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The Luck Piece
by
“All the time you was on that street car I was riding along right behind you, and I came up these steps here not ten feet behind you. I wanted you all for myself and I’ve got you all by myself.”
“You don’t hate yourself, exactly, do you?” said Trencher. “Well, without admitting anything–because there’s nothing to admit–I’d like to know, if you don’t mind, how you dope it out that I had anything to do with Sonntag’s being killed–that is if you’re not lying about him being killed?”
“I don’t mind,” said Murtha blithely. “It makes quite a tale, but I can boil it down. I wasn’t on duty to-night–by rights this was a night off for me. I had a date at the Clarenden at eleven-thirty to eat a bite with a brother-in-law of mine and a couple of friends of his–a fellow named Simons and a fellow named Parker, from Stamford.
“I judge it’s Parker’s benny and dicer you’re wearing now.
“Well, anyhow, on my way to the Clarenden about an hour or so ago I butt right into the middle of all the hell that’s being raised over this shooting in Thirty-ninth Street. One of the precinct plain-clothes men that’s working on the case tells me a tall guy in a brown derby hat and a short yellow overcoat is supposed to have pulled off the job. That didn’t mean anything to me, and even if it had I wouldn’t have figured you out as having been mixed up in it. Anyway, it’s no lookout of mine. So I goes into the Clarenden and has a rarebit and a bottle of beer with my brother-in-law and the others.
“About half-past eleven we all start to go, and then this party, Parker, can’t find his coat check. He’s sure he stuck it in his vest pocket when he blew in, but it ain’t there. We look for it on the floor but it’s not there, either. Then all of a sudden Parker remembers that a man in a brown derby, with a coat turned inside out over his arm, who seemed to be in a hurry about something, came into the Clarenden along with him, and that a minute later in that Chinese room the same fellow butts into him. That gives me an idea, but I don’t tell Parker what’s on my mind. I sends the head waiter for the house detective, and when the house detective comes I show him my badge, and on the strength of that he lets me and Parker go into the cloak room. Parker’s hoping to find his own coat and I’m pretending to help him look for it, but what I’m really looking for is a brown derby hat and a short yellow coat–and sure enough I find ’em. But Parker can’t find his duds at all; and so in putting two and two together it’s easy for me to figure how the switch was made. I dope it out that the fellow who lifted Parker’s check and traded his duds for Parker’s is the same fellow who fixed Sonntag’s clock. Also I’ve got a pretty good line on who that party is; in fact I practically as good as know who it is.
“So I sends Parker and the others back to the table to smoke a cigar and stick round awhile, and I hang round the door keeping out of sight behind them draperies where I can watch the check room. Because, you see, Trencher, I knew you were the guy and I knew you’d come back–if you could get back.”
He paused as though expecting a question, but Trencher stayed silent and Murtha kept on.
“And now I’m going to tell you how I come to know you was the right party. You remember that time about two years ago when I ran you in as a suspect and down at headquarters you bellyached so loud because I took a bum old coin off of you? Well, when I went through that yellow overcoat and found your luck piece, as you call it, in the right-hand pocket, I felt morally sure, knowing you like I did, that as soon as you missed it you’d be coming back to try to find it. And sure enough you did come back. Simple, ain’t it?
“The only miscalculation I made was in figuring that when you found it gone from the pocket you’d hang round making a hunt for it on the floor or something. You didn’t though. I guess maybe you lost your nerve when you found it wasn’t in that coat pocket. Is that right?”
“But I did find it!” exclaimed Trencher, fairly jostled out of his pose by these last words from his gloating captor. “I’ve got it now!”
Murtha’s hand stole into his trousers pocket and fondled something there.
“What’ll you bet you’ve got it now?” he demanded gleefully. “What’ll you bet?”
“I’ll bet my life–that’s all,” answered Trencher. “Here, I’ll show you!”
He stood up. Because his wrists were chained he had to twist his body sidewise before he could slip one hand into his own trousers pocket.
He groped in its depths and then brought forth something and held it out in his palm.
The poor light of the single electric bulb glinted upon an object which threw off dulled translucent tints of bluish-green–not a trade dollar, but a big overcoat button the size of a trade dollar–a flat, smooth, rimless disk of smoked pearl with a tiny depression in the middle where the thread holes went through. For a little space of time both of them with their heads bent forward contemplated it.
Then with a flirt of his manacled hands Trencher flung it away from him, and with a sickly pallor of fright and surrender stealing up under the skin of his cheeks he stared at the detective.
“You win, Murtha,” he said dully. “What’s the use bucking the game after your luck is gone? Come on, let’s go down-town. Yes, I bumped off Sonntag.”