Amos Walker: The Complete Story Collection (44 page)

BOOK: Amos Walker: The Complete Story Collection
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He wrapped a hand around my neck and reared back. “Sorry, man.”

The fist was coming at me when a woman in the crowd screamed. The scream was higher and louder than any of the others and it made him hesitate just an instant.

I didn’t. I doubled both fists and brought them up in an uppercut that tipped his head back and snapped his teeth together and broke his grip on my neck. Then I put my head down and butted him in the chest. He staggered back, spitting teeth.

The whole crowd was screaming now, and not at us. A torn and bleeding Henry Revere had stumbled into the building trailing a pack of enraged dogs that were bounding through the audience, bellowing and slashing at limbs and throats with the madness of fear and anger and pain. One, a red-eyed pit bull, leaped over the concrete rim and landed on my dazed opponent and I clubbed it with my forearm before it could rip out his throat. Stunned, the dog sank down on all fours and fouled the pit.

“You all right?” I asked.

He got his feet under him, a hand on his throat. It came away bloody, but the skin was barely torn.

“I guess.”

“What’d they promise you, a clean ticket?”

“Probation.”

“Give me a leg up and maybe you’ll still get it.”

After a moment he complied and I scrambled out of the pit, then stuck out a hand and helped him up. Most of the crowd had cleared out of the building. One of the dogs lay dead, shot through the head by one of the cops; the report had been drowned in the confusion. Another stood panting and glaze-eyed with its tongue hanging out of a scarlet muzzle. I didn’t look for the others. My former opponent and I went out the door.

It was more dangerous outside now than in. Cars were swinging out of the makeshift parking lot, sideswiping one another and raking headlamps over scurrying pedestrians and dogs. I heard sirens getting nearer. I wondered who had called the cops. I wondered which cops they had called.

A maroon Cadillac swung into the light spilling out the barn door, illuminating Proust’s pale face behind the wheel. I shouted at the black man and we ran after it. His legs were longer than mine; he reached the car first and tore open the door on the driver’s side and pulled Proust out with one hand. The car kept going and stalled against the comer of the other building.

The black man took a gun from under Proust’s coat and hit him with it. I let him, then twisted it out of his grip from behind. His other hand was clutching the acting police chief’s collar. Proust was bleeding from a cut on his forehead.

“Police! Freeze! Drop the gun!”

I did both. A county sheriff’s car had pulled up alongside us and a deputy was coming out with his gun in both hands. The door on the passenger’s side opened and George Strong got out.

“It’s all right,” he said. “That’s our inside man.”

The deputy kept his stance. “What about the other?”

I said, “He’s with me.”

Strong looked from Proust’s half-conscious face to mine. “I bribed the guard at the high school for this spot. I remembered I was a newspaperman and that maybe the biggest story in years was getting away from me. What about the ones who hurt Stillwell?”

“Sergeant Gogol and Officer Joyce,” I said. “APB them.”

His crinkled face got wry. “Did you find the woman’s dog?”

I indicated the other barn. “In there. Take it easy on him,” I told the deputy. “Take it easy on all of them.”

“You a dog lover or something?”

“No, just one of the dogs.” I walked away to breathe.

Safe House
One

Our host was a county deputy
who wore a lumberman’s checked jacket over his uniform blouse and non-issue wool pants. His name was Jerry and he had a long slab of blue chin and a .38 Chief’s Special in a holster behind his right hipbone. I wanted to ask how the hunting was in that country but I’d been told not to speak to anyone except the two detectives who were guarding me. Jerry no longer looked at me, having filed me with the antlers over the door and the ulcerated leather sofa he said his father had died in with a .30-30 round in his chest during the 1966 deer season.

“Boys need anything?” he asked at the door. “How you fixed for eggs and shit?”

“Eggs we can use. Walker here gives us all the shit we need.” Sergeant Coyne, seated as close to the oilcloth-covered table as his hard thick belly would let him, booted two cards out of his hand and accepted fresh recruits without looking up.

Jerry left. Outside, his Jeep Cherokee started up and clattered away. Officer Blevins, a long sinewy strip of busted University of Detroit basketball scholarship in an unbuttoned vest, as black as
Coyne was pale, bumped the pot up six bits and the sergeant threw in his hand with an oath.

