Part 19 (1/2)
Izzy leaped for the machine gun and yanked it from dead hands, while the cops slowly began raising their arms. Wayne sat petrified, staring unbelievingly, and Gordon drew out the warrant. ”Wayne, you're under arrest!”
Trench moved forward, his hands in the air, but with no mark of surprise or fear on his face. ”So the bad pennies turn up. You d.a.m.ned fools, you should have stuck. I had big plans for you, Gordon. I've still got them, if you don't insist...”
His hands whipped down savagely toward his hips and came up sharply!
Gordon spun, and the gun leaped in his hands, while the submachine gun jerked forward and clicked on an empty chamber. Trench was tumbling forward to avoid the shot, but he twitched as a bullet creased his shoulder. Then he was upright, waving empty hands at them, with the thin smile on his face deepening. He'd had no guns.
Gordon jerked around, but Wayne was already disappearing through a heavy door. And the cops were reaching for their guns. Gordon estimated the chances of escape and then leaped forward into their group, with Izzy at his side, seeking close quarters where guns wouldn't work.
Gun b.u.t.ts, elbows, fists, and clubs were pounding at him, while his own club lashed out savagely. In ten seconds, things began to haze over, but his arms went on mechanically, seeking the most damage they could work.
Then a heavy bellow sounded, and a seeming mountain of flesh thundered across the huge room. There was no shuffle to Mother Corey now. The huge legs pumped steadily, and the great arms were reaching out to flail aside clubs and knives. Men began spewing out of the brawl like straw from a thresher as the old man grabbed arms, legs, or whatever was handy. He had one cop in his left arm, using him as a flail against the others.
The Munic.i.p.als broke. And at the first sign, Mother Corey leaped forward, dropping his flail and gathering Izzy and Gordon under his arms. He hit the heavy door with his shoulder and crashed through without breaking stride. Stairs lay there, and he took them three at a time.
He dropped them finally as they came to a side entrance. There was a sporadic firing going on there, and a knot of Munic.i.p.als were cl.u.s.tered around a few Legals, busy with knives and clubs. Corey broke into a run again, driving straight into them and through, with Gordon and Izzy on his heels. The surprise element was enough to give them a few seconds.
Then they were around a small side building, out of danger. Sheila was holding the door of a large three-wheeler open. They ducked into it, while she grabbed the wheel.
They edged forward until they could make out the shape of the fight going on. The Legals had never quite reached the front of the building, obviously, and were now cut into sections. Corey tapped her shoulder, pointing out the rout, and she gunned the car.
They were through too fast to draw fire from the busy groups of battle-crazed men, leaping across the square and into the first side street they could find. Then she slowed, and headed for the main street back to Legal territory.
”Lucky we found a good car to steal,” Mother Corey wheezed. He was puffing now, mopping rivulets of perspiration from his face. ”I'm getting old, cobbers. Once I broke every strong-man record on Earth--still stand, too. But not now. Senile!”
”You didn't have to come,” Izzy said.
”When my own granddaughter comes crying for help? When she finally admits she _needs_ her old grandfather?”
Gordon was staring back at the straggling of trucks he could see beginning to break away. The raid was over, and the Legals had lost.
Trench had tricked him.
Izzy grunted suddenly. ”Gov'nor, if you're right, and the plain gees pay my salary, who's paying me to start fighting other cops? Or is it maybe that somebody isn't being exactly honest with the scratch they lift from the gees?”
”We still have to eat,” Gordon said bitterly. ”And to eat, we'll go on doing what we're told.”
Chapter XIV
FULL CIRCLE
Hendrix had been wounded lightly, and was out when Gordon and Izzy reported. But the next day, they were switched to a new beat where trouble had been thickest and given twelve-hour duty--without special overtime.
Izzy considered it slowly and shook his head. ”That does it, gov'nor. It ain't honest, treating us this way. If the crackle comes from the people, and these gees give everybody a skull cracking, then they're crooks. It ain't honest, and I'm too sick to work. And if that b.l.o.o.d.y doctor won't agree...”
He turned toward the dispensary. Gordon hesitated, and then swung off woodenly to take up his new beat. Apparently, his reputation had gone ahead of him, since most of the hoodlums had decided pickings would be easier on some beat where the cops had their own secret rackets to attend to, instead of head busting. But once they learned he was alone...
But the second day, two of the citizens fell into step behind him almost at once, armed with heavy clubs. Periodically during the s.h.i.+ft, replacements took their place, making sure that he was never by himself.
It surprised him even more when he saw that a couple of the men had come over from his old beat. Something began to burn inside him, but he held himself in, confining his talk to vague comments on the rumors going around.