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Sunday, February 8, 2026

High Heels and Hot Tips: A Sheila Coffin Adventure, Chapter 3


HIGH HEELS AND HOT TIPS

By Christopher Leeson 


Chapter 3: The Rough Stuff

 

The Narrative of C.D. Callahan


It was the fourth night at The Velvet Room, Val’s last curtain call. The air in the club was thick enough to choke on, a mix of expensive gin and pervasive desperation.

I was working the floor in an emerald cocktail waitress dress that looked like a million bucks while making me feel like target. I had asked the boss, Dom, for a that would keep me closest to Val while she was on the floor. Every face that crossed near her got my hard squint; every over-eager fan who was a red flag waving in my mug.

Martin, meanwhile, was still playing a lush and holding down his usual stool, but tonight his beer was only a prop, gathering condensation while he mapped the exits. At the wings, the bouncers Big Leo and Joey stood like twin pillars of muscle. They looked likes statues, but had eyes that moved like searchlights.

The clock didn’t tick; it crawled. Val's set consisted of slow, sultry tribute to Eartha Kitt, a recall of the days when that gal was really something. Between strips, she worked the room, turning on the customers just by talking to them. Inwardly, she wanted go to a safe place and pull the covers over her head.

She was captivating  on stage. What would it be like, I wondered, to walk into a room like she did, knowing I had a hook into every soul who occupied it? It was a heady fantasy.

But what in heal was I thinking about?! Val’s life was dangling by a thread. This was no time for daydreaming. But the thought of being glamorous was hard to get rid of. It was like the scent of French perfume lingering in an empty room.

#

At nine o’clock, the room turned cold.

I felt it in the marrow of my bones—like that itch on the back of the neck that tells a soldier a sniper has finally found his range. 

I scanned the floor. Then I saw them.

Two Joes. They’d walked in five minutes apart, but they were working as a pincer. One held down the bar; the other staked out the stage entrance. It was professional-grade surveillance—the kind that looks like a man enjoying a drink until you notice his eyes aren’t following the girl; they’re following his target’s patterns.

I caught Martin’s eye across the room. He gave a microscopic nod. He’d made the pair of them himself.
Val was leaving the floor, toward the ladies’ room. I intercepted her before she could hit the facilities, crossing her path like a black cat.

“Keep your eyes on me,” I said with a low rasp. “Two shadows. Bar and stage left. If you need to use the room, do fast. I’ll keep watch out here. But afterwards, stay in the light, surrounded by people. And for God’s sake, don’t go anywhere you can be cornered alone.”

Val grimaced. “Are they... from the family?”

“Probably. It's par for the course. Just do like I’ve told you.”

The next sixty minutes were like a slow-motion car crash. The two watchers didn’t move. They didn’t blink. They just sat there, memorizing the geometry of the room and the timing of the exits. Building a tactical map of a murder to come.

Then, at midnight, they stood up in unison and vanished into the night.

I jumped at the sound of Martin's voice behind me. “Reconnaissance,” he grunted. “Whatever they wanted to find out here, I guess they found out. And that ain't good!”

“What's going to happen?” Val asked, standing behind him. She looked small, swallowed up by size of the big room.


“Soon,” I said. “Maybe tonight, maybe tomorrow. But we have to act like the clock is at one minute to midnight.”


Big Leo rounded the corner just then, his massiveness blocking out the light. “Dom wants the three of you. Now.”

#

The boss's office felt like a pressurized cabin. Dominic Santelli sat behind the mahogany desk, flanked by Leo and Joey. Sheila, Martin, and Val stood before him like a trio of suspects in a lineup.

“Those two mugs tonight,” Dom started, leaning into the light. “Leo recognized one. Vincent Russo. He’s a button-man for the Morettis. They aren’t just window shopping any longer.”

“We knew it'ld come to this,” Martin said, his voice flat.

“Maybe so, but I don't allow murder in my house. I’ve got a liquor license to keep afloat, and I don't need bloodstains on my floor.” Dom looked at Val, his hard eyes softening for a fraction of a second. “Miss Romano, the pressure's gotten too intense. Finish the shift, but don’t come back tomorrow. Call in sick tomorrow. Since you're a good kid, I'll give you half pay for the no-show. Disappear until the blue coats come to collect you.”

“Won’t ducking out tip them off?” Val asked.

“They’re already tipped,” I countered. “They’re just looking for a hole in it your protection that they can stick a rifle barrel through.”

