Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
wash over the shore. Turning the water on full blast, as cold as he could get it, he
shrugged slowly out of his soiled pants, opened the shower door and forced himself
inside. The explosion of the chilled water on his body sent tremors rippling down his
spine.
“Doorbell’s ringing,” Jackson said.
“Who the hell…?” Daire asked, but figured he knew. He smiled grimly as he took
up the soap and began lathering.
Jackson opened the door and was rewarded with an insulated pot of coffee. The
smell was fantastic. “Bless you, my child,” he told Star, making the sign of the Cross
over her.
“I figured you had your hands full trying to sober him up and wouldn’t have time
to brew a decent pot of coffee,” she said.
“He was going to get three heaping teaspoons of instant,” Jackson responded.
“Which he would have promptly thrown up,” Star said with a laugh. She turned to
go.
“Thanks, sweet lady,” Jackson said.
“
De nada
,” she acknowledged over her shoulder.
Jackson took the pot of coffee to the kitchen, grabbed two mugs out of the cabinet
and headed back to the bathroom. He poured himself a cup, sat down on the rim of the
garden tub and took a sip. “Woman brews a hell of a cup of java,” he called out over the
rush of the shower.
Dáire turned the water off and stood there for a moment as the water dripped from
his shivering body. He hadn’t had either the courage or the strength to shave and he
knew he would catch hell about it. Not that he cared at that moment. He could smell the
coffee, and though his gut roiled at the aroma, he desperately needed the hot brew.
Flinging open the shower door, he held out his hand and a mug magically appeared in
his blurred line of vision.
23
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“Could have used a croissant or a bagel with honeyed cream cheese,” Jackson
complained as he returned to the edge of the tub. “Would have gotten it too if you
hadn’t fucked up with our lady.”
“Why don’t you court her yourself, Jack Off,” Dáire grumbled as he walked
gingerly over to the sink, leaned over the vanity and stared at his reflection in the
mirror. “God, I look like death warmed over.”
“Not your usual pretty-boy self, no,” Jackson agreed. “A life of debauchery is not
conducive to maintaining one’s superior looks.” He chuckled. “I should know.”
“Think Gentry will believe I’ve decided to grow a beard?” Dáire asked, turning
away from the mirror.
“The boss had a man on you last night,” Jackson told him. “He’ll have reported
every juicy detail about your fall from grace.” He got up and followed Dáire out of the
bathroom.
Dáire shrugged. “Oh well.” He winced as he turned the light on in the walk-in
closet and grabbed the first pair of pants he saw. He leaned against the closet wall and
tugged the pants up his long legs.
“How do you keep from getting skidmarks in your trousers, Dairy Crow?” Jackson
wanted to know. “Don’t you even own a pair of underwear?”
“I know how to wipe myself. Do you?” Dáire asked between clenched teeth. His
head was pounding so brutally, it was all he could do to straighten up from pulling on
the khaki pants. For the first time he got a good look at Jackson. “Jesus, Jackson. You
look like the Michelin tire man.”
Dressed in a white long-sleeve cotton shirt, white trousers and white loafers,
Jackson glanced at himself in the full-length mirror. “I’m dressed for this balmy clime,
you arrogant prick.”
“The Michelin tire man whose face ran over a can of red paint,” Dáire muttered. He
took a long drink of the scalding-hot coffee, barely flinching as the liquid spread over
his tongue.
Jackson was hovering close by should his help be needed. He took a seat on the
bench in the middle of the closet floor and watched as Dáire tried to button a shirt over
his broad chest. “It’s lopsided, dude.”
“Who gives a fuck?” Dáire inquired in a pleasant voice.
“Gentry will,” Jackson said. He put his mug on the bench, stood up and came over
to rework the buttons on his friend’s navy blue shirt.
Feeling like a toddler, Dáire remained still until Jackson had the shirt buttoned up
correctly. “I feel like shit,” he complained.
“Dago Red will do that to ya,” Jackson declared. “Don’t forget your socks.”
“Screw the socks,” Daire said.
