Author's Note: This story was submitted as part of the
Hammered - An Ode to Mickey Spillane
story event. It's written in a style that some readers may find uncomfortable and touches on subjects that are not often palatable in the modern era. Read at your discretion.
Chapter 1
Rain. Always with the rain. Rain never helped my mood.
I turned my collar up against the pinpricks of water that the wind spat onto my neck. It fell back down again, defiant. Time to get a new raincoat.
The cold came quickly this year. Here it was, not even October, and the cold had flown into the city like some toxic gas they used back in the first War.
Dammit. I needed to get outta my head. That first war - so much fun they decided to have a second. I spent way too much time thinking about that. It'd been a lifetime ago. Before my lifetime. The second one was my time.
It'd been two years already since they dropped the bomb on the Japs, letting us all go home.
My rainy, pathetic city. Home.
I turned the corner and was nearly blinded by the reflections off nearly every surface. Lights everywhere pierced the night like needle points. The wind couldn't get me here, though. Too many buildings blocking the way. Good.
"Shoe shine, mister?"
I looked down and saw a little colored boy, maybe ten. Possibly younger. He held onto a shine box older than he was. He was shivering, the cold eating through his torn fingerless gloves, like termites through rotting wood.
It was raining, but he was out trying to make his nickel. "Had much luck tonight?" I asked. He shook his head, and looked up at the sky. No customers on a rainy night.
We both looked at my shoes. They were in need of repair, not a shine. The boy would have worked his butt off to give me the best shine he could, even as the rain poured down on both of us.
"What's your name?" I asked.
"M-marcus," he answered. Then he set his jaw. He was upset that his stutter from the cold made him sound nervous instead.
I nodded, solemnly. "A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do for his family, right Marcus?"
He relaxed a little. He was a man too. Just over four feet, maybe, but definitely a man. He was out shilling for work, probably to help his mama. Maybe a brother or sister or two.
"I'll tell you what," I said, fishing into my pocket. "What if I pay you now, and you can shine my shoes when your hard work won't get washed away."
I flipped him two bits. He caught it, eyes wide. "Thanks, mister!" He stuffed the money into his pocket. The coin apparently found a hole in that one, and clanged to the ground. He picked it up and dropped it into his other pocket.
Another year or two and he would have looked at me suspiciously. For now, though, he was grateful and I knew he would fulfill his end of the bargain.
He looked up at me. "Long shift tonight?" I asked.
He shrugged. "Maybe," he said. "Dunno."
I nodded. "Yeah," I agreed. "Me too. Dunno."
I dropped my chin, and he dropped his in return. There wasn't anything more to say. I moved on, leaving my new blue-collar buddy behind.
The office wasn't far ahead from where Marcus had set up shop. Maybe half a block. In the rain, it felt like it was at least three blocks, but I got there. The door opened with a quick jerk, and the doorman tipped his cap.
"Good evening, Mr. Driver!" he said, cheerful as ever.
Christ.
"Evening, Bobby," I muttered.
"Um, Billy," he corrected me.
Crap. "Oh, yeah. Right, sorry. Must have the wrong name on the brain," I tried to cover my tracks.
"No problem, Mr. Driver," Bo-, I mean, Billy said. I never could get that kid's name straight in my head. I didn't think he bought it. He was polite, I'd give him that.
"Big case today?" he asked.
"Not today," I said, walking into the foyer of the building. Cheating wives and husbands don't really make for big cases. Just more proof that people are horrible all over. Maybe the A-bomb shouldn't have just been reserved for other countries.
"Gosh," he said. "You must get a lot of them, huh? Maybe some car chases, some mafia shootouts?"
I looked at him. Maybe eighteen, nineteen. Glasses. Too young to serve. Good for him. Let him dream big, but act small. He'll live longer that way. "Only if I'm really unlucky," I said.
"Oh, okay," Billy said, uncertain. "Well, uh, see ya later, Mr. Driver."
I nodded in reply. I wasn't in the mood for small talk.
The day had been long. It was over, almost. I wanted a date with my Old Grandad and a mostly clean glass in my bottom desk drawer.
I passed his dais into the large square space. The old building opened up to me like the legs of an old woman. Rickety, begrudgingly, uninviting. Old bones of iron girders from the turn of the century that must have been attractive, once. This old girl, though, she was past her prime.
The broken elevator just mocked me. Its open cage sat idle as always. No one trusted it, so no one used it. Only guests who didn't know any better.
Three flights of stairs. Days like today I just wanted to let that damn rickety thing haul my ass up to my office and spare me the climb in soggy shoes.
Most of the offices forming the perimeter of the space were empty on all sides. It was a quiet Friday night, everyone gone for the weekend. Good for them. Whatever businesses that hadn't abandoned the old girl were now all closed. Well, almost all of them.
I made the last step onto my floor. I knew there was something wrong the instant my foot planted. My office light shone through the frosted door. Movement caused a shadow to pass across the glass.
I pulled my .38 from my shoulder holster, and cocked the hammer. I reached for the door knob. Locked.
Okay, so that's how you want to play it?
I fished out my keys and looked down to see which one I needed. A good half gallon of water from the brim of my hat fell straight onto my hands.
Dammit.
I slipped the key into the lock. Turned it. The deadbolt slid out of place. I grabbed the knob one more time, took a breath, and burst into the room.
"God
dammit
, Frank!"
Tammi Malone, my protege and junior PI partner, stood bent over the edge of the desk -
my
desk - with her skirt bunched up around her waist. The young sailor docking his submarine in her port looked like a deer caught in headlights.
I sighed. This, again.
"You're on my desk," I said, holstering my piece. I stepped in and closed the door.
"No shit, Frank," she said. "Do you mind? We're kind of in the middle of something here."
"Um, should I go?" her friend asked.
She reached around and grabbed his tie. "Don't you dare," she said. "Don't mind him. Just keep going."
"Are you sure?" he asked, looking from her to me and back again. Gotta give the kid credit. Some big guy comes busting in on his fun time and his lettuce doesn't wilt. Impressive. "I mean, I could -"
She pulled harder on his tie, bringing him off balance. "If you stop," she said, "I'll take Frank's piece and shoot you myself."
"Don't mind me," I said, hanging up my coat. "I just run the place."
The kid started pounding her again, but never took his eyes off me. "Don't look at me, kid," I said, taking off my hat and coat. "I'm nowhere near the dish she is."
Tammi pushed back against him, trying to get him to pay more attention to her. He took ahold of her hips and picked up the pace.