Dom nodded. “It's best to hide the target, Val." He glimmed Martin and me. "Look after her. And, Sheila, we'll miss you, too. You’re no great shakes as a waitress, but the customers can't take their eyes off you. Glamour brings in money.”

“Yeah. Nothing's more important than money,” I said glumly.

Out in the hall, Martin grabbed my arm and pulled me into a quiet corner. “I think they're going to be waiting in sight of her car to take an opportunity shot.”

“She can't go near her care," I said. We can do the same routine we did last night.” 

He shook his head. “No, we need a new routine. Organized crime is crazy, not dumb. We need a new play.”

The two of us hammered out a plan: Martin would take his bike, which was in his car trunk, and place it in a bicycle rack where I could retrieve it later. Then, when the closing hour came, Val and I would go out the front door and make for the cab stand. I'd put her in a hack that would take her to rendezvous with Martin and his car. To confuse any peepers, I’d hotfoot it to the rack and unchain Martin’s bike. I’d ride it to rejoined the others, at the agreed-upon spot. Then the three of us would take an evasive route to Martin’s building, where we'd spend the night. We'd nursemaid her there, with drawn revolvers.

It was a solid plan on paper. Unfortunately, the Morettis didn't fit the bill for paper tigers.

#

At two AM, Val left from the Velvet Room, not having let anyone know she wouldn’t be back the next night. As planned, I escorted her outdoors to the cab stand, where several other club girls were also waiting for rides. I hailed a taxi when our turn came up and pushed Val inside. “I’ll see you back here at the club tomorrow night,” I said, in case a gangster was within hearing range.

Val set her jaw. “Yes, you will,” she said. 

I didn’t linger, but took off to where Martin’s bike was chained up. The spot was so lonely that even my shadow behind me felt like company. I hurriedly set my "getaway car" free. But I heard the scuff of leather on asphalt and then saw a shadow coming from behind me.

I spun to see a heavy-set guy in a dark windbreaker. He grasped for my throat. I didn’t think; I ducked under his arms and ran.

Another thug out of the gloom intercepted me, and he was holding a piece.

But my Army training wasn't lost on me. I grabbed a galvanized trash can lid and flung it like a steel Frisbee. It slammed square into the bridge of the nose. He flinched, of course, and I was on him before he could remember where his trigger was.

The gun went off with a deafening roar, but the lead it spat out went streaking toward the stars. I grabbed his wrist, drove my knee into his groin with all the puny weight I had, and he went limp with a garbled gag.

Then the first guy enveloped me from behind. A bear hug. I slammed my head back, felt the crunch of his nasal bump against my skull.

His grip faltered and I twisted out of his grasp. I made it to the bike, got on the seat, and started pumping. The two guys with hurting noses couldn't catch up before I made it into the lighted street.

But I was afraid of being shot in the back. An alley ahead looked too narrow for a car to drive through, so I aimed for its mouth, pumping as if it were a race of life or death.

Because it was.

the alley was so dark I was flying blind. Just then, the phone in my thigh holster buzzed. I braked, drew it, and hit the speaker. It was Martin. “They jumped Val and me at the pickup point,” he barked, his voice ragged. “I raced after them on foot and they pulled in at Danny’s Diner on Seventh. They dragged Val inside. I went to the window to get a shot at them, but when they spotted me coming and I had to run like hell. Now I’m hiding behind the lighted Captain Pretzel sign. You know it. You can’t miss it. I hope your didn't leave your hardware back at the club!”

The line cut to silence. I got back astride my bike and checked the alley behind me. No shadows, no scuffling feet. Maybe the bruisers had given up on me after the girl was caught. I just hope she was still alive. I pumped as hard as I could toward Captain Pretzel's. 

Before I got there, I heard a ruckus inside Danny's Diner. I braked the bicycle and tossed it into a dark shadow, hoping no homeless person would steal it before I got back to it. Losing it would set Martin back at least a buck-ninety!
 

Val was screaming from inside the diner. Whatever they were doing in there, the sloppy dunces hadn’t locked the front door behind them. Only the burglar lights were on inside, but it was enough to let me see that a guy was holding onto Val behind the service counter. He was standing by while Anthony Gallo was doing his best to reduce my bud Martin to strawberry paste. Gallo and the latter were thrashing around, making a mess of the closed diner. It seemed like the other thugs hadn't caught up to them yest, and that was good. Gallo was throwing slugs like a heavyweight. Though Martin was fighting like a trooper, I didn’t think he had weight enough to stick it out for a full round.

