The Blade Itself (17 page)

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Authors: Marcus Sakey

Tags: #Fiction, #Suspense, #Thrillers

BOOK: The Blade Itself
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The sedan in his rearview had a blue siren on the dash. ‘Shit.’

‘What?’

‘Security.’

‘Shit.’ Evan straightened in the seat.

The car was a recent-model Ford, the windows tinted just enough that all Danny could make out was the driver’s silhouette. His heart banged against his ribs like an animal throwing itself at the bars of its cage. How long had the car been there? He’d been too distracted with his thoughts to know for sure.

A block or two, though.

He braked at the sign, a full stop. The bumper of the Ford crept up in the rearview. Danny touched the gas and turned, just another civilian going about his business in a nice car.

The blue light flashed on as he rounded the corner.

His sweating palms made the gloves sticky as he braked, gliding the car to a smooth stop. Put it in park but left the engine running. The Ford pulled up behind them, the light still going. Soundless, though. No siren.

‘He alone?’ Evan asked, not turning around.

The man stepped out of the car, a tall guy, thin, with a mustache. He wore a black uniform with a red patch on the chest. ‘Yeah.’

Evan nodded. The revolver appeared in one hand. He opened the cylinder, spun it, and flipped it back in place. Then he rocked his head to either side, fast. Danny could hear his neck pop. Evan winked and transferred the pistol to his right hand as he reached for the door handle with his left.

This couldn’t be happening. History couldn’t be about to repeat itself, not while he just sat there and watched everything spin out of control.

It never was in control, Danny-boy
.

You were just kidding yourself
.

A thought gut-punched him: If the situation could be saved, it would be because he saved it. He flung open his door and stepped out before Evan could react.

The security guard jumped, one hand straying to his belt. His fingers cupped over something, it looked like pepper spray.

‘Hi there.’ Danny made himself smile, a resident talking to an employee. Out of the corner of his eye he could see that Evan had his door open an inch or two, but he hadn’t gotten out. Danny took another step toward the guard, putting his body in Evan’s line of fire.

‘Sir.’ The guard didn’t smile, but his hands loosened on the pepper spray. He pointed to the trunk of the car. ‘Can you step over here please?’

Every part of him tingled. The trunk of the car. Adrenaline tasted bitter in his mouth. He took one step, then another, thinking maybe he could sucker-punch the guard. He wouldn’t let Evan do things his way, but that didn’t mean he had to let a rent-a-cop bend and cuff him. Maintaining his smile through sheer force of will, he stepped over to face the man, hands at his sides, fingers dying to clench into fists.

‘What’s the problem, Officer?’ Laying it on, like he didn’t realize the guy wasn’t police.

The man’s expression didn’t change as he pointed at the back of the car. ‘That.’

Had Tommy somehow woken up and figured a way to open the trunk? Danny took another step, rounding the side of the car, his gaze following the man’s finger, ready to jump the guy. Expecting to see the trunk partway open, Tommy’s hands poking out. Certain that at any moment Evan would throw open his door and start shooting, the blasts loud enough to shatter the world.

On the right-hand side, the Saab’s taillight was broken.

‘Sir, that’s very dangerous. You shouldn’t drive with only one. I wanted to warn you before the police stopped you.’

Something inside Danny broke into manic laughter,
wet-cheeked and fearsome, like a little boy who turned on a light to realize the monster in the corner of his room was only a stack of clothes on the dresser.

And as he went through the motions with the pseudo cop, clucking and acting concerned, wondering aloud when it had happened, the whole time he was thinking how this sanctimonious jerk had almost gotten his head blown off. Thinking that if he hadn’t moved just when he did, Evan would have come out shooting over a busted taillight.

Thinking that the problem with the relief the little boy in his bedroom felt was that at some point, he had to turn the lights back off.

And when he did, the monsters would be waiting.

23. Dead Leaves to Dance

The stolen Saab had been pure pussy to drive, more responsive and muscular than Evan expected. He’d taken a couple of long blocks around Cabrini as a victory lap, the accelerator to the floor so the crumbling world outside blurred: a chain-linked high school, a row of burned-out tract houses, a liquor store barricaded like a World War Two bunker. Half the buildings he passed were tagged with gang symbols, and at one point he’d sent a group of teenaged bangers jumping for the curb, their shouts after him making him laugh. Call it payback for the crews he’d had to deal with in Stateville. He wasn’t racist or anything, but it was always the blacks in gangs, them and the Hispanics. He’d hated dumping the Saab in their turf, leaving it with the windows open and the keys inside. A shame to leave such a nice piece of machinery to perpetual losers.

