The Fabulous Clipjoint by Fredric Brown (the reader ebook TXT) š
- Author: Fredric Brown
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We came out of the alley on Fairbanks, went north to Erie and cut over Erie to the boulevard. We stayed in the heavy traffic of the boulevard north to Division Street.
Claire gave him the address and ten minutes later we were rid of Dutch. We didnāt waste any time getting out of there.
We hadnāt talked any at all. We still didnāt talk until we were lost in the boulevard traffic again, heading south. Somewhere a big clock struck two.
Claire was very quiet in a corner of the back seat, with my arm around her.
Uncle Am said, āYou still got the gun, kid?ā
āYeah, I got it.ā
He pulled into the alley, stopped the cab right where it had been before. He said, āStay in here, you two. Ed, give me the gun and Iāll case the joint. If you had company before, there could be someone waiting there. Claire, give me the key.ā I wanted to go up with him, but he wouldnāt let me. It was very, very quiet. Claire said, āKiss me, Ed.ā
A little later she said, āIām taking an early train tomorrow, Ed. IādāIād be afraid there, alone. Will you stay, and take me to the train?ā
I said, āChicago is big. Canāt you go somewhere else in Chicago, for a while, anyway? Until this is all over?ā
āNo, Ed. And youāve got to promise that youāll never come to Indianapolis looking for me. I wonāt give you my address. Tomorrow morningās got to be good-bye. For good.ā
I wanted to argue, but down inside I knew she was right. I donāt know how I knew it, but I did.
Uncle Am was opening the door of the taxi. He said, āBreak it up, you two. Hereās the gun and the key, Ed. Listen, you donāt know what that gunās been used for. Keep it tonight, but get rid of it before you come back to the Wacker. And without your prints on it.ā
I said, āIām not that dumb, Uncle Am.ā
āSometimes I wonder, kid. But youāll grow out of it. Whenāll I see you again? Around noon?ā
āI guess so.ā
Claire said, āWonāt you come up for a drink, Am?ā
We were getting out of the cab. Uncle Am opened the front door and slid into the driverās seat. He said, āI guess not, kids. This taxi and cap are costing me twenty-five bucks an hour and Iāve had āem two hours now. Thatās a little rich for my blood.ā
Claire said, āGood-bye, Am.ā
He stepped on the starter of the taxi and then leaned out of the window. He said, āGod bless you, my children. Donāt do anything I wouldnāt do.ā
He drove off.
We stood there a little while, hand in hand, in the warm summer night, in the darkness of the alley.
Claire said, āItās nice tonight.ā
I said, āItās going to be nicer.ā
āYes, itās going to be nicer, Ed.ā
She leaned against me a little. I let go her hand and put my arms around her. I kissed her.
After a minute she said, āShall we go in out of the snow?ā
We went in out of the snow.
*
When I woke up, Claire was dressed already, and was packing a suitcase. I looked at the little electric clock on the bedstand and saw it was only ten oāclock.
She smiled at me and said, āāMorning, Eddie.ā
I asked, āIs it still snowing out?ā
āNo, itās all through snowing. I was just going to wake you. Thereās a train at eleven-fifteen. Weāll have to hurry, if weāre going to eat any breakfast.ā
She went to a closet for another suitcase.
I got up, took a quick shower, and dressed. Sheād finished packing by then. She said, āWeāll have to settle for coffee and doughnuts at the station. Thereās only an hour now.ā
āHad I better phone for a cab?ā
āThereās a stand out in front. At this time of morning, we can get one.ā
I took the two suitcases and she took the overnight bag and a small package that I saw was stamped for mailing. She saw me glance at it and said, āBirthday present for a friend of mine; I should have mailed it two days ago. Remind me, on the way.ā
I didnāt give a damn about birthday presents. I walked to the door and then turned around, with my back toward it and put down the suitcases.
I held out my arms, but she didnāt come. She shook her head slowly. āNo, Ed. No good-byes, please. Last night was good-bye for us. And you mustnāt ever look for me; you mustnāt ever try to follow me.ā
āWhy not, Claire?ā
āYouāll know why, Ed, when youāve had time to think things out. Youāll know Iām right. Your uncle will know; maybe he can tell you. I canāt.ā
āButāā
āHow old are you, Ed? Really? Twenty?ā
āAlmost nineteen.ā
āIām twenty-nine, Ed. Donāt you see thatāā
I said, āYeah, youāre practically dying of old age. Your arteries are hardening. Yourāā
āEd, you donāt see what I mean. Twenty-nine isnāt old, no, but itās not young any more, either, for a woman. AndāEd, I was lying to you last night about the job and the hall bedroom and all that. When a womanās used to good things, and money, she canāt go back, Ed. Not unless sheās stronger than I am. Iām not going back to that, Ed.ā
āYou mean youāre going to find yourself another mug like Harry?ā
āNot like Harry, no. I have learned that much. A guy with money, but not earned that way. Iāve learned that much in Chicago. Especially last night when DutchāIām glad you were here, Eddie.ā
I said, āMaybe I understand a little. But why canāt weāā
āHow much do you make, Eddie, as a printer? Do you see?ā
āOkay,ā I said.