“Two players sucks. Just pushing the same three sixty-seven back and forth. Sure you won’t sit in?” Coyne looked at me.

“How long have you two partnered?” I asked.

He frowned at Blevins. “Six years?”

“Eight.” The black detective raked in the pot and shuffled the deck.

I said, “I’ll pass. I got cleaned out once playing checkers in Huron Metropark with this old wheeze who spent his retirement playing with his friend. Either one of them could tell you in three moves where the game was going from there.”

“Hear that, Marcus?” Coyne said. “You and me are too good for the private flash.” Blevins grunted and dealt.

Actually the sergeant was the worst poker player I’d seen in a long time. His face mirrored every card he drew and he fell like a piano for the most transparent bluffs; but I needed his good opinion.

They’d been shoving three bucks and change around the table for eight days, ever since I’d been tagged to testify before a grand jury investigating the death of a hood named Frank Acardo in front of my building. I’d missed the shoot, but I’d seen the Colombian hitters waiting for him earlier and so far I was the only witness who could place them at the scene. Rumor said the Colombians were laying out ten grand for me dead, which was a good deal more than I was worth alive. I hadn’t had a client in weeks.

“Spicks got all the hotels staked out,” Coyne had said when we’d arrived at the safe house, a hunting cabin in Oakland County arranged by a friend of the deputy’s in the Detroit Police Department. “Sorry we got no mints to put on your pillow.”

I didn’t mind. There was nothing waiting for me at the office and the smell of knotty pine reminded me of hunting trips north, a
long time ago. I ate Blevins’ greasy cooking and read old paperback westerns and watched Coyne get himself bluffed out of everything but his shoulder rig.

He tossed in his cards again and leaned back, shoving his hands in his pockets. “Ten G’s, that’s a year’s pay after taxes for me. How’s come the Spicks got more to spend than the city?”

“Less overhead.” Blevins reshuffled. “Spit-in-the-Ocean?”

“I ain’t
got
spit. You cleaned me out.” He rose to answer the telephone. “Coyne. Sure, he’s still breathing. What time? ‘Kay.” He hung up. “Pack your panties, Sherlock. You go on at three.”

I got up from the sofa. “I’ll miss this place.”

“You and Grizzly Adams,” he said, shrugging into his sportcoat.

It was a 45-minute drive to Detroit and the City-County Building, where a soporific clerk directed us to a row of seats outside the jury room. The seats across from us were occupied by the man I was there to give evidence against and his entourage. This included his lawyer, young and black in a gray sharkskin suit and one of those bottle-top haircuts they go in for now and a pair of dark-skinned, long-haired bodyguards that would dress out to 500 pounds and look at home in Aztec ceremonial kit.

The man seated between the two hulks belonged to another species. Hector Matador was narrow enough in face and body to vanish when he turned your way, which may have been why he always presented a three-quarter profile, looking at you out of one eye. He had small hands and feet, big eyes, a hawk nose, and wore his black hair in bangs like Al Pacino in
Scarface.
Dressed like him, too, in fawn-colored suits with peaked lapels, pink silk neckties, and a camel’s-hair overcoat flung across his shoulders cape fashion. He glanced at me with one mahogany-colored eye that had no bottom, then looked away.

He recognized me, all right. The last time I’d seen him he was seated beside the driver of the car that sped away from the scene of Frank Acardo’s murder.

After a brief whispered consultation with the assistant city prosecutor, a big man named Fallon with red hair and the broken-knuckled hands of an Irish bricklayer, I went in to answer questions. Thirty minutes later I paused at the top of the outside steps to shake Fallon’s hand.

“We’ll get an indictment,” he said. “I’ll call you when we have a trial date. I wish you’d reconsider and remain in custody.”

“Being a witness doesn’t pay enough. I’ll watch my back.” I’d said good-bye to Coyne and Blevins outside the jury room.

“Watch your front, too. These Colombians don’t care what direction they come at you from.”

I took a cab to the office, circular-filed most of the mail I found waiting for me under the slot, paid some bills, and ran a duster over the desk. My answering service had no messages for me; just to make sure they asked me to repeat my name. The investigation business has more slumps than the Tigers. I was thinking of signing up for a course in word processing when the telephone rang.

“Walker’s School of Dance. Fox-trots our specialty.”

