Read Hate is Thicker Than Blood Online
Authors: Brad Latham
“I’m Albert Lomenzo,” the man told him in a manner that was almost courtly. “I want to thank you.”
The Hook eyed him coldly, but said nothing. He felt someone come up from behind and frisk him. They took the .38.
“Maria Nuzzo was my sister,” Lomenzo said, after it was obvious Lockwood was not about to say anything. “My family. My blood.
And somebody killed her. Some loathesome, stinking thing killed her!” Lockwood was covered by two other thugs in the room,
and Lomenzo turned his back to him and continued to address his harangue to someone else in the room. “I had to find him,
have
to find him!”
Lockwood shifted to one side, and saw who Lomenzo was addressing. Red Agitino was sitting in a straightback chair, arms and
legs bound, his shirt ripped off, and big red welts standing out on his chest. Agitino’s wife was seated a few feet away,
unbound, her eyes wide with mute horror.
Lomenzo turned back to the detective. “And then Frankie told me about you. About your working on the case. So I had you followed.
Not in time to help Frankie’s boys, which to tell the truth, I’m not so sorry about. But once you left your hotel last night,
my men were with you every step of the way.”
“They’re the ones who killed Teresa Stoneman.”
“You mean the lady who talked too much? You already know about that?”
“It’s in the papers, Lomenzo.”
“In the papers? Good, good. They say why she died?”
“No. The cops thought it was a maniac. I agree.”
Lomenzo ignored him. “The cops. Who cares about the cops. The right people, they’ll know. They’ll understand, and it’ll help
them a little bit to keep their mouths shut when they got to be shut.” Lomenzo nodded, content with the thought, and then
indicated The Hook. “Sit him down and keep him quiet. I want to talk some more to this one.” He wheeled, and moved toward
Red Agitino.
One of the gunmen nodded toward a chair near Agitino’s wife, and Lockwood walked over and sat down. The woman looked at him
wildly, unseeingly, anaesthetized with terror.
“Okay, pallie, you’ve had a little holiday. Now let’s resume our conversation,” Lomenzo said. He turned to one of his men.
“Light up another butt,” he told him.
“No. Please. I don’t know anything.” Agitino was shaking, his eyes echoing the horror in his wife’s.
“You and my sister. Tell me about you and my sister.”
“Nothing. I didn’t know your sister.”
“Gimme the cigarette,” Lomenzo held out his hand, and the slim white tube was given to him, the end of it glowing red. “You
know,” Lomenzo said, hand nearing Agitino’s chest, “I’m startin’ you off easy. This kind of stuff don’t work on you, I can
come up with plenty rougher.” And he pressed the cigarette into Agitino’s flesh.
“No, please.”
“Talk.”
“I have nothing to say. I didn’t do anything with your sister. I swear on the grave of my mother!”
“Pig!” Lomenzo spat at him. “So yellow, you hide behind your mother’s skirts, you lying adulterer!” He turned to a slight,
sallow-faced man near him. “Vinnie—the knife.”
The three of them, Agitino, Agitino’s wife, and Lockwood watched, helplessly, as Vinnie approached Agitino, a stiletto gleaming
in his hand.
“Vinnie, here is a carver,” Lomenzo told Agitino. “He likes to carve. Nice things in wood. Sometimes in ivory. Nice. You’d
like it.” He jerked his head at Vinnie. “But most of all, Vinnie likes to carve in flesh.”
Agitino said nothing, his eyes wild with fear.
“This guy’s a snake, Vinnie. Why don’t you give him a brother? Carve a nice snake on his chest?” Lomenzo said, his tone deadly.
Vinnie’s eyes lit up, and he approached Agitino. Slowly, carefully, he traced a line along Agitino’s chest with the stiletto,
scraping the surface of the skin just enough to leave a mark, a mark that eventually took the shape of a cobra.
“You gonna talk?” Lomenzo asked again.
Agitino shook his head no, his eyes streaming with tears. “I’ve got nothing to tell. I swear.”
“Go ahead.”
Vinnie took his time, sinking the knife in, and following the outline he’d traced. Agitino started to scream, but one of the
thugs stuffed a pillow against his face.
“Not too hard. We don’t wanna smother him,” Lomenzo said, his expression impassive. He waited until Vinnie was done. Agitino’s
body was convulsing with pain. “Okay, let him talk.” The pillow was pulled away.
Agitino had fainted. “The salts. Give him the salts,” Lomenzo instructed, and someone broke a capsule and held it under the
red-headed man’s nose.
Agitino came to, and started to scream, and the pillow was clapped over his mouth again. Blood was streaming down his chest.
“Quiet. Be quiet,” Lomenzo told him. “Be quiet or we do more. Understand?”
