A
Chilly wind-driven rain swirled in the headlight beams of Gus Wilson's truck
as he was returning from a late service call in the country. Suddenly the
husky proprietor of the Model Garage jerked erect in his seat and jammed on
the brakes as a figure dashed onto the highway, signaling with a flashlight.
Gus cut the wheel sharply and pulled up on the shoulder.
As he rolled
down the window, the flashlight, which had been moving over the lettering on
the truck, came to rest on his face. The blinding beam of light moved closer
- until it blared into Gus's eyes from an arm's length away.The beam lowered
slightly and in its light Gus saw a hand holding an automatic. It was
pointed at his chest. For a moment, panic seized him.
"Sure," Gus
said, easing from behind the wheel carefully. The man got into the driver's
seat and the flash beam winked off.
"The gun is in
my lap," he said softly as he shifted into gear. "I can reach it quick. So
don't try any tricks."
They drove down
the highway in silence. At last the man said, "We saw you pass by on your
way out. We figured you'd be coming back pretty soon. We need a mechanic."
They were
turning off the highway now, into a forested area where folks came in
summertime for picnics.
"Why the gun?"
Gus asked. "Without it, I might not have suspected who you are."
"With the
papers full of our pictures? And descriptions going out on radio and TV?"
The man snorted. "That's a laugh."
Gus turned a
thoughtful eye on him.
"I guess you're
right," he said. "Two toughies, wanted for murder. I'd say you were the tall
one, six foot two, dark hair, dark suit, brown hat. You're Slade, aren't
you?"
A soft chuckle
answered him. "How right you are, friend."
Ahead of them,
the headlights lit up a small clearing. A blue coupe stood in the center, a
man leaning against it. He came out now to the truck.
"Douse those
lights, you fool!" he called sharply.
As the lights
flicked out, a flashlight appeared in his hand. Its beam played over Gus's
face. "Get down, grease monkey, and get to work," the man said harshly. "We
didn't bring you out here to go on a picnic."
As Gus eased
himself to the ground, the soft-voiced Slade said, "He knows who we are."
"That so?" the
man said. He reached out a powerful hand and grasped the front of Gus's
coveralls, twisting the cloth, squeezing Gus's chest. For a long moment he
gazed thoughtfully into Gus's face.
The sound of
wind and rain lashing the trees came to Gus now in the silence. He felt the
awful remoteness of this lonely spot. What was to stop these men from
killing him? He knew them - Warren Slade and Sidney Bascom, wanted by the
police of three states for murder. The soft-spoken Slade, standing behind
Gus now with a gun in his back, had shot down a bank teller during a holdup.
His partner had seriously wounded a guard.
It was Gus who
finally broke the silence.
"Let go," he
said. "Let's take a look at the car."
Slowly Bascom's
grip relaxed on Gus's coveralls. "It's the lights," he said. "If they hadn't
gone out, we'd have been through the net by now and far away. Your job is to
fix the lights."
"Lights or no
lights," Gus said grimly, "they'll pick you up. The police will have
roadblocks set up."
"Roadblocks!"
Behind Gus, Slade chuckled. "I can spot them a mile away at night. Out here
in the sticks they don't have enough cops to block all the roads. If we run
into any, we can turn around and go the other way. Our car will outrun any
cop car. Fix those lights and we'll take care of everything. Get going."
Gus turned
slowly, reached into the truck for his tool kit and walked toward the blue
coupe. Slade moved carefully behind him while Bascom played his light on the
car. It was an old model, a car not apt to attract police attention. Its
appearance was deceptive, for under the raised hood of the old car Gus saw a
powerful, souped-up engine - four barrel carburetors, special head,
overdrive...the works.
This job could
probably outrun most police cars.
The thought
bore heavily on Gus's mind as he reached inside the coupe to turn on the
light switch. No lights came on. Gus played his pencil light over the
dash-board, noting that the ammeter showed no discharge. Maybe, he thought,
there was nothing wrong but a loose connection or a dirty circuit breaker,
something he could fix in a moment. And then this pair would be on their way
to rob and kill again.
Slade's light
played over Gus's face.
"Any tricks,
mister," he said in his soft voice, "and you bleed."
"I'm no fool,"
Gus said heavily, squeezing in under the dash, peering up at the maze of
wires and instruments. Presently he backed out, pawed through his kit, went
in again and came out to turn on the light switch. Twin headlight beams
sprang into the stormy woods. Bascom cursed as he leaped to turn the switch.
