Read Ed McBain - Downtown Online
Authors: Ed McBain
"I do, too. I developed the habit in the slammer."
"Sir, are you paying attention here?" Orso said. "Yes, I'm sorry," Michael said. "That's perfectly all right, sir. And we also got this phony movie director who stole your car ..." "It was a rented car," Michael said. "Good thing," Bonano said.
"Which in no way diminishes the fact of Grand Theft, Auto," Orso said. "The point being we now got _two cases here instead of one. Which now makes it _twice as hard." He sighed heavily, and then said, "When did you plan on leaving the city, sir? In case we hear anything." "I'm catching an eleven-oh-five plane out of Kennedy," Michael said, and looked at his watch. "Do you have your plane ticket already?" "Yes, I do." "All paid for and everything?" "Yes."
"That's very good, sir. How did you plan on getting to the airport, sir?"
"Well, I haven't given that any thought, actually."
"Since all your money was stolen, you see." "Yes, that's true." "In fact, sir, how did you plan on getting to Franklin Street?" "Why would I want to go to Franklin Street?" Michael asked. "Because that's where you can catch the train to Kennedy." "Oh."
"Are you familiar with our subway system, sir?" "No."
"I will give you a subway map, sir, which will
acquaint you with all the lines in the city."
47
"How's he gonna ride the subway if he ain't got no money?" Bonano asked.
"Well, I have some change," Michael said, and reached into his right hand pocket. "What's the fare, something like a quarter?" "A quarter!" Orso said. "A quarter!" Bonano said. Both men burst out laughing.
"The fare hasn't been a quarter since the _Dutch were here!" Orso said, laughing.
"The _Indians!" Bonano said, laughing.
"Well, I've got ..." Michael quickly counted the coins on his palm. "Sixty cents," he said. "Sixty cents!" Orso said, and burst into new gales of laughter. "Sixty cents!" Bonano said. "I'm gonna wet my pants!"
"Sir," Orso said, "the fare has been a dollar-fifteen since Hector was a pup, sir. That is the subway fare in the city of New York. For _now, anyway." "How much does it cost in Sarasota?" Bonano asked.
"We don't have a subway," Michael said, and looked at the coins on his palm again. "Mr. Orso," he said, "do you think I can ...?was "No, don't, sir," Orso said. Michael looked at him. "Please, sir." Michael kept looking at him.
"Please don't ask me for a loan, sir. Please. I know that all you need is fifty-five cents to make up the difference between the subway fare and what you've got. But, sir, perhaps you don't know how many victims we get in here all the time, day and night, this city never sleeps, sir, victims who have had every penny taken from them and who need bus fare or subway fare to get them back home again. Sir, I can tell you that if I gave every one of those victims fifty-five cents, or even a quarter, or a dime, sir, even a thin dime, why, sir, I'd be giving away my entire salary to these people and I'd have nothing left to put clothes on my children's backs or food in their bellies. So, please, sir. As much as I'd like to ..."
"You're breaking my heart," Bonano said, reaching into his pocket with his free hand. "Here's
ten bucks," he said to Michael, and with some
49 difficulty extracted two five-dollar bills from his wallet. "This'll get you to Kennedy."
"That is probably tainted money, sir," Orso said. "But do as you see fit." Michael looked at the bills.
"Money from the proceeds of prostitution or drugs," Orso said. "But let your conscience be your guide." Michael took the money.
"Thank you," he said to Bonano. "I'll pay you back."
"You can send your check to Sing Sing," Orso said. "My luck, I'll get Attica," Bonano said.
"Write it out to any one of his names," Orso said. "And, sir, I hope there are no hard feelings. It's just that if I lend money to ..." "Where are the violins?" Bonano asked. "Actually," Michael said, "I wasn't about to ask for a loan." "You weren't?" Orso said.
"You wasted a whole speech," Bonano said. "I only wanted to use your toilet." "Oh. Well, it's just down the hall." "Thank you." "But they have very nice toilets at the airport," Bonano said. "You don't want my subway map?" Orso said, sounding hurt. "I _do," Michael said. "Yes, thank you for reminding me."
