Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Terror at Glasgow Station: Chapter 2: Gangsters!



It was the machine guns that first gave the impression that something was wrong.
Not many people in Glasgow, Montana, owned machine guns.  Those that did had usually received them during one of the World Wars—1 or 2.  They didn’t parade around the streets with them, pointing them at people and making requests.  They especially didn’t wander into buildings with their firearms already drawn.  Unfortunately for Marilyn and her friends, the visitors to the station were from out of town.
They burst through the door, six of them, hardened toughs that could’ve played the goons in a Humphrey Bogart picture.  Only, these weren’t actors on a screen.  They were the real things.  Only two of them actually had machine guns (the rest had pistols), but they all had their weapons out and ready.
Neil’s gasp caused the dispatcher to turn his head—he found himself staring straight into the muzzle of a pistol.  Ed shouted, “What in tarnation—”; Bob almost swallowed his pipe when he saw the guests.  The station agent swiveled casually in his chair, then froze when he saw who’d come through the door.  As for Marilyn…well, she just stood where she was, too stunned to do anything, really.
“Alright, alright!” barked the leader of the gang, one of the two that held machine guns.  He was about six-foot-four, taller than anyone else in the room.  Like his confederates, he wore a finely-tailored suit, but the black of his outfit provided the perfect contrast to his bright blond hair, combed to the left side of his head and clearly coated with some sort of hair oil.  His voice was shrill, quite evil-sounding.  Evil’s not a sound, some might protest, but they’re dead wrong.  When concentrated enough, evil can be seen, heard, felt—maybe not tasted or smelled, but you get the idea.  Everyone in the room heard the evil in the man’s voice, and they all cringed, knowing that what he was about to say next wasn’t going to be pleasant.
“I’m Burt Kane, and this here’s my gang.  We’re the Windy City Devils.  You may have heard of us.”
Blank stares all over the room.
“Uh-uh?  No problem.  You’ll know who you’re dealing with by the end of the night.  Now, which one of you’s the dispatcher?”
The man at the desk slowly raised his hand.  “That’d be me.”
Beside him, the pistol trained at his heart shook menacingly.  “When’s the Empire Builder coming through?”  Kane asked.  “Still at nine?”
“Should be here right around then,” the dispatcher murmured nervously.  “It’s late, of course—”
“Yes, yes, we know.  You don’t think we’d wait unprepared, do you?  Baby Face there [Kane nodded towards the man next to the dispatcher] has one of those radios you all use to communicate.  We know exactly where the Empire Builder is, as well as all the other trains on the line.”  He smirked.  “It couldn’t come at a better time.”
All the railroad employees had been staring in shock at the newcomers.  Now, Neil spoke up.  “What do you want with us?”
“With you?  Nothing.  We’re just gonna sit here and wait for the train.  Go ahead and make yourselves comfortable.  You can do whatever you want—except leave, use the telephone, or use the radio without our permission.  Got it?”
Silent nods all around.
“If you’re planning to rob it,” murmured Brown, “I should warn you that—”
Kane shook his head carelessly.  “That’s kid stuff!” he spat.  “We’re after something more.  Does the name Edgar Malone ring any bells?”
Marilyn shivered with recognition.  The dispatcher stiffened.  “The gangster?”
“Isn’t he the top mob boss in Chicago?” Neil said.
Kane laughed.  “Not after tonight, he isn’t.  He’s on that train.”
“Edgar Malone on a Great Northern Railway train?”  The station agent looked shocked.  “I didn’t think they’d sell tickets to a rat like that!”
“Oh, you’re not stupid enough to think he’d be travelling under his right name, do you?  He rides trains all the time.  Problem is, he’s always got two bodyguards with him.  They go wherever he goes, and they get in the way whenever someone tries to bump him off.  Quite frustrating, really.  But this time, it’ll be different.”
“So you’re going to kill him when the train arrives,” the dispatcher murmured.
“Hah! No, we’re not going to do that.  What are you, crazy or something?  That’s when he’ll most be expecting an attack!  When he’s in a town and the train’s stopped.  It’d be so easy for someone to slip on and off.  The guards’ll be on red alert!”
