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"Dammit," Dave Pekach said, and then stopped as Miss Penelope Detweiler walked up to them.
She took Matt's arm, leaned up and kissed his cheek, and then laid her head against his shoulder.
"Hi," she said. "I'm Penny."
"You know our hostess, of course," Matt said. "These delightful folks are Mrs. Mike Sabara, Captain Sabara, Captain Pekach, Officer O'Mara, and the boss, Inspector Wohl."
"How do you do, Miss Detweiler?" Mike Sabara said.
From the look on your face, Mrs. Sabara, Matt thought, Matt thought, it is evident that you have just identified the sweet-looking blonde you thought was my girlfriend as the poor little rich girl who took dope, was involved with the Guinea gangster, and was just freed from the looney bin. it is evident that you have just identified the sweet-looking blonde you thought was my girlfriend as the poor little rich girl who took dope, was involved with the Guinea gangster, and was just freed from the looney bin.
"Couldn't you call me 'Penny'?" she asked plaintively.
"Hi, Penny," Wohl said. "Call me Peter."
"I'm Dave," Captain Pekach said.
"I like him, Martha," Penny said. "He's even nicer-looking than you told Mother."
"I like him too," Martha said, and kissed Captain Pekach on the cheek, an act that seemed to embarra.s.s him.
"Please call me Helen," Mrs. Sabara said.
"My name is Tom," Officer O'Mara said.
"Hi, Tom," Penny said, and smiled at him.
Officer O'Mara, Matt thought, Matt thought, looks as stunned as Madame Sabara. I think he has just fallen in love. looks as stunned as Madame Sabara. I think he has just fallen in love.
"I think we're all here now," Martha said. "I thought we'd have some munchies and a drink or two to work up an appet.i.te and then Dave will do the steaks."
"May I help in some way, Martha?" Penny asked.
"It's all been done, dear, thank you just the same."
I wish to h.e.l.l she would let go of my arm, Matt thought. Matt thought. As a matter of fact, I devoutly wish she weren't here at all. As a matter of fact, I devoutly wish she weren't here at all. And then he considered that for a moment. And then he considered that for a moment. You are really a p.r.i.c.k, Matthew Payne. She isn't at all interested in you as a male. She is hanging on to you because she's scared to death. She's floating around all alone in strange waters, and you're the only life preserver in sight. You You are really a p.r.i.c.k, Matthew Payne. She isn't at all interested in you as a male. She is hanging on to you because she's scared to death. She's floating around all alone in strange waters, and you're the only life preserver in sight. You are, are, whether you like it or not, the closest thing she has to a brother, and you have a clear obligation to try to help her. whether you like it or not, the closest thing she has to a brother, and you have a clear obligation to try to help her.
"Nonsense," Matt said. "Put her to work. If nothing else, get her a broom and have her sweep the place up."
"Matt, that's terrible!" Martha said.
"No, it's not," Penny said. "I learned a long time ago that saying something rude is Matt's perverse way of showing affection."
She leaned up and kissed his cheek again.
"So go get a broom," Matt said.
"I won't get a broom, but I will pa.s.s the . . . what did you say, Martha, 'the munchies'?"
Matt glanced at Peter Wohl and found Wohl's thoughtful eyes already on him.
There was the muted sound of a telephone ringing, and Evans opened a small door in the low brick wall and took out a telephone.
"One moment, please, sir," he said, and covered the mouthpiece with his hand. "Are you available to take a call from a Lieutenant Malone, Inspector?"
"Sure," Wohl said, and got up and took the telephone from Evans.
"G.o.d," Pekach said. "I didn't think to ask him! Peter, let me talk to him when you're through."
"h.e.l.lo, Mike," Wohl said. "What's up?" He paused. "Wait a minute, Captain Pekach wants to talk to you." He covered the microphone with his hand. "He says he needs to talk to me."
Pekach nodded, and took the phone.
"Mike, where are you? I've been trying to get you on the phone." There was a reply. "Okay, well, you come over here. No, you won't be intruding."
He handed the telephone back to Evans and turned to Wohl.
"He was over at your place. He'll be here in ten minutes. He say what was on his mind?"
Wohl shook his head no. "Thank you, David. I really didn't want to leave before the steak."
"I should have invited him, anyway. I don't know why I didn't."
"Probably for the same reason you don't read departmental teletypes, " Wohl said. He saw on Pekach's face that he had stung him more than he intended, and quickly added: "You're in love. People in love are unreliable."
"I don't think I like that," Martha said in mock indignation.
Lieutenant Malone, in slacks and a cotton jacket, drove up the drive ten minutes later in his personal automobile, a battered Mustang that always made Peter Wohl wonder what Malone had on the State Certified Inspection Station garage that had certified it as safe for pa.s.sage on the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania's public roads.
"I didn't mean to intrude," he said, when he came into the barbecue pit.
