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The Payback Assignment foams-1

Page 19

by Austin S. Camacho


  “Sort of,” he replied. “You made a mistake. You confronted the enemy prematurely. Okay. All I’m saying is, you learn from your mistakes and you go on. Don’t beat yourself up too much about it. Turns out these are some extremely dangerous men we’re dealing with.”

  “Well, that’s the Lord’s truth,” Felicity said. “Dangerous and ruthless. So what do you suggest? Should we be running away?”

  Felicity stopped at a red light and Morgan turned to face her. “I suggest a late supper, then a good night’s sleep. And then we hit them again, soon, because they’ll think we feel lucky to just get away with our skins. We take the brooch and whatever else is worth having on the premises.” The light changed and as Felicity pulled away Morgan faced the windshield again. In his mind he was cursing the inevitability of the situation. “Of course, we’ll have to finish it.”

  “Meaning?” Felicity glanced toward him, but Morgan was watching the lights change as they approached, green lighting their progress. “This guy Seagrave, he won’t let it go, Red. If we hit him he’ll send out his dogs and they’ll stay on us until they get us. If we’re ever to have any peace in life, I’ll have to sign him off.”

  “You mean you’re going to top him? Kill him?”

  When she looked at him, Morgan shrugged grimly. “Hey, he tried to kill me first, Red. And you know what they say. Payback is a bitch.”

  29

  Morgan stretched hard, listened briefly for activity in the apartment before swinging his feet to the floor. After an unremarkable late supper with Felicity, he had enjoyed the easy, after action rapport they seemed to share, along with a couple of beers. They had returned to Felicity’s apartment and turned in pretty quickly. A two-hour nap in the guest room had been plenty for him. He could sleep more, but he had things to do, and they were things that should not include Felicity.

  Getting dressed made Morgan aware of some minor soreness, residual damage from his brief meeting with Monk. Pulling on his holster rig he took another look at the pistol he seized from the man who rode with them in the elevator. It was a little Colt Commander, complete with a full magazine of eight rounds of. 45 caliber ball ammunition. Not his favorite, but it would do a much better job than the little. 38 revolver Felicity took from Monk. He pulled the slide back to charge the Colt, pushed the safety up, and slid it into his holster. His plans didn’t include any shooting, but in his mind, it was better to have a weapon and not need it than the reverse.

  In the hall he stopped long enough to tune in to Felicity’s breathing. Confident that she was resting comfortably, Morgan moved quietly through the apartment and out. There were things he had to do before they even considered dealing with Seagrave in his own little fortress.

  Rain met Morgan at the door. He pulled the zipper of his jacket to his chin, turned up the collar, and stepped out into the darkness. It was not a hard, driving rain, but somehow the drops felt unusually sharp as they slashed against his shoulders. New York rain didn’t carry the sweet scent of a jungle shower, but it set the sidewalks aglow in a way that made him feel welcomed. Hands in pockets, he moved purposefully uptown. He thought he might be followed but frankly didn’t care. He hoped whoever might be out there in the shadows would show themselves. If they did he would end their night violently. Otherwise, he would move on to the little after hour spot he remembered from the old days.

  Morgan fell into a steady forced march pace, his leather boots seeping moisture in to his feet, water running off his head into his eyes. The city was relatively quiet, people moving quickly under umbrellas or wrapped in plastic, not bothering to pretend they noticed anyone else. In some indeterminate amount of time Morgan reached Forty-sixth Street, just west of Eighth Avenue. He stopped on a corner from which he could see the waterfront. He was deep in the neighborhood called Clinton, although for the better part of a century it had carried the nickname Hell’s Kitchen.

  Part of Forty-second Street leaked into this little area of narrow storefront restaurants and dance clubs. There were more luxury rentals and fancy condos now than when he was growing up, but he could see that there were still plenty of walkup tenement flats available. The city kept moving, shifting out from under him. There were some pretty nice places within an easy walk – the Hudson Library Bar on 58th, the Float, a hot dance club up on West 52nd Street – but his destination was old school, a nameless basement after hours spot that sort of rebelled against the new age nightlife. Stepping away from the street lamp, Morgan seemed to pull the darkness around himself like a cloak before moving quickly down a flight of stairs to the entrance of a place only people in his business would know about.

