Kim Oh 3: Real Dangerous People (The Kim Oh Thrillers)

Read Kim Oh 3: Real Dangerous People (The Kim Oh Thrillers) Online

Authors: K. W. Jeter

Tags: #Mystery & Crime

BOOK: Kim Oh 3: Real Dangerous People (The Kim Oh Thrillers)
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The Kim Oh Thrillers:

 

 

 

 

 
Kim Oh 1: Real Dangerous Girl

 

 
Kim Oh 2: Real Dangerous Job

 

 
Kim Oh 3: Real Dangerous People

 

 
. . . and more to come.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Praise for the Kim Oh Thrillers –

 

 

 


Real Dangerous Girl
grabs you from the first sentence and leaves you wanting more about this wonderful character. Thankfully Kim Oh is giving all of us more . . .”

 
– Dean Wesley Smith,
USA Today
Bestselling author

“Kim Oh hardly seems dangerous – a one-hundred-pound orphan, barely out of her teens, caregiver for her disabled brother – but the people who assume she won’t fight back when they get in her way learn a tough lesson in survival. And some of them
don’t
survive.
Real Dangerous Girl
is smart, funny, and cool . . . Kimmie Oh is a heroine to identify with, and to root for.”

 
– Louise Marley, author of
The Brahms Deception
and
Mozart’s Blood

“With Kim Oh, we’re treated to a refreshingly original experience: joyriding shotgun alongside a truly irresistible heroine in a world of crime, thrills and mayhem.”

 
– David Sakmyster, author of
Crescent Lake
and
The Pharos Objective

“With nods to Mack Bolan, Jonathan Quinn, and Mike Hammer, Kim Oh takes you on a non-stop thrill ride to Hell with no guarantees she’ll ever get back. How far would you go if your life – and the lives of those you love – were at stake?”

 
– Nathan Lowell, author of
Half Share
and
Full Share (Solar Clipper Trader Tales)

“Kim Oh’s
Real Dangerous Girl
should come with a warning label – may cause addiction. It’s fast and fun, and I devoured it like a tub of kettlecorn. More, please.”

 
– Sean Ellis, author of
Dark Trinity: Ascendant

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 2011 by the Author.

 

This ebook edition first published October 2011.

 

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including digital reproduction, photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without the express written permission of the
Author & Copyright Holder.

 

Please visit the author’s website at

 

Real Dangerous Girl
.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A message from Kim Oh:

 

 

 
This is the third of my thriller novels. It’s a complete novel, but you might enjoy it even more if you start with my first thriller
Real Dangerous Girl
. Thanks!

 

 
Kim

 

 

 

 

 

 

PART ONE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Trust everybody. To do exactly whatever it is that would screw you up the most.

 

– Cole’s Book of Wisdom

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ONE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“You’re going out?”

 

“Yep –” I went on loading up my backpack. “Got things to do.”

 

My younger brother Donnie seemed a little dubious about the prospect. “But the race starts in half an hour.” He pointed over to our beat-up little TV, in the corner of our equally unglamorous apartment. “You’ll miss it.”

 

“Come on.” I opened up a box of ammo on the kitchenette table and began sliding the bullets into the .357. “It’s just the truck series.” For the most part, when I’m at home I like to keep the gun safely unloaded. “Not like it’s even Nationwide.”

 

For the last couple of weeks, Donnie and I had been spending some quality time together. The start of the NASCAR season was always a big deal for him. And of course, it’s not just the races. It’s the pre-race coverage, then the post-race analysis, plus all the other NASCAR shows leading up to the weekend. Which I was fine watching with him, even though I was just barely up to speed on telling one driver apart from another. The technical stuff – all that bump-drafting and track bar adjustments and restrictor plates, et cetera – all that was way beyond me, no matter how many times Donnie patiently explained it.

 

It didn’t bother me. After all, I was way better at killing people than he’d ever be. Just goes to show that everybody has their own area of expertise.

 

“It’s still racing,” Donnie pointed out. “And I’ve got bets down on it.”

