“Nick can't afford an apartment,” I said. “He sleeps here. He drinks sometimes. You might have to be loud.”
Fitz eyed the block and then the door. “Yeah. Great.” He rapped on the metal shutter. Nothing happened. He repeated it, knocking slightly louder and longer. Still nothing.
“Ticktock, kid.”
He glowered in my direction. Then he started pounding on the shutter in a heavy, steady rhythm.
Maybe five minutes later, there was the click of a speaker, evidently small enough to be concealed virtually in plain sight. “What?” said a cranky, whiskey-roughened voice.
“Um,” Fitz said. “Are you Nick Christian?”
“Who wants to know?”
“My name is Fitz,” the kid said. He'd pitched his voice slightly higher than usual. It made him sound a hell of a lot younger. “Harry Dresden said that if I was ever in trouble, I could come to you.”
There was a long silence. Then Nick's voice said heavily, “Dresden is history.”
“That's why I'm here,” Fitz said. “I don't have anywhere else to go.”
Nick sounded annoyed. “Dammit. He told you to say that, didn't he?”
Fitz looked slightly bemused. “Well. Yes, actually.”
“I am getting too old for this crap,” he growled. Then there were several loud clicks and a short, heavy screech of metal, and the shutter rolled up.
Nick Christian hadn't changed much since I'd last seen him. He was short, out of shape, well past his fiftieth birthday, and had sharp, quick, dark eyes that seemed to notice everything. His bald spot was larger. So was his stomach. He was dressed in a white undershirt and boxer shorts, and he held an old wooden baseball bat in his right hand. He shivered and glared at Fitz.
“Well, boy. Get in out of the cold. And keep your hands in sight, or I'll brain you.”
Fitz held his hands up in plain sight and went in. I followed. There was a threshold at the doorway, but it was flimsy as hell, and felt more like a sheet of Saran Wrap than a wall. The muddling of business and home life in the same space was probably responsible. I pushed through it, following Fitz.
“Right,” Nick said. “Close the shutter and the door. Turn all the locks.”
Fitz eyed Nick for a moment. Streetwise and cynical, the kid didn't like the idea of locking himself into a strange building with a strange old man.
“It's all right, Fitz,” I said. “He might kick your ass out his door if you give him trouble, but he won't do anything to hurt you.”
Fitz glowered in my general direction again, but he turned and followed Nick's instructions.
We stood in his one-room office. It looked . . . Hell, it looked almost exactly like mine had, though I'd never compared the two in my head before. Old filing cabinets, a coffee machine, a desk, and a couple of chairs that had been pushed all the way to one wall to make room for a simple folding cot on an aluminum frame. Nick also had a computer and a television set, features my office never had. Nick was no wizardâjust an old detective with a set of iron principles and a self-appointed mandate to help people find their lost children.
There were also seven pictures on his wall, every one of them an eight-by-ten school photo of a child between the ages of six and thirteen. The first few were faded, the hair and clothing styles in them clearly aged.
Nick went around to the back of his desk, sat down, pulled a bottle of rye from the top drawer, and slugged back a swallow. He capped it, put it back, and eyed Fitz warily. “I don't get involved in Dresden's line of work,” he said. “I know my limits.”
“The magic stuff,” Fitz said.
Nick shuddered and glanced at his top drawer. “Yeah. That. So if you came here for that, you're out of luck.”
“No,” Fitz said. “It's about gangs. Dresden said you knew them.”
Nick shrugged one shoulder. “Some.”
“A man I know was abducted,” Fitz said. “There's a description of the guy we think did it.” Fitz dished out what I remembered about the thug who had broken into Morty's house.
Nick listened to it all without saying a word. Then he nodded once. Then he asked, “Who is this man to you?”
“No idea,” Fitz said. “You're the expert.”
“Not the kidnapper.” Nick sighed. “The victim.”
Fitz hardly hesitated. “My uncle.”
Nick mused over that. Then he said, “I am too old to get up in the middle of the night and get conned. Get out.”
“Wait,” Fitz said, holding out a hand. “Wait, please.”