  As Morgan pushed the door open, a wave of oppressive heat burst outward onto him, like the fetid breath of the desert. If a wet dog could be set afire and made to smolder, it would smell like this place. He pushed his hands back into his pockets and stepped inside, crossing the bare wood floor toward the long bar on his left. In a far corner, a jukebox boomed out a hard rock song Morgan didn’t recognize, with a base line he could feel in his feet. The room was a dimly lighted square, barely big enough to hold the forty or so patrons seated at its closely packed tables. A small team of barely dressed women wove between those tables, mostly ignored as they exchanged full beer bottles for empties and collected bills from the tables.

  These men were all hard cases: bush pilots, treasure hunters, fire eaters, personal protectors, and professional soldiers like himself. They would call themselves gunfighters, or runners and gunners. They were men who didn’t ask many questions, and didn’t pay much attention to others. So far ignored, Morgan scanned the room slowly. He was surprised to find a few women at the tables, playing cards and drinking with the others. This was an all male joint the last time he was here, but things do change. Anyway, they were females, but they were certainly nobody’s dates. The girls he saw seated were hard cases too, evidence, in Morgan’s mind, of equality gone wildly wrong.

  Morgan spotted what he was looking for at a table almost in the center of the room. The man was short, with broad shoulders and a deep chest. He wore a blonde crewcut and a fatigue shirt with its sleeves rolled up. At the moment he was playing poker with three others but Morgan had last seen him standing in a telephone booth pretending to make a call.

  Morgan got the bartender’s attention and using hand signals ordered a mug of beer. He drank about half of it at the bar, then began weaving through the tables as if he was looking for an empty seat. In a moment he was standing behind the blonde poker player. He gave the man on the other side of the table a friendly nod before gripping the back of the blonde man’s collar. Morgan twisted his fist hard enough to choke Blondie with his own shirt, and calmly swung his mug up against the side of the man’s head. While the others stared on impassively he yanked Blondie from his chair and dragged him across the room. Just as Blondie began to regain his balance, Morgan slammed his head into the bar a couple of times as if ringing a gong.

  “Can I get your attention over here,” he shouted. “My name is Morgan Stark.” All eyes turned to him. A few men stood with clenched fists, and he saw some hands easing toward holsters or knife scabbards. He had their attention.

  – 31 Morgan stood with his back against the bar, holding up the unconscious man by his collar. Someone unplugged the jukebox and the room suddenly seemed even closer. Morgan figured he had about forty-five seconds to make his point before it got nasty.

  “Some of you know me by reputation,” he said, using his drill sergeant voice, “and I see that most of the rest of you have heard my name. I understand there’s a price on my head.”

  He was tracking one man on his right visually, and another directly ahead of him looked ready for trouble. Yet his senses told him that the real danger was behind him. The bartender must be screwing up his courage to try to end any trouble before it started.

  “This guy here, he worked for Griffith,” Morgan went on. “Griffith tried to earn that reward. He’s dead now. His crew’s been following me arou
nd though, at long distance. They even got ahead of me once and set up a trap, complete with a sniper. That guy’s probably in jail now, and a couple of his friends are hanging out with Griffith in hell.”

  Blondie cocked a fist back but before it went anywhere, Morgan slammed a left hook into the man’s midsection. He crumpled to his knees. A couple of the other men in the room stepped a bit closer. The serving girls eased to the far corners. The man Morgan had marked as a danger man, over on the right, had his right hand behind him, surely on the butt of a gun.

  “Now this could go a couple of ways,” Morgan said, pulling his hands out of his pockets and slowly unzipping his jacket. “You could all come rushing at me, right? I’d make a hell of a mess in here,” he pulled his jacket back to show his automatic, “but I’d eventually go down. Then, you’d end up chewing each other up over who gets the money, right?”

  While he spoke in a tightly modulated voice, Morgan felt his senses going crazy. The bartender must be about to make his move. Morgan had him pinpointed by the direction he expected the threat to be coming from.

