L. A. Movie by Philip Prowse
10
'Where's the intruder?' the doorman asked.
Mike Devine pointed at me. The doorman gave a short, loud laugh.
'He's a private eye,' the doorman said. 'He brought you home, and he and I
carried you up here.'
Mike Devine looked at me in surprise. He threw my gun back to me.
'I'm sorry, fella,' he said.
'I've got a couple of questions,' I said to the doorman. Did you let anyone
in here earlier this evening? And did anyone leave after I got here?'
'The answer to both questions is no,' the doorman replied. 'I don't let
people into apartments when the owner's out. And no one left. If anyone had
gone out through the hallway, I would have seen them.'
Mike Devine thanked the doorman, then turned to me.
'There's
one thing, Mr Samuel. I don't seem to have any money on me.
Could you lend me fifty bucks?'
I smiled. Rich people! They're the ones who've never got any money. I
opened my wallet and gave Mike fifty dollars. He walked over to the
doorman and gave him the money.
'There's no need to say anything about this to anyone,' Mike said.
The doorman thanked him and left the apartment.
I sat on the bed and thought about what had happened. Who had hit me on
the head? Had Mike himself done it? If he hadn't hit me, there must have
been someone else in the apartment. Certainly, someone had wrecked the
living-room. Perhaps that person had hit me on the head when I came into
the bedroom. But why?
I
asked myself the question, but my head hurt and I felt tired. I couldn't
think of an answer.
'Look,' Mike said. 'I'm sorry. It's late. Can I offer you a bed for the night?
I don't know who's been here. Whoever hit you on the head must have got
out while I was in the bathroom. Perhaps they thought they were hitting me.'
'But the doorman said that no one had left the building,' I replied. 'So
perhaps they're still here somewhere. Or perhaps they're hiding in another
apartment. But they must have a key to your apartment. The first thing to do
is to make sure they're not still here.'
Together, we searched every room in Mike Devine's apartment. We found
no one.
Suddenly, I had an idea.
'I won't take your
offer of a bed for the night,' I said. 'My car's outside.
The police will take it away if I leave it in the street any longer.'
'Put the car in the garage,' Mike said. There's a garage underneath the
apartment building, and the elevator goes straight down to it.'
My idea had been a good one. Mike had told me something that I had
already guessed.
'So, someone could have left the
apartment, then taken the elevator down
to the garage and driven away without the doorman seeing them,' I said.
At that moment, the phone rang. Mike Devine answered it.
'Yes,' he said. 'Yes, I see.' Then he hung up. He looked terrible.
'Who was it?' I asked.
'Someone I owe some money to,' he replied. 'He said that he wrecked the
L. A. Movie by Philip Prowse
11
apartment. He said it was a warning. He said he was sorry he had hit you. He
thought you were me!
And he said that next time, he wouldn't wreck my
apartment - he would wreck me!'
So the person who had hit me on the head was trying to frighten Mike
Devine. And he had succeeded. Mike was looking very frightened indeed.
'Mr Samuel,' Mike said. 'I think I need some protection. I will pay you to
stay here for the rest of the night. Will two hundred bucks be all right?'
'Plus the fifty you borrowed,' I replied with a smile. I left the apartment,
and went down to the hallway. I told the doorman I was staying for the rest
of
the night, then I went out into the street. Quickly, I drove the Chrysler
into the underground garage.
Ten minutes later, I had turned off the lights in Mike Devine's living-
room, and I was sitting in a comfortable chair with my gun beside me. Mike
had gone to sleep in his huge white bed.
The hours passed. Nothing happened. There were no intruders. I didn't get
any sleep.
The phone rang at six o'clock. I answered it. 'Mr Devine's apartment,' I
said.
'Who's that?' a woman's voice asked. I knew that voice. It was Gail Lane.
At that point, Mike Devine picked up a phone in his bed-room and began
to speak. I hung up immediately, so I never knew what she said to him.