There was a front desk in the high foyer. A good-looking young woman in a tailored suit was at the desk. A discreet sign on the desk said Concierge. She looked a little nervous when we came in. There were doors off the foyer in all directions, and an elegant staircase that curved up toward the second floor.
"My name is Spenser," I said. "For April Kyle."
The concierge looked relieved. She picked up the phone and spoke, and almost at once a door opened behind her and April appeared, looking just as elegant as she had in my office.
"Thank God you're here," she said. "They're coming."
We were in the office. It was spartan. There was a big modern work desk against the back wall. Desks where two women sat working at computers. A bank of file cabinets stood along one wall. There was a bank of television monitors high on the wall above the door.
"For future reference," April said to the office workers, "these are the good guys."
The two women looked at us silently. April didn't introduce us. She was all business, as if stepping into her work space had made her someone else. Hawk and I took off our coats and hung them on a hat rack near the door.
"The monitors are for security cameras," she said. "The one in the center is on the front door."
"Who's coming," I said.
"The man called," April said.
Her voice was flat and didn't sound emotional, except that she spoke very swiftly.
"He said they were tired of waiting. He said they were coming."
"To remonstrate with you?" I said.
"Yes," April said. "He told me this time it would be worse."
"Probably not," I said.
"I won't give in," April said. "I won't. He can't have this."
"What they do last time?" Hawk said.
"They pushed past Doris on the desk, and went through the house interrupting the girls and their guests, chasing the guests out."
"Very bad for business," Hawk said.
"Yes," April said. "Those guests are unlikely to return."
"You have a gun?" I said.
"Yes. But I don't want to use it. I don't want either of you to use one. That would be the end of it if someone got shot here."
"It would," I said.
"This is a good business," April said. "A good woman's business. I'm not going to give it up because some man wants part of it."
Hawk was watching the monitor. "Hidey ho," he said.
April looked up.
"Yea," she said. "That's them."
"You ladies go somewhere," I said to the office workers. They looked at April. April nodded. The two women got up and went out a door behind April's desk.
"How about you, my feminist beauty?" I said.
She smiled. She didn't seem frightened.
"I'll stay," April said.
"Don't blame you," Hawk said. "Be fun to watch."
3
They were both wearing dark overcoats. On the monitor one of them looked fat. They brushed past the concierge desk and headed for April's office. The door opened and in they came. In person, one of them was fat. The other guy had the thick upper body of a weight lifter.
The weight lifter said, "Time for another talk, whore lady…"
He stopped and looked at Hawk and me. "Who the fuck are you?" he said.
"I often wonder," I said. "Don't you? Sometimes at night when you're alone?"
"You ain't customers'… the weight lifter said.
The fact that Hawk's coat was off and he was wearing a.44 Magnum in a shoulder holster was probably a clue. They had thought it was going to be another walk in the park. Both of them had their overcoats buttoned up. If they were carrying, it would take them five minutes to get their guns out.
"We be whorehouse security," Hawk said.
He seemed pleasant. Both of the overcoats stared at us. They seemed a little uneasy. Despite the pleasant overtones, Hawk didn't look like a guy who'd surrender easily.
The weight lifter said, "Whoever the fuck you are, take a walk. We got business with the head whore."
"Her name is Miss Kyle," I said.
The fat guy began to unbutton his overcoat.
"Leave it buttoned," I said.
The fat guy frowned.
"Fuck you," he said.
Hawk stepped away from where he'd been leaning on a file cabinet and knocked the fat guy down with a single punch. The punch exploded on him so fast that the fat guy never got his hands up. He got to his hands and knees and stayed there, shaking his head slowly. The weight lifter's hands moved slightly, as if he wanted to unbutton his coat, but he didn't.
"So who sent you here to talk with Miss Kyle?" I said.
"I ain't talking to you," the weight lifter said.
I almost felt bad for him. He had come here assuming he was going to frighten a few prostitutes and maybe slap around some guy from Newton, in town for an early-afternoon quickie. He hadn't planned on us. And as things developed, he was beginning to realize that he and his pal were overmatched.
"You are talking to me," I said. "It's just a matter of when."
The fat guy got painfully to his feet. He didn't look at Hawk. Hawk had his gun in his hand. He let it hang by his side.
"I got nothing to say," the weight lifter muttered.
He was trying to be a stand-up guy. I slapped him across the face with my open hand. Behind me I heard April gasp. The weight lifter stepped back. It hurt. It was humiliating. But mostly it startled him. People in his circles didn't do a lot of slapping. He put his hands up toward his face and glanced at his fat friend.
"Who sent you here to talk with Miss Kyle?" I said.
The weight lifter was backing toward the door. Hawk stepped across and blocked it.
"I'm getting outta here," the weight lifter said.
I feinted at his stomach with my right fist. He dropped his hands and I slapped him with my left hand. And then with my right. He hunched and ducked his head and covered his face. I slapped him on the top of the head. He put his hands up to cover. I slapped him in the face again.
"Stop it," he said. "Stop it, stop it." His face was mottled.
"Who sent you to talk with Miss Kyle?" I said.
"Ollie," he said.
"You know Ollie?" I said to April.
"No."
"Who do you talk to?" I said.
April shrugged.
"He never gives a name," she said. "Maybe it's Ollie. I have no way to know."
"Tell me about Ollie," I said to the weight lifter.
"Ollie's got a crew," the weight lifter said. "Me and Tank work with him."
"What's Ollie's last name?"
"DeMars."
"Where is Ollie located?" I said.
" Andrews Square," the weight lifter said.
There was some sort of odd anticipation in his voice. I realized he couldn't wait for us to try our stuff on Ollie. Ollie would show us.
"He's got a clubhouse there," the weight lifter said. "Storefront, used to be a chiropractor's office. Right off the square."
"Why is Ollie asking you to annoy these folks?" I said.
"I don't know."
I smacked him across the face with my open hand. He ducked back.
"Don't," he said. "I honest to God don't know. Ollie just says keep on them until they come around."
"Which means?"
"They'll talk business."
"With Ollie?"
"I don't know."
"What business?"
"I don't know."
"You know, Tank?" I said to the fat guy.
He shook his head.
"You agree with everything he told us?" I said.
The fat guy nodded.
"Okay," I said. "Hands on the wall, legs apart. You know how it works."
They did as I said, and I patted them down. I took a gun from each of them, and a wallet. I put the guns on April's desk. I took the driver's licenses from the wallets and handed the wallets back to them.
"Tell Ollie we'll drop by," I said.
"How 'bout my gun?" the weight lifter said.
"You guys will have to risk it back to Andrews Square unarmed," I said. "Beat it."