Love and Fear

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Authors: Reed Farrel Coleman

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BOOK: Love and Fear
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LOVE
AND
FEAR
LOVE
AND
FEAR
REED FARREL COLEMAN

Copyright © 2016 Reed Farrel Coleman

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

Coleman, Reed Farrel, 1956–, author
Love and fear / Reed Farrel Coleman.
(Rapid Reads)

Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN
978-1-4598-0677-1 (paperback).—
ISBN
978-1-4598-0678-8 (pdf).—
ISBN
978-1-4598-0679-5 (epub)

I. Title. II. Series: Rapid reads
PS
3553.
O
47443
L
69 2016         
C
813'.54          
C
2015-904480-4
C
2015-904481-2

First published in the United States, 2016
Library of Congress Control Number
: 2015946326

Summary:
PI Gulliver Dowd is pulled into a search for the missing daughter of the most powerful Mafia don in New York in this work of crime fiction. (
RL
2.7)

Orca Book Publishers gratefully acknowledges the support for its publishing programs provided by the following agencies: the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Province of British Columbia through the BC Arts Council and the Book Publishing Tax Credit.

Cover design by Jenn Playford
Cover photography by Peter Rozovsky

ORCA BOOK PUBLISHERS
www.orcabook.com

19   18   17   16   •   4   3   2   1

For Jim Bogart and Carrie Robb

CONTENTS

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

SEVEN

EIGHT

NINE

TEN

ELEVEN

TWELVE

THIRTEEN

FOURTEEN

FIFTEEN

SIXTEEN

SEVENTEEN

EIGHTEEN

NINETEEN

TWENTY

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

ONE

Gulliver Dowd had been this close to finding out why his sister was murdered. This close to finding out who had done it. He had held the envelope with the answers in his misshapen hands. He had also been the one to set the envelope on fire. For most of the last eight years, the answers to these two questions had been his reason for living. Keisha’s murder had haunted him. Driven him. Helped turn him into the man he was. Now he had to forget. He had to leave Keisha’s murder behind him. Why?
Why does any man turn his back on the past? Love and fear.

He had been forced to choose between the two women who had meant the most to him. The two women who had lifted him out of his bitter life. His life of pain and self-hatred. His sad and lonely life. One of those women—his sister Keisha—was already gone. And gone was gone forever. He could get the answers about her murder, or he could keep Mia safe. That was his choice. Those were his only options. There was no middle ground. And the man who had given Gulliver the choice was a serious man. A dangerous man with even more dangerous friends. The math was cruel but easy to do.

Gulliver’s parents had adopted Keisha, just as they had adopted him. Like Gulliver, Keisha was a runt of the litter. But in many ways she was his opposite. Gulliver was pale. A dwarf. A little person. A freak.
It never mattered to him what label you used. He was never going to grow taller. His legs were never going to be the same length. His body was never going to be normal. As much as he hated his smallness, he hated his good looks even more. God’s little joke was how Gulliver thought of his handsome face.

Keisha was black, her skin very dark. Always a little heavy. Plain to look at. An abused foster child. But she had overcome all the things the world had put in her way. She had taken all the pain in her life and turned it into love. She had gotten herself into shape. Gone to college. Made it through the police academy at the top of her class. All that only to be murdered, her body left behind a vacant building in East New York.

In a very real way, it was Keisha’s death that had given Gulliver life. Until his sister’s murder, he hadn’t really lived. A day was
something to suffer through, not something to enjoy. He had only one friend—Rabbi. He’d had only one girlfriend—Nina—and then only for a few months in high school. But the need to solve Keisha’s murder had changed him. It had given him a reason to live. Her death had led him to study martial arts. To learn how to shoot. To earn his private investigator’s license. As true as all that was, as much as he loved his sister and wanted justice for her, what did it matter? Keisha was like Humpty Dumpty. The answers were like all the king’s horses and all the king’s men. All the answers in the world wouldn’t bring Keisha back again.

Gulliver had to choose Mia. Mia was alive. Mia was his present and his future. And Gulliver knew it would only take a single whisper from one powerful man to another to end Mia’s life. Gulliver’s was the choice everyone in his shoes would have made. Rabbi had told him as much.
Rabbi who had grown up with Gulliver and Keisha. Rabbi who loved Keisha like a second big sister. So too had Ahmed. Ahmed who had gone to school with Keisha. Ahmed who had dated Keisha before he went into the Navy. But the choice ate at Gulliver. It tore at him.

He felt tortured every time he looked at Mia. Every time he kissed her or held her in his arms. He felt tortured because he had turned his back on Keisha. He felt tortured because he could not stand the thought of losing Mia. But that was just what had happened.

His guilt and fear had made him push Mia away. They were no longer living together. She had stayed in their condo in Brighton Beach. He had moved back into his office in Red Hook. Mia didn’t understand why Gulliver had changed. Why he seemed so far away. Why he seemed so cold to her. And he could not explain it.
How could he tell her she was in danger again? How could he make sense of it to her? No, Mia was better off without him. She was safer without him.