"The rope,
Sid," Slade said. "Tie him up - tight." Bascom took a rope from the coupe,
came forward in the dim glow of the parking lights, then halted.
Pointing, he
growled. "Why no tail lights?" Ferocity came to his sharply hewn features as
he moved on Gus with upraised fist. The brawny mechanic turned, shoulders
hunched to meet the attack.
"Hold it!"
Slade broke in. "How about it, grease monkey? Why no tail lights?"
"You had a
blown fuse," Gus said quietly. Probably a short in the tail light wire - it
will probably blow again."
"Find it and
fix it then," Slade ordered. "Fast!"
"Maybe I can
find it fast and maybe not," Gus said warily. "The quickest way would be to
forget the old wire and run a new hot lead to the tail lights."
Slade studied
Gus's face for a long moment. "Okay," he said at last.
Gus got a roll
of wire from his truck, worked under the dash a few moments, then crawled
beneath the car. He emerged at the rear, dripping wet. He turned on the
light switch again. This time the twin tail lights glowed.
"Good," Slade
said with satisfaction
"Now tie him
up, Sid, and we'll roll."
"Tie a man up
in this storm," Gus protested, "and he'll get pneumonia before he's found."
"Tie him,"
Slade repeated, again eyes hard above the soft voice.
They tied him
in the cab of the service truck and left him. Gus lay there, listening to
the storm, wondering how long it would be before he was found. Stan Hicks,
his helper in the Model Garage, would think that he had been delayed and
might close shop and go home. Gus realized he might be here a long time.
Somewhere out there on the highways, he knew, would be men like Officer
Jerry Corcoran. They might spot the blue coupe, but what then? Gus tried to
visualize what might happen.
On a night like
this, the police would not dare to park a car across the highway without
flares to warn the innocent. The deadly pair would be warned, and would flee
in the other direction. With escape routes carefully planned, a hideout
waiting and their speed, they could make it.
As inner voice
reproached Gus. If he had not repaired the coupe's lights, Slade and Bascom
could not have stirred.
As time passed,
the chill began to bite into his bones. He fought the rope that held him,
but it had been too cleverly tied. It seemed to Gus that hours passed before
he heard a car, saw its lights moving among the tires.
"Gus," Jerry
Corcoran called. "Are you there?"
Gus yelled,
"Here. Did you get them?"
"Are you hurt?"
Corcoran asked as he worked on Gus's bonds. "No? Good!" They told me that
they'd tied you up in here. They saw our roadblock and tried to turn back.
But something went wrong with their car. They couldn't get it into reverse."
"I know," Gus
said. He began chafing his hands and stamping his feet to stimulate
circulation. "They wanted me to fix their lights. But when I fixed them I
cut the wire to their tail lights under the dash, so that I'd have an excuse
to get under the car with wire in my hands to rewire the tail lights."
Corcoran was
puzzled. "What's that got to do with their not being able to back up?"
Gus chuckled.
"I merely put the cut tail-light wire together again while the lights were
turned off. 'Then, while I was crawling under the car, I strung a hot wire
to their overdrive solenoid."
"Come again!"
Corcoran queried.
"You see," Gus
explained, "when an overdrive-equipped car reaches about 25 miles and hour
speed a governor activates a solenoid to put the drive into overdrive, and
at the same time bring about a reverse gear lockout. I'd run into a few
cases where, through a shorted governor, this solenoid was activated when
the car was standing still, or traveling below overdrive speed. In those
cases you couldn't get into reverse gear at any speed. My wiring eliminated
the governor, put juice directly to the solenoid, but permitted the car to
move forward in overdrive gears. I figured that sooner or later they'd have
to get into reverse to dodge you fellows."
"Well, I'll
be..." Jerry Corcoran began. Then, remembering Gus's ordeal he said, "Jump in,
Gus, I'm taking you in before you catch pneumonia."
"I'll drive my
truck. I'm okay now," Gus said, getting in and starting the engine. "It's
got a good heater, and you know something, Jerry? - since you told me the
news I'm not so cold as I was."
"That I can
believe," Officer Corcoran said fervently.
The lights of
both vehicles began creeping out of the trees toward the highway. Gus Wilson
looked relieved - and a little pleased with himself.
END
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