Vegas Moon dc-7 Read online

Page 10


  “What’s wrong?”

  “Insufficient funds.”

  “How much does he have?”

  “They won’t say.”

  I remove his blindfold.

  “How much is in your account?” I say.

  “A couple hundred.”

  “Dollars?” Lucky says. “You son of a bitch!”

  I kick Hampton out of the car. As we drive away, he yells, “Gwen! Call me!”

  A few minutes later Gwen says to Lucky, “Now you know what it’s like.”

  “What?”

  “To get felt up by a slime ball.”

  “Actually, I kind of liked it,” Lucky says.

  25.

  We’re back at the house. Gwen’s in her bedroom, changing clothes. Lucky’s in his command center, with the door locked. He’s settling back into his routine. After missing several days of action, the calls from his savants are piling up. I’m on the phone with Callie, telling her about my morning. When I hear Gwen open her bedroom door, I say, “Gotta run!” and click my phone off.

  “Will you take me to the Forum?”

  She’s wearing cut off jeans with frayed ends that are short enough to show a sliver of pink panty, and a UNLV cotton t-shirt with rhinestone lettering. A thin, tan leather strap hangs on one shoulder and crosses her chest like a bandolier belt, and is attached to a Chanel purse that hugs her left hip. The purse is high style, but too small to be practical. She’s wearing pink eye shadow, with blue eyeliner, and frosted pink lipstick. Her hair’s in a pony tail and the whole package is put together so well, I don’t give a shit what kind of sandals she’s wearing. But they look great, too.

  “The shopping center Forum?” I say.

  “The same.”

  “What about Lucky?”

  “He won’t even know we’re gone.”

  “You sure about that?”

  “Trust me. He’ll stay locked in there till eight-fifteen tonight.

  “Why?”

  “Two reasons. First, he’s avoiding you.”

  “Why?”

  “He’s afraid you’re going to ask for your money.”

  “And?”

  “He doesn’t have it.”

  I shrug. “No big deal.”

  “No?”

  “I don’t need the money.”

  We walk out the back door, lock it behind us, and get in my car.

  After settling into the passenger seat, Gwen looks at me with curiosity. “If you don’t need the money, why’d you take the job?”

  “Honestly? I wanted to get to know you.”

  I glance at Gwen’s face while I start the car. She looks surprised. I drive us down the driveway, wave at the gate goons, and turn right. It’s hot out, and in the distance I can see wavy heat lines coming off the asphalt.

  The lots are nice in this area, with oversized houses, and massive iron gates designed to make honest people feel safe.

  But they’re not safe.

  Each of these homes is a cracker box to guys like me.

  “Why were you interested in knowing me?” Gwen says.

  “Specifically, I wanted to determine if you were the type of woman who could look me in the face and lie, even when the truth would serve you better.”

  She laughs. “And what have you decided?”

  “You are.”

  She scrunches her nose. “Well, that’s not very flattering.”

  “Do you deny it?”

  She leans over and kisses me on the cheek. “No. But let me say this: I only lie to level the playing field.”

  “That’s well put,” I say. Then ask, “What’s the second reason?”

  “For what?”

  “Back at the house you said there were two reasons why Lucky would stay locked up in his command center till eight-fifteen. The first is he’s avoiding me. What’s the second reason?”

  She turns away and looks out the window.

  I try again: “What happens at eight-fifteen?”

  “That’s when he comes out for his shower.”

  “And why’s there a timetable for that?”

  “Because Maddie’s coming.”

  “Wait. Tonight?”

  “At nine.”

  “Maddie, as in threesome Maddie?”

  “It’s not a threesome. Lucky doesn’t participate.”

  “No?”

  “He watches.”

  We come to the first light just as it turns red. It turns out to be a long light, considering how little traffic there is out here.

  I look at her and say, “Do you enjoy being with Maddie?”

  She scrunches her nose again. “It’s not really my thing. I mean, I’m a willing participant. If I’m in the mood.”

  “Really?”

  “You’re giving me that old guy look again,” she says.

  “Oh. Sorry. I don’t mean to.”

  “What then?”

