Voyage of Vengeance
TODAY’S GARBAGE
IS TOMORROW’S AMERICA
And another sign:
ENTER THE CONTEST!
WIN A ROUND TRIP
TO THE GARBAGE DUMP
ALL EXPENSES PAID
The old cab was drawing nearer and was about to come up beside the moving truck. Another sign:
TRUCK 2183
MR. J. P. FLAGRANT
GARBAGE EXECUTIVE
Yes, the ditty was coming from the truck. There were two loudspeakers mounted on the cab. They were singing:
Happy garbage to you,
Happy garbage to you.
Be kind to your garbage,
And it will love you.
The old cab was driving even with the truck window now. Bang-Bang leaned out and yelled, “Pull over!”
The truck driver was wearing a green derby. Yes, it WAS Flagrant! He was staring popeyed at the cab, his eyes fixed on the door sign.
“Corleone!” he shrieked. Instantly he sped up.
I breathed a sigh of relief. Flagrant probably remembered all too well that icy winter ducking in the river he had experienced at the sideways thumb thrust of Babe Corleone! He thought they were after him to throw him in again! Yes, sir! My breaks were holding! I hoped his didn’t!
But (bleep) that Heller! He was racing right alongside the garbage truck!
Then the old cab leaped ahead with a ferocious roar. It snarled down the street ahead of the truck. Heller applied his brakes and yanked his wheel.
With a scream of tires, the old cab went broadside. It jarred to a halt.
It was blocking the street!
The garbage truck bore down on it like a juggernaut!
I prayed, hit that cab! Then that will be the last of Heller.
But Flagrant had jammed on his brakes. The heavy vehicle was shuddering to a halt. Oh, Gods, he was going to stop. I wanted to scream “Hit that cab!” Oh, Gods, if he stopped he would be caught.
He stopped.
But he wasn’t caught.
Flagrant had the truck in reverse!
It started backwards slowly and then began to pick up speed. He couldn’t turn in that narrow street. But he was going to get away!
He was shortly up to what must be forty miles an hour! Backwards!
Bang-Bang yelled, “Shoot out his tires!”
“No!” cried Heller. “We don’t want to hurt him, we only want to stop him. Slide under this wheel!”
Heller jumped out of the cab. Bang-Bang slid over and got into the driving seat. Heller slammed the door, dropped a bag in Bang-Bang’s lap and stepped on the cab’s running board.
Bang-Bang started up and began to chase the furiously backing garbage truck. “Go to it, Flagrant!” I yelled. “Buy me time!”
The old cab was streaking up the street, pursuing the swiftly backing garbage truck.
Heller reached in through the cab window and rummaged with one hand in the bag he’d dropped in Bang-Bang’s lap. He took out something.
“Get closer to that truck!” shouted Heller.
There was a cross street. The light was green. Probably Flagrant would have turned, except stopped traffic, waiting for the light, blocked the intersecting streets. He kept backing faster, the huge truck teetering as its engine roared.
The cab was almost bumping the truck’s radiator.
Heller was sizing up the truck. The whipping flags were very near.
Heller drew back his hand.
He threw!
Something sailed over the truck’s cab and landed in the garbage.
“Bang-Bang! Brake! Stop!”
The old cab tires screamed as they locked. It came to a swerving halt.
The garbage truck was racing away! Oh, Gods, Flagrant was going to back to safety! He would make it.
BOOOOOOM!
Out of the truck’s back and into the air went a geyser of garbage!
Tonnage of garbage sacks shot up the street BEHIND the truck.
A concussion grenade! The other one I had given Silva!
The cab bucked in the blast.
The load of garbage was suddenly a street-blocking barricade. It had flown out of the body backwards.
The truck’s rear plowed into it!
It came to a squishing halt!
“Forward!” cried Heller.
Bang-Bang raced ahead.
The old cab came to a stop before the halted truck.
I looked anxiously up at the building we were parked beside. Where was Teenie? Time was growing short!
PART FIFTY-FIVE
Chapter 3
J. P. Flagrant crawled out of the truck cab, his green derby askew. Heller stepped toward him.
Flagrant fell on his knees, clasped hands upraised in supplication. “Please don’t kill me! I learned the lesson that you taught me. I am not a traitor anymore. I will not rat on FFBO!”
Oh, what a surge of relief went through me. Babe Corleone had done her job too well. When he had promised to tell all before, she had thrown him in the wintry river as a traditore. Smart man! He wasn’t going to let that happen again, even if it was spring!
“No, no,” said Heller. “We’re not here to kill you. We just want some information.”
“The Rockecenter interests are sacred!” whined Flagrant. “You’re Corleone. I was wrong to offer to rat. Now let me go back to my garbage.”