“I used to do that in my youth, but I’ve since learned mayonnaise jars are much
more entertaining,” Jackson revealed.
24
HardWind
Dáire refrained from making a comment. He thrust his feet into his loafers,
grimacing as he did. He hated the feel of the insole against his bare feet but he didn’t
have the heart to go rummaging for socks. Leaving his shirt outside his pants, he
walked out of the closet and headed for the front door.
“Don’t you need your wallet?” Jackson asked.
Either Dáire didn’t hear or was ignoring Jackson. He continued on to the door,
opened it and then held up a hand to block the bright sunlight falling through the
domed skylight. “Sunglasses,” he pleaded.
“Already on it,” Jackson said, swiping the dark Ray-Bans from the console table
beside the front door. He held them out to Dáire.
“You are a fucking hell of a gentleman, Jack Off.”
“I live to serve, pretty boy.”
From the closed-circuit camera over Star’s door, she was watching the men as they
waited for the elevator. Dáire was weaving as he stood there, but at least he was erect.
She watched them until the elevator doors closed then went in to get dressed for the
day.
The ride down in the elevator’s overly bright light had Dáire leaning against the
wall, his eyes behind the dark glasses squeezed shut. Pain was beating through his head
and his stomach was still threatening to revolt.
“I left a note for Consuelo to throw out your sheets,” Jackson said as the cage
settled. “No way was I going to wash those things.”
“That’s fine,” Dáire agreed.
Thankfully no one was about in the lobby other than the morning concierge to
waylay the two men as they walked outside. As soon as the humid heat struck Dáire he
gagged, but there was nothing left in his stomach to throw up.
“You might want to sit up front with me, Mr. Jackson,” the driver said, sweeping
his sunglass-covered gaze over Dáire. He was holding the rear door open. “I put a basin
in the back for him.”
“Does the whole world know I’m hungover?” Dáire complained.
“Just get the hell in and lay down,” Jackson advised. “I’ll sit up front with Allen.”
Daire climbed inside and promptly stretched out as best he could fold his six-feettwo frame into the confines of the sedan. He was grateful Allen, the driver, had not only
provided a basin but a thick pillow.
“Better than he deserves,” Jackson said as Allen gently shut the door.
“I have some Steppenwolf tapes in the glove box if you feel up to listening to them
this early in the a.m.,” Allen joked.
“Thanks for the offer, but I’ve no desire to smell him puking all the way to the
airfield.” He got in and slammed his door as hard as he could.
“Jackson, please!” came a faint beseeching from the backseat.
25
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“Go back to sleep,” Jackson ordered. “And try not to puke down your shirt.”
Allen was a bit less enthusiastic about shutting the driver-side door but he too was
rewarded with a complaint from the backseat.
The ride to the airfield where the chopper was berthed took roughly thirty minutes.
By the time Allen had driven the twenty miles from the Farraige to the Bay County
International Airport, Dáire was sound asleep, snoring softly.
“Don’t he look cute?” Jackson asked, twisting around to look at the sleeping man.
“Makes me feel inadequate and all,” Allen said dryly.
“Yeah, me too,” Jackson said.
“I don’t feel cute,” Dáire said. He’d awakened as soon as the car stopped. “I feel like
shit.”
“So you’ve said,” Jackson commented. “Stop belaboring the point. Don’t nobody
feel sorry for your ass.”
Struggling to push himself up, Dáire groaned. The vicious agony in his head was
still there but at least his nausea had subsided. He ran a hand over his forehead, wiping
away the sweat that had formed there.
“Try not to get slapped in the head with the blades, okay, Dairy Crow?” Jackson
warned as he opened the back door and held out a hand to help Dáire from the car.
“Although I think a buzz cut would look adorable on you, I doubt Gentry would.”
“I’ll try to remember to stoop to your height,” Dáire returned.
Beneath the rotating blades of the Agusta 109C, the air was a bit cooler, but the
wash of the wind did nothing to make Dáire feel any better. He climbed into the twin
engine, multi-blade helicopter and buckled in. He began to feel even worse as the
chopper took to the skies and arced out of the Gulf.
