Pulp Fiction, 1946 · page 15 of 84
10-Story Detective Magazine, April 1946 — page 15: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Page Analysis: "Merchant of Vengeance" This is a **story prose page** (page 13) from a hardboiled crime pulp magazine. The text depicts a scene where detective Tommy Slawter confronts Rodney Pell about a poisoning case. The narrative reveals that George Stawse (apparently a gang member) may have poisoned Sam Ownmond at the Comet Park café, and that Ownmond's wife Lola was present. A key plot point emerges: Tommy realizes Mrs. Pell gave him a letter that may contain evidence—possibly hidden in newspaper and found in his overcoat pocket. The page shows mounting tension as Tommy recognizes this letter's significance to the murder investigation.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
__ERCHANT OF VENGEANCE——————___13 He was a nervous guy, all tight and ready to snap. Slawter wondered if this could be Rodney Pell. _ Dr. Merryway pushed by him, his mon- strous figure biending darkly into the shadows of the hall. “I want to see Mrs. Pell,” Slawter said. “Mother isn’t seeing anyone just now,” “Tell her who I am and she'll see me. Tell her it’s Tommy Slawter come to visit.” * “7’ll tell her it was some snooper look- ing for trouble,” said the young man. “G’wan, beat it, you!” He banged the door in Slawter’s face. A cab stopped in the street as the de- tective came back down the steps, and Betty Romine rolled down a rear window. “Yoo-hoo,” she called. “Yoo-hoo, Mr. Slawter!” He walked over to the cab. Betty pushed open the door and introduced him to Rodney Pell. “That fellow you were just talking to is Rodney’s brother,” she said, This time he knew she wasn’t kidding. “How does it feel to have a stomach full of poison?” he asked Pell, not hiding the irritation in his voice. Pell grimaced stubbornly and didn’t speak, Betty said, “Things are different now since I’ve found Rodney. I promise never te give you a wrong cue again.” She gave with a warm smile, moved over, “Get in, Tommy.” He sat down beside her, putting ber between him and glum-faced Rodney. “Thanks for tipping me off about Ser- geant Treckess.” She smiled sofily, mischievously. “Ser- geant Treckess is looking fer you. 1 met him on the street, and he wanted to know if you were in your office. But we made up that stuff about the vial of poison peing found in the booth at the café.” “That stuff about the bus driver, where’d you pick up that dope?” He guessed he sounded pretty sore, because a hurt look clouded her eyes for a mo- ment. “Rodney knew his mother talked to you last night. He saw her give you his letter, It’s one he wrote when—when this trouble all started.” She looked at Rodney as if she ex- pected him to stop her. He didn’t. “You see, Rodney got the idea you’d poisoned Georgie Stawse. I told him the idea was silly. He said it wasn’t. paper evidence to prove tha in for certain members Georgie was mixed in- with. I j n’t picture you poisoning an ney doped out the story about the vial fi poison being found at the café, and I sprung it om you over the phone, We wanted to see if you’d get panicky and run,” nee Tommy said, “Just who is—was Georgie Stawse?” Rodney cleared his throat and grudg- ingly told him. “He was the guy who ran the Comet Park dance hall for Sam Ownmond, He’s also the guy who was found dead in the café.” “He was sweet on Ownmond’s wife, the Comet Park trick dancer ealied Leia,” Slawter said, using information he'd gleaned from the crazy cabby, “Some things you do know,” said Red- ney. “Yes, Lola was playing wp te his. ~It was burning old Sam Ownmond down to watch it, too.” “Ownmond probably poisoned him. Fed him the poison somewhere eise, then Stawse came into the café, and—” He stopped. That wouldn’t do, Stawse had been slugged inside the café, and died from the poison while he was wuncon- scious, “He didn’t go anywhere after he was slugged,” Pell said. Betty said, “Anyway there Was poison in the soup, and Daddy didn’t put it have been in Florida for aver a week.” IGHT then Tommy was thinking that Mrs. Pell might have given him a letter. A letter might have been rolled inside the piece of newspaper. He dis- tinctly remembered puttmg the rolled piece of newspaper in his overcoat pocket. Then when he’d found it it had been in his suit coat pocket. He said, “I think I lost the letter Mrs. Pell gave me. 1—” The sudden change in Rodney’s face checked him. It was like turming on a light behind a dark curtain. A look of gladness was a flail _beating the gloom of his map. Slawter went on, “I think Jake Romine must have taken it from my coat at the eafé.” In that second a wilder, sicker gloom moved in and crowded the gladness off CORMIC Oo) S _ (SO@