  “The thing you said about being with Maddie.”

  “What about it?”

  “I like it. I think. I’m just trying to understand.”

  “Maddie’s one of a kind. Teeny Tiny, but a sexual rock star. So when she comes over, it’s like an event. Between the X, the booze, the music, and the sheer force of Maddie’s sexuality, I can get caught up in it.”

  “If you’re in the mood.”

  “That’s right.”

  The light finally turns green. I drive to Capstan Way, take a left, and follow it all the way to the interstate.

  “And if you’re not in the mood?”

  Gwen laughs. “Maddie doesn’t need me to participate. She just prefers that I do.”

  “Maybe I should be there tonight, just in case.”

  She giggles. “In case Maddie tries to kill us?”

  “No. In case you’re in the mood.”

  She smiles. “I won’t be.”

  “No?”

  She whispers, “Not if things go according to plan.”

  I whisper back, “What’s the plan?”

  She whispers, “I’ll tell you in the hotel room.”

  “What hotel room?”

  She laughs again. “You stopped whispering.”

  “I got excited. What hotel room?”

  “You didn’t really think I wanted you to take me shopping, did you?”

  In truth, that’s exactly what I thought. I mean, I’ve seen her closet.

  She says, “I was thinking you could drop me off at the mall entrance, park the car, and get us a room at Caesar’s.”

  “And then?”

  “I’d meet you there.”

  “That’s what you thought?”

  “Unless you’re chicken.”

  26.

  Gwen calls from the lobby. I give her the room number, then say, “I’ll leave the door slightly open so you can walk in without knocking.”

  “That’s very thoughtful of you,” she says.

  Moments later she enters the room, turns her back to me while closing the door, and locks the dead bolt. In the movies, this is where she spins around, holding a gun on me. The audience gasps in shock! But of course this ain’t the movies, and Gwen doesn’t have a gun. Her purse is too small, remember?

  She crosses the floor, puts her arms around my waist, holds me tight. Then she tilts her chin and kisses me with good intentions. I kiss her back with bad ones. We go at it awhile, good and bad intentions, moving around the room, backing into the desk, her against the wall, me against the wall, neither of us against the wall, all while making breathless moaning sounds. We sound silly, like teenagers imitating movie romance.

  But laughing is not an option.

  Success in fighting means not coming at your opponent the way he wants to fight you. Success in lovemaking is just the opposite: you’ve got to come at her the way she wants to fuck you. And tomorrow she’ll want you to come at her a different way. I’d give you the whole seminar, but I’m too busy right now. Plus, she’s asking me something.

  “You’ve wanted to do this since th
e day we met,” she says.

  “Yes.”

  I decide not to remind her we met exactly twenty-eight hours ago.

  She breaks the embrace and backs up to the bed, removes her sandals, and sits down. A small cloud passes over her face.

  “What’s wrong?”

  “I want to say something,” she says. “About this morning.”

  I kick off my shoes and sit beside her on the bed. She scoots to the far side and lies down, motions me to join her. When we’re face to face, she gives me a small kiss. I trace my fingertips over her thigh, from the end of her shorts to her knee, and back again.

  “What about this morning?” I say.

  “I wanted to thank you for what you did.”

  “At the restaurant?”

  “Uh huh.”

  I lean over and kiss her, softly.

  “My pleasure,” I say.

  She raises up to a sitting position and reaches her hands behind her head to unroll the scrunchie from her ponytail. Then tosses her head a single time, and ah, the joys of youth: every hair falls magically into place. Except for one tiny wisp that’s hanging over her eye. I reach up and smooth it to the side.

  We kiss again, a quick peck, and she says, “You haven’t asked why Lucky would allow that man to feel me up at the restaurant.”

  “No.”

  “How come?”

  “I try not to judge people.”

  “You just execute them?”

  “I’d like to dress it up nicer than that,” I say, “but…”

  “It is what it is?”

  “It is.”

  We kiss again.

  “Can I ask you a question?” she says.

  “Of course.”

  “Promise you won’t try to read too much into it?”

  “I’ll try.”