I was still at the threshold. I reached for my Rossi, but its hammer got itself hooked in the fabric of my jacket lining. No matter how much I pulled and twisted, I couldn't tear it loose. Damn, but I hate being five and a half foot weakling!

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Martin slam a jagged right into Gallo's jaw and send him stumbling back in a clatter of tables and chairs. My guy followed up by grabbing a glass coffee carafe and shattering it the mobster's head. That made him unsteady on his feet, but the Italian-descended Terminator wasn’t a kay-oed. Instead, he pulled out a medium-sized knife; its steel flashing back the little light available.

Martin dodged his first swipe. As the blade whispered past his leather jacket, he caught Gallo’s wrist. As a follow up, the two men crashed into a vinyl booth, grunting hard, fighting with knees and fists.

I kept struggling to get my pistol loose, while Val was injuring her vocal chords screaming. But there was mechanical screaming coming from the outdoors, too. We heard sirens approaching.

That wasn't possible! It broke an unwritten law for D.C. cops to show up where they were needed!

When I finally dislodged the heater from my jacket, I pointed it at Gallo. Martin had only his fists, but Gallo clutched a knife. I’d have to shoot, just like I'd gotten used to doing back in Iraq...

“Freeze! Police!” shouted a loud, rough male voice behind me at the front door.

Gallo heard it, too, and looked back. I checked my impulse to shoot. The hit man rocked himself back from Martin, as if he thought the game was up. He let the knife clatter to the tiles and raised his hands. Smart guy. Why risk a bullet when the criminal justice system was ten to one against getting jailed?

I let my roscoe relax and sized up Martin’s battered face. “Are you still in one piece?!” I called out.

Martin lifted himself on one elbow. “Mostly,” he wheezed, touching his mouth to see if he had any loose teeth.

The gangster holding Val let her go and ducked away into the kitchen. Val, close to fainting, clung to the countertop, sobbing against the marbled gray Formica laminate. I ran to her. “It’s over,” I whispered, stroking her hair. “You’re safe.”
 

#

The uniformed men dragged Anthony Gallo out, wearing handcuffs. The Hard Harry at the counter had escaped by way of the kitchen door.

What next, I wondered.

Testifying against mob kingpins isn’t my favorite hobby, but Martin and me had only witnessed to a public brawl, not the homicide stuff that incites the mob to murder witnesses. Sure, Gallo had a rap to beat, but here in the nation’s capital, violent criminals didn't have much to worry about. On the bright side, D.C. wasn’t anywhere near as prejudiced a venue as Minneapolis!

A gray-haired officer approached Martin and me.

“Dewitt?”

“Present,” Martin said, wincing as he rose and holding his ribs. “I’m the one who phoned in about the Moretti gang going crazy.”

“What we have is a kidnapping case, right? That’s pretty bad stuff,” the policeman said. 

“They were after the girl because she’s a witness to a gang murder,” said Martin.

The officer nodded. “That's what I heard. I’m glad she made it through.”

“Val’s scheduled for witness protection soon,” I added. "Keep her alive until then!"

“We’ll take her to the detective headquarters,” said the officer.
 

That was it. My adrenaline could finally stop flowing. The work of the D.C. Callahan agency had brought the case to the end. But the way I saw things, the story wasn’t nearly over. I don’t think it ever will be -- not as long as this heart of mine keeps pumping.

#

Peace is wonderful, but sometime the things that a person gets into when the bullets stop flying are embarrassing. My instinct is to keep mum about it, but since the journals I keep are raw material for my memoirs, I might as well get it off my chest. 

After the diner slug fest, Martin and I went back to our normal day to day life. Being glad to still be alive, we made hot and heavy love every day for nearly a week. Living that way makes a girl blissful, I'm finding out. While in that magic state of mind, I remembered the name of the dance school that the club floor manager, Mercedes, had recommended. Angelique’s School of Fine Dancing. Hell, why not?

So far, detective work had required me to portray a hooker, and, right after that, a cocktail waitress. I had to admit that both disguises had helped us close major cases. Dancers are welcome everywhere. They can access a slew of sleazy places. That they could God's work while looking great! 

