If the lady came through with the information he needed, it might just be Bolan's turn to do some shaking in the Twin Cities. And he was ready to shake somebody at that moment, shake them hard.

Right down to the ground.

* * *

Assistant Police Commissioner Roger Smalley was awake earlier than usual, and he was disgruntled by the call from Detective Lieutenant Jack Fawcett.

Fawcett had sounded nervous on the phone, hardly making sense, in fact, so Smalley had reluctantly told him to come on over and relate his problem in person. Now, with his wife sleeping upstairs, Smalley sat in his rather luxurious study, smoking his first cigar of the new day.

Commissioner Smalley was not unfamiliar with wake-up calls, both from his superiors and, less often, from his subordinates. But now, at age fifty-two, one step removed from the pinnacle of power in St. Paul's police establishment, the superiors were fewer in number, and subordinates were well advised to hold their calls until office hours.

It would have to be something special, really extraordinary, for Jack Fawcett to call and wake him at sunrise, demanding a face-to-face meeting. And because it would be something special, something extraordinary, Roger Smalley was not only feeling disgruntled. He was feeling nervous.

The assistant commissioner would humor Jack Fawcett — to a point. But he hoped for the lieutenant's sake that Fawcett wasn't letting the strain of his job get the better of him.

Yeah, it had damned well better be something extraordinary.

Smalley heard the soft knock on the side door and padded through the house to greet Fawcett in the kitchen. In the pale morning light, the detective looked calmer than he had sounded on the phone — but only just.

"Good morning, sir," Fawcett began hastily. "I am sorry about the time."

Smalley forced a smile before turning his back. "This way," he said curtly. "And catch the door, will you?"

Fawcett followed his superior into the study, and they sat down facing each other in leather upholstered chairs. Smalley pushed a humidor toward his nervous guest.

"Cigar?"

Fawcett shook his head.

"No, thanks. I'm trying to quit... again."

"What's so urgent at..." Smalley paused to consult a wall clock. "...Five-forty in the morning?"

"I think we got trouble," Fawcett said.

Smalley arched an iron-gray eyebrow.

"So you said on the phone, Jack. Can we have some specifics?"

"I don't know where to start, sir," the detective said. "Well... I mean, I don't even know what it means."

Smalley sighed resignedly, expelling a blue cloud of fragrant cigar smoke.

"Take your time, Jack. Try starting at the beginning."

Fawcett took a deep breath, held it an instant to steady his nerves, then let it go in a long, whistling sigh. The ritual complete, he began telling Smalley about the predawn shooting, his meeting and cryptic discussion with a man named La Mancha, and the subsequent discovery of three more leaking stiffs, exactly where the big stranger said they would be found. When he had finished, the two men regarded each other in silence for several moments through the haze from Smalley's cigar.

At last it was the commissioner who broke the silence.

"You believe there may be some connection between these killings and our other problem?"

Fawcett shrugged. "This guy, La Mancha, seems to think so, and he sure called it right on the second carload of meat. Frankly, I don't know what the hell to think."

"He's chasing the wind," Smalley said confidently. "What tie-in could there be, Jack?"

The lieutenant shook his head, obviously confused.

"I don't know, unless... There has to be an angle, Chief. The feds wouldn't touch a sex crime case unless they thought they were onto something bigger."

"Bigger, Jack? What could they have?"

There was another long pause as the detective mulled that one over.

"If somebody's running his mouth overtime..." he began.

Roger Smalley leaned forward, elbows on knees, jabbing his cigar toward Fawcett's face.

"Nobody knows, dammit," he said. "Nobody who's going to spill his guts, anyway. Everyone has too much to lose at this point."

"I suppose you're right, but..."

Fawcett left the statement unfinished. He plainly was unconvinced.

"Go on," Smalley prodded.

"Well, Traynor suspects something," Fawcett said. "I know it."

The commissioner smiled patiently. "She's out of it, Jack. How many times must I tell you? Forget her."

"She could still hurt us," Fawcett countered.

"Relax, Lieutenant," Smalley said, making it sound like an order. "You're borrowing trouble. Leave the lady to me."

"What about the fed, this La Mancha character?"

Smalley shrugged.

"I'll ask around. In the meantime, play it cool and let me know if he contacts you again."

Fawcett nodded. "Sure, Chief. Okay."

"Is that other matter under control now?" Smalley asked.

"Huh? Oh, that. Yeah, I think so."

"You think so, Jack?"

Fawcett stiffened, hastening to make amends.

"Well, uh, I mean, the girl is still being stubborn, but the freeze is on. Anyway, what does she know?"

Smalley shrugged.

"She's a witness, right? She could get lucky."

Fawcett shook his head in a firm negative.

"No chance. I've had the identikit sketches recalled, and her verbal description could fit a couple thousand punks here in St. Paul alone."

"I hope you're right, Lieutenant."

The ice was back in Smalley's voice, unmistakable.

"I hold up my end," Fawcett countered. "You know that."

Smalley looked hard at him for a long moment, then visibly relaxed.

"Okay, I'll leave you to it. I have several calls to make."

"Are you going to bring the Man in on it?" Fawcett asked.

Smalley offered a thin smile to his subordinate.

"Why not? It's his mess, after all. If somebody has to sweat, who better?"

They shared a brief chuckle at that, and then Jack Fawcett rose to leave.

"Don't get up, Chief," he said quickly, when Smalley made no move to do so. "I can let myself out."

"Goodbye, Jack. And remember — stay cool."

When Fawcett had gone, the commissioner snared the ornate telephone receiver from its cradle at his elbow. He listened to the droning dial tone for a long moment, thinking.

Fawcett was in a sweat, no doubt about that. Smalley didn't know yet whether his concern was justified, but he had every intention of playing it safe. The federal angle was a puzzler, and coming on top of the shootings that morning, it could mean trouble, but Roger Smalley was not about to panic before he had exhausted all logical possibilities.

He would make some calls. You didn't get to be the assistant P.C. in a city the size of St. Paul without making some high-level contacts at Justice. And if La Mancha — or whoever the hell he was — was working in Smalley's backyard, someone would know about it.

And finally, saving the best for last, he would call the Man.

Roger Smalley smiled at the thought, his first open, genuine smile of the day as he began dialing the telephone.

Hell yes, he told himself, there was already plenty of sweat to go around on that warm summer morning. And who better to do the sweating than the man who had started the whole frigging mess in the first place?

Roger Smalley's face froze in the smile. It was the grin of a predatory animal, carved in stone.


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