Nick opened the top drawer again, but this time he came out with an old 1911. He didn't point it at Fitz. “Good try, kid. But I've been in this town a while. Walk back to the door and let yourself out.”
“Dammit,” I muttered. “Fitz, listen to me. Tell him this, word for word.”
Fitz listened, nodded, and then said, “I can't tell you everything for a reason, Mr. Christian. Dresden said you and he had an understanding. That you wanted nothing to do with his side of the street.”
“I don't,” he said. “Get out.”
I fed Fitz his next line.
“He also said that you owed him a favor.”
Nick narrowed his eyes to slits. “What favor?”
Fitz listened to me, then said, “All the money and fame the Astor case brought you.”
Nick arched an eyebrow. “All the . . .” He looked away and shook his head. He couldn't keep the smile off his mouth, until he finally snorted. When he spoke, there was laughter under his words. “That sounds like Harry.”
The Astor case had been about a little girl lost. Her parents cared more about the fame of having an abducted daughter than they did about her, and when she ran off one day, they hired the child-recovery specialist Nick Christian and his apprentice, Harry Dresden, to find her. We did. She hadn't been kidnapped, but the Astors had reported her so, and, in the absence of an actual perpetrator, fingered Nick and me. It had been a trick and a half to get her safely back into her parents' custody without going to jail. There was a lawsuit afterward. The judge threw it out. But, all in all, finding that little girl had cost Nick about two thousand bucks.
Nick hadn't wanted to take the case. I had talked him into it. He had wanted to cut and run the moment I confirmed the kid was at liberty. I had talked him into seeing it through, being sure she was safe. When I'd completed my apprenticeship, Nick's graduation present had been to forgive me the two grand I owed him.
“You were tight with him?” Nick asked.
“He was sort of my adviser,” Fitz said. “Sometimes it's almost like he's right there next to me, still.”
Nick grunted. “Investigation apprentice or the other kind?”
Fitz put on a sober face. “I'm not at liberty to say.”
“Hngh,” Nick said, nodding. “Heard he'd picked up an apprentice. You're holding back to keep me distanced from the situation.”
“Yes.”
“And you just want the information? You don't want me to work the field on it?”
“That's right.”
“A wwww,” Nick said. He scratched at his ear and said, “Yeah. I guess. What else can you tell me about this guy?”
I fed Fitz his lines. “He was crazy.”
Nick snorted. “Whole hell of a lot of gangers are crazy, kid. Or the next best thing.”
“Less money-drugs-sex-violence crazy,” Fitz said. “More creepy-cult crazy.”
“Hngh,” Nick said. Lines appeared on his brow. “There's one, where they all wear the hoodies with the hoods up all the time. Got rolling maybe three or four years back. They don't call themselves anything, but the gangs call them the Big Hoods. No one knows much about them.”
“Perfect,” I said to Fitz. “Sounds like the assholes we're looking for. Ask him where they're set up.”
“A tunnel under the Eisenhower Expressway, on the south end of the Meatpacking District. The other gangs think they're crazy to be where the cops move so freely, but the Big Hoods never seem to attract any police attention.” He scrunched up his eyes. “Don't think they even claim any territory. That's all I got.”
“Because they aren't a gang, per se,” I said. “Excellent, Fitz. Let's move.”
“Thank you,” Fitz said to Nick.
“Thank Dresden. Wouldn't have said that much to anyone else.”
“I'll do that.” Fitz stared intently at Nick for a moment and then said, “What do you do here?”
“As a private cop?” Nick asked. “Take some cruddy work to keep the lights onâdivorces and so on. But mostly I look for lost kids.”
“Doing it a while?” Fitz asked.
“Thirty years.”
“Find any?”
“Plenty.”
“Find any in one piece?”
Nick stared hard at Fitz for a long time. Then he pointed a finger up and behind him, to the row of portraits on the wall.
“Seven?” Fitz asked.
“Seven,” Nick said.
“In thirty
years
? You live like this and . . .
Seven
? That's
it
? That's
all
?”
Nick leaned back in his chair and gave Fitz a small smile. “That's enough.”
Â
Outside, Fitz said, to me, “He's crazy.”