As I figured it, learning to dance, learning to pass as a showgirl, would help me in the shamus business. With that in mind, I signed up for a semester. At the very least, wearing those flashy dance costumes would be a hell of a lot of fun. 

The trouble was, I was doing detective work with my boyfriend all day long, and then I'd go home with him at night. Under his eagle eyes, how could I possibly attend dance classes on the sly?

To make a long story short, I did my best to sneak around. I thought I was in the clear until one afternoon when I was coming out of Angelique’s to see Martin’s Ford parked at the curb in front of me. He called my name and offered me a ride home. The jig was up. I had no choice but to get into the car with him and face the music.

Without letting him say a word, I jabbered out an explanation, the malarkey  about how dance training was going to make me a better detective. He listened patiently, nodding head and smirking.

“But I’m going to give it up!” I said at last, looking away, my cheeks burning.

“No, you won’t!” he said firmly. “What you’re going to do is work hard, get your diploma, and then show me everything that you learned.”

“So that's it, huh. Way, you lousy lecher!” I replied.

He shrugged. “Women are hard to figure out. Do what you want to do. It’s your business.”

Martin shifted into drive and turned out into the street. I sat there peevishly for a few minutes, until I realized that I didn't have any reason to be made. I said, “Well, I can tell you what I don’t want to do.” Then I stopped. Saying what I wanted to say would be such a big admission!


“What's that?”


I took a deep breath and tried to articulate it. “I don’t want to wait until graduation day before...before I'm able to give you a demonstration.”


He smirked again. “Great attitude! No wonder I love you!”


Okay, I had admitted what kind of girl I was! So what? I knew how guys think, and how smart they are. What red-blooded American male wouldn't want to toss a gorgeous stripper over his shoulder and carry her into the bedroom?!


But what the hell! There are some things that go along with being a girl that are actually fun!


 THE END 

Thursday, January 8, 2026

High Heels and Hot Tips: A Sheila Coffin Adventure, Chapter 2

 


By Christopher Leeson

Chapter 2

  

The Narrative of D.C. Callahan

Morning came too early and too bright. The sun cutting through the gaps in the hotel curtains felt like a personal insult. I woke in Val's room with the previous night's work written into my every muscle. My back was in full complaint mode about the constant movement, my arms were protesting against the heavy trays I'd carried, and my calves were in full rebellion against the long hours on my feet.

But my feet themselves? They were fine. Sheila had fortunately worn stilettos before I was stuffed into her body by those miserable space invaders. D.C. Callahan had been used to sensible, thick-soled oxfords. Without the resilience of Sheila Coffin's ankles, I'd be in agony about now. It was a relief to find out that at least two or three of the crazy things women subject themselves to came with a legit payoff.

Val's bed was empty; she was already up. She was doing stretches on the floor, her body folding with a flexibility that made my own joints ache just watching. Dancers were a type of acrobat, and I could respect that. She had on yoga pants and a sports bra, which wasn't an impressive outfit on a girl as attractive as she was.

"You okay?" she asked, noticing the audible creak in my knees as I sat up.

"Just sore. It's been a while since I've done barroom service." I didn't add that the 'last time' I worked in a bar I was a two-hundred-pound man hauling kegs in from the alley, not a slip of a girl balancing martinis on a silver tray.

She smiled—a genuine, sympathetic look—and slid a bottle of ibuprofen across the nightstand along with a glass of lukewarm water. "I've done floor work, too. Take three with breakfast. Trust me. The second night is always the hardest because the adrenaline from the first night has worn off."

I took them gratefully with a plastic cup of water. The pills felt chalky and dry in my throat.

"You really love the work, don't you? The dancing?" I asked, watching her expression. Talking to a stripper about stripping was still a turn-on for me.

Val paused, her leg pulled up behind her head in a way that looked physically impossible. Her eyes went distant as she considered the question. "Yeah, I do. Most people think strippers are stupid or trashy. They put us only one notch above whores. It kills me that society wants what we offer them, but still despises us when we give it to them. The best part of the strip gig is that on that stage, I'm the one in control. I'm the one they're looking at, and I'm the only one who's important in the entire room."

As I watched her movement, the detective in me went quiet. As D.C. Callahan, I'd spent decades on the other side of that stage. I thought I'd been showing the strippers respect because I didn't hoot or holler. Before this, I'd talked to a few strippers, but none of them spoke honestly to me, not like Val was doing. She was letting me know about the "life." It took sweat and sheer raw discipline to bring off what she did so well. To be honest, that was also true about cocktail waitressing. There was more to the job than wearing a short dress. My body wouldn't have ached so much if I had only needed to stand around looking great.