Back in his own car, he munched on chips while he waited for Danny. He was parked in back of a gas station beside a wrecked Ford compact that looked like it had run into a semi, the front end crunched in, the windshield shattered, fragments of greenish safety glass scattered across the seat. The gun bit into his belly, and he took it out and tossed it on the passenger seat. Danny’s face when he’d seen it had been almost as funny as those of the gangbangers diving for the curb. A beautiful moment, like watching a building collapse. Such surprise. Evan couldn’t believe it – the guy had actually managed to convince himself that he was in charge, that everybody was going to follow orders like good little soldiers.

By the time this job was done, Evan had a hunch Danny’s smug look of superiority would be nothing but a fading memory.

He’d finished his pack of cigarettes and been playing with the idea of going in for another, knowing he was smoking too much lately, not much caring, when Danny pulled in. Evan climbed out of the Mustang, the wind hitting with physical force, way too cold for this time of year. Soon as this job was over, he was taking his money and heading south. Find a place with bars that opened to the beach. Bikinis that would call him Daddy.

To the right of the gas station sat a freezer with bags of ice. Danny made a three-point turn to park his truck next to it, then climbed out the passenger side, using the truck to block off the phone. Such a Danny move, overthinking things – like anybody was going to spy on two guys talking in a parking lot. Especially in this weather.

The first words out of Danny’s mouth were, ‘Did you ditch the Saab?’

Evan decided to ignore him. ‘What, you carry a change of clothes in the car?’ Danny was back in faggoty khakis and a dress shirt, every bit the young professional.

‘I went to a job site. Had to look the part.’ Danny dug a hand into his pants pocket, came out with a couple of quarters, started tossing them hand to hand.

‘Dorito?’ Evan offered the bag.

Danny suddenly looked at him, hard. ‘You went inside?’

‘Checked it out. It’s good. Clerk can’t see us.’

Instead of being happy to hear it, Danny just clenched. ‘The point was to stay out of sight.’

‘I bought chips,’ Evan said. ‘I didn’t rob the place.’

Danny shook his head. ‘All right. You know what to say?’

‘Yeah. I tell him I’m a friend of Danny Carter’s, and that I’ve got his kid in my basement. What’s the number?’

For a second he thought the guy was going to make an issue of it, and wondered how much longer he was going to have to deal with this shit. A couple of days at least, until things were solidly in motion. He might need Danny’s knowledge of the boss man. Still, if Danny kept treating him like some punk pulling his first counter job, they were going to mix it up.

Danny handed him the quarters. ‘The number’s 847-866-0300. That’s his mobile. He always answers it.’

He nodded, reaching for the phone. Danny caught his wrist.

‘Wear your gloves.’

He snorted. ‘Your asshole must be puckered so tight you need a shoehorn to take a shit.’

‘Just put on the gloves.’

Evan shrugged, took them from his pocket and pulled them on. ‘Happy?’ Picked up the receiver and slotted the change, his energy up. Not as strong, as pure, as when they broke into the house, but still, that edge of power surging through him. He pitied the regular citizens that went their whole drab little lives without ever feeling this way.

‘Richard O’Donnell.’ A nasal voice, more than a little arrogant. Evan gave him a moment of silence, let the guy repeat his name, then said, ‘We have your son.’

The man stuttered, asking, ‘What?’ and ‘Who is this?’ Evan cut him off.

‘We have Tommy.’ Shooting a wink at Danny. ‘When I hang up, you can go home and see for yourself. But now you’re going to want to listen quietly. You got me?’

There was only silence on the line.

‘Good boy, Dick. Here’s the story. To save your son’s life, all you have to do is everything I say.’ He paused, savoring the thrill of it, the fear in boss man’s breathing. ‘If you call the cops or do anything to make us nervous, Tommy
dies.’ He kept his eyes on Danny, predicting he’d wince. He did.

‘How do I know he’s all right?’

‘No, Dick. We’re not going to do that. I’m not going to send you a photo with him holding a newspaper. I’m not going to play a tape of his voice, I’m not going to threaten to cut off his fingers. I’ll just kill him and disappear. Understand?’

The arrogance vanished. ‘How much do you want?’

Evan stared at Danny, the guy keyed up, fingers clenched, eyes betraying his discomfort.
Just wait, Danny-boy. If you liked that, you’re going to love this one
. A sheet of icy wind whipped through the parking lot, stirring dead leaves to dance. ‘A million in cash.’

The look on Danny’s face was everything he could have hoped for. He went white, then red; reached for the phone, stopped himself, and finally stood frozen with anger in his eyes. Evan smiled at him. ‘You hear me, Dick?’

‘I …I don’t have that much.’

‘Then your boy dies. Nice talking to you.’ He winked at Danny again, loving this, able to twist the knife in both of them at once, the adrenaline kicking hard now. He could see Danny wanting to make it better, but just as helpless as the boss man.

Watching it felt good.

‘Wait!’ Richard’s voice, a yell.

‘If you don’t have the money, this is a waste of my time.’

‘I can get it. I mean I will get it.’ He stuttered like a little kid trying to weasel his way out of a fight.

‘I thought so. We’ll call you again in a couple of days. Wait by the phone. And Dick? Remember that you’re dealing with serious people. Doubt it for a minute and you’ll spend the rest of your life wishing you hadn’t.’

Evan hung up the phone, pleased with himself. A nice
note to end on. The guy was probably pissing himself right now, all the things he’d thought mattered to him stripped away. ‘Not bad, eh? I could do this for a living.’

‘You stupid fuck.’ Danny’s voice was strangled, his fists white-knuckled.

‘What?’ He smiled casually.

‘We said half a million.’

‘You said it, not me. Anyway, you should be thanking me – I just doubled our take.’
My take
.

Danny glowered at him, looking for all the world like somebody’s dad. ‘Half a million he could pull from his bank account,’ he lectured. ‘Cash in an IRA, sell some stock. But a million, it makes it more likely he goes to the cops –’

‘Blah, blah, blah. Look, the guy was quick enough to say he could get it when he knew what was at stake. Besides, now he knows he’s dealing with pros.’

‘Evan –’

‘You want to call him back?’

They stared at each other for a long moment, Danny still edgy, like he was thinking of making a play for it. Part of Evan would have welcomed that, but he knew the time wasn’t right. He eased back on his stare, put a smile in his eyes. ‘Relax. The hard part’s over.’

No need to push Danny too far yet. He was still useful. If Danny disappeared, boss man might panic. Better to stay cool, finish the job, and get paid.

Then he and Danny could settle any final debts.

‘Cheer up, partner. It’s all downhill from here.’ He almost chuckled saying it.

Danny shook his head. ‘Sure,’ he said, but he didn’t sound convinced.

Evan watched Danny climb into his truck and shut the door. He could see the man checking him out in the rearview. Evan smiled and threw a two-fingered salute, the
way Dad used to. Funny how the little things stuck. Danny ignored him, started the truck. Put it in drive, signaled, and gently pulled out. It made Evan sick. Even furious, the guy didn’t have the
cojones
to squeal out of a parking lot.

Evan walked into the gas station and asked for Winstons. Soft pack. The Pakistani at the counter pulled them down without a second glance. Didn’t even notice he’d been in forty minutes earlier, or if he did notice, didn’t say anything about it. Evan imagined taking the gun off the Mustang’s passenger seat, coming back in here, and having the guy empty the register. But instead he paid, snagged a pack of matches, and stepped outside.

He lit a cigarette as he walked to the car. The weather seemed to be getting gloomier, twilight falling though it was only five o’clock. Dark clouds reflected the city glow in shades of gray and green. As he climbed in the car, he had an idea. It took some digging around, but he found a pen under the passenger seat. He leaned against the dash to write,
847-866-0300. Dick
.

He smiled and tucked the matchbook in his pocket.

24. Slippage

The hamburgers at Top-Notch had been getting smaller over the years – no way that was half a pound of meat – but they were still good, juicy and dripping cheese, and when the waitress spotted the radios Sean Nolan and Anthony Matthews always left on the table, she’d write ‘Police’ on the ticket so the counterman rang it up half price. Which wasn’t much consolation when Matthews’s cell phone rang thirty seconds after their meal arrived. Nolan watched him roll his eyes and wipe the grease off his fingers before he answered.

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