“Then you’re going to put somebody on the train and wait for it to head west before you actually kill him.”
“Uh-uh.  That’s been tried—by other parties—with, er, how shall we say it…less than favorable results?  No, we’re going to just let the Empire Builder keep going…that is, until it runs into that freight headed east.”
The dispatcher smirked.  “That’s not how railroads work,” Wise said.  “The freight’ll be waiting on a passing siding when the train goes by.  We give Great Northern’s top trains priority.”
“It’ll only be on a passing siding if it knows that another train’s on the track.  For all that freight knows, though, the Empire Builder isn’t anywhere close to Glasgow yet.  It’s already half a day late.  There’s no reason that engineer’s not going to believe it’s later.”
“He’ll see the signals, though,” said Wise.  “That’ll tell him another train’s coming—”
“Only if it’s red,” said Kane, “and it ain’t gonna be red, if you want this girl to live through the night.”  One of the other toughs pointed his gun straight at Marilyn.
Wise’s face turned white, as he started to sense the plan.
“Let me tell you exactly what’s going to happen,” sneered Kane.  “The train’ll arrive, it’ll stop.  Somebody may get off, somebody may get on.  Who knows.  After that, it’ll leave the station.  Not knowing about the freight, it’ll smash head-on into the other train somewhere down the line.
“Will that kill Malone?  Probably not.  The guy’s indestructible.  What it will do is throw everyone on board into confusion.  People will be panicking to get out, but they’ll be stuck in the middle of nowhere, with snowdrifts blocking their escape.  In this type of conditions, they’re not going to get very far.
“Meanwhile, some of my boys are going to follow on one of those engines out in the yard.  We’ll show up right after the crash, get out, and find Malone.  If we get the opportunity, we’ll make his death look like an accident.  Otherwise, we’ll shoot him.
“Either way, we’ve got a perfect escape planned.  There’s a little cabin—accessible from the highway when there’s not too much snow.  There is too much snow right now, but we happen to have a sleigh parked at that cabin.  By the time the wreck happens, one of our cohorts will be driving over the snow to meet us.  When Malone ain’t thinking or breathing anymore, those of us who did the job will ride back to the cabin.  From there, we’ll call this station and tell the ones waiting here that they can get out.  Malone won’t be able to escape, no one will notice his death in all the confusion, and the police will never catch us.  It’s foolproof.”
As he said all this, a whirlwind of thoughts ran through Marilyn Dawson’s mind.  Her first instinct was to jump up and scream, “My father’s on that train!”  However, she knew better than to say that.  Kane had obviously killed men before.  A man as evil as him wasn’t going to let family considerations get in the way of his master plan.  Wisely, she kept her mouth shut.
Instead, Bob Hightower spilled the beans.  “But that girl’s father’s on the freight train!  He’s the engineer!”
“Is he?”  Sure enough, a dreadful smirk oozed over Kane’s face like poison oozing out of a vial.  “Well, that makes your position easier, doesn’t it, dispatcher?  I’m sure if that engineer were here right now, he’d ask you to keep the signal green, rather than forfeit his daughter’s life.”
“You wouldn’t kill a girl, would you?” burst out a shocked Neil.  “What kind of heartless brute do you think you—”
“Shut up!” Kane yelled, fixing the young engineer with an icy stare.  “This gun’s killed all sorts of people.  The rich and the poor, the old and the young, the dangerous and the expendable.  I ain’t too particular about where I put my bullets, and the rest of my gang ain’t either.  Are you, men?”
The other five all nodded their assent.  “They get in our way, boss,” one of them muttered, “and I fix ‘em.  I fix ‘em for keeps.”
“Lefty’s really good at fixing,” Kane bragged.  “I’d advise you to take him seriously.”  He trained his gun at the station agent.  “You, there!  Any passengers getting on tonight?”
“One that I know of!” said Brown.  “He’ll probably be here in a half hour.”
“When he does show up,” said Kane, “I don’t want you to let on that there’s anything wrong.  We’ll have our guns out of sight, but we’ll kill the first one of you that squeaks or tries to leave.  Is that clear?”
The silence equaled a yes.
           “Good.  Then, let’s all relax and enjoy the evening.”

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