Read Killing The Rat (An Organized Crime Thriller) Online
Authors: Dani Amore
Tommy slipped the gun into his coat pocket. He placed both hands on the door handle and reefed. He heard a splintering from within. He relaxed, checked the hallway. Still empty. He placed his weight in his shoulders and slammed down on the door handle. Another crack. He turned the handle until he was sure the catch was free. He put his shoulder to the door and slammed against it. The door gave but remained in place. Down the hall, he heard a door handle begin to turn. Tommy slipped into his own room and waited. Footsteps passed by, and a few seconds later, he heard the ding of the elevator. He stepped back out and pulled on the door handle again. Finally, his blood boiling, he stepped back and kicked the door as hard as he could. The handle sagged and he kicked again. This time, the door swung open.
Tommy’s breath went out of him like he’d been kicked as hard as he’d kicked the door.
Dominic lay on the ugly beige carpet, a menacing pool of blood spread around him. The room was empty. Tommy went to his brother and turned him over. He took in the sight of his brother’s blood-stained robe, the ugly hole in the middle of his forehead. The dull blank stare, not entirely different than the look that was there when the poor bastard was alive.
Tommy’s hands were shaking as he turned his brother back over. He sank to his knees and slumped his shoulders, his gun hanging loosely from his hand.
Tommy thought then of the early years, when he and Dominic were kids in Philadelphia and it became apparent to everyone that Dominic was slow. During those years, Tommy had protected him from the other neighborhood kids who, being kids, targeted anyone who was different and heaped abuse. Tommy, when he wasn’t picking on Dominic himself, protected his brother. It had been a full-time job.
And now, not only had he failed to protect him, he’d gotten him killed.
No! That wasn’t true!
Tommy shook his head. Admittedly, trying to trick the hooker might not have been the greatest idea in the world. Saving a grand was probably stupid considering he had a half-mil in a suitcase. But it was just a joke, really, nothing major.
It was the hooker’s fault. It had to be her. There was no way Romano could have found him. No one knew where he was. Sure, he’d used his stolen credit card, knowing that Rierdon could probably use it to track him down. But there was no way Romano could have gotten the same information. And there was absolutely no way Romano could have beaten Rierdon to the punch.
It was the hooker.
She was a smart one, all right. She must have sent Dominic to the bathroom. Maybe to start the shower. Or maybe Dominic went in there to take a shit or something. And when he was gone, the hooker had snooped. She’d probably found the suitcase, then gotten a gun, probably hidden in her purse, and blasted Dominic when he came back out.
But how did she get him into the next room? And why?
Tommy thought about that.
It didn’t make sense, but there had to be a reason. What if the hooker was working with someone else? Maybe her pimp had been in the next room and the hooker had sent Dominic over there.
That might be it.
Tommy’s mind cycled through the possibilities. He wasn’t sure how it had happened, but he knew one thing: the hooker had killed his brother.
She was going to die.
He slipped back out of the room, paused at the door to take out his handkerchief and wipe the handle clean of any prints. Tommy went back into his room, picked up his other suitcase and left via the back stairway.
He walked quickly across the parking lot to his rented Cadillac, threw the bag in the trunk.
As he drove with no destination in mind, the images rolled through his mind. The scenarios, possibilities and dead-ends, played out in his mind like previews before the feature film.
He pulled to the curb and dug through his wallet for a phone number and address then brought out his gun. He made sure the magazine was full and there was a round in the chamber.
Cocked and locked.
25.
Jack Cleveland looked down at the dead body on the carpet.
He felt no remorse. He simply saw a contract fulfilled.
Or at least, the first part of a contract fulfilled.
Jack quickly buttoned his shirt and watched Betty put on her blue jeans. Her hands were steady and she didn’t rush. She moved with no wasted motion. The reason he trusted her, was impressed with her, was because of the bookie in L.A.
The bookie’s name was Croghley and he’d burned down his own bar, which was just an IRS dodge, and taken all of his money to L.A. Unfortunately for him, some of that money belonged to Romano, so the Mob boss had sent Jack after him.