 

“For real money?” I flipped the gun closed and looked over at him. “I’ve told you –”

 

“No – just bragging rights.”

 

I was okay with that. He’d done pretty well with the Fantasy League stuff last season, to the point that some NASCAR fan blog had interviewed him for handicapping tips – they’d probably figured they were talking to some deep redneck gearhead type, instead of a twelve-year-old Korean-American kid. But anything to do with money, I’d put a serious kibosh on. With what I was doing for a living these days, I didn’t exactly need some federal Internet police squad raiding us for illegal online gambling.

 

Correction, actually – what I was
hoping
to be doing for a living. Just like everything in this crummy economy. You can be really good at something – and I was at least okay at the killing thing – and you still got the problem of getting a paying gig. Let alone benefits. On second thought, maybe I should’ve let my brother put down some actual money bets. Our household account was getting a little on the thin side.

 

Everybody’s was, I supposed. Something that’d popped into my head, last time I’d gone shopping –

 

Groceries are the new cocaine
.

 

Seriously. You go to the corner, next thing you know all your money’s gone, and you’re holding a little bag with nothing in it. From an accountant’s viewpoint – and I used to be one – how is that not like doing drugs? I mean, at the celebrity level. Not that I had any actual first-hand knowledge about the subject, except what I read in the gossip magazines while standing in the checkout line, the few times I went to a real store.

 

“Okay –” Down to business. I tucked the .357 into my backpack. I’m always careful with that gun – partly for sentimental reasons. Somebody important in my life gave it to me. “I don’t know how late I’ll be. So when the race is over, fix yourself some real dinner. Don’t just finish off the Doritos and the rest of the junk.”

 

“Sure.” Sitting in his wheelchair in front of the TV, he gave me an absent nod. “No problem.”

 

Probably hadn’t heard a word I’d said. The screen was already full of mutant pickup trucks with sponsor endorsements all over them, zipping around an oval track. Obviously way more important than whatever I was up to.

 

As I headed down the apartment building hallway to the stairs, it struck me that maybe Donnie had gotten just a little
too
used to the notion of his sister going out and killing people.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TWO

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

While I’d been getting ready, there were other people who already were.

 

Matter of fact, they pretty much always were ready. For all sorts of unpleasant things. Just the nature of the business they were in.

 

In my mind’s eye, I could just see one of them trudging down the street, over in one of the city’s other genuinely crappy neighborhoods. This time of year, there was still dirty snow piled up in the gutters, with an equally gray and dismal sky overhead. It’d be the end of March before the wind stopped cutting through your clothes like razor blades that’d been stored in a deep freezer. That’d be why Foley had his hands dug deep into his overcoat pockets as he made his way toward the neon palm tree glistening on the damp sidewalk.

 

Well, partly glistening. Every time I saw the place, it was just a couple of the fronds that lit up on the overhead sign, plus one side of the curved trunk. The rest, including most of the letters that spelled out
Mae’s Diamondhead Lounge,
had burnt out a long time ago.

 

Somebody comes in off the street, in weather like this, there’s always a little ritual soon as you get inside the door. You have to unbutton your coat and grab its thick woolen lapels, then flap them back and forth to shake off any snow that might’ve drifted onto your shoulders. Plus stamp your feet on the worn tire-tread mat, to get the icy slush off your shoes. Small place like this, if you’re a regular, you try not to track a lot of thawing mud across the floor.

 

There were some others waiting for him, in one of the back booths. They weren’t drinking, not this early in the day, except for the stuff that was constantly simmering on the bar’s little one-ring hot plate, turning into something that tasted more like kerosene than coffee. If it’d ever actually ignited, it would have set fire to the thatched bamboo awning over the bar, incinerating the dusty coconuts and moth-eaten stuffed monkeys up there.

 

Foley went behind the bar – he had those privileges – poured himself a cup, then carried it over to the booth. The others made room for him as he slid in.

 

“So what’s the guy saying?” He took a sip – it not only tasted like coffee to him, but was actually the kind he preferred – and looked up at the vintage TV hanging in the nearest corner of the lounge.

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