  “Or, you could let me walk out of here, and chase me around the city until somebody gets lucky,” he went on. “Or…”

  Morgan’s left elbow swung up and around, as if of it’s on accord, crushing the bartender’s nose, causing him to drop the scotch bottle he was about to use as a club on Morgan’s head. Before the bottle hit the bar, Morgan was diving to his right, his pistol thrust forward, rocking in his hand as the slide slammed back and forward, the blasts echoing in the packed room. As he slid across the floor the two men who had drawn were falling backward into their neighbors, their blood splattering the men standing behind them.

  Morgan slowly stood, halfway to the door now, his gun still at arm’s length toward the room. A particularly large, olive skinned man in a wifebeater and jeans stepped over to the bar, separating himself from the others.

  “You got a point here?” he asked in a thick Corsican accent. “What do you want, Stark?”

  Morgan nodded his recognition at the man who apparently spoke for the group. Even in a room full of alpha males, one would always surface.

  “What I want is forty-eight hours of peace,” Morgan said. “I know who put the price on my head, and it’s nobody in the business. Not a fighter or a shooter, just some rich businessman. I’m telling you right now, he’s going to be in no condition to pay up by this time tomorrow night. I just don’t want to be looking over my shoulder while I’m taking care of him.”

  The Corsican huffed impatiently. “And if you fail?”

  “Hell, if I don’t put this guy down in the next two days, then I deserve to get capped by whoever thinks they can get close enough.”

  Morgan’s mouth felt unnaturally dry, as he stood alone, gauging the crowd. It all came down to what kind of mood they were in, what kind of night it had been. He had played it the best way he knew, and now he would learn if it worked or not.

  The big Corsican looked down at his table. He glared over at the two unmoving men on the floor in the middle of the room. He shook his head for a minute. He unconsciously fingered the hilt of a Kukri knife hanging from his belt. Finally, he locked eyes with Morgan.

  “I come here to drink beer and play cards. That’s what I want to do. Get the fuck out of here.”

  Morgan took a slow deep breath, nodded, and slowly holstered his automatic. The jukebox came back on as he backed toward the door. By the time he was opening it the room’s occupants had already forgotten him, except for the men who were lifting the corpses for disposal.

  A cold rain stung his face as he stepped outside. Not a big deal, he thought, and his remaining errands would be a lot more pleasant.

  30

  Felicity’s eyes popped open at eight-thirteen. She had slept well. A bright sun beamed into her room, the sky rinsed clean by night rain. She got up and stretched her naked form into the sunbeam, absorbing the warmth, absorbing the silence. Fully stretched, she headed for the door. She knew before she opened it that Morgan was gone.

  She had no rational way to know. They had slept in separate rooms after stopping for some barbecued ribs she found both interesting and delicious. She remembered that Morgan had made her laugh by painting word pictures of their enemies, turning them into caricatures. He joked about the trouble they had with “Donkey Kong”, “Stone-face” and their boss, the walking pear man. He had made her feel confident and relaxed. She had awakened only briefly in the night, with an uneasy feeling, but it had faded in seconds and she knew he was fine.

  She treated herself to a hot shower, dried herself with a plush terry cloth towel, and gave her hair a hundred brush strokes. Halfway through them she knew he was back. It was eerie in a way, but also very comforting, being able to feel when someone was nearby. They had not had a chance to talk much about these strange phenomena, but she felt some experimentation would be in order as soon as she had her brooch in hand.

  As she squirmed into her Calvin Kleins, Felicity heard the stereo pop on. Music filled the apartment, happy but fierce. A trumpet wandered effortlessly through lilting expository phrases. Very soothing, she thought as she pulled on a sweatshirt, pushing the sleeves halfway up. Soothing yet driving.

  Morgan, standing in the living room, looked up as she approached. The overstuffed shopping bag at his feet prodded her curiosity almost as much as the man standing beside him. The stranger was shorter, with curly black hair and an olive complexion. When he spotted her he took a small step back.

  “What a fox,” the newcomer said, under his breath.