Pause. “Is this Amos Walker?” Female, middle register, 30 to 35. I took my foot off the file drawer and said it was. “My husband has been missing for a week.”

“Do you want him back?”

“I wouldn’t be calling you if I didn’t. Do you know the Blue Heron?”

“It takes a month to get a reservation there,” I said.

“I’ll meet you there at six. Ask for Glasscock.” She hung up.

Two

The restaurant was tucked back from four lanes of solid traffic in West Bloomfield, identified only by a blue long-legged bird taking off from a sign with no lettering. A rangy hostess in a white silk blouse and long black skirt came out from behind a trellis and towed me to a corner table looking out on the garden.

“I’m Natalie Glasscock. Thanks for coming.”

I took a slim hand with a ruby the size of a typewriter attached and gave it back to the woman seated at the table. I’d guessed her age right over the telephone. She had a lot of black hair brushed back without ceremony and a little makeup on the kind of face that writers call handsome to keep from slobbering all over the keyboard. She wore a grayish-pink suit with no blouse that was plain enough to have cost plenty. The ring was her only jewelry. It would have been enough for Imelda Marcos.

I sat down. “Glasscock Bodies?”

“Now it’s GlasCo, and we make everything from surgical lasers to those easy-exercise gadgets that get a ten-day workout and then wind up in the attic. Cars don’t have bodies any more. Drink?”

She had a full martini glass in front of her. I got rye from the waitress who’d materialized when she made the offer. The help faded. “Your husband is a Glasscock?”

“My husband is an Emmett Firman. My great-grandfather founded the company. He’s hypertensive.”

“Your great-grandfather?”

“He died in 1930. Emmett’s the hypertensive one. I thought it might help you locate him.”

“You mean by making faces at strangers until one turns red and keels over?”

“I mean by canvassing drugstores. He needs medication. I brought his prescription.” She took an empty plastic vial out of a purse with a clasp that looked like a Krugerrand and gave it to me.

I glanced at the typewritten label and pocketed it. “This is Detroit. People with high blood pressure outnumber the muggers. I could peddle Emmett’s picture around drugstores every day for a month and not cover them all. That’s a manpower job. Any reason you haven’t called the police?”

“Just one. The same reason I haven’t called the Six O’clock News. Except for the occasional wedding and death the name Glasscock has never wandered beyond the newspaper business page. As the last one to bear the name I’d rather keep it that way.”

“When’d he leave?”

“Last Monday morning about eight o’clock. He has an office in the GlasCo Building on Grand. He never arrived.”

“Did you have a fight?”

“Emmett and I never fought. He’s entirely without passion. Frankly I was surprised when his doctors diagnosed hypertension. It was the first I knew he had any blood pressure at all.”

“I guess that rules out a mistress.”

Something stirred behind her face. She opened the purse again and handed me a matchbook. “I found that in the pocket of one of his jackets. He didn’t take any of his clothes with him.”

It had an advertising cover, THE DELPHI in blue on marble gray, with a telephone number and an address on Watson. I gave it back. “The Delphi’s a gay bar,” I said. “Is your husband a homosexual?”

“I can’t believe he practices. He lacks passion as I said. But it wouldn’t shock me to learn he leaned that way. We haven’t had relations since our honeymoon, and
that
was a disaster.”

Our waitress was back. Her flush said she’d heard more than she’d cared to. We read our menus and ordered appetizers. I waited
until we were alone again. “Personal question.”

“I married Emmett because my father’s will stipulated I had to have a husband in order to collect my inheritance. A wedding was cheaper and less involved than an attempt to break the will. I don’t think I have to tell you why he married me.”

“Are you sure you want him back?”

“I’m used to him.”

I asked her a few more questions and then the food came. “Another drink?” Natalie Glasscock asked.

“Not if I’m going to a bar later.”

The waitress left. “Is that an acceptance?”

“Seven-fifty will do for a retainer.”

Three

When you visit a gay hangout, and you’re not trolling for truckers, it pays to bring reading material; it turns away all but the most rabid pick-up artists while you check the place out. I drank a beer at the bar and read a veiled piece in the
News
about my testimony in the Matador case. There was a sidebar listing Hector’s various money-laundering operations under the umbrella of his dummy company, Corrida Ltd. I guess I was out of town the day the hoods moved from the police blotter to the financial pages.

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