Agitino nodded, and the pillow was pulled away again.
“Now talk.”
“I’m telling you, I don’t know anything.”
“Liar!” Lomenzo slapped him across the face, splitting Agitino’s lip. “Okay, Vinnie. Again.”
“I won’t talk. I didn’t do it.”
“Stop,” Lomenzo told Vinnie. “Put away the knife.” A disappointed look came over the carver’s face, and reluctantly he returned
the weapon to his pocket, after carefully wiping it off.
Lomenzo considered Agitino for a moment, then, “Okay. I tell you what I got for you. Someone once told me about this thing
the Arabs do. The Arabs, they been around a lot longer than any of us—they’re ahead of us by hundreds of years. Thousands.”
Lomenzo turned, and walked toward a corner of the room where a covered box stood. “The things we do to make people talk, the
Arabs would laugh at us. Nance stuff, they’d call it.”
Lockwood looked wildly around. He had to do something, but as soon as he moved, three guns were trained on him, all at point-blank
range. He subsided.
Lomenzo smiled a little, shrugged, and continued. “The Arabs, they got all sorts of ways. Ways that are guaranteed. You gotta
hand it to the Arabs, for heathens they got minds we all should be envious of.”
Lomenzo fiddled a bit with the cloth covering the box. It looked as if there were a handle on the top of the box, as if it
were some kind of carrying case.
“But one idea the Arabs had, I think it’s the best of all. I
know
it is,” Lomenzo said, in a tone of voice that might have been heard at a board of directors’ meeting. “The Arabs, what they
do, see, is they take a cooking pot, and they heat it up. Make it red hot, you understand? Remember, when we first got here,
I told my man to put a pot on the stove? Remember?” He turned to one of the men. “Is it hot? Red-hot?”
“Yes, Mr. Lomenzo. Red-hot. Glowing.”
“Good.” Lomenzo turned back to Agitino. “And do you know what the Arabs do with that pot? No? Well, what they do is they take
the clothes off someone they want to get an answer out of, at least strip them off far enough so that his belly is bare. That’s
good enough, especially,” his eyes flicked toward Agitino’s wife, “when a lady’s present.”
Lomenzo again toyed with the cloth on the box. “And then they take the pot that’s so hot it’s red and glowing, and they put
it on the belly of the guy they want to have a conversation with. A burning hot cooking pot on his belly, see?”
Lomenzo paused, and rubbed his face. He looked portly, prosperous, a good citizen. Only his eyes gave him away.
“That don’t sound like much fun, does it, a red-hot pot on your belly?” he asked Agitino, who said nothing, dumb with fear.
“But compared to the rest of it, it
does
sound like fun,” Lomenzo said, voice dry and uninflected. He lifted the covering off the box. From where he sat, Lockwood
couldn’t see for sure, but the box seemed to be, not a box after all, but a cage of some sort. Lomenzo picked up the cage
and carried it over to Agitino.
“You like the look of these?” he asked Agitino, and now Lockwood saw inside the cage, saw its contents. Rats.
Agitino’s eyes were wide with horror as Lomenzo continued. “You see, my friends the Arabs, for them a red-hot piece of metal
on somebody’s stomach don’t mean nothing, no matter how much it hurts, no matter how it cooks the flesh till it stinks. For
them, that’s just the beginning. It’s what they put under the pot that counts.”
He leaned closer to Agitino. “This is what they put under the pot.” He pointed to the rats. “You see, once the rats are under
the pot, they want to get away from it, because it’s so hot, you know what I mean, they’re afraid they’ll be burned. So there’s
only one way they can figure to get away. And that’s to eat their way through the stomach they’re standing on.”
Mrs. Agitino began to scream, and Vinnie came up behind her and clapped a hand over her mouth. There was blood on his hand.
Her husband’s blood. She subsided, sobbing.
Lomenzo toyed with the door of the cage, raising it a fraction of an inch. Instantly, the rats raced to it, bodies quivering
with excitement, eyes glittering, teeth bared. “Bring in the pot, Vinnie,” Lomenzo commanded.
“No!” Agitino cried. “No! I’ll—I’ll talk.” All of him seemed to sag as he said it.
Lomenzo stared at him for a moment, for two. “Okay,” he said, finally, “talk.”
Agitino’s eyes pleaded. “Not in front of her,” he said, indicating his wife.
Lomenzo was stone. “In front of her.”
Agitino began to cry. “I love her. I don’t want her to know.”
Lomenzo shrugged. “You shoulda thought of that before you started. Now talk. Or,” he fiddled with the cage, “we get to find
out how good the Arabs are at what they do.”
Agitino blanched, and turned to his wife. “I’m sorry, honey. I loved you, I really did.” He was talking like a man already
dead. “But—” he began to sob again. “I couldn’t help it.”