  “I know what you mean,” Morgan said. “She never just comes into a room. She always makes an entrance. I always feel grubby next to her.” Felicity chuckled at that, since he had on black denims, new black running shoes he had picked up someplace and a charcoal wool blazer over a gray, Italian cut dress shirt. It was a sharp contrast to her jeans and sweatshirt. He had clearly been shopping, but the only clothing stores open at dawn were parked at the curb of certain city streets.

  “Good thing I wasn’t walking around starkers,” she said, stepping forward to offer her hand. “Who’s your friend?” She was surprised to find Morgan bringing a guest to the apartment, but figured he must have a good reason. Besides, the man was handsome in a Middle Eastern way, dressed very nicely in a conservative blue suit of obviously steep price tag.

  “Felicity, this is Aaron Goldsmith. I met him in Brussels during an arms deal. Now he sells insurance.”

  “A very pleasant surprise,” she said, smiling at Aaron.

  Your boyfriend here was ringing my doorbell before the sun was up,” Aaron said. “Believe me, I’m not a morning person.”

  “Maybe,” Felicity said with a smile, “but as I’ve learned, Morgan can be a very persuasive person. Now, Morgan, what else did you bring me?”

  “Assorted pastries for you to pop into the microwave,” Morgan said, lifting a package from the top of the shopping bag.

  “Well, there goes my diet,” she said, accepting the little bundle. “What else?”

  “Stuff.”

  “What kind of stuff?” she called from the kitchen.

  “Stuff for tonight.”

  “Great,” she said. “Find out what Mr. Goldsmith wants in his coffee.”

  “Aaron, please,” Goldsmith called. “And I’ll take a little cream and one sugar.”

  Felicity’s coffee maker had automatically ground beans and brewed a fresh pot just minutes before. She reveled in the tangy aroma of her own personal blend of Costa Rican and Columbian beans while pouring three cups, Aaron’s she prepared as he requested. For herself she added two sugars, a little cream, a stick of cinnamon, a drop of vanilla and a little chocolate powder. Morgan, she knew, took his straight.

  She placed a tray on the oak cube in front of the sofa, next to Morgan’s shopping bag. With Morgan and Aaron on the couch and Felicity in one of the overstuffed chairs, they ate warm pastries and drank hot coffee and listened serenely to the African rhyth
ms. The cherry and cheese-filled Danish in her mouth was as sweet and relaxing as the music.

  “You know, this is good stuff.” She nodded toward the stereo.

  “Yeah. Miles Davis,” Morgan said, moving his head with the sound. “The CD is `Bitches Brew’. The state of the art of jazz in the early seventies, and one of the best albums ever cut.”

  She let the music rule the room, waiting for Morgan to tell her the new scenario. After a couple of minutes, he glanced at Aaron, who nodded.

  “Aaron wasn’t that anxious to come over until I filled him in on the week we’ve had,” Morgan said. “And I didn’t drag his ass out this morning to sell me an insurance policy. He’s also kind of an information broker, too.”

  Felicity’s brows knit accusingly, and Aaron quickly added, “I don’t deal in blackmail, miss.”

  “No, he just makes it a point to know things, and shares that information with interested parties,” Morgan said. “For a price.”

  “I see,” she said. “And he knows things we want to know, I take it. That’s why he’s here. He knows you, but he wanted to meet me to make sure I was okay. Well, do I pass?”

  “That’s not it at all,” Aaron said around a mouthful of pastry. “I know you too, at least by reputation. I just wanted a chance to meet you in person.”

  “Okay,” Felicity said, turning to Morgan. “I assume that you didn’t bring Aaron here for a social call. What is it we’re wanting to know from him?”

  “I thought a little more background about Seagrave was in order.”

  “I checked him out,” she said, sipping her coffee. “He’s a ruthless businessman, made a lot of enemies, but seems to know how to handle his money. What else is there to know?”

  “You checked society sources,” Aaron said, leaning back. “Maybe you got his business background but nothing of the real man. That’s what Morgan wanted me to give you.” She sat forward as Aaron spoke. She really had seen the man from a single point of view, and realized the possible advantage of a different perspective.

 

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