James Kane Fullscreen The postman always calls twice (1934)

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“I figured on twenty-five grand.”

“Are you crazy?”

“No, I ain’t crazy.

You got ten grand from Katz.

The place has been making money, I figure about five grand.

Then on the property, you could get ten grand from the bank. Papadakis gave fourteen for it, so it looked like you could get ten.

Well, that makes twenty-five.”

“You would strip me clean, just for that?”

“It’s worth it.”

I didn’t move, but I must have had a flicker in my eye, because he jerked an automatic out of his pocket and leveled it at me.

“Don’t start anything, Chambers.

In the first place, I haven’t got it with me.

In the second place, if you start anything I let you have it.”

“I’m not starting anything.”

“Well, see you don’t.”

He kept the gun pointed at me, and I kept looking at him.

“I guess you got me.”

“I don’t guess it.

I know it.”

“But you’re figuring too high.”

“Keep talking, Chambers.”

“We got ten from Katz, that’s right.

And we’ve still got it.

We made five off the place, but we spent a grand in the last couple weeks.

She took a trip to bury her mother, and I took one.

That’s why we been closed up.”

“Go on, keep talking.”

“And we can’t get ten on the property.

With things like they are now, we couldn’t even get five.

Maybe we could get four.”

“Keep talking.”

“All right, ten, four, and four.

That makes eighteen.”

He grinned down the gun barrel a while, and then he got up.

“All right.

Eighteen.

I’ll phone you tomorrow, to see if you’ve got it.

If you’ve got it, I’ll tell you what to do.

If you haven’t got it, that thing goes to Sackett.”

“It’s tough, but you got me.”

“Tomorrow at twelve, then, I phone you.

That’ll give you time to go to the bank and get back.”

“O.K.”

He backed to the door and still held the gun on me.

It was late afternoon, just beginning to get dark.

While he was backing away, I leaned up against the wall, like I was pretty down in the mouth.

When he was half out the door I cut the juice in the sign, and it blazed down in his eyes.

He wheeled, and I let him have it.

He went down and I was on him.

I twisted the gun out of his hand, threw it in the lunchroom, and socked him again. Then I dragged him inside and kicked the door shut.