“Outside,” Pridgeon commanded. “I told you to get him out of here.”
“He isn’t fit to go anywhere just yet.” Kneeling beside the chair, Hasson patted Werry’s cheeks with his left hand, while with his right he covertly unbuttoned the safety strap which held Werry’s pistol in its holster. “The least you can do is give him a glass of water.”
Pridgeon’s lips tightened. “I’m giving you both ten seconds to get out of here.”
“What’ll you do then — send for the police?” Hasson renewed his efforts to give Werry control of his own body and was rewarded by a preliminary stirring of his limbs. Werry rolled his head from side to side, then brought his eyes to focus on Hasson’s face.
“I’m sorry, Rob,” he said thickly. “I … You’d better get me out to the car.”
Hasson leaned forward and brought his mouth close to Werry’s ear. “Al,” he whispered urgently, “I know how sick you must feel. I know how little you want to hear all this right now, but if you leave this house without talking to Morlacher you’re finished as a police officer. Too many people have seen what happened. They’ll talk it up all over town, and you’ll be finished.”
Werry almost smiled. “Supposing I don’t even care.”
“You do care! Listen, Al, you don’t even have to do anything. You don’t even have to stand up — just talk to Morlacher the way you set out to do. Then we can leave. Okay?”
“Okay, but who’s going to…?”
“That’s it! I’ve had enough of you two pricks.” Pridgeon’s feet sounded on the floor behind Hasson. “Nobody can say I didn’t give you a fair warning.”
Hasson stood up and turned to face him. “Reeve Werry has deputised me to act for him — and we want to talk to Mr Morlacher.”
“He’s deputised you!” Pridgeon gaped at Hasson, then he smiled and closed his eyes for a moment like a man experiencing a long-sought ecstasy. “Here’s what I think of you, cripple.”
Slowly and gently, as though about to pick up a priceless vase, he raised his hands towards Hasson’s ears. Hasson placed one hand on the centre of Pridgeon’s chest and gave him a stiff armed shove which took him completely unawares, carrying him backwards too fast for his feet to catch up. He fell, sliding on his back on the polished floor with his legs in the air. One of the watching men gave a derisive whoop.
Pridgeon scrambled to his feet, mouthing venomously, and went for Hasson, this time coming in with all his speed, slit-eyed and crouching, determined to wreak swift and bloody vengeance for the humiliation he had just received. He feinted with his left and right, then threw a looping right-handed punch which was aimed at Hasson’s throat.
Hasson, shifting into adrenaline overdrive, had time to analyse the three movements and knew at once that here was an instinctive and overconfident opponent, the sort of man who blundered casually into physical duels perhaps once a year — winning by dint of strength and ferocity — and who on that basis had deluded himself into believing he was a superior and gifted fighter. Lifting the punch harmlessly over his shoulder with his left forearm, Hasson saw the whole of Pridgeon’s body hung up before him like an anatomical wallchart with all the nerve centres marked in red, and made the discovery that he had no desire to bring the contest to a clean and scientific conclusion. Pridgeon had insulted him and degraded him and made him feel ashamed. Pridgeon liked tormenting blind youngsters who were in no position to do anything about it. Pridgeon liked using muscle on men he thought were cripples. For all that, and for a thousand other things of which Pridgeon had no knowledge, Pridgeon would have to pay a heavy price, and the time had come…
Hasson changed his point of aim and drove his right fist into Pridgeon’s mouth, exulting in the dull snap of teeth. He threw Pridgeon against the panelled wall, to deny him the respite he might get through being knocked down, and hit him three more times, each time aiming for the face, each time connecting solidly and drawing blood. The madness boiled away as quickly as it had come when from the comer of his eye he detected a movement among the three men on his left. He allowed Pridgeon to slide down on to the floor and turned to face the men. They were advancing and fanning Out to surround him, and on their faces was an expression Hasson had seen many times before — the righteous anger that a bully always feels when the victim has the temerity to strike back. The man with the beer glass — a stocky redneck in a plaid shin — had drained the glass and was holding it with the base nestled into the palm of his hand.
Hasson moved in close to Werry and raised his hands like a traffic cop, giving them a signal to halt. “Before you men get yourselves involved,” he said, forcing his voice to sound light and unconcerned, “I think you ought to know that Reeve Werry is here to make enquiries about a murder. Somebody planted a high explosive bomb in the Chinook Hotel, and it went off a little while ago in the middle of a crowd of youngsters. More than one of them might be dead — we’re not sure yet, but I can tell you that some people around here are going to go to jail for a long, long time. Now, it’s up to you whether you want to dirty your hands with that sort of thing or not.”
Hasson paused, breathing quietly and regularly to ease the pounding in his chest. The three men glanced at each other, obviously distrustful of Hasson and undecided about what to do next. His warning had been less effective than he had hoped it would be, and he had an uneasy feeling he was facing a group of individuals who had the classical criminal inability to weigh up future consequences.
“It’s time somebody did somethin” about those punks up in the hotel,” the man with the glass said. “They’re nothin” but a pain in the ass.”
“Yes, but is that any reason for you to become an accessory after the fact of murder?”
The man looked unconvinced. “That sounds like a load of hull to me. I don’t know nothin” about no murder, but I know I don’t like to see cops beatin” up on my friends.”
“That’s right,” another man agreed, moving forward slightly.
“Look at it this way,” Hasson said. “You came up here tonight to have a quiet drink and maybe a game of cards. Right? You didn’t come out to get yourselves mixed up in a murder enquiry. It’s a nasty business, and it could get even worse if this sort of thing was brought into it.”
Hasson leaned sideways and drew Werry’s pistol from its holster, holding the weapon between finger and thumb as if it was an object for which he had a deep distaste. He let the three look at it for several seconds, then lowered it back into the holster.
“I don’t want to start waving a gun in your faces and perhaps have it go off by accident,” he said. “I would hate that, and probably you would hate it even more, so why don’t you go home and let Reeve Werry get on with what he came here to do?”
“What the man’s saying is — take off while you’re still able,” Werry put in, rising to his feet. “It’s good advice.”
“We’ll go if you say so, Al,” one of the men growled. They lifted CG harnesses and suits which had been heaped untidily on a carved oak chest and filed out into the night. The last one out slammed the heavy door.
Hasson nodded to Werry, who was tentatively moving his shoulders. “Thanks, Al. I don’t think I was getting through.”
“Don’t start thanking me, Rob — I’m not stupid.” Werry brushed his uniform with his hands, picked up his cap and put it on. “I may be gutless, but I’m not stupid. Okay?”
“I don’t think you know what gutless means. Remind me to tell you some time.”
“Let’s drop the subject,” Werry said curtly, glancing at his communicator. “I wish I’d told Henry to keep in touch. I’d like to know if you’re right about this being a murder gig.”