"Suppose I picked up a phone and called a doctor?" Hawes asked.
"I'd shoot you."
"Aren't you afraid of another explosion?"
Willis said.
"You got a little nervous when Murchison came up here last time, didn't you?" Hawes said.
"Shut up, redhead. I've had enough from you."
"Enough to shoot me?" Hawes said.
"Yes."
"And chance the explosion?" Brown put in.
"And another visit from downstairs?"
"You can't chance that, Virginia, can you?"
"I can! Because if anyone else comes up, the nitro goes, goddammit!"
"But what about Carella? You blow us up, and you don't get Carella. You want Carella, don't you?"
"Yes, but ..
"Then how can you explode that nitro?"
"How can you chance another gunshot?"
"You can't shoot any of us, can you? It's too risky."
"Get back," she said.
"All of you."
"What are you afraid of, Virginia?"
"You've got the gun, not us."
"Can't you fire it?"
"Are you afraid of firing it?"
Hawes came around to the left side of the desk, moving closer to her.
"Get back!" she said.
Willis moved closer on the right, and Virginia whirled, thrusting the gun at him.
In that instant, Hawes stepped between her and the bottle of nitroglycerin. She was out of the chair in the space of a heartbeat, pushing the chair out from beneath her, and starting to rise. And as she started the rise, Willis-seeing that her hand was away from the bottle, knowing she was off balance as she rose -kicked out with his left foot, swinging it in a backward arc that caught her at the ankles. Hawes shoved at her simultaneously, completing the imbalance, sending Virginia sprawling to the right, toppling toward the floor. She hit the floor with resounding force, and her right hand opened as Hawes scuttled around the desk.
The gun fell from her fingers, slid across the floor,
whirled in a series of dizzying circles and then came to a sudden stop.
Willis dove for it.
He extended his hand, and Hawes held his breath because they were getting rid of the crazy bitch at last.
And then Willis shrieked in pain as a three-inch dagger of leather and metal stamped his hand into the floor.
CHAPTER I3
The black skirt was taut over the extended leg of Angelica Gomez. It tightened around a fleshy thigh, pulled back over the knee, ended there in sudden revelation of shapely calf and slender anlde. A black strap circled the anlde and beneath that was a red leather pump with a heel like a stiletto. That heel was buried in the back of Willis' hand.
And then Angelica pulled back her leg and stooped immediately to pick up the gun. From the floor, her skirt pulled back over both knees, her eyes flashing, she whirled on Lieutenant Byrnes, who was reaching for the bottle of nitro on the desk top.
"Don' touch it!" she shouted.
Byrnes stopped cold.
"Away from the desk," she said.
"Ever'body! Back! Back!"
They moved from the desk, fanning away from it, backing away from a new menace which seemed more deadly than the first.
Angelica Gomez had stabbed a man and, for all they knew, that man might now be dead. She had the law to face, and she also had the street gang to face, and so the look on her face was one of desperate resignation. Angelica Gomez was making her pitch for better or worse, and Christ help whoever stepped into her path.
She rose, the pistol unwavering in her fist.
"I'm ge'n out of here," she said.
"Don' nobody try to Stop me."
Virginia Dodge was on her feet now. She turned to Angelica, and there was a smile on her face.
"Good girl," she said.
"Give me the gun."
For a moment, Angelica did not understand. She looked at Virginia curiously and then said, "You crazy? I'm leavin'. Now!"
"I know. Give me the gun. I'll cover them for you. While you go."
"Why I should give you the gun?"
Angelica said.
"For Christ's sake, are you on their side?
The ones who want to send you to jail?
Give me the gun!"
"I don' have to do you no favors. I ask before you let me go, an' you say no. Now you want the gun. You crazy."
"All right, I'll put it in black and white. If you take that gun with you, I'm jumped the minute you leave this room. And that means they'll be on the phone in four seconds and the whole damn police force will be after you. If you give me the gun, I hold them. I keep them here. No phone calls. No radio cars looking for you. You're free."
Angelica thought about this for a moment.
"Give me the gun!" Virginia said, and she took a step closer to Angelica. The Puerto Rican girl stood poised like a tigress, her back arched over into a C, her legs widespread, the gun trembling in her hand.
Virginia came closer.
"Give it to me," she said.
"You hol' them back?~' Angelica asked.
"You keep them here?"
"Yes."
"Come then. Come close."
Virginia moved to her side.
"Your hand," Angelica said.
Virginia held out her hand, and Angelica put the gun into it.
"I go now," she said.
"You keep them here. I get away. Free," she said, "free."
She started to move. She took one step away from Virginia, her back to the woman. Quickly, Virginia raised the gun.
Brutally, she brought it crashing down on the skull of Angelica Gomez. The girl collapsed to the floor, and Virginia stepped over her and moved rapidly to the desk.
Does anybody still think I'm kidding?"
she asked quietly.
Roger, the servant who had been with Jefferson Scott for more than twenty years, was sweeping out the hallway when Carella went upstairs again. Hunched over a tall thin man with white wisps of hair circling a balding head, he swept up the wooden rectangles, squares, triangles, and splinters of the crowbar's destruction. The foxtail brush worked methodically in thin, precise fingers, sweeping the debris into the dustpan.
"Cleaning up the mess?" Carella asked pleasantly.
"Yes," Roger said.
"Yes, sir. Mr.
Scott liked things neat."
"How well did you know the old man?"