Authors: Glen Cook
I arrived beside Morley and Chodo. “Might be smart to get him out of here. That thing don’t look sociable.”
It dropped through the hole, and landed at the far end of the pool, fifty feet away. It was twelve feet tall, had six arms, and might have been the thing on those temple coins. It wavered as though I was seeing it through an intense heat shimmer. Or as though it didn’t know if it wanted to be a six-armed gorilla or something even uglier.
Chodo’s bodyguard stopped charging. I guess he had suffered a fit of sense.
Morley said, “I think you’re right.”
The thing jumped Chodo’s man before he could turn around. Their struggle was a one-second contest. Pieces of thug flew. The ape thing munched on a leg and eyed the rest of us.
Chodo cursed. Morley got his chair moving. I dipped a hand into a pocket. This seemed like the time.
The thing roared and charged. I let fly with the ruby bottle Peridont had given me. It splattered on the monster’s chest. I spun to race Morley and the kingpin.
The monster skidded to a halt, scratched itself, and woofed puzzledly before it let out a howl. I reached the doorway and turned.
Flesh dribbled down the thing’s chest like wax on a candle. And it was evaporating, shedding a red mist. It screamed and clawed itself and threw gelatinous gobbets of itself that splattered on the marble floor, evaporated, left pitted stains. It went into convulsions, tumbled into the pool, thrashed the water into a scarlet lather.
Morley said, “I’d hate to be the one who has to clean that up.”
Chodo croaked, “Now it’s a life I owe you, Mr. Garrett.”
And Morley said, “Garrett, I grow ever more fearful that someday I’ll be with you and you won’t have a trick up your sleeve.”
“Me too, Morley. Me too.”
“What the hell was that thing?”
“Tell me and we’ll both know.”
“Never mind,” Chodo growled. “Talk later. Take me to the front door.’’
He was right. We weren’t out of anything yet. There was a brawl out front.
We arrived as it broke up. Most of the thunder lizards and half the thugs were out of action. But the effort put out by the airborne guys cost them, too. An athletic lizard caught one with a flying leap and dragged him down. The other, with about twenty missiles stuck in his armor, shot off like a comet going the wrong way.
Crask and Sadler noticed their boss. They came over as fast as they could limp.
Chodo told them, “Gentlemen, I’m angry.” He didn’t sound it. He’s one of those guys who is at his nastiest when he seems his coolest. “There will be no more surprises.”
The house and grounds shuddered. A scarlet fog belched through the spine of the house and dispersed in the breeze.
A diminished thunderhead went off with the last sky walker. And the sun peeked over the horizon, checking to see if it was safe to come out.
Chodo told his boys, “Find those people. Kill them.” What a sweetheart. He looked at me and Morley. “Have someone drive these men home.” He seemed blind to the fact that Crask and Sadler had been knocked around like shuttlecocks. “Here come Cage and Fletcher. Get their reports. Then move.”
Two thugs were coming up the drive, their chins dragging on the ground.
30
I dropped out of the coach in front of my place and thought I’d keep dropping. “Getting too old for this,” I muttered. This thing had become too deadly. I barely had time for a cleanup and maybe an hour nap before I started tracking Jill down.
If I could decide where to start.
I was sure she hadn’t gone back to her apartment, though I’d check. She’d have more savvy.
Dean let me in. He fed me. I told him what had happened so my useless boarder could listen in. Dean was properly appalled, though he thought I’d exaggerated an incident into a whopper. Afterwards I went upstairs, stretched out, and continued to worry the problem I’d badgered all the way home.
Was I becoming identified with the kingpin?
People were getting killed and people were trying to kill me and all I could think about was the chance that my reputation for independence might be sullied.
That rat Dean let me snore for four hours. I yelled at him. He just smiled. I didn’t yell too much. Chances are his reasoning was sounder than mine. Rested I was less likely to do something stupidly fatal.
I jumped up, did a quick change and cleanup, a quicker meal, and hit the street. My first stop was Jill’s apartment. I had no problem getting inside. At first glance nothing had changed. But I felt a change. I looked around until I caught it.