A sharp, rhythmic rapping at the door broke the quiet of the morning. Both of us went still.

"It's Martin," my roomie said, checking the peephole.

Martin came in carrying a cardboard carrier of coffee with a grease-stained bag of breakfast sandwiches tucked under his arm. His dark stubble told me he hadn't shaved. Well, the old Callahan wouldn't have shaved either. He'd be too eager to get over to a stripper's hotel room before the window of opportunity closed. Martin set the food on the small laminate table and started taking maps and handwritten notes from his pack.

"The Morettis aren't going away," he said without preamble. "Big Leo's guys spotted two 'scouts' idling in a sedan outside the club at closing time. They're circling, waiting for an opening."

"Well, you've been busy," I said. "I'm impressed."

He looked across at me in that special way of his. "I aim to please," he said with that smile I love so much. It's a nuisance being a girl, but when the lights are out, it has aspects that aren't so bad.

I took a sip of the coffee—black, bitter, and hot. "They're smart," I said in the breathy alto I'd inherited from Sheila. "They won't hit her inside the club. Too many witnesses, too much security. They'll wait for the transition—the walk to the car, the ride back here."

Martin's eyes narrowed as he looked up and studied me.

"Yeah," I quipped. "Just don't tell me I look like a pro."

"Not in those dowdy PJs, you don't. But I've seen you dressed like a bad girl before and loved it."

"You would! You're a randy son of a bitch who can't keep his lip buttoned."

He shrugged. "Yeah, if you say so. But I know how much you like being complimented. You gotta have it even when you're wearing your grumpiness like an old lady's shawl."

#

The crowd tonight differed from the one on my opening night. This time, it was heavily weighted with regulars who tipped well and caused less disturbance than the tourists in town to see the Lincoln Memorial. These were the customers that Dom, the boss, cultivated: affluent people with expense accounts and enough sense not to get handsy with the talent.

On stage, the dancer named Lacy was performing a routine I'd seen her rehearse earlier. She moved like water, every gesture deliberate and controlled. There was something magical about a striptease dancer, at least the pretty ones. I couldn't get enough of them. Though I couldn't have explained it, even after becoming as a girl myself, I still couldn't.

When someone tapped me on the shoulder, I jumped. "You look tense, Sheila." Val was standing behind me. "Trouble?"

"No, it's nothing. A guy propositioned me. He took me by surprise. What makes me tense is keeping lookout for killers."

"I don't know about killers, but I know about the lounge crowd. You just learn to endure their lewd comments, sigh, and move on."

It was Val who moved on just then, but I wasn't left on my own for over ten seconds. "Scarlett!" Mercedes's hard voice came at me like the swipe of a buzz saw. "Table nine in your section is waiting for drinks. Are you planning to deliver them this century?"

I snapped back into motion, heat rising in my cheeks. "Sorry, I was distracted by another customer."

"That's no excuse!" With a snort, the floor manager passed on.

"Damn it!" I thought in her wake. How did college-age women stand working in such a demanding place?

More time passed, and then, around eleven o'clock, the atmosphere shifted.

A man in his fifties slinked in like a prowling alley cat and sat down at a corner table. He didn't order a drink immediately. The newcomer was wearing a charcoal suit that cost more than my first three cars combined. He had on understated and expensive duds and moved with a stillness that would have put any savvy observer on guard. I saw the way his eyes were fixed on Val, who was just then on the floor doing hostess duty for extra tips.

I stepped into his line of sight. "Sorry, honey, Val's booked solid tonight."

I was taking care to use my "waitress voice"—light, polite, but firm.

The man glanced up, with eyes resembling two pieces of flint. They didn't help make his smile look authentic. "You're new. What's your name, honeybuns?"

"Scarlett."

"Nice gams. You ought to try dancing yourself." He let the compliment hang in the air like a buzzng hornet. "I don't have time to hang around here," he finished. "Tell Val I'll be seeing her soon—very soon. My name's Anthony Gallo. Tell her that."

He stood up, adjusted his cuffs, and left the lounge without looking back.


The Narrative of D.C. Callahan, continued

The name Anthony Gallo hit me like a bucket of ice water. The talk on the street called Gallo the "Architect." He was more than a commonplace hit man. Breaking legs wasn't his game; his specialty was disappearances. If the Morettis had sent their top consigliere into a strip club just to say "hello," it meant the clock wasn't just ticking. It was about five seconds from midnight.