“Hang in there, dude,” Jackson told him.
“Bitch, bitch, bitch,” Dáire whispered.
His discomfort had gotten no better by the time the Agusta landed on the helipad of
the
HardWind
. Even though the pilot finessed the six-thousand-pound helicopter to the
pad, there was enough of a jolt to send savage pain through Dáire’s throbbing head. He
put his palms to his temples and bent forward beneath the agony.
“I want you to drink another case of Dago Red,” Jackson said sweetly as he
unbuckled his seatbelt.
“I want to die,” Dáire complained.
“Gentry just might oblige you,” Jackson warned.
Forcing one foot ahead of the other, Daire walked away from the helicopter,
following Jackson into the ship. He mumbled acknowledgements to those members of
the crew who greeted him, but didn’t lift his head any higher than it was necessary for
him to navigate the interior of the plush motor yacht.
“The boss is in the office,” Dáire heard someone say.
26
HardWind
Two hundred and thirty feet of luxury motor boat, the
HardWind
had a twenty-foot
draught and was built for extended ocean voyages. It was registered to a Dutch
company with a homeport in Jamaica. Onboard the boat, a garage held the owner’s
custom-equipped sports utility vehicle and a helipad graced the top deck. Two fortyfoot sport-fishing boats were strapped snugly to the side decks. Manned by a twentymember crew, the
HardWind
had eight double-suite cabins with queen-sized berths, two
twin suites with full-sized berths, and dining and entertainment facilities large enough
to accommodate twenty-four people in luxurious comfort. The owner’s private deck
bore a suite with a retractable moon roof and was decked out with a sitting area
complete with a sixty-inch plasma television, a concave ten-feet-wide acrylic twohundred-and-sixty-five-gallon aquarium, a fireplace, high-tech office, well-stocked bar,
his and hers walk-in showers, a sunken whirlpool tub and a Hollywood king-sized bed.
The
HardWind
was the company ship and a little piece of floating heaven for those
granted access to her. At any given time, three operatives of The Cumberland Group
were onboard along with their boss Tyndall Gentry, the boss’ private bodyguard and
the crew.
Flanking the doorway into the luxuriously appointed office were two of the three
operatives and they neither smiled nor replied when Jackson wished them a good
morning.
Whistling beneath his breath, Jackson leaned over to Dáire. “Methinks you are in
deep doo-doo this time, old chap.”
“Wouldn’t be the first time,” Dáire acknowledged.
One of the gatekeepers reached behind him to open the office door then stepped
back for Dáire and Jackson to enter. He quietly closed the door behind them once they
were inside.
A rock-solid man with wide shoulders, a bull-like neck, arms the size of pine tree
trunks, cold black eyes set in a face only a mother could love, with a bald head that
glistened as though it had been polished with oil, stood off to one side of the room,
thick arms crossed over a powerful chest. Like the operatives outside, he did not smile
or greet the men in any way. His gaze was locked on Dáire with obvious dislike.
Tyndall Gentry was sitting behind an elegant mahogany desk in a chair Dáire knew
held an eight-motor massage unit. The ergonomic chair had been crafted especially for
Gentry in soft Corinthian leather that matched the exact same shade as the desk’s
uncluttered top. Only a telephone, pad, pen and a cup of tea rested on the pristine top
of the huge desk.
Without being told, the men took the two uncomfortable leather chairs that sat
before the desk. Neither spoke for it was against Gentry’s rules that anyone speak until
spoken to. For a long time, the boss did not speak, just stared angrily at Dáire until the
young man began fidgeting in the chair.
“Sit still!”
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
The order was a hiss of sound that brooked no disobeying. Though not spoken
loudly, the two words nevertheless carried with them a harsh reprimand.
Dáire stopped moving. His hands were curled around the padded arms of the chair,
his eyes leveled on Gentry.
“Have you any notion how angry I am with you, Cronin?” Gentry asked, eyes
narrowed, lips tight.
“I have some idea,” he answered.