"Here's what you do," Orso said, opening the map. "You go outside, you make an immediate right the minute you come down the steps, and the first street you hit is Varick. Okay, you make another right on Varick, and you walk past Moore, which there's a place called Walker's on the corner, and the next cross street you come to is Franklin. But you don't want to go all the way to Franklin ..." "I don't?"
"No, because just before you get to Franklin, what you'll see is a subway kiosk, that's the one right here," he said, and put his finger on the map. "Okay, you go downstairs, and you buy a token
for a buck-fifteen and you go to the downtown
51 platform, make sure it's the _downtown platform, and you get on the A-train. You get off at Howard Beach--that's in Queens--and take a shuttle bus to the airport. There'll be directions when you get off the train," Orso said, and nodded in conclusion, and folded the map, and handed it to Michael. "Thank you," Michael said. "I hope you understand about the money and all. It's just that with all the victims in this city ..."
"Bring on the Philharmonic," Bonano said. "Will you let me know if you hear anything?"
"They _never hear anything," Bonano said. "You'll get old and gray waiting for them to catch that phony cop and his girl. Or the phony movie guy, either." "We caught _you, didn't we?"
"Only 'cause my pants fell down when I pulled the gun," Bonano said.
"You're even uglier with your pants down," Orso said, and both men burst out laughing. They were still laughing when Michael left the squadroom.
He went down the hall to use the toilet, and then came down the iron-runged steps, waving the subway map in farewell to a uniformed cop going up, and then opened one of the blue wooden doors leading to the street, and stepped outside into __Fang, Son of _Claw. The wind almost blew him off the front steps of the station house. It was snowing even more heavily now, the flakes swirling dizzily around the green globes on the station-house wall, the lights casting an eerie glow onto the thick carpet of snow on the steps and the sidewalk below. He pulled up the collar of his coat, walked to the corner, turned right on Varick, walked past Moore, and was just approaching the lighted subway kiosk ahead when a huge man wearing blue jeans, a leather jacket, black gloves, and a ski mask stepped out of a doorway and stuck a gun in his face.
3 One good thing Michael had learned in Vietnam was that a bad situation could only get worse. Either you reacted immediately or you never got
a chance to react at all. Only three
53 words came from the man's mouth, cutting through the wind and the slashing snow, but those words meant trouble. "Hands up, man!" and Michael moved at once, inside the gun hand, knee coming up into the man's groin, head rising swiftly to butt the ski-masked chin as the man doubled over in pain. There was the click of teeth hitting teeth. The man lurched, his hands flailing the air as he twisted partly away from Michael, who reached out for the collar of the leather jacket, caught it, twisted his hand into it, and yanked back on it. He might have been in the jungle again, this could have been Vietnam again. But there was snow underfoot and not the damp rot of vegetation, and the man was wearing black leather instead of black pajamas. Nor was this a slight and slender Oriental who you sometimes felt you could break in half with your bare hands, this was a giant who measured perhaps six-feet two-inches tall and weighed two hundred pounds, and he wasn't about to be yanked over on his back by someone who was shorter by four inches and lighter by thirty pounds. Michael hadn't done this kind of work for a long time now. You got fat living in Florida. Eating oranges and watching the sun go down. You forgot there were such things as people wanting to hurt you. You forget there were such things as sometimes getting killed. In the old days, there'd have been a knife in his hands, and he'd have gone for the throat. But that was then, and this was now, and Michael was working very hard and breathing very hard as the man turned and swung the gun at the same time, slamming the butt into the side of Michael's head, knocking the subway map out of his hand and knocking Michael himself to the sidewalk. He immediately rolled away in the snow, because jungle fighting had taught him yet another thing: if one man is holding a gun and the other man is on the ground and the first man doesn't fire, then the gun is empty and the next thing that's coming is a kick. Michael didn't know how the gun could be empty since not a single shot had been fired, but the kick came right on schedule, aimed straight for the spot on his head where the gun had already hit him. His head wasn't there anymore, though. His head was perhaps six inches from where the kick sliced the air, eight inches now because he was still rolling away from the kick, a foot away now, rolling, rolling, and then scrambling to his knees and
bracing himself because the man was coming at him
55 again, bellowing in what seemed to be genuine rage although Michael hadn't done a damn thing to him but kick him in the balls and butt him under the chin a little.