My heart was hammering against my ribs. With time running out, what was I supposed to do? Some plans I'd had! Here I was, wearing a cocktail dress and holding a rattling tray of empty glasses in my mitts when I should have been fingering a deadly weapon.

Val fast-stepped toward me, losing her smile now that she had he back to the customers. "How are things looking?" she asked in a whisper.

If I told her the truth, we'd probably have a screaming Mimi on our hands. That wouldn't do anybody any good.

"No news is good news," I told her. "It's best if you act like you don't have a care in the world."

She forced a smile, as if sensing the surrounding menace. But, saying nothing, the dancer nodded, sighed, and returned to her hosting gig. I winced as my glams followed after her. It was like I was seeing clouds of doom gathering over her head.

Just then, Dom, the club boss, materialized beside me. "I saw the guy. I know who he is. You okay, Scarlett?"

"Gallo told me to tell Val that he's going to see her soon," I muttered.

Dom's jaws tightened. "Gallo doesn't make social calls. If he came to deliver a message, it means they're getting ready to move. Tonight, tomorrow—it doesn't matter. The clock's ticking."

Concerned, I searched the room for Val. I saw her trying hard to chat pleasantly with a regular. She looked tense, aware of the surrounding danger. I knew she'd panic if I told her that her executioner had just walked through the door and measured her for a coffin.

"Keep her in sight," Dom said quietly. "This is trouble beyond my league. What can you and your buddy do to keep the worst from happening?"

I grimaced and must have looked pretty clueless.

The club manager squeezed my shoulder then—a gesture that was probably meant to be reassuring but felt more like a warning. "Let me know whether you detectives can think of something. I'll tip off the bouncers to help you out if they can. I'll do what I can, too, short of getting myself killed." Then he drifted back toward his observation point near the stage door, his mouth grim and his eyes darting about.

To my relief, I saw Martin coming out of the crowd, returning to his place at the bar. Intense and jittery, I moved fast, the clicks my heels made reminding me of gunfire. I glanced over to the exit that Gallo had used, feeling like I was standing in the path of a breaking dam.

When my shadow touched Martin, he glanced up. I said nothing, but my eyes gave him a message to meet me away from listening ears. I made for the backstage area. My pard waited in place for just half a minute before stepping after me, maybe trying to look like he was going to the john.

When the pair of us met under a web of hanging ropes, it took me only one breathless sentence to fill him in on the whole sordid story.

He shook his head. "So there really are gangsters chasing Val. But if Anthony Gallo has a personal interest in her, that's about as bad as things could get."

"Tell me something I don't know," I fired back at him.

"It's a dark night, but maybe not the eleventh hour yet," Martin answered back. "Gallo came to deliver a warning. Why try to scare her? Why not just ambush her?"

I had a pretty good idea why, and none of the reasons were good. "He probably thinks Val is alone and unprotected. He'd like to shock her into making a run for it. Then the gang will be able to grab her someplace away from witnesses."

Martin nodded. "They'll probably stake out her car. You didn't say anything to Val about the danger, did you?"

"No! I'm not that dumb!"

"Good. It's best if she carries on naturally until closing time, doing nothing that might excite the bad guys. Have you got your gun?"

"No! Where the deuce could I hide a gat while wearing this outfit? I feel naked."

He briefly looked like he would make a jibe, but his features fell. He wasn't in the mood for it.

"You'll need to figure out the how and where yourself! But get on the  move! Armed yourself and then head back to the floor. I'll stay as close to Val as I can, while you keep watch on the flanks. After her shift, we'll bring the car around and take her home. Like I said, her own car might be a danger spot."

"We could take her home, but they probably know where she's staying!" I reminded him.

Martin paused a beat. "You're right. Fortunately, I still keep a room of my own. We'll stash her there and stand guard. There's no way the apes could know about my place yet."

I shook my head. "Even if Val gets through the night alive, what about tomorrow?"

Martin took a deep breath. "I think—"

"What are you doing here, Scarlett?" a hard female voice broke in. It was Mercedes, the wicked witch of Washington. "I know this hunk is your boyfriend, but you're distractions are unprofessional. You won't get another warning. You look good, and we'd like to keep you on board but pretty girls who need jobs are a dime a dozen."