The coin drawer was empty. Anybody could have gotten to that. But a battered old rag doll had disappeared too. I was willing to bet nobody but Hester Podegill would bother taking that.
So she’d risked coming back, if only for a moment. Just to grab a doll and some change? I didn’t think so, not the ice maiden. It felt like a by-product of a more desperate mission. So I tossed the place again. And I didn’t find another thing added or taken away.
I wasn’t pleased as I slipped out. There should have been something … I eyeballed the doorway across the hall.
Why not look?
The door swung quietly as I pushed it inward. Nobody stampeded over me. I went inside. And there it was, lying in plain sight on a small writing table.
Darling:
The key is safe. I have to disappear. They are getting desperate. Be careful. Love.
Marigold. Marigold? The handwriting matched that in a note written to me by one Hester Podegill. Did she have a different name for every person she knew? That would make her hard to find. No one would know who I was talking about.
She was an actress. Suppose she became a different person each time she donned a different name? She’d really be hard to find then.
I had to get to know who Jill had been before I looked for the Jill who existed now. That was a technique Pokey had used when he was after someone who was voluntarily missing. He talked to relatives, friends, enemies, neighbors, acquaintances, seducing them into talking however he had to, until he knew the missing person better than anyone else alive — until he was able to think like his quarry.
But that took time, and time was at a premium.
My best bet was Maya and the Doom. They were handy. And I owed Maya that apology.
I hit the street, troubled by a vague certainty that I’d overlooked something critical. But what? Nothing came. I moved slowly, checked my surroundings. Yep. The boys were out there.
They’d picked me up as I’d left my place. I’d spotted three of them coming over. They weren’t getting close. They didn’t seem inclined to get in the way. Nor did they work real hard at staying out of sight. I couldn’t get a close look but they didn’t have the lean, impoverished look I’d seen in my recent enemies.
If they were going to keep their distance I’d worry about them when the time came.
I was a block from the Doom’s lair when I realized those guys weren’t the only folks stalking me. The Sisters of Doom were on me, too.
People don’t pay enough attention to kids, especially youngish girls not showing colors. I didn’t get it until I realized I’d seen the same faces several times. Then I paid enough attention to pick out a couple I’d seen before.
Now what?
They closed in as I neared their hideout. I must have hurt Maya’s feelings more than I’d thought.
She always was touchy and unpredictable.
If there was a confrontation it would come off better in the open, where I’d have some choice about which way I’d run.
I sat down on a tenement stoop.
That threw them, which was the plan. I expected them to get Maya and she’d come explain what a horse’s ass I am.
It didn’t work that way.
After a few minutes the girls understood that I was calling. They moved in. Some electric sense of trouble flooded the street. Everybody who wasn’t part of it disappeared, though nobody ran and nobody hollered. The girls edged toward me with the group confidence of pack animals. I slid a hand into a pocket and toyed with one of Peridont’s gifts.
I picked a sixteen-year-old I recognized, looked her in the eye and said, “Maya is overreacting, Tey. Tell her to get her tail out here and talk before somebody gets hurt.”
The girls looked at each other, confused. But the one I’d spoken to didn’t let an antique baffle her with bullshit. “Where is she, Garrett? What did you do with her?”
The gang was in close now, feeling nastier. And those guys that I’d noticed before were moving in behind the girls. There were five of them and I knew two, Saucerhead Tharpe and a slugger named Col-train.
I got it.
Chodo was sure he’d need Jill’s knowledge before he could settle with the Master. He was just as sure that I’d be the guy to find her. So he’d gotten Morley to lay on a loose cover to make sure I stayed healthy and to keep him posted.
Morley is a friend, sort of. He’s a lot better friend when-you keep an eye on him. He works these deals with his conscience.
I watched those five drift in behind the girls. I chuckled.
“You think it’s funny, Garrett? You want to find out what we do with comedians? You want to see if you can laugh with your balls down your throat? What did you do with Maya?”
“I didn’t do anything with her, Tey. I haven’t seen her. That’s why I came here. I want to talk to her.”
“Don’t feed us a ration of shit, Garrett. The last time anybody saw Maya she was hanging out with you, with moon eyes as big as a cow.”