"Freeze!" a woman's voice shouted, but nobody froze anything. Michael kept coming up off his knees because being on your knees was a bad position when a gorilla was charging you, and the gorilla kept right on charging and bellowing but not firing the gun, which caused Michael to think yet another time that the gun was empty. "I said freeze, _police!" the woman shouted again, which wasn't at all what she'd said the first time, and which this time caused the gorilla to hesitate for just the slightest bit of an instant, but that was all the time Michael needed. He feinted at the masked man's head with a right jab, and then kicked sideways and hard at his ankles, hoping the snow underfoot would help the maneuver, which it did. The man's feet slid out from under him and he went crashing down in the opposite direction, the gun flying out of his hand. This time Michael was on him in a wink, straddling him, and chopping the flat of his hand across the bridge of where the nose should have been under the mask. The man screamed. Michael hoped he'd broken the nose. The woman screamed, too. "Police, police, break it _up, goddamn it!"
She was standing at the top of the steps leading down to the subway. She didn't look like any cop Michael had ever seen in his life.
She was, in fact, a very fat woman in her late thirties, he guessed, wearing a short black monkey-fur jacket over a red garter belt, red panties, red seamed silk stockings, and red high-heeled boots.
At first, Michael thought she was a mirage. Coming up out of the subway that way. Half-naked. In a snowstorm no less. Flaming red hair to match the lingerie and boots. Blazing green eyes, five-feet four-inches tall and weighing at least a hundred and fifty pounds.
Michael picked up the gun and pointed it at the man in the snow. "Up!" he said. "On your feet!" "Drop the gun," the fat redhead said.
Michael had no intention of dropping the
57 gun. Not while the man sitting in the snow was still breathing. "You hurt me," the man said. High, piping, frightened voice.
"No kidding?" Michael said, and reached down for the ski mask, pulling it off his head, wanting to see just how _much he'd hurt him. The man was Chinese. Or Japanese. Or, for all Michael knew, Vietnamese.
Everything seemed suddenly like a dream. He was back in the jungle again, where everyone had slanted eyes, and where day and night he dreamed of naked redheaded women materializing in the mist, though not as short or as fat as this one was. Back then the women who materialized were very slender, but they were all carrying hand grenades in their armpits. The bad guys were slender, too. And very small. This bad guy was very large. "You son of a bitch," he said. In perfect English.
"Nice talk," the fat redhead said. "You," she said to Michael. "I told you to drop the gun." "Where's your badge?" Michael said. "Here's my badge," she said, and took from her handbag a shield that looked very much like the one Cahill had flashed in the bar, gold with blue enameling. "Detective O'Brien," she said, "First Squad." "Officer," the Oriental man said at once, "this person broke my nose."
"No, I don't think so," Michael said.
"Get up," Detective O'Brien said. "I think he broke some of my _teeth, too."
He was on his feet now, tongue searching his teeth for chips, hand rubbing his nose at the same time. Michael knew the nose wasn't broken. He'd have jumped out of his skin just touching it. The teeth were another matter. He'd butted the man pretty hard. "What are you doing sticking up people?" he asked. He had the idea that Chinese guys--if he was Chinese--didn't go around sticking up people. Japanese guys, neither. He wasn't so sure about Vietnamese.
"What are _you doing trying to _kill people?" the
man said.
59 "I was defending myself," Michael said. "From what? A fake gun?" Michael looked at the gun in his hand. It had the weight and heft of a real gun, but it was nonetheless plastic. By now, the man had decided that nothing was broken. Teeth all okay, nose still intact. Which put Michael in a dangerous position in that the gun in his hand was plastic and the man standing before him was beginning to look bigger and bigger every minute. Michael had never seen such a large Oriental in his life. He wondered if perhaps the man was a fake Oriental, the way Cahill had been a fake detective and the way the plastic gun in his hand was a fake Colt .45 automatic. The gun Detective O'Brien pulled out of her handbag looked very real. "I'll shoot the first one of you fucks who moves," she said. Which sounded like authentic cop talk, too. "You," she said. "What's your name?" "Charlie Wong." "Chinese, huh?" she asked.
"No, Jewish," Wong said sarcastically, which Michael figured was the wrong way to sound when a fat lady in only her underwear and a monkey-fur jacket was standing in the shivering cold with a pistol in her hand. "And you?" she said to Michael. "Presbyterian," he said.