Lomenzo slapped him, hard. “Talk!”
“All right,” Agitino said, all hope gone from his face. He looked like a shell. “Maria and I—we were what you say.”
“Pig!” Lomenzo slapped him again. “When? For how long?”
“It began last summer—August, I think. I was working on her car. We got to talking. She made an advance.”
“Liar!” Lomenzo punched him this time, full on the mouth.
“It’s true. And—and she was an attractive woman. I was tempted.” He turned to his wife. “I didn’t want to, not really, but—I
don’t know why—I couldn’t say no. I never loved her.”
Lomenzo hit him again. “Who else?”
“What?”
“Who else was she givin’ it to?”
Agitino looked genuinely astonished. “No one. No one I knew.”
“Yeah.” Lomenzo turned away from him. This was his sister. He was being dishonored in front of his men. He wanted to get it
over quickly.
“That’s the truth?”
“Yes. As far as I know.”
“When did you stop seein’ her?”
“I—I—” Agitino looked helplessly at his wife. “I didn’t.”
“You were still seein’ her right up to the time she was killed?”
“Yes.”
Agitino wheeled back to him, murderous. “Did you kill her?”
“No.” Agitino saw the look in Lomcnzo’s eyes, and whatever last shred of dignity he had left fell away. “No! I swear to God
I didn’t. Please believe me! Please!”
Lomenzo tried to retrieve a little family honor. “You loved her.”
Agitino looked at Lomenzo, then at his wife, then back to Lomenzo. “No. No, I didn’t love her.”
Lomenzo was already done with him, except for a few final questions, questions he obviously expected no satisfactory answer
for. “Do you know who killed her?”
“No.”
“Do you think Frankie knew? Her husband.”
“No. I mean, I don’t know. I don’t think so.”
Lomenzo spoke, though looking at no one. “I got to find out who killed her. I also got to protect her honor. These three know
about it now, all of them.” He adjusted his tie, buttoned his jacket. He was ready to leave. He spat the words over his shoulder,
“Vinnie, you and Phil and Loomo, you stay here and finish up. There’s nothing left we can get out of them.”
He walked out the front door, and two of his men followed, one of them carrying the cage, which was once again covered, once
again nondescript-looking.
When the long black Packard outside roared away, Vinnie cut a piece off Agitino’s shirt, and stuffed it in the bound man’s
mouth, then sliced another strip, and tied it around Agitino’s head so that the gag couldn’t be dislodged.
“Hey, what you doin’?” one of the other two asked, the big one.
“I wanna have a little fun, Loomo.”
It was Phil’s turn to speak. “C’mon, Vinnie, I’m tired, I wanna get home.” He was screwing a silencer onto his automatic.
“We can be outta here in less than a minute.”
Vinnie whipped around toward Phil, his eyes like the rats’. “This is my show, Phil! I’m in charge of this one! And I wanna
take my time!” He withdrew the stiletto from his pocket, and waved it in the direction of Agitino. Agitino’s wife started
to throw herself at Vinnie, but Loomo grabbed her from behind, and held a pistol to her head.
Phil’s silencer was already pointed at Lockwood’s heart. “Put it to his head, Phil,” Vinnie said. “Right up against his temple.
That’ll keep him quiet.”
Phil did as ordered, and Vinnie turned toward Agitino.
“You thought you escaped the rats,” he sneered. “Just for that, I’m gonna show you, you didn’t. I’m gonna carve a big fat
rat right on your belly.” And he took his knife and once again traced a drawing on Agitino’s body, some of the design obscured
by the blood that was still flowing down from the cobra that had been carved in his chest.
Lockwood tensed and waited. He had only one chance and it was a small one. He had quick hands, far quicker than an ordinary
man’s, but he didn’t know if they were quick enough. And if they weren’t—he shrugged to himself—if they weren’t, it wouldn’t
make any difference. He’d never know.
Vinnie had finished tracing the outline of the rat, and now his knife was poised over Agitino, enjoying the fright in the
red-headed man’s eyes, taking it in for all it was worth. And then, finally, he sank the blade a quarter inch into Agitino’s
midriff.
They were all watching, spellbound by the horror of it, and that was what Lockwood was counting on. Phil’s attention was,
however slightly, diverted, and this was the opportunity The Hook had been waiting for. His hand flew straight up, and then
out, slapping Phil’s pistol away from his head before the gangster could pull the trigger. There was a dull sound as a bullet
whirled through the silencer, but The Hook had no time to follow the missile, as he whipped a left into Phil’s soft gut, then
grabbed for the gun, swinging the mobster around so that his back was to Loomo and Vinnie. Loomo’s gun was already pointed
in their direction, and it barked once, twice, its contents whistling by the two of them.