Quarry in the Middle - Max Allan Collins [46]
“So long, Dr. Leefer,” he said.
I found my way out, the nurse giving me a glare (I’d clearly really exceeded the toilet time limit), moved through the waiting room where the bodyguard was holding his magazine sideways, and went out to my car.
No fast getaway necessary.
After I called from the bar downstairs, Cornell received me in his third-floor office. The Paddlewheel was open—it was around six-thirty—but business wasn’t bustling yet, as this was not exactly a place where you went for the early bird special.
He emerged from the bedroom, tying a black rope belt around his maroon dressing gown; his legs were bare and as tanned as George Hamilton’s neck and his feet were in slippers. He was lighting up a cigarette and his unblinking aqua-blue eyes narrowed, taking me in.
“What happened to you?” he asked, so concerned he flopped into the nearest overstuffed brown leather chair as he tossed a spent match in an ashtray.
I sat nearby on the matching couch. Cocaine ghosts haunted the glass coffee table.
I said, “Two of Jerry G’s greeters took me out back and beat the fuck out of me.”
His eyes tightened a little. “You all right?”
Was there an end to his compassion?
“I am, now. This happened Wednesday, or really Thursday morning, and I slept round the clock. Nothing broken. This is what that hazardous duty pay is for.”
“Drink?”
I had trained him not to say drinky-poo.
“I could stand a Diet Coke.”
He called, “Chrissy!”
The bedroom door opened and the little babe with the big yellow perm emerged, painting her nails red. She had on black panties and half a white t-shirt, the underside of pert breasts showing.
“What?”
“Fix me up with a drink, and my friend with a Diet Coke.”
She zombie-walked over to the bar, painting her nails all the way, not blessing either of us with a glance. She was efficient, though, and only two minutes or so passed before Cornell had a tumbler of Scotch and ice cubes and I had a cold can of Diet Coke.
“Thanks,” I said. “Things go better with Coke, you know.”
She said nothing, her lips almost forming a smirk but lacking the enthusiasm for that commitment. She padded into the bedroom, the perfect moons of her bottom exposed below the cut of the panties. She could have used a spanking. So could my dick.
Alone again, my employer and I made a half-hearted toast, and he said, “Why don’t you fill me in?”
“I don’t do details. I can tell you’ve I’ve determined, to my satisfaction anyway, that the old man is out of it.”
The tanned forehead formed white creases. “Out of…what?”
“It. Any contract on you, any aspect of running the Lucky Devil in particular and downtown Haydee’s Port in general, anything greater than putting on his pants, wiping his bottom and warming up some cocoa.”
He grinned, a white slash in the tan puss, but his forehead kept on frowning. “What is he, senile?”
“As good as. He’s had a bunch of little strokes, and Jerry G is Chief Big Shit now. Sonny Boy apparently hasn’t advertised papa’s delicate condition because the old reprobate has a big rep, and Jerry still needs to bask in it.”
Cornell shook his head. “I hate to say it, but Jerry G has something of a reputation himself. That’s one of the reasons why this Chicago conflict, between the Giardelli brothers, continues to just simmer, never boil over. The status quo is too appealing—me running the Paddlewheel effectively, and profitably…and Jerry G doing the same with his sleazeball operation downtown.”
“I believe Jerry G does more than just run the Lucky Devil,” I said. “I think some major drug-running is going on, and Christ knows what other contraband. We are right on the river.”
“I’ve heard the scuttlebutt.” He shrugged, swirled the liquid in its tumbler, studied it as if looking for tea leaves to read. “So—it’s just Jerry G, then. Are you prepared to go forward?”
“With what?”
He frowned. “What the hell do you think, love? Handling the Jerry G problem.”
“You want him gone, I’m fine with that. But I haven’t got the goods