I picked up the suitcases and went out. We got a taxi at the stand in front of the hotel, and started for the Dearborn Station.
In the taxi, Claire sat very straight, but I happened to notice that there were tears in her eyes.
I donāt know whether it made me feel better or worse. Better, I guess, about last night, and worse about her. I was all mixed up, inside, something like the time Mom had fooled me by being so nice to me, when I came home from going to the carney to get Uncle Am.
I thought, why canāt women be consistent? Why canāt they be good or bad, and make up their minds which? I thought I guess most of us are that way, good and bad mixed up, but women are worse and they change back and forth faster. They go to almost absurd lengths of being nice to you, or being nasty.
Claire said, āFive years from now, youāll hardly remember me, Ed.ā
āIāll remember you,ā I said.
We crossed Van Buren, under the el, and we were through the Loop, only two blocks from the station.
She said, āKiss me once more, Edāifāif you still want to, after I told you the truth.ā
I still wanted to, and I did. My arms were still around her when the cab stopped. The little package sheād been holding slid to the floor as she moved and I picked it up and handed it to her. I noticed the address, and the name.
I said, āIf I hit a million-dollar jackpot, Iāll get in touch with you through your girl friend in Miami.ā
āDonāt try, Ed, either for me or for any jackpots. Stick to your job and to being what you are. And donāt come in the station with me. Here comes a redcap for my bags.ā
āBut you saidāā
āItās almost train time, Ed. Please stay in the cab. Mama knows best. Good-bye.ā
The redcap was picking up the bags and starting away with them.
āGood-bye,ā I said.
The cabby asked, āBack to the Milan Towers?ā and I said, āYeah,ā watching Claire walk away from me. She didnāt turn around to look back. She stopped at the mailbox outside the door and mailed the package, and didnāt turn around at all as she went into the door of the Dearborn Station.
My cab was pulling away from the curb, but I was still looking out. Thatās how I happened to notice the dark little man get out of the cab that had been right behind mine at the curb, and walk rapidly into the station.
Something bothered me; he looked familiar but I couldnāt think where Iād seen him.
We were pulling across the street, turning north into Dearborn Street. I told the driver, āI didnāt mean to tell you back to the Milan. I want to go to the Wacker on Clark Street.ā
He nodded and kept going.
We slowed for a stop light on the next corner, and suddenly I remembered where Iād seen the guy whoād gotten out of the cab behind us. It had been yesterday evening in the bar of the Milan Towers. And heād been Italian, and Iād thought he looked like a torpedo. Iād wondered if heād been Benny Rossoā
āStop,ā I told the driver. āLet me out here, quick.ā
He finished crossing the street and pulled to a stop along the line of cars at the curb. He said, āAnything you say, mister. Just make up your mind.ā
I fumbled a couple of singles out of my wallet and gave them to him. I didnāt wait for change. I was out of the cab, running back toward the station. I could get back there quicker on foot than by having the cab go on around the block and wait for lights at every corner.
But it was an awfully long block from Harrison back to Polk. I almost got run down by a car crossing in front of the station, but I kept on running until I was inside the doors.
I stopped running then, and walked fast through the station, looking around. Iād never realized what an enormous place it was. I didnāt see Claire and I didnāt see the man who might have been following her.
I made two fast circuits of the station and I hadnāt seen them, either of them. I hurried up to the information desk. I asked, āWhich track is the Indianapolis train on, if it hasnāt left?ā
āIsnāt loading yet. It doesnāt pull in until twelve-five.ā
āThe eleven-fifteen,ā I said. āHas it pulled out already?ā
āThereās no eleven-fifteen for Indianapolis, sir.ā
I looked up at the clock; it was fourteen after eleven already. I asked, āWhat eleven-fifteen trains are there?ā
āTwo of them; the St. Louis Flyer on Track Six, and Number Nineteen on Track OneāFt. Wayne, Columbus, Charlestonāā
I turned away.
It was hopeless; two long trains leaving in one minute. I probably wouldnāt be able to reach one of them, certainly not both. I didnāt have enough money left to buy a fare even to Ft. Wayne.
I looked up and saw the gateman closing the iron gate marked Track Five.
A last desperate chance, I thought. The redcap; if I could find the redcap who tookā I looked around and there were a dozen redcaps in sight, in different parts of the station. They didnāt all look alike, but I realized I hadnāt even looked at the one that had taken her bags. Iād been looking at Claire.
One was walking past me, and I grabbed his arm. I asked, āDid you take two suitcases and an overnight bag for a lady, alone, from a taxi just a little while ago?ā
He pushed his cap back and scratched his head.
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