Carter."
He handed me a book of matches.
"Don't you have a lighter?" I asked casually, lighting my cigarette.
"Never carry one. The damn things are always running out of fuel."
I grinned and tossed the matches back to him. "I guess if I could pick the lock, so could you."
He crossed his legs and leaned back in the chair, his hands cupped on his knee. His eyes hadn't left me since I entered the room. "You mean you don't believe I'm Meredith?"
Unzipping my jacket, I said, "I know damn well you aren't."
His relaxed smile was still in place. He had plenty of poise. "What did I do wrong?"
"The important thing is that you did it. Who are you really?"
"I'm the man who's carrying your death warrant," he said. With a deft movement, he pulled up his trousers leg with one hand. With the other he plucked a revolver out of a scabbard strapped to his calf.
I dropped to one knee as he drew. His revolver was equipped with a silencer and I heard a soft cough as the gun went off. The bullet thudded into the wall.
I flexed my arm and the stiletto popped into my hand. I threw it as he moved to get me in his sights again. The knife sank into his throat and quivered like a dart. His eyes bugged and he leaned over as though he intended to look under his chair.
I caught him as he sagged toward the floor. He was heavy. I stretched him out and frisked him. His wallet contained five thousand-dollar bills and some identification that said his name was Coogan and he came from Denver. That didn't necessarily mean anything. His papers were probably as phony as mine. Stuffing his driver's license into my pocket. I stood up. Things were off to a bad start. Someone knew why I was in Bonham, AXE's security had clearly been breached.
I had to do something about the body. I couldn't leave it in the genuine Meredith's room. Making sure the corridor was empty, I chose a door at random and sprung the lock. Apparently the room was unoccupied. I picked Coogan up and carried him across the hall and put him on the bed.
No Chamber of Commerce would be interested in hiring me, I thought. I had been in town less than two hours and already a man was dead.
I went downstairs and struck up a friendly conversation with the desk clerk, who welcomed the opportunity to leave his crossword puzzle. I told him I'd met a man in the hallway, a round-faced, jovial fellow.
"That's Mr. Hobbs. A salesman. Checked in today. Room 206."
"What does Mr. Hobbs sell?"
"I don't believe he said."
After five minutes, I extricated myself from the conversation, mounted the stairs again, and picked another lock. Room 206 was empty except for a sample case. Mr. Hobbs had barely touched down before he took up his wait for me. I slapped the case on the bed and opened it. The only sample it contained was a stripped down rifle with a silencer and a scope. Mr. Hobbs, also known as Mr. Coogan and briefly as Meredith, had been selling death. The well-oiled rifle was the kind of hardware packed by a professional assassin.
I could guess at his game plan. He was to intercept me and kill me as soon as I arrived, pick off the girl from the hotel window when she came to work, then leave Bonham in a hurry. The lie about his being Meredith had been a quick ruse to pull me off guard and possibly to find out if I'd talked to the girl. Mr. Hobbs, or Mr. Coogan, had been a clever pro, cool-headed and good at his business. But even the best have their bad days.
I faded quietly out of room 206 and down the stairway. Because telephone calls from the rooms went through the hotel switchboard, I used a pay phone in the lobby to call Meredith at the gas station. "Don't walk in any dark alleys. The opposition has hit town," I told him when he came on the line.
"Damn. Have you got a fix on them? I mean, on who they are?"
"Just that they aren't amateurs."
"Well, no reason to be surprised," he said. "If we could find the girl, so could they."
"I'm afraid we led them to her," I said.
I could picture Hawk's