"I'm sorry," I said. "It won't happen again!"

"Your 'sorries' are inflated currency, Pouty Lips. If I have to tell you that you're screwing up again, it will be the last time."

She wheeled away, leaving me steaming. To her, I was just a spot of dust in need of sweeping. I gritted my teeth. Having to look like a girl 24-7 was bad enough, but being treated like a useless twit from four to midnight really made me sour.


#

Closing time came, and we took Val outside through the most obscure exit the club had. Martin had already positioned his Honda there, engine running. Getting Val out of the club without incident took careful choreography. Big Leo, the bouncer, helped us walk Val out first, his considerable frame shielding her from any potential sniper angles. I followed close behind, my hand in my purse, gripping my Rossi.

We were in an alley, not a parking lot, but there were many shadows, many angles where shooters could hide. I scanned the roof lines, the piles of trash, the dark spaces between the glaring lights.

Martin pushed the passenger door open. "Get in," he said sharply.

Val dove in next to him, and I took the back seat, my pistol now out. I'd be the tail-gunner. Martin vavoomed out of the alley with a heavy foot, but not recklessly—doing nothing that would draw unwanted attention.

For the first few blocks, nobody spoke. Martin took random turns, doubled back twice, and used every trick he knew to dodge a tail. I watched through the rear window, my pulse racing faster than the car.

"Are we being followed?" Val whispered.

"Not that I can see," Martin answered. His knuckles were white on the steering wheel. "Anything, Sheila?"

"Not that I can tell!" I said from backseat.

We took the long way to Martin's single room, adding twenty minutes to the drive. By the time we pulled into the underground garage, my shirt was damp with sweat under my jacket.

"We made it," Val breathed.

 "For now," I said.


The Narrative of D.C. Callahan, continued

We hurried inside and climbed the stairs. I pushed open the door to the single room that Martin still maintained as his own space. I knew full well that every man needs to have a hidey-hole to call his own. Sniffing the air, I could barely detect the scent of Martin's cheap cigarettes in his seldom-occupied crash zone.

Val was behind us. We shuffled out of the way, and she hurried into the room, her phone clutched in a shakey grip. "I'm scared," she said. "Should I call the police?" 

Martin shook his head. "They won't be ready to take you yet," he said. "You'll be lucky if they're ready to hide you as early as they told you they would. That's how this town works." He looked back at me. "I hope all the evasive driving I did pays off. The two of us are both armed, and we'll stand guard, sleeping in shifts. Val can have the bed. We'll make do on the chair or the floor."

"I'm sorry," I apologized to our client. "That's about all a pair of dicks can do when up against a criminal outfit of the Morettis' size."

Martin crossed to the window ledge and sat down. He was wearing his "danger face," with the piercing, analytical gaze of a man who makes his living noticing things that are out of place.

Val, shivering more from fear than cold, struggled under the covers fully clothed. I took possession of the only chair available and gave the small room a good perusal. Until now, I'd thought it silly for my cash-strapped partner to shell out good dough for cramped cubbyhole he hardly needed. But tonight, I was damned glad to have access to an out-of-the-way hiding place.

I assumed the first watch, too keyed up to sleep. The dark hours after midnight seemed endless, but who could be bored when you had a gang of thugs on your heels? I was still awake when Martin's wristwatch alarm went off. He heaved up from the floor and relieved me. I took his place on the old carpet, under the large towel he'd been using for a blanket, still warm from his body heat. I didn't expect to get any sleep at all, but I miraculously dropped off within minutes. When Martin shook me awake, the sun was beaming in through the window. Val was up, too, sitting on the bed's edge, biting her lower lip.

Martin yawned and returned to the windowsill. "Now that we've gotten some rest," he said, "we ought to take breakfast some public place, maybe at a mall when it opens. If the gang can somehow track us down here, it won't a good place to defend."

"I don't care for us walking around like three clay pipes in a shooting gallery," I said. "Maybe we ought to take Val to our office later. We'll burrow in behind the "closed" sign until it's time for her to go back to work. But before we head that way, we have to pack in some groceries. Otherwise, Val and I are going to faint from hunger working at the club tonight."

I stepped up to the window overlook to take look outside over the top of Martin's head. It was a shabby neighborhood, full of illegal emigrants. After thinking quietly for a moment, I had to admit, "I've got a bad feeling about tonight."


 


To be continued in Chapter 3