In three days, Jack had tracked him down. Croghley had moved in with a group of swingers high in the Hollywood Hills. The problem was that Croghley, as crazy as he was to think he could get away from Vincenzo Romano, was also extremely paranoid. Naturally, he had every right to be. But Croghley never left the house of the swingers. It was a commune really, with no fewer than a dozen people there at any given time.
So Jack had subcontracted Betty and they’d taken the only recourse they were given: they posed as swingers, got in and Betty took their target into a special S & M room where the swingers found him the next morning, strung up like an obscene pińata.
Jack was glad he’d brought Betty in on this job, to take out Tommy Abrocci. It wasn’t his preferred method of working, but the job had come on such short notice that he’d decided he’d needed help. Normally, he would have taken several days, scoped everything out, then come up with a plan. But orders had been clear. This was an immediate disposal. NTTFA. No time to fool around.
Getting into Abrocci’s room would have been difficult. Phony room service, maid service, the usual tactics wouldn’t have worked. Abrocci was a wiseguy. He knew the usual drill. So they’d gotten creative.
Jack zipped up, put on his shoes and crossed the room quickly. He went through Abrocci’s pockets. Keys. A wallet. A room key. Jack grabbed the room key. And then he heard something.
He stood stock still, listening.
Across the room, Betty was wiping off fingerprints. She looked up at him, sensed his sudden tension.
“What?” she said.
It had come from the stairwell, Jack thought. He paused, closed his eyes so his brain could focus on what he was hearing. Was it footsteps? Maybe. And maybe, faintly, the sound of another door closing.
Jack quietly opened the door and stepped into the hall. It was empty. How much time had passed since he’d drilled Abrocci? A minute? Minute and a half? Somewhere around there, he figured.
He took out the first key. Tried it in Room 914. It was the room from which Abrocci had just come.
Jack turned the key and the lock slid back.
Jack looked down the hallway. No one in sight. His gun was in his hand, held tightly against his leg.
He quickly opened the door and stepped inside, his back flat against the wall.
He moved without making a sound past the bathroom and peeked around the corner.
The room was empty.
In five short seconds, he’d already seen what he needed to see: the closet was empty. The messed up bed, the empty bathroom. There were several glasses on one of the night tables. The room service books had been opened and were askew on the small writing desk in the corner. From the bathroom, he could hear the faucet dripping.
Jack took a quick peek under each bed, already knowing he wouldn’t find anything.
His nose detected the scent of Abrocci’s cologne, and a lighter, sweeter smell. He savored the smell like a fine wine. Was it fresh? Was it the smell of the room? Of the sheets? Of the maids?
It was a woman’s perfume, Jack was convinced of that.
Had Abrocci gotten a woman into his room?
“Shit,” Jack said. Had something been going on in Room 914? He would have liked to have staked it out for longer than he did, but it was a rush job. Jack cursed again. He should never take rush jobs, as tempting as they are and as lucrative as they are.
Jack went back to the door and stood inside the room, listening. From down the hall came footsteps. He listened, heard the footsteps stop, then someone fumbling for keys. The next sound was a key being inserted and moments later, a door opening and closing. As soon as the door closed, Jack opened his.
He stepped into the hallway, then went to 912. Betty was waiting, her gun drawn, pointing at Jack’s chest. When she saw him, she slowly lowered it.
Jack shook his head.
He went to the window and tried to get a glimpse of the parking lot, but he was on the wrong side. He took out his key card, wiped it down and tossed it on the bed, then looked up at Betty.
“He isn’t going to be happy,” he said.
26.
Loreli drove the Camry down Second Street, four cars behind was the Taurus she had noticed minutes before. She’d even gotten a glimpse of the Taurus’ driver: a curly-haired man with glasses.
“Goddamnit!” Loreli said. Her voice was choked. She was crying. Her hands shook as she wiped the tears from her face. “Shit! Shit! Shit!” She looked in the rearview mirror again. The Taurus was still there. Loreli slammed on the brakes, nearly rear-ending the car in front of her. She swerved around the offending vehicle, almost clipping its bumper in the process.
Loreli gunned the Camry and she shot down a side street before spilling out into the heavy traffic of Adams Street. She gave the Camry gas, but the car’s little engine was no match for the Taurus’. From the look of it, her tail was having no trouble staying with her.
