“You ever feel like you need protecting, you come down here and hire Saucer head Tharpe. He’s the best there is.”
“What about the other one? Morley? Do you trust him?”
“With my money or my life but never with my woman. It’s getting late. I’d better get you home.”
“I don’t think I’m going home, Garrett. Unless you insist.”
“All right.” I do like a woman who can make up her mind, even though I may not understand what she is doing. The Dead Man would have fits. But that was all right. What did he live for but to chew me out and to march his bugs around the walls?
Only one thing further about that night needs to be reported. When we were slipping into bed, I noted the absence of a gewgaw worn by every woman who doesn’t want to hear little voices piping, “Mommy!”
“Where’s your amulet?”
“You’re a gentleman in your heart, aren’t you, Garrett? Most men would have pretended not to notice.”
I don’t often get caught without something to say. This was one of those rare times. I kept my mouth shut. She slipped in beside me, warm and bare, and whispered, “You don’t have to worry. I can’t make you a father.”
And of that night nothing more need be said. She was gone when I awoke the next morning. I never saw her again.
__VIII__
Morley himself stopped by to let me know what he’d learned. Old Dean let him in and brought him to the overconfident closet I call an office. I didn’t rise and I didn’t offer the usual banter. Dean went off to the kitchen to get Morley some of the apple juice we keep in the cold well against those millennial moments when I don’t feel like having beer.
“You look glum, Garrett.”
“It happens. The strain of being Mr. Smiles catches up.”
“Well, you may have good reason. Even though you don’t know it yet.”
I showed him my eyebrow trick. He wasn’t impressed. Everyone knows what familiarity breeds.
“I put out feelers that touched everybody in the snatch racket. Nobody has gone underground. Nobody is scoping out a job on the Hill. I got the personal guarantee of some of the best and the worst that there’s nobody in this burg crazy enough to go for the Stormwarden’s kid. Not for a million in gold. Gold don’t do you any good when you’re getting your toes roasted in the sorceress’s basement.”
“That’s what’s supposed to give me a sour puss?”
“No. You get that when I tell you about the guy who was tailing you last night. Or your lady, actually. You should have told me she was Amiranda Crest, Garrett. I wouldn’t have made remarks about her father.”
“She’s used to it. What about the tail?”
“He trotted right down here after you, not even thinking somebody might be following him too. Fool. He hung around watching the place for a couple of hours. About the time even a moron would have figured out that she was spending the night he took off and headed”
Dean stuck his head in through the doorway. “Excuse me, Mr. Garrett. There’s a Mr. Slauce here to see you, representing somebody he calls the Domina Dount. Will you see him?”
“I can wait,” Morley told me.
“Out that door.” I indicated the closet’s second exit, which opened on a hallway leading past the Dead Man’s room. “Bring Mr. Slauce in, Dean.”
Slauce was a blustery, potbellied, red-faced little man who was way out of his element. I think he had me pegged for a professional killer. He worked hard at being polite. It was obvious he wasn’t accustomed to that.
“Mr. Garrett?”
I confessed that I was that very devil.” Domina Dount would like to see you again. She said to tell you she’s received another letter from her correspondent and would like further professional advice. I assume you understand what she means. She didn’t explain to me.”
“I know what she meant.”
“She authorized me to offer you ten marks gold for your time.”
I wondered what she really wanted. She was throwing