was the guy with the Patriots jacket, tried to put his arms around me and pin my arms. I turned sideways before he could get me pinned and hit him on the side of the face with my elbow. He let go and staggered backward as Tedy Sapp arrived behind Long Hair and Comb-over. Sapp hit Long Hair across the back of the head with his forearm. It knocked Long Hair face forward into the salt slush of the sidewalk. I hit Baldy four times as fast as I could punch. Straight left, left hook, left hook, right cross. He went down. I turned to look for the guy in the Patriots jacket. He was backing away. I looked at Comb-over. He was trying to get a gun out from inside his coat. When it was out, Tedy Sapp chopped it from his hand, almost contemptuously. Comb-over backed up a step with his hands raised in front of him. Sapp kicked him in the groin hard enough to lift him from the ground. Comb-over yelped and fell forward, doubled over in pain, and lay in the slush. Sapp and I both looked at the guy in the Patriots jacket. He backed up another couple of steps and then turned and ran. We watched him until he turned right on Arlington and disappeared.
I looked at the three men on the ground. Comb-over would take a while to recover. Baldy was on his hands and knees with his head hanging. Long Hair was sitting up. We did a fast shakedown to make sure there were no other weapons. There weren't.
"I love the pat-down part," Sapp said.
"Pervert," I said.
"Your point?" Sapp said.
I grinned.
"Since they had four guys and one gun," I said, "I'd guess they weren't going to pop me."
Sapp nodded.
"What was the message?" I said to Long Hair.
He looked at the sidewalk and shook his head.
"Now that's dumb," I said. "You just got your ass handed to you by a couple of guys who could spend the week doing it again if they had reason. What did Ollie want you to tell me?"
Sapp poked Long Hair in the ribs gently with the toe of his work boot. Long Hair looked at him, and then at me.
"Ollie says to tell you to stay away from the whores."
"And?"
"And give you a good beatin'," Long Hair said.
"Well," I said. "You did your best."
We were quiet. No sirens wailed in the distance. No patrol cars pulled around the corner from Arlington Street. If anyone had seen the fight, they hadn't thought enough about it to call the cops. I looked at Long Hair. He didn't know anything. None of them did. They were street labor. Asking them stuff was a waste of time.
"Tell Ollie," I said, "that if he keeps annoying me, I will stop by and tie a knot in his pecker."
Long Hair nodded.
"Beat it," I said.
Long Hair and Baldy got slowly to their feet. They got Comb-over up, still bent over in pain, and got him into the backseat of the Crown Vic. Tedy Sapp bent over and picked up Comb-over's gun and looked at it and nodded to himself and slipped it into the pocket of his peacoat. The Crown Vic started up and pulled away. At Berkeley Street it turned right, heading for Storrow Drive, and we didn't see it anymore.
"You know the part about tying a knot in somebody's pecker," Sapp said.
"I was trying for a colorful metaphor," I said.
"Sure," Sapp said. "But if it happens, can I be the one does it?"
"God," I said. "I gotta find me some straight help."
Sapp grinned.
17
April had an apartment on the fourth floor of the mansion. We were up there eating oatmeal cookies and drinking coffee. The apartment was nice in the unengaging way that good hotel rooms are nice. There were some paintings on the walls that went just right with the room. There were no photographs of anyone anywhere that I could see.
"Two of the girls quit today," April said. "Bev and another girl."
"Bev's the one that got beat up," I said.
April nodded.
"Are you making any progress?" she said. "I'm going to lose more girls, I know I am. And the clients who were here when those two apes rampaged through here . . ."
"Before Hawk and I joined the operation?" I said.
These oatmeal cookies had no raisins in