He said, “And the keys to that shitty little bike, too, bitch.”
With a flick of her wrist, the end of the chain whipped out, whapping the white kid in the face, his nose breaking with a sharp little crack, sending him windmilling back, yowling, hands coming up to cover his nose where blood was erupting with scarlet insistence.
The skinny Hispanic lurched forward, thrusting with the knife, and she sidestepped, grabbed his arm, and dropped to one knee as he went by. With considerable force, she bent the skinny arm backward, then slammed into it with her shoulder. The arm snapped, the kid screamed, and the knife fell from splayed fingers to do a little hop, skip, and jump on the concrete, spinning when it landed. Rising, she backhanded his face with a fist, which shut him up momentarily as he spit blood and teeth. As he was staggering up to a half-standing position, she spun and kicked him hard between the legs and he crumpled to the cement where he alternated moans and sobs.
The bigger one charged her now, in a mix of fear and anger, his eyes white in his red-streaked face. Her chain lashed out and wrapped itself around his lower leg and she gave a sharp tug and his leg did a chorus-line kick before he dropped with a whump.
Jordan leapt, landing with a knee on his chest that sent blood and spittle flying from his grunting mouth. She twirled her hand and the chain wrapped itself around that hand, which became an iron fist with which she battered him, pounding him in the face, stopping when she was looking down at a blinking scarlet mask, not wanting the trouble killing him might cause.
She got off him.
The white kid lay on his back like an overturned bug. He was moaning and a tooth she had freed was sticking through a cheek.
She was breathing a little hard, but nothing extreme.
“Yo, bitches,” she said. “Come dance anytime.”
They said nothing, just moaning there on their backs. She went to each of her attackers and kicked them twice in the ribs — they responded with “Unh! Unh!” “Unh! Unh!” — and then she went over and found the knife and collected it. A switchblade. Old school.
She was chaining her bike to the lamppost when the Hispanic, his broken arm swinging like a busted fence gate, stumbled over to his friend and helped him to his feet and they hobbled into the dark, whimpering like the kicked dogs they were.
In her apartment, she put the switchblade in the silverware drawer as if it were a butter knife. She doubted those two would ever be back, but if so, she would be ready. Nice to know that what she’d taught herself could be put to practical use. Stepping to the fridge, she shadowboxed with the picture of the male face held by a magnet to the door.
She felt ready for what lay ahead.
Smiling, she stripped, went into the bathroom, and turned on the shower — hot as she could take. As the mirror started to steam, she stepped under the spray, the hot needles feeling just fine; she still felt exhilarated. She started to reach for the soap, but her fingers faltered.
Her stomach did a little back flip and her knees went weak. Slowly, she sagged and slid down to a sitting position, the hot water still pounding her. She just sat there, for quite a while, huddled in the corner in a fetal position. Maybe she was crying. Maybe it was just the shower spray. She would never tell.
Not even herself.
Chapter Eight
After his encounter with Basil Havoc, Mark would have to play things much closer to the vest. No one besides his partner Pence and Captain Kelley himself knew of Mark’s investigation into the apparently related “family” murders.
Yet somehow Havoc had made him. Had either Pence or Kelley told somebody else, a trusted reporter or another cop maybe, about Mark’s homicide-investigation hobby? That seemed unlikely, but either the guy got tipped off or he maybe was even smarter than Mark had imagined.
And Mark didn’t take this man lightly. If Havoc was the killer, that made him one resourceful son of a buck. You couldn’t kill as many people as Havoc apparently had, over all those years and jurisdictions, and avoid capture without a Mensa-level IQ and a certain jungle cunning.
At work, Mark stayed focused and intense, as always. He and Pence had been busy as heck trying to track down a burglary ring, where the clues and witness interviews just wouldn’t mesh. After some digging, it became clear two somewhat similar such rings were operating in the same area.
Either one or both of these crews had been at it for the better part of a year now. Sooner or later their luck would go south, and either somebody would be home, or would walk in on them. Then what? Home invasions, no matter how carefully planned, could erupt into violence.
Or as Pence colorfully said, “What if these crews find out about each other? I mean, we did. And suppose they don’t cotton to havin’ competition? Further suppose they turn up to burgle the same building, the same time? All of a sudden, we got two simple robberies turnin’ into one great big fuckin’ O.K. Corral.”
How serious was the situation? Serious enough for purse-string pincher Kelley to green-light overtime. In this economy, that put these burglaries on a par with bank robbers.
Or maybe a serial killer.
Nearing midnight, they would normally have still been at HQ, pushing papers, sifting for clues; but Pence had gotten a lead from a snitch of his. Right now they were sitting surveillance outside the back door of Gold Medal Pawn, a rundown shop in an equally rundown neighborhood.
The snitch had told Pence that Robert Slowenski, owner of Gold Medal, was up to his old fencing ways and clearing goods for a burglary ring. This would appear to be one of the two such rings the Pence and Pryor team were seeking to bust.
In his seventies, darn near wide as he was tall, the nearly bald Slowenski was known by his colleagues (and the cops) as “Slowhand,” a nickname the pawnbroker claimed dated back to when he’d once sold a Stratocaster guitar to Eric Clapton. While Clapton had indeed performed in Cleveland from time to time, the story was likely fanciful, because the nickname actually related to Robert Slowenski’s reputation for being slow to pay.
Though the front of the store was dark, a dim bulb extended over the back door in the alley, with Slowhand’s dodgy-looking Lincoln Town Car parked not far away, barely allowing passage for any other vehicle.
Farther down the darkened alley, Pence and Mark (behind the wheel) sat in their unmarked Crown Victoria, right where they had been for the last three hours. Mark had wanted to be a detective for a very long time, but he wondered if he’d have gone into this line of work had he known about the dulling boredom of a stakeout.
Each detective had a penlight in one hand — Pence had a newspaper in his lap, the light shining on a Sudoku puzzle that was a mystery the seasoned detective would never solve, while Mark examined a clipped newspaper story about Brittany Sully and the dust-up she had caused at Strongsville High School when she asked another girl to the prom.
Pence grunted, “How the hell are you supposed to work these dumb things? My old man helped beat the Japs. Is this their fuckin’ revenge?”
Mark said, “It’s all logic.”
Pence threw him a look. “And I’m not logical? You think I broke all those cases by bein’ not logical?”
“You’re logical enough, but you’re trying to do one square at a time. You need to see the whole puzzle.”
They stayed at their individual tasks for a while, each occasionally glancing toward the pawnshop’s dimly lighted back door to make sure Slowhand wasn’t going anywhere. In Mark’s mind, the old song “I Shot the Sheriff” kept playing, unbidden.