“Just tell me what the letters FFBO mean,” said Heller.
“Then you’re not from the advertising world or you would know,” said Flagrant. “Please let me get back to my garbage.”
Heller looked at the flags and signs on the truck. The ditty had stopped. He looked at the green derby.
Then he reached into his pocket. Flagrant obviously thought he was drawing a gun and began to weep.
But Heller took out a wallet and looked through it. He found and took out a card. It said:
OWN YOUR VERY OWN
ALLIGATOR FARM, INC.
Ochokeechokee, Florida
Sales Office: Empire State Building
“Advertising?” said Heller. “It just so happens I know of an opening advertising alligator farms in Florida.” He gave J. P. Flagrant the card.
Flagrant looked at it. He stopped weeping. He stood up and gave his green derby a twitch. He said, “Fifty thousand dollars a year, one percent of the gross of those sold, a five-year contract with ninety-day option renewal, my own secretary—a brunette, under twenty-five, nice build, nice (bleeps), pretty face?”
Heller said, “I hope the information is worth it. The answer is yes.”
Flagrant stood up straighter. He gave his green derby a tug. He said, “Well, in that event, I’m hired. As I am now on your payroll, I cannot possibly be a traitor to anyone except you. Right?”
“Right,” said Heller.
“So I am not a traitor. FFBO stands for Fatten, Farten, Burstein and Ooze. It is the biggest PR and advertising firm in the world. It handles the accounts of the Rockecenter interests, amongst others, and until I was unjustly fired I was the Rockecenter Account Executive and also handled the advertising of the Rockecenter-connected firm of IG Barben Pharmaceuticals. Also Octopus Oil. Also Grabbe-Manhattan Bank. Also, also, also, on and on. Billion-dollar-a-year account.”
I shuddered. He was spilling his guts, just as I feared. Gods, what was delaying Teenie?
“Who, then,” said Heller, “is responsible for the Whiz Kid?”
“Aha,” said Flagrant. “The man who cost me my job. I begged them not to hire him and they fired me. The name of that dog is J. Walter Madison, a PR artist known in the trade as J. Warbler Madman.”
“Wait a minute,” said Heller. “I’ve met him!”
“And you’re still alive?” said Flagrant. “That’s a miracle.”
“Sincere, earnest-looking young fellow?”
“That’s the snake,” said Flagrant. “He was hired at the express demand of Bury, of Swindle and Crouch, the Rockecenter attorneys, for the explicit purpose of rui
ning a man named Wister.”
The Countess Krak’s voice rang out behind Heller. “Aha! I knew it! The crooked lawyer trying to usurp the empire!”
“What?” said Flagrant.
“Never mind,” said Heller. “You mean this Madison has been doing all this bad, crazy Whiz Kid publicity?”
“Yes, indeed,” said Flagrant. “I followed the campaign amongst the garbage cans. I’d recognize Madison’s overblown style anywhere.”
“That adds up,” said Heller. And then in a deadly voice he asked, “Where can we locate this Madison?”
“Well, I don’t know where the campaign office is, but Madison lives with his mother and she’s in the phone book—Mrs. Dorothy Jekyll Madison.”
Oh, Lords, I was praying now. What was delaying that (bleep) Teenie!
“Anything else you know?” said Heller.
Flagrant thought a bit. “I was there when Bury came in. He and some other man—brown-eyed, swarthy, had a gun.”
I felt the strain tearing at my skull. That was ME he was describing! Oh, I had to get going!
Heller said, “Bang-Bang, there’s a phone kiosk over there. Call information and get that address.” He turned back to the man who was doing me in. “You have been a lot of help, Mr. Flagrant.”
“I hope so,” said Flagrant. “And I wish you lots of luck shooting Madison and anyone else connected with him.”
I shuddered.
Flagrant was looking at the card. “Empire State Building, eh? Nice address. I’ll report for work tomorrow and start advertising the sale of alligators.”
“Alligator farms,” said Heller.
“Yes, sir!” said Flagrant with mounting enthusiasm. “You wait! I’ll do some ad campaigns that will make those alligators’ mouths water. I’m getting ideas already! I can see it now! ‘Tired of your mother-in-law or wife? Buy an alligator farm!’” He found a piece of board in the scattered garbage on the street, drew out a marker pen and started writing.
Bang-Bang came back, “Got the address!”
The Countess Krak and Bang-Bang jumped into the old cab. Heller slid under the wheel.
Bang-Bang yelled, “Goodbye, Mr. Flagrant!”
The cab tore away.
The Countess Krak said, “It would have been cheaper to use a helmet.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” Heller called back over his shoulder. “Sales of those farms have slowed down. And that man seems to have a real talent. Did you see the sign he was writing up? Instead of cleaning the street himself, he’s organizing a treasure hunt and offering the truck as a prize!”