Gulliver opened his eyes. Yawned. Smiled. Reached over to the other side of the bed for Mia. But this wasn’t their bed. It wasn’t a bed at all. And Mia wasn’t there. Old habits die hard. The smile ran away from Gulliver’s face as he swung his legs off the couch. Not even the bright sunlight pouring into the office could bring his smile back. He laughed a sad laugh at himself, for he had ended up where he began. His office was once Keisha’s loft. He had moved into the loft after she was killed, in order to feel closer to her.

For years it had been his office and his home. Now there was much less space than there used to be. When he’d moved to Brighton Beach with Mia, he had built walls around his office and rented the rest
of the loft space to a group of artists. That was okay. Small spaces suited him. And so too did building walls around things. Walls around his office. Walls around his heart.

With the smell of freshly brewed coffee thick in the air, Gulliver sat at his desk. He had showered and dressed. He didn’t bother shaving. What for? Who for? As he sat there, he could feel himself slipping back into his old bitter self. When he was working cases, it was easier to forget. It was easier to forget about the choice he had made. Easier to forget about missing Mia. Easier to forget about who he really was and what he really looked like. But he was between cases, and the mirror had stopped lying to him. All he saw when he looked into it was the little, lonely freak he had always been.

He couldn’t know that the knock at his door would change everything forever.

TWO

Gulliver Dowd was shocked to see the man standing in the doorway, but he acted like he didn’t care. He didn’t like this man very much. That was fair enough, because the man liked Gulliver even less than Gulliver liked him. But they had a kind of respect for each other. The kind of respect an enemy has for his toughest foe.

“Good morning, Tony,” Gulliver said.

“Morning to you, Bug,” said Tony.

Tony was a tough guy. Thick-necked. Barrel-chested. Good with his fists. And mean. He carried a 9mm Beretta in a
shoulder holster. Gulliver knew this because he had once taken it away from him. He had disarmed Tony and beaten him up in front of his boss. Gulliver had to do things like that all the time because of his size and misshapen body. People never took him seriously. They turned away. They whispered. They laughed. Gulliver hated the laughing. But he hated most of all people pitying him. So he always had to battle to prove his worth to people. To prove that he too could be a dangerous man. A man to be taken seriously.

Gulliver was unhappy to see Tony because the big man was a living, breathing reminder of the one person Gulliver never wanted to think about again. That person was Tony’s boss, Joey “Dollar Menu” Vespucci.

Joey Vespucci was the only Mafia don who’d been left standing after the Justice Department wiped out most of the old New York City mob. And it was Joey Vespucci
who had made Gulliver choose between Keisha and Mia. He was the man who had handed Gulliver the envelope with the answers to Keisha’s murder. He was the man who would have threatened Mia if Gulliver had chosen to see what was in the envelope. Joey Vespucci was the man who’d given Gulliver the lighter with which to set the envelope on fire.

“Come on in. You want coffee? I just made some,” Gulliver said, then turned and hobbled back into the office.

“Sure, Bug.” Tony always called him Bug. “Milk and sugar.”

Gulliver spun around on his heel. “This is my turf, Tony. My office. In here, you call me Gulliver or Dowd or Sir.”

Tony puffed out his chest. He looked like he was going to give Gulliver a hard time. But instead he gave in. “Okay, Dowd. You’re right. On your turf you deserve respect.”

Gulliver shook his head at the big man.

“What is it, Bug—I mean, Dowd?” Tony asked. “Didn’t I just say a man deserves respect on his own turf ?”

“People deserve respect period, Tony. All people. They shouldn’t have to earn it or be on their own turf to get it.”

“That ain’t how my world operates.”

Gulliver nodded. “I know.” He handed Tony his coffee.

“Good stuff, Dowd. Thanks.”

Gulliver sipped his coffee and waited for Tony to get to the point. Gulliver was in no rush. He had finished his most recent case a few days ago and had nothing to do. That was the worst thing for Gulliver these days. When he was busy he could focus on the job at hand. It didn’t matter whether it was finding a runaway kid or a runaway dog. The important thing was keeping himself busy. Keeping his mind busy. When he wasn’t busy, all he could think about was how much he missed Mia.

Tony looked around the office. His eyes landed on the couch, on the blankets and pillows. It was obvious it had been slept on. “You and that girlfriend of yours split up or something?” he said.

Gulliver got a sick look on his face, like he’d been kicked in the stomach. That was answer enough for Tony. He was a tough guy but not a stupid one.

“That’s too bad, Dowd. She was pretty, and she seemed to really love you.” Tony shook his head and smiled.

“What?” Gulliver asked.

“Not for nothing, Dowd, but how do you do it? No disrespect or nothing—you got a nice face and all, but the rest of you ain’t much to look at.”

“That’s not disrespecting me. It’s telling the truth. I’m short and disfigured. But I’m not blind. I see who looks back at me from the mirror.”

“And still you land women like that Mia and Nina. Nina was smoking hot. How do you do it?”

Gulliver thought of many answers to that question. One even made him laugh. But what he said was, “You know how women love wounded animals and strays? It’s like that. Women love wounded men too. It appeals to their mothering natures. And you don’t even have to look at me twice to see I got all kinds of wounds. Inside and out.”

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