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35

Morley had company. I had to wait. Then wait. Then wait some more. While I waited, Saucerhead came in. I waved. He joined me, glumly. “Cheer up. I need some muscle,” I told him.

“Like now?”

“Right away. Unless your investments—”

“Can’t wait?”

“Would I be . . . ? What’s the matter?”

“Just don’t feel like it, Garrett. Not in the mood.”

“Since when do you have to be in the mood to make yourself a mark?”

“Hey, busting heads ain’t all the fun it looks like, Garrett.”

“I know. I know.”

“How would you? You don’t wale on nobody unless—”

“You feel good enough to pick up a few coppers running a message?”

“I guess. Yeah. I could handle that.”

I sent him to fetch Captain Block. If I had to wait around forever for Morley to finish playing, I might as well pull in the money man while I did.

I did wait. And I waited. And then I waited. I waited so long I got sober. No Morley. Block and Tharpe showed up, dripping. It was raining again. I thought some more about getting into the boat business. When Morley still showed no sign of growing bored with his guest, I said, “The hell with him. We can handle it without him. Let’s go.”

Block was relieved. He didn’t think it would be politic for him to associate with a professional killer.

Saucerhead said, “I’ll tag along.”

“Thought you weren’t in the mood.”

“Maybe I’ll change moods.”

“It’s raining out there.”

“It’s always raining. Let’s go.”

Block said very little till we enjoyed the privacy of the street. “I hope this is something good, Garrett. I need it.”

“Yeah?”

“Pressure again. You don’t feel it down here. The Hill is in a panic. Some people up there are carrying on like the Venageti were at the gates. I need something fast. Anything.”

“Tell you what. This doesn’t pan out, you pass the word for them to keep their daughters out of the Tenderloin.”

“Give me a break, Garrett.”

“I mean it. There’s a fad amongst the deb set. Go down and play sleazegirl. That won’t make their fathers happy, but it’s a fact. It looks like our killer picks his victims from rich girls working the quarter.”

“That won’t make anyone happy.”

“Not when it gets out. You recall, none of the stories we got about the victims ever mentioned anything like that. I think we talked to the wrong people. People who didn’t know and didn’t guess because the bodies weren’t found near the quarter.”

“Maybe some suspected. I can think of several stories that sounded like somebody trying to make somebody look good.” Block sniffed, grunted, hawked. He was working on a cold. “We get lucky, maybe we won’t have to deal with any of that.”

“We don’t get lucky, maybe we can let the word get around without it looking like it’s your fault. It will come out if this goes on much longer.”

Block grunted again.

I glanced over my shoulder. My instincts were right. We were being followed. “Did you maybe bring a few helpers?”

Block glanced back. “Yeah. They’re mine. Clumsy, aren’t they?”

“They don’t get much practice.”

“Thought it might be handy having a few guardian angels hovering.”

“Aw. You don’t feel comfortable in the Tenderloin?”

“Make fun while you can, Garrett. Things are gonna change.”

Nice talk, but I wouldn’t put one copper on it. Good intentions can’t overcome the inertia of decades.

We reached the Passionate Witch. I checked my companions before I went inside. Tharpe was fine. And Block didn’t look like the law. “We’re going to be talking to some real lowlifes. Let me do all the jawing. No matter what. Understand?”

Saucerhead said, “Means you, Captain. You want to lose these guys fast, let them get a notion what you are.” I gave Tharpe the fish eye. He said, “I know Downtown Billy Byrd, Garrett. Bottom of the barrel.”

I said, “I’m going to try to bring them out here. You bring money?” I asked Block.

“Some. I won’t let them rob me.”

“They don’t have imaginations that big. What they’d call robbery you’d call a tip.” I shoved into the Passionate Witch.

The evening was fading but Downtown and his pals were hanging on, nursing their stone beer bottles, waiting for opportunity to knock. I knocked. Downtown grumbled, “I thought you forgot us.”

“Had trouble finding my man.”

“Huh?”

“Guy I work for. One who wants to know what you know. He’s outside. Wants to listen. He brought money. You ready to deal?”

“Now?”

“You want to wait for the King’s birthday? He don’t have time to waste.”

“Why don’t he come in? It’s wet out there.”

“He don’t want to show his face. You have to get wet anyway. You got to show us the way, right?”

“I guess. Shaker. Take care of the bottles.” To recover their deposits, of course. “Dickiebird. C’mon.”

I led the way. Downtown and Dickiebird followed like they counted on trouble. Each kept a hand inside his shirt. Knives. Shaker wasn’t near the bar, getting deposit refunds. He’d vanished. “Awful nervous, aren’t you, Downtown?”

“Think about it, Garrett. We got a bunch of murders, Hill gals what probably got daddies that eat no-counters like you and me for snacks. Could get hairy.”

“Sure could.” I didn’t like being included in his no-count family. I’m at least a one-counter. “But it hasn’t yet. We’re counting on what you tell us fixing it so it never does.”

“Yeah?” He was starting to think about holding me up.

Block stepped out of the shadows. “These the men?” Saucerhead wasn’t to be seen. Somebody had to watch for Shaker. Block looked damned evil in a bad light. He might do.

“Yes. They say they think they saw the last victim, who called herself Barbie, get snatched. They think they knew one of the snatchers.”

Block eyed Downtown and Dickiebird. “What’s the deal?”

“Huh?”

I asked, “You have a plan, Downtown? You got a price? Talk to us.”

“Uh. Oh.” Downtown looked around for eavesdroppers, or maybe to see if Shaker had him covered. “Yeah. Like this. You pay half now. We show you where to find your guy. He’ll be home, I guarantee.” Like he’d maybe checked while I was collecting Block. “He don’t go out. You pay us off. We split. You forget you ever saw us.”

“Not bad,” I said. “Only let’s make it you get the other half after we grab the guy and make sure he’s the one you saw.”

“Garrett! Take it easy, man. He’ll know who fingered him.”

“If he’s the real thing, you won’t have to worry about what he knows,” Block said. “How much?”

Downtown tried to get a better look at Block. “This don’t sound like nobody off the Hill, Garrett.”

“Don’t worry about where he comes from. Worry about earning his money.”

“Yeah. Right. We figured about thirty marks would be fair. Ten apiece.”

Small men have small ambitions. Block had trouble keeping a straight puss. He jingled coins, handed me three gold five-mark pieces. I passed them to Downtown, who stared at them in the light leaking from the Passionate Witch. “Damn.” He was stunned by the certainty that he’d just blown a rare opportunity.

“Too late, son,” I told him when he started to say something. “You set the price. Time to deliver.”

“Uh. Yeah.” He led off.



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