Oh, Gods, they only had about eighteen miles to go. I had to get to the heliport and rescue Madison. For Madison would TALK! And implicate ME!
IT WAS NO TIME TO BE DELAYED!
I began to despair of making it!
Where, where, where was Teenie?
PART FIFTY-FIVE
Chapter 4
Our cab meter was ticking over. “That must be some TV show you’re looking at on that portable,” my hacker said. “You keep letting out small screams.”
“What happened to our passenger?” I begged.
“Oh, you can never depend on kids these days,” my hacker said. “But on the subject of TV shows, you got to watch it. Violence is bad for the heart.”
“Especially when it’s done with blastguns,” I said.
“Oh, you’re watching some rerun of Star Trek,” he said. “That stuff is just garbage, you know.”
“Please don’t mention garbage,” I begged.
“Well, it is. Like the commercials. They lie like hell, Mac. They got a lot of trick things in them trying to capture the audience.”
“Please read your Racing Form,” I begged. The word capture had turned my blood to icy slush. Heller was driving that old cab! Even my dimmed vision could see the way he was going around corners on two wheels! Have an accident, I begged him. Oh, please have an accident!
And Teenie? Perhaps she had just plain chickened out from an overdose of cold feet. This gave rise to new alarm. If I left her behind me, Adora would have me hunted down for rape of a minor simply by having this lying Teenie string some tale to the judge. It required her testimony for such a warrant, as I understood it, and photographs alone would do no more than whet the legal appetite. If I had Teenie in my possession I could guarantee that threats would prevent such testimony. Also, if I had her alive, a witness or two could so state and I couldn’t be hunted down and hung for a Teenie dead. Oh, I had it all worked out. But where was Teenie?
Heller’s cab went screaming around a curve. It was hurtling toward my doom. They only had fifteen miles or so to go to get to Madison’s mother’s house just north of me on the East Side.
There came Teenie!
She didn’t have anything in her hands! No baggage. She had not come down the fire escape the way she went up.
“Inky, we’re in trouble,” she said. “I can’t carry my baggage down the fire escape.”
“Look,” I said. “I’ll pay the cabby extra to climb up and help you! But for Gods’ sakes, hurry!”
“Well, I will admit I thought of that,” said Teenie. “But that isn’t it. It’s the landlady. She heard me pushing things around and demanded her back rent. When I started to carry my things down, she threw the elevator bus bar and only let me come out when I told her you would let me have the two hundred dollars.”
A sound of skidding wheels came from my viewer as Heller turned a corner.
I grabbed for my roll and gave her two hundred dollars.
I waited anxiously.
Then here she came again, burdened under sacks and boxes.
“Get in, get in,” I screamed at her.
“No,” she said, “but you can ask this hacker to come back with me and help with another load.”
Oh, Gods! What could I do? I gave the order and the hacker slouched after her.
They came back staggering under boxes and baggage. What junk! There was even a worn-out monkey doll riding on top of Teenie’s mountain.
“Get in!” I screamed.
“Can’t,” said the hacker. “Too much baggage for the cab. Breaks company regulations. I’ll have to radio for a second hack.”
He did so. They wouldn’t budge otherwise. I sat there suffering.
Heller had gotten on an expressway. He was dodging about through trucks as though they didn’t exist!
I looked in despair at all this baggage. “What is this stuff?” I wailed, hoping she would abandon it after all.
“The labors of a lifetime,” Teenie said. “You see that big sack over there? That’s chock-a-block with the seed of the very best Colombia hemp. That second bag is seeds of choice Acapulco Gold. That red sack is preselected seed from Panama Red.”
“But that doesn’t account for a tenth of this!” I wept.
“Well, no. Some of it is sentimental, I will admit. That big box is a press camera, one of the original tools of my childhood. It may be busted now, but oh, the pictures it has taken! Me being forced to go down on two men at once. Me being licked by a pervert that coughed up twenty Gs. Oh, the memories of childhood. You wouldn’t want me to leave that behind! It’s museum-quality stuff. And then there’s two or three skateboards that can be fixed, to say nothing of the two new ones you got me.”
I averted my face from such a painful subject.
“And then there’s my collection of autographed jock straps.”
“WHAT?” I said, startled in spite of my anxiety.
“Of course. Most wonderful blackmail material you ever saw. You get one in a sentimental moment and afterwards you suggest you show it to the guy’s girl. Gets you into all games free and God knows what else.”
Thank Gods, here came the other cab. I even helped them pitch the things in.
“The 34th Street East Heliport!” I yelled. And off we went.
We weren’t driving fast enough for me. Heller, on my viewer, was even jumping lights!