As for your two-gun<br />

friend--maybe he didn't know, but he knows now and that ties him up in the same package."<br />

Conant banged on the table top, leaned back, looking calmly at the blue gun in Carmady's hand.<br />

Carmady stared into the big man's eyes, said very softly: "That hood at Cyrano's tonight--he wasn't your idea of putting on the<br />

pressure <strong>by</strong> any chance, Conant, was he?"<br />

Conant grinned harshly, shook his head. The door at the top of the stairs opened a little, silently. Carmady didn't see it. He was<br />

staring at Conant. Jean Adrian saw it.<br />

Her eyes widened and she stepped back with a startled exclamation, that jerked Carmady's eyes to her.<br />

The albino stepped softly through the door with a gun leveled.<br />

His red eyes glistened, his mouth was drawn wide in a snarling grin. He said: "The door's kind of thin, boss. I listened. Okey? . . .<br />

Shed the heater, rube, or I blow you both in half."<br />

Carmady turned slightly and opened his right hand and let the blue gun bounce on the thin carpet. He shrugged, spread his hands<br />

out wide, didn't look at Jean Adrian.<br />

The albino stepped clear of the door, came slowly forward and put his gun against Carmady's back.<br />

Conant stood up, came around the table, took the Luger out of Carmady's coat pocket and hefted it. Without a word or change of<br />

expression he slammed it against the side of Carmady's jaw.<br />

Carmady sagged drunkenly, then went down on the floor on his side.<br />

Jean Adrian screamed, clawed at Conant. He threw her off, changed the gun to his left hand and slapped the side of her face with a<br />

hard palm.<br />

"Pipe down, sister. You've had all your fun."<br />

The albino went to the head of the stairs and called down it. The two other gunmen came up into the room, stood grinning.<br />

Carmady didn't move on the floor. After a little while Conant lit another cigarette and rattled a knuckle on the table top beside the<br />

birth certificate. He said gruffly: "She wants to see the old man. Okey, she can see him. We'll all go see him. There's still something in<br />

this that stinks." He raised his eyes, looked at the stocky man. "You and Lefty go downtown and spring Targo, get him out to the<br />

Senator's place as soon as you can. Step on it."<br />

The two hoods went back down the stairs.<br />

Conant looked down at Carmady, kicked him in the ribs lightly, kept on kicking them until Carmady opened his eyes and stirred.<br />

NINE<br />

The car waited at the top of a hill, before a pair of tall wroughtiron gates, inside which there was a lodge. A door of the lodge stood<br />

open and yellow light framed a big man in an overcoat and pulled-down hat. He came forward slowly into the rain, his hands down in his<br />

pockets.<br />

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