Part 16 (1/2)

”You've got a visitor--outside,” he announced. ”Trench. And I don't like the stench of that kind of cop in my place. Get him away, cobber, get him away!”

Gordon found Trench pacing up and down in front of the house, scowling up at it. But the ex-Marine smiled as he saw Bruce Gordon in uniform.

”Good. At least some men are loyal. Had breakfast, Gordon?”

Gordon shook his head, and realized suddenly that the decision seemed to have been taken out of his hands. They crossed the street and went down half a block. ”All right,” he said, when the coffee began waking him.

”What's the angle?”

Trench dropped the eyes that had been boring into him. ”I'll have to trust you, Gordon. I've never been sure. But either you're loyal now or I can't depend on anyone being loyal.”

During the night, it seemed, the Legal Force had been recruiting. Wayne, Arliss, and the rest of the administration had counted on self-interest holding most of the cops loyal to them. They'd been wrong. Legal forces already controlled about half the city.

”So?” Gordon asked. He could have told Trench that the fund was good-enough reason for most police deserting.

Trench put his coffee down and yelled for more. It was obvious he'd spent the night without sleep. ”So we're going to need men with guts.

Gordon, you had training under Murdoch--who knew his business. And you aren't a coward, as most of these fat fools are. I've got a proposition, straight from Wayne.”

”I'm listening.”

”Here.” Trench threw across a platinum badge. ”Take that--captain at large--and conscript any of the Munic.i.p.al Force you want, up to a hundred. Pick out any place you want, train them to handle those d.a.m.ned Legals the way Murdoch handled the Stonewall boys. In return, the sky's the limit. Name your own salary, once you've done the job. And no kickbacks, either!”

Gordon picked up the badge slowly and buckled it on, while a grim, satisfied smile spread over Trench's features. The problem seemed to have been solved. Gordon should have been satisfied, but he felt like Judas picking up the thirty pieces of silver. He tried to swallow them with the dregs of his coffee, and they stuck in his throat.

Comes the revolution and we'll all eat strawberries and scream!

A hubbub sounded outside, and Trench grimaced as a police whistle sounded, and a Munic.i.p.al cop ran by. ”We're in enemy territory,” he said. ”The Legals got this precinct last night. Captain Hendrix and some of his men wanted to come back with full battle equipment and chase them out. I had a h.e.l.l of a time getting them to take it easy. I suppose that was some d.a.m.ned fool who tried to go back to his beat.”

”Then you'd better look again,” Gordon told him. He'd gone to the door and was peering out. Up the narrow little street was rolling a group of about seventy Munic.i.p.al police and half a dozen small trucks. The men were wearing guns. And up the street a man in bright green uniform was pounding his fist up and down in emphasis as he called in over the precinct box.

”The idiot!” Trench grabbed Gordon and spun out, running toward the advancing men. ”We've got to stop this. Get my car--up the street--call Arliss on the phone--under the dash. Or Wayne. I'll bring Hendrix.”

Trench's system made some sense, and this business of marching as to war made none at all. Gordon grabbed the phone from under the dash. A sleepy voice answered to say that Commissioner Arliss and Mayor Wayne were sleeping. They'd had a hard night, and...

”d.a.m.n it, there's a rebellion going on!” Gordon told the man. Rebellion, rebellion! He'd meant to say revolution, but...

Trench was arguing frantically with the pompous figure of Captain Hendrix. From the other end of the street, a group of small cars appeared; and men began piling out, all in s.h.i.+ny green.

”Who's this?” the phone asked. When Gordon identified himself, there was a snort of disgust. ”Yes, yes, congratulations. Trench was quite right; you're fully authorized. Did you call me out of bed just to check on that, young man?”

”No, I--” Then he hung up. Hendrix had dropped to his knees and fired before Trench could knock the gun from his hands.

There was no answering fire. The Legals simply came boiling down the street, equipped with long pikes with lead-weighted ends. And Hendrix came charging up, his men straggling behind him. Gordon was squarely in the middle. He considered staying in Trench's car and letting it roll past him. But he'd taken the d.a.m.ned badge.

”h.e.l.l,” he said in disgust. He climbed out, just as the two groups met.

It all had a curious feeling of unreality.

Then a man jumped for him, swinging a pike, and the feeling was suddenly gone. His hand snapped down sharply for a rock on the street. The pike whistled over his head, barely missing, and he was up, squas.h.i.+ng the big stone into the face of the other. He jerked the pike away, kicked the man in the neck as he fell, and unsheathed his knife with the other hand.

Trench was a few feet away. The man might be a louse, but he was also a fighting machine of first order, still. He'd already captured one of the pikes. Now he grinned tightly at Gordon and began moving toward him.