Loreli’s stomach was in knots. She passed a pick-up truck, raced past a minivan and ran a red light. With the traffic clear around her, she leaned over and vomited into the footspace of the passenger seat. The hot acid burned her throat and she coughed, some of the liquid shot into her nasal passages and she gagged.
Between retches, she sobbed. The images from the hotel room ricocheted around her brain. The sound of the angry spits from the next room reverberated in her head. She had blocked the images of sex, of the big Italian pounding into her. Now he was dead. And she was running.
“Get it together!” she shouted at herself. The Camry swerved toward oncoming traffic and Loreli brought it back into her lane, amid a chorus of honking car horns.
The last thing she needed was to get pulled over now. That thought calmed her, forced her to concentrate. She looked into the rearview mirror. The Taurus was still there.
If he was after her, why wasn’t he racing up to her? Slamming into her? Running her off the road?
They passed quickly through the downtown area of Ann Arbor, and into the outskirts. Here, the sense of the university was gone, and it was mostly suburban homes and small strip malls. Soon, signs for I-94 began to appear, pointing the way back to Detroit. Detroit, which was about a thirty-five minute drive. Shorter if she ignored the speed limit.
The last sign for I-94 East came up and Loreli took it. Loreli saw in her rearview mirror a pickup blaze past the Taurus and cut in front of him. There were now four cars between the Taurus and the Camry.
The entrance ramp to the freeway was clogged with traffic. A hundred yards up, the ramp curved severely, and as the cars ahead rounded the curve, they were briefly blocked from view of the cars behind.
Loreli gritted her teeth. Up until now, she’d felt paralyzed with fear. Absolutely dumbstruck by the mess she’d gotten herself into. But now, now there was a chance for her to actually do something.
With a grunt, she jerked the wheel sharply to the left and the Camry jumped over the curb of the entrance ramp. A low ditch ran alongside it, then back up again to a service road. Her heart was in her throat. The ditch was deep and angled. If she got stuck in there
she’d be a sitting duck for the man in the Taurus.
She pushed the thought from her mind, recognized it as a thing not to think about, an image not to entertain.
Instead, she stomped her foot on the gas.
Her rear wheels hopped the curb and she immediately began to go down the steep ditch of the incline. She turned the wheel hard to the left, to put the Camry at an angle and avoid hitting the other side of the ditch head-on. For a brief second, Loreli had the urge to slam on the brakes, but instinctively she knew that if she did that, she would become mired in the mucky grass at the bottom of the ditch.
With her right foot, she kept the accelerator flattened to the floor. Her left foot hovered over the brake. The Camry jumped, plowed through the thick, mucky grass and hit the opposite bank of the ditch. Loreli held onto the steering wheel in a death grip. The phrase cigarette smokers use, “when they pry my cold dead fingers from it” came to her mind. The car’s front end rose and for a brief instant, Loreli nearly screamed, convinced that the little car was going to flip right over and turtle. But it didn’t. Suddenly, she was climbing the embankment, accelerating rather than slowing. She flew over the curb and bounced onto the service drive. The Camry groaned. Loreli thought she heard metal popping, imagined all kinds of horrible damage being done to the underbelly of the car. But then she straightened out and caught up to the traffic ahead, blended the Camry into the middle of the pack. Only then did she take a quick look over her shoulder.
The Taurus was nowhere in sight.
27.
“He’s dead and I’m still not happy!” Vincenzo Romano’s voice thundered through the great room of his Grosse Pointe mansion.
“Easy Vincent,” said Gloria. “You’re not supposed to get so upset after...” She stopped short, but it was too late.
“After what?’
“Nothing.”
Romano poured a glass of sherry from the bottle on the mantle. He was breathing heavily, the air leaving his nose in cottony gushes. He filled the glass, put the bottle back on the shelf, leaned his head back and took a long drink. He looked around the room, attempting to find solace, but seeing none. Gloria was sitting in one of the living rooms’ easy chairs. She was wearing black slacks and a white sweater that clung to her sculpted body. Her head was cocked to one side and she seemed to be observing him with feigned interest.