'Helpmeet.'

'What?'

He showed her a sober smile. 'The Canuck helped save my skin once.'

'I guess it's an offer,' she said, giving him a perplexed gaze. 'I, uh, I couldn't have asked you, Mack. You've got enough to...'

He said, 'I need a new angle of attack, anyway.'

'Well...'

'We need to hit directly at the source.'

'Toronto?'

He nodded glumly. 'You still have a pilot's license?'

'Sure. I'm Toby. Fly me anywhere.'

'You'll have to leave your badge at home.'

'Oh, sure. I told you, I'm on leave.'

'I'm the boss. You do what I say when I say it.'

'You're the boss,' she agreed soberly. 'When do we start?'

'How does five minutes sound?'

She leaned across the table to plant a kiss on his lips, holding her own there in light contact as she told him, 'Like music, Captain Quick. Like a fresh new sound from a fresh new place. God loves you, Captain Wonderful.'

Bolan wasn't so sure about God, but the message from the helpmeet was very clear.

And, this time, he couldn't decide whether it was good or bad.

Necessary, though, yeah. Cosmic magic, maybe.

The onus, for damned sure.

10

Backtracked

Toby first placed a brief call to Toronto — then she rented a Beechcraft single-engine job, and they flew due north out of Detroit before angling eastward across Lake Huron for the penetration of Canadian airspace.

She was a good pilot and an excellent seat-of-the-pants navigator. They crossed the width of the Ontario boot and reached Toronto without incident, putting down at a small field near the shoreline of Lake Ontario.

A few brief words from Toby cleared a path there and saw them speeding into the city, minutes later, in a rented car.

Bolan did not ask, nor was he told about the 'special arrangement' that the girl enjoyed. He suspected that it had to do with Georgette's 'someone big with the police establishment.' He knew that someone with considerable authority, and probably great concern for the fate of the missing policewoman, was working some magic for them.

They reached the 'suspect place' on Toronto Harbour while the day was still young. Following Bolan's instructions, Toby canvassed the neighborhood in two slow passes, then she parked directly at the entrance to Simon's Grotto, a 'girls girls girls' joint that apparently catered to the waterfront crowd.

The girl remained with the vehicle while Bolan made a frontal assault on the problem. He wore a dark, neatly tailored suit, nylon turtleneck, and the Beretta Belle.

Simon's was dark, reeking with a thousand identifiable odors, and mostly empty of patrons. A narrow doorway with a chair placed in the opening divided the joint — into day and night, probably.

'Day' was a long bar with greasy wooden stools and a line of small tables along the outside wall.

'Night' was a fair-sized lounge with many tables jammed close together, now with chairs upended atop them. A large stage spanned the far end.

There was a smaller stage in the day room, behind the bar. It held a couple of wicker props and a life-sized poster of a fetching filly called Tootles LaFleur, below which was scrawled the announcement: Luncheon Show.

Yeah. Bolan could see it with his inner eye: luncheon with Tootles — bare bouncing boobs with beer and a cheese sandwich and pretzels to lift a guy briefly from deadening monotony and hopeless mortality. Sure, every man sought his own cosmic magic at the level available.

The guy behind the bar had no magic left whatever. He gave Bolan a disinterested greeting and waddled along the backbar like a walrus on his final march to the sea.

'No lunch 'til eleven,' the barman announced from several paces back. 'You want beer, we got — '

'Where's the boss?' Bolan growled.

'What?'

He pinned the guy to his tracks with a fierce glare and a voice of sheer ice. 'The man, damn it!'

'Oh, he uh ...'

'Don't screw around. It's a long way from Detroit.'

'Oh, sure,' the walrus said, glad to be relieved of further thought and, therefore, responsibility. 'Just through the door there, turn left. Office is behind the stage. You'll find it.'

Bolan found it with no difficulty whatever and with no loss of time. He was moving quickly along a narrow hallway when the door presented itself, bearing the neat sign: 'Mister Simon. Private.'

Bolan presented the door with two hundred pounds moving fast behind a driving foot, and the flimsy thing splintered away in full surrender.

Two guys were seated at a table along the back wall. One was stacking currency, the other was feeding coins into a counting machine — or, that's what they had been doing.

Now they were lunging onto their feet and grabbing for revolvers that were perhaps no more than a heartbeat too far away. The Belle leapt into that void and sealed it there — one heartbeat away — with a pair of rustling little persuaders that had no respect whatever for the privacy of mere flesh and bone.

One of the guys spun into the wall. The other hit the corner of the table and the whole thing went over.

A fortyish guy behind a rickety desk gasped, 'My God! My God!'

The guy had no god, and he must have known it right away. Both hands immediately .shot skyward, and he stammered, 'No — not armed — wait!'

Bolan went over there and placed the warm muzzle of the Belle at the center of Mister Simon's forehead.

'Take it!' the guy gasped. 'Hell, it's yours, I'm giving it to you. Take it!'

The icy Bolan gaze slid disdainfully to the scattered stacks of bloodsoaked currency. 'That? I didn't come for that.'

He kept the Beretta where she belonged and flipped a marksman's medal onto the desk. 'Pick it up,' he commanded.

Simon picked it up, then dropped it with a shivery jerk. 'Oh, my God! Hey, I'm not — no! Wrong guy! My God, I'm not Mafia!'

Bolan told him, 'You stink like it, guy.'

'I'm not! I swear! Let me prove it! I'll cooperate! Tell me what you want. Hey, just tell me!'

'Girls girls girls,' Bolan intoned coldly. 'At wholesale prices. What's the going price of one girl, Simon? About fourteen ninety-two?'

'What? What? Hey, hey, look now! I'm a supplier, that's all. After that I don't know nothing! I swear!'

The Belle pressed her advantage, and the guy's head went to full backward tilt. Now he was staring straight up toward his forlorn god. 'You better think up something; better than that, guy,' the voice from hell advised him.

'Well, God, give me a hint! What d'you want?'

Вы читаете Detroit Deathwatch
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату