Ed Duncan
Author of:
Here Tomorrow
7 pm PST.
Excerpt From Chapter
1
When Rico knocked on Jean’s
door he was happy to hear the sound of footsteps. At least she was there. Maybe
it was a good omen. Jean, a stunning redhead with a figure that made the heart
leap, looked through the peephole, opened the door, and greeted him wrapped in
a towel. She was even more tantalizing than she’d been in the car earlier that
day. She wasn’t completely dry, and here and there tiny droplets of water
glistened on her arms and shoulders. Rico inhaled the subtle fragrance of her
shower gel, but before it could distract him, a voice in his head reminded him,
“Point one percent.”
“I wasn’t expecting you
back so soon,” she began, a playful, sultry smile on her face.
From the doorway Rico
scanned the living room and saw nothing amiss. He walked in and closed the door
behind him. Too bad. He only knew how to do this one way. “Jean, how long have
you known me?” he asked stoically.
She was baffled. “You know
as well as I do. What kind of a question is that?”
“I never tried to hide from
you how I make my living, true?” They stood face to face, inches apart, before
she took a few halting steps backward. “So you know what happens to people who
don’t tell me what I want to know, don’t you?”
“Rico,” she stammered, her
voice trembling, “you aren’t making any sense. What’s this all about? I don’t
know what you’re accusing me of, but I haven’t done anything, I swear.”
He took a straight razor
from his coat pocket and opened it. As he walked toward her, she covered her
face with her hands. He stepped behind her, thrust his left arm through the
triangle formed by her hands pressing against her face, and grabbed her right
shoulder. With his right hand he held the blunt side of the open razor against
her right cheek.
“Where is it?”
“Please, Rico,” she sobbed.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” He pressed harder and tightened his
grip on her shoulder. “Please, please!”
“I don’t believe you.” He
turned the sharp side to her cheek.
“Rico, not my face, please!
I swear I don’t know what you’re talking about.” Her tears puddled where the
razor met her skin.
“Sorry, baby.”
As Jean cried out he let
the razor fall from his hand and, in one uninterrupted motion, expertly muzzled
her scream with the same hand before the razor hit the floor. She fainted.
When she came to, she was
lying on the couch where Rico had carried her. He stood with his back to her,
talking to Jerry on the phone. Jerry hadn’t been able to get past lobby
security in Robert’s building.
“He palmed it, right?”
Jerry asked.
Rico glanced over his
shoulder at Jean. “I’ll be there in a few minutes.” He hung up. “I had to be
sure,” he said unapologetically.
She shivered in her towel
and glared at him, anger roiling in her eyes. He went to the bedroom and
returned with a blanket, which she allowed him to drape around her shoulders.
“Sorry, baby. It was just business.”
Still too furious to speak,
she defiantly turned her back to him and silently dared him to say anything
about it. A small victory but it was something. Ignoring the gesture, Rico
walked out and closed the door softly behind him.
She was enraged, as much at
herself as at him, because she knew that the next time he called she would
answer. She tried to justify her emotions by telling herself that he’d stopped
short of actually harming her and that he never would have. But who was she
kidding? She could hope but she could never know for sure.
When the cab pulled up in
front of Robert’s building, Jerry was standing outside smoking a cigarette. It
was an expensive high rise on the city’s Gold Coast along Lake Michigan’s north
shore, with a security guard on duty twenty- four hours a day. There was no way
around it; if they wanted to get into Robert’s apartment, one way or another
they’d have to deal with him. This was admittedly a minor detail, more of an
annoyance than anything else.
Jerry knew Rico hated
cigarette smoke. An icy stare from him whenever Jerry lit up was as effective a
deterrent as a punch in the gut, so he put the fag out as Rico left the cab.
Rico kept his body rock solid by lifting weights at a neighborhood gym, jogging
regularly, and minimizing his intake of junk food. He didn’t like the idea of
second-hand smoke undoing any of his hard work.
“So what happened?” Jerry
asked.
“She didn’t have it.”
“I could’ve told you that.
She’s good people.”
“Don’t start with me.”
“But—”
“But nothing. Anybody can
cross the line.”
“Including me?” Jerry hoped
Rico might exempt him
but didn’t expect it.
“Yeah, including you.” The
two men stared at each
other for a long moment
before Rico smiled. “No, not including you.” The smile vanished as quickly as
it had appeared and his eyes narrowed. “You know better.”
The comment stung and Jerry
hung his head a little, but it was true and he knew it. It wasn’t easy to get
close to Rico and not many people did. He was loyal to a fault, yet distant and
brooding. Deadly as a cobra but with a dry, sometimes biting sense of humor.
Brutally honest, he lacked guile. Hated hypocrisy. Loathed arrogance. If you
were in a fight for your life against hopeless odds and could pick just one
person to help even them out, he would be your choice every time. But if you
needed a shoulder to cry on or even a pat on the back, you’d have to think long
and hard before you settled on Rico.
“Now, about this guy...”
Rico said, ignoring Jerry’s reaction.
Jerry snapped out of it.
“You have to tell the security guard who you want to see. He rings the
apartment. If the person answers, the guard buzzes you in.”
“High-class joint.”
“No wonder he’s always out
of money.”
“How much traffic in and
out?”
“Not too bad so far.”
Taking in as many details
as his eyes could process in one sweep of the area, Rico slowly turned in a
circle, looking for anything out of the ordinary, anything that counseled
against getting on with the business at hand. Outside, there were pedestrians
and cars passing everywhere, but it was a busy street, so there was nothing
unusual about that. Inside, the foyer was empty except for the security guard.
Nothing looked menacing. Nothing looked out of place. He nodded. “Okay?” Jerry
nodded back. “Let’s go and talk to the man.”
They walked briskly to the
entrance, donning sunglasses almost in unison, then glanced behind them one
last time before opening the door. Rico nodded to a spot inside. Jerry planted
himself there. Without slowing, Rico continued toward an oak-paneled counter
facing the door, behind which sat an unarmed security guard casually reading a
newspaper. He was about forty, with a gaunt face and stringy hair reaching
below his collar. He was the kind of guy who went through life trying to keep
from stepping on anyone’s toes and hoping everyone would try to avoid stepping
on his. He looked up in time to see Rico, advancing quickly in his direction,
throw open his coat and jerk a .45 out of a powder-blue shoulder holster. He
leaped to his feet and raised his hands above his head. Rico slammed the gun on
the counter.
“Put ’em down,” Rico said.
Eyes bulging and hands shaking, the guard complied and his face took on the
look of a condemned man who had just received word of a reprieve. “That’s
right. Relax,” Rico said. “Now buzz Robert McDuffie’s apartment.” There was no
answer. “Try again.” Still no answer. “Get the key and take me up there,” he
ordered, then nodded in the direction of the .45 resting on the counter under
his hand. “This’ll be pointed at the back of your head on the way. Any
questions?” The guard shook his head. “Then let’s go.”
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