"You're not," Martha said. "David's been trying to get you on the phone ever since we decided to do this. Will what you have to tell Peter wait until after you've had a drink?"
"Unless one of Dave's cars has run into a station wagon full of nuns it will," Wohl said.
"Yes, thank you. Scotch, please."
Malone spotted Matt and smiled at him.
"h.e.l.lo, Matt," he said.
"How are you, Lieutenant?"
Malone spotted Penelope Detweiler, looked hard to make sure it was she, and then looked away.
Wohl went to Penny, put his arm around her shoulders, and led her to Malone.
"Penny, I want you to meet the man who put one of your father's golf partners in jail," he said. "This is Lieutenant Jack Malone."
"One of Daddy's golf partners? Really? Who?"
"Bob Holland," Wohl said. "Philadelphia's Friendliest Car Dealer of Integrity."
"Oh, I heard about that!" Penny said. "He was stealing cars, wasn't he?"
"By the hundreds," Wohl said. "And Jack was the guy who caught him."
Malone looked torn between pleasure and embarra.s.sment.
But he has also decided, Matt saw, that being somewhere with Penny Detweiler was no cause for being uncomfortable. If Peter Wohl had a friendly arm around her shoulders, she was all right.
That was a G.o.ddammed nice thing for you to do, boss. And if it incidentally makes me feel like a s.h.i.+t, I deserve it.
"Is what's on your mind going to take long, Jack?" Wohl asked.
"No, sir."
"Then why don't we take our drinks and wander off in the woods for a minute and get it over with? Will you excuse us, Penny?"
"Certainly," Penny said. "Nice to have met you, Lieutenant. I can't wait to tell my father."
When Wohl and Malone were out of earshot, Penny touched Matt's arm and when he looked at her, she said, "He's really nice, isn't he? I like your friends, Matt."
Wohl led Malone fifty yards away from the barbecue pit and then stopped.
"Okay, let's have it," he said.
"I had a call from the Secret Service this morning," Malone replied. "A guy named H. Charles Larkin. Supervisory Special Agent Supervisory Special Agent H. Charles Larkin." H. Charles Larkin."
"How did he get to you?"
"I told you that Dignitary Protection sergeant, Henkels, has a room temperature IQ. Larkin called him, and he gave him my number."
"What did this guy want?"
"He said that he was the guy in charge of the Vice President's security; that he was coming up here by train in the morning; and that I'm 'invited' to the Philly office of the Secret Service at nine-thirty to discuss the Vice President's visit."
"Tomorrow's Sunday," Wohl thought aloud, "and I can't believe this guy doesn't know he's supposed to go through Captain Whatsisname Duffy in the Roundhouse."
"Jack Duffy," Malone furnished. "Special a.s.sistant to the commissioner for inter-agency liaison." Duffy," Malone furnished. "Special a.s.sistant to the commissioner for inter-agency liaison."
Wohl looked at him and grunted. "What did you tell this guy?"
"That I would get back to him. And then I started looking for you."
"Have you got this guy's number?"
Malone nodded, and Wohl made a "follow me" gesture with his hand and led him back to the barbecue pit.
"Martha," he said. "I have to call Was.h.i.+ngton. May I use the phone? I'll have it billed to the Department, of course."
"Don't be silly. Just use the phone."
"Thank you," Wohl said, going to the cubicle in the brick wall where Evans had stored the telephone.
"Dave," he called. "I want you and Mike to hear this. And you too, Matt."
Pekach and Sabara walked over to him. Officer O'Mara, Matt thought, looked like he had just been told the Big Boys didn't want to play with him. And then Wohl saw the look on O'Mara's face too: "And, of course, you too, O'Mara. You're supposed to be able to remind me of what I said."
"Yes, sir."
Wohl pointed to the phone. Malone took a notebook from his pocket, opened it, and found the number he had.
"Person to person, Jack," Wohl ordered.
The call went through very quickly. Malone put his hand over the microphone.
"They're ringing him."
Wohl took the telephone from Malone, and held it slightly away from his ear so the others would be able to hear both sides of the conversation.
"Larkin," a somewhat brusque voice said.
"Mr. Larkin, this is Inspector Peter Wohl of the Special Operations Division of the Philadelphia Police Department."
"What can I do for you, Inspector?"
"That's what I intended to ask you. You called one of my people, Lieutenant Malone, an hour or so ago."
"Oh, yeah. I asked him to come by our Philadelphia office in the morning. Is there a problem with that?"
"I'm afraid there is. I'm not free at that time."
"Is there sort of an inference in that that I should have called you, not this lieutenant?"
"That would have been nice. Dignitary Protection is under Special Operations. I run Special Operations."
"I thought it was run out of the commissioner's office."
"Not anymore."
"Oh, s.h.i.+t," Larkin said. "Okay, Inspector. You tell me. How do I make this right?"
"Are you open to suggestion?"
"Wide open."
"I was going to suggest . . . I understand you're coming by train?"