One of the little ones noticed my guardian angels. “Tey. We got company.” The girls all looked around. The level of hostility dropped dramatically. Five guys like those five guys are enough to dampen anybody’s belligerence.
“So,” I said, grinning. “Tey. Why don’t you sit down and we’ll talk like civilized people.” I patted the step.
Tey looked around. So did her friends. Those guys didn’t look like their consciences would bother them much if they stomped a bunch of girls. They looked like they ate kids for snacks.
Tey was one of Maya’s lieutenants. She fancied herself Maya’s successor. She was a nasty little thing, uglier than a boiled turnip, with manners that made Maya seem genteel. But she had brains. She understood talk as an alternative to more popular methods of resolving disputes. She sat. I said, “I get the impression you guys have misplaced Maya.”
“She never came home. Things she said made it sound like she had plans.”
“She was with me,” I admitted. “We wandered around trying to get a lead on some guys who killed a buddy of mine.” I outlined our evening. The mob listened like they wanted to catch me in a lie.
Tey said, “You don’t know Maya the way you think. You’ve got to take her seriously. She don’t say it unless she means it. You know what she’s done, don’t you?”
“She tried to follow those guys so she could show me what she could do on her own,” I said.
“Yeah. She gets dumb stubborn sometimes. What’re we going to do?”
“I’ll find her, Tey.”
“She belongs to the Doom, Garrett.”
“These guys play rough. This isn’t a turf rumble, bang a few heads and it’s over. These guys tried to hit Chodo Contague. They used sorcery.”
She didn’t bat an eye. “Sorcerer bleeds same as anybody else.”
I looked at her hard. She wasn’t whistling in the dark.
“You recall a blonde gal used to belong to the Doom, used a lot of made-up names, told a lot of lies about herself to make herself look important?”
“Hester Podegill?”
“That’s one name she’s used. She may be a little crazy.”
“More than a little, Garrett. Sure, I remember her. Hester was her real name. She wanted to be crazy. She said when you’re crazy the truth is whatever you want it to be. She wanted what she remembered not to be true.”
I gave her the hard eye again. “You were close?”
“I was her only friend because I was the only one who listened. I was the only one who understood. I was the only one who knew what she had to forget.”
Sometimes you cross the river so fast you don’t get your toes wet getting to the other side. I flashed on all those lamps in Jill’s apartment. “She started the fire that killed her family.”
Tey nodded. “She dumped a gallon of oil on her stepfather when he was passed out drunk. She didn’t think what the fire could do. She just wanted to hurt him.”
If I’d killed my whole family I’d want to be somebody else, too. I’d want to be crazy. I might even want to be dead like them.
“What about her?” Tey asked.
“She’s the key in the mess Maya and I were snooping around.” I gave her more background. “She might be able to tell us something.” I spoke softly, not wanting word to get around that Garrett wasn’t the only one who might get a line on Jill Craight. For my sake and the Doom’s.
Like I said, Tey had a brain. I’d told her enough for her to put a lot more together. “You’re a snake, Garrett. A slick-talking snake. We’re going to turn you loose. But next time you see me I just might be Maya’s maid of honor.’’
I didn’t handle that well. She laughed at me. It wasn’t a pleasant laugh. She said, “I have some ideas where to look for Hester. I’ll let you know.”
I wanted to argue but it was too late. My convoy had decided I was safe and had faded. If I pressed I’d get the hostility perking again. So I sat quietly while the girls went off to do the hunting themselves.
I could think of nothing better to do so I went home, where Dean told me there had been no message and no visitors. I told him Maya might be in trouble. That upset him. He blamed me without saying a word. I asked if the Dead Man’s temper had improved. He told me the old sack of lard had gone back to sleep.
“Fine. If that’s the way he wants it, we’ll just leave him out of our lives. We won’t even bother him with the latest about Glory Mooncalled.”
I was bitter. I blamed me for Maya’s predicament, too. I had to take something out on somebody. The Dead Man could handle it.
31
I took a bath, changed again, ate, then for lack of any brilliant plan, walked up to the Tate family compound and had a big row with Tinnie. Then we made up.