“Yeah,” I said. “And he helps people.”
Fitz frowned and moved hurriedly back out of the Vice Lords' domain. He was silent for several blocks, seemingly content to walk beside me and think. Eventually, he looked up and asked, “You still there?”
“Yeah.”
“All right. I helped you. Pay up.”
“Okay,” I said. “Take a right at the next corner.”
“Why?”
“So I can introduce you to someone who will help.”
Fitz made a rude sound. “You really love not telling people things, don't you?”
“I don't love it, so much as I'm just really good at it.”
Fitz snorted. “Does this guy drink, too?”
“Nah. Sober as a priest.”
“Fine,” Fitz sighed, and kept trudging.
Chapter Twenty-six
“Y
ou've got to be kidding me,” said Fitz.
We were standing outside Saint Mary of the Angels. Calling the place a church is like calling Lake Michigan a swimming hole. It's huge, literally taking up an entire city block, and an architectural landmark of Chicago. Gorgeously built, a true piece of gothic art, both inside and out, St. Mary's had often served as a refuge for people with the kind of trouble Fitz was facing.
The kid was not in good shape. We'd done a considerable bit of hiking that evening, and despite what might have been the beginnings of a thaw, it was still below freezing, and the slight lack of bitter cold in the wind wasn't stopping it from cutting through Fitz's layers of mismatched clothing and his old jacket. Those lean, gangly kids have the worst of it when winter sets in. They lose their body heat fast. He'd been making up for it in exercise, but he was getting tired, and I remembered that he probably hadn't eaten since I'd seen him before the previous day's sunrise.
He stood clutching his arms around his body, shivering and trying to look like nothing was wrong. His teeth were chattering.
“I know a guy here,” I said. “Go around to the back door and knock until someone answers. Ask for Father Forthill.”
Fitz looked skeptical. “What's he gonna do for me?”
“Give you a blanket and some hot food, for starters,” I said. “Look, kid, I'm giving you my A game here. Forthill's a decent guy. This is what he does.”
Fitz clenched his jaws. “This isn't getting me the guns back. I can't go back without them. If I can't go back, I can't get my crew out.”
“Go inside,” I told him. “Talk to Forthill. Get some food in you. If you decide you want to go back and try to sneak the guns out of that drift on your own, you'll have plenty of time before dawn.”
Fitz set his jaw stubbornly.
“Your choice, man,” I said. “But going hungry in cold like this is hard on the body. You had, whatâseven weapons? Most of them submachine guns? Comes out to maybe forty pounds. Call it fifty if you bring back all the clips and ammo. Think you can burrow into a half-frozen snowbank, get all those guns out, load them up, and walk for most of an hour in the coldest part of the night? On an empty stomach? Without a cop spotting you and wondering what a guy your age is doing on the dark streets so late, carrying a really heavy bag?”
He grunted.
“At least have a damned sandwich.”
Fitz's stomach gurgled audibly, and he sighed. “Yeah. Okay.”
Â
It took Fitz five minutes to get anyone to answer the door, and when it finally opened, a dour, sour-looking elderly man in a heavy brown bathrobe vaguely reminiscent of a monk's habit opened the door. His name was Father Paolo, and he took himself very seriously.
Fitz told him that he needed to see Father Forthill, that it was a matter of life and death. Only after several minutes of emphasizing his original statement did Father Paolo sigh and invite Fitz in.
“Stay there,” Paolo said, pointing a stern finger at Fitz.
Fitz pointed at the ground, questioningly, and then nodded. “Got it.” Then he deliberately took a small shuffle-step to one side as the priest began to turn away, drawing a scowl worthy of at least a cardinal.
I probably shouldn't have undermined Paolo's authority by chuckling like that, but come on. That's comedy.
Forthill came down the hall from his chambers a few moments later, dressed in flannel pajamas and a heavy, black terry-cloth robe. He had thick, fuzzy house shoes on his feet, and his fringe of hair was standing up every which way. His bright blue eyes were a little watery and squinty without the aid of his glasses. He blinked at Fitz for a moment and then said, “Can I help you, my son?”