  “How much would you charge to kill Lucky?”

  27.

  “Under normal circumstances what would I charge to kill your husband? Or are you asking what I would charge you?”

  “Both.”

  “Under normal circumstances, that’s a hundred-thousand dollar hit.”

  “And for me?”

  “Is that what we’re doing here today? Making a contract?”

  She gives me three short, quick kisses.

  “God, I love your face!” she says.

  I wait for her to answer my question. She finally says, “I don’t want you to kill Lucky.”

  “No?”

  “Of course not.”

  “Then why’d you ask?”

  “I’m trying to understand you.”

  That surprises me. “In what way?”

  “I’m trying to understand how you place a monetary value on other people’s lives.”

  The woman lying on the bed with me today is far shrewder than the girl I met yesterday. Today’s woman is probably smarter than me, which is a plus, if we’re in a relationship. But right now we’re on a bed in a hotel room, and there’s fire in my pants. I want yesterday’s girl to put it out. I sigh, realizing today’s woman is waiting for me to answer her question about how I price my hits.

  “There are a lot of factors that go into the equation,” I say.

  “Such as?”

  “His prominence, how hard it would be to kill him, if there was a specific time and place you needed it done, and if you require a specific method.”

  “Of killing him?”

  “Yes.”

  “So it could cost more.”

  “Or less.”

  “Interesting.”

  “How much to kill Carmine?”

  “Excuse me?”

  “Carmine Porrello, crime boss, western region.”

  “I know who he is.”

  “Would you take a contract that big?”

  I shrug. “It’s what I do.”

  “You could kill Carmine?”

  She’s looking at me with bright, hopeful eyes.

  I meet her gaze. When I speak, my words are clear and precise.

  “I can kill anyone.”

  The smile that spreads across her face says she likes my answer.

  I say, “Anything else you want to ask?”

  “Yes. Are you ever going to fuck me?”

  28.

  We fucked.

  It wasn’t love, but it wasn’t bad. Not even close to the best sex either of us has had, but probably the best sex either of us is likely to have today. Unless Gwen decides she’s in the mood tonight when Maddie shows up.

  After our breathing gets back to normal, Gwen moves in close to cuddle me. I hadn’t thought about it till now, but I realize we’re still on top of the covers.

  “I hope we can do it again in a few minutes,” she says, touching me down there, as if trying to determine how many minutes it might be.

  “I’d like that,” I say, trying to avoid thinking I might be on a time table.

  “You’re the best I ever had,” she says.

  “Really?”

  “Swear to God.”

  “You, too,” I say. Then add, “Speaking of lies, there’s something I haven’t told you or Lucky. About Phyllis.”

  She sits up. I’d love to describe for you how the sheet falls away slowly, revealing her perfect, artificially-enhanced breasts, but I already told you we’re on top of the covers.

  Not that it makes her boobs any less attractive.

  “What haven’t you told us?” she says, her voice suddenly serious.

  “If I tell you a big secret, will you tell me one?”

  “Like truth or dare?”

  “Except without the dare.”

  “Okay. Wait. Who gets to choose the subject?”

  “Me.”

  “That might be fun,” she says. Then adds, “Do I have to tell the truth?”

  “That’s sort of the whole purpose.”

  She frowns. “Well, I can try, right? So what’s your big secret about Phyllis?”

  “I met her.”

  She’s quite surprised. “When?”

  “Yesterday.”

  “Before Connor Payne killed her?”

  “Yes. And I asked her about the device.”

  “The one we’ve been looking for?”

  I nod.

  “How did you know about it?”

  “Connor’s been seeking it awhile.”

  “He spoke to you about it?”

  “We’re getting off track. Let’s just say I was trying to negotiate a deal with Phyllis, to keep Connor from killing her.”

  “She paid you off?”

  “No. I was just seeking the device.”

  “And she didn’t give it to you?”

  “No.”

  “Why not?”

  “She didn’t have it.”

  She stares at me. “Who does?”

  “According to Phyllis, you.”

  “What? Me?”

  “She told me she gave it to you.”

  “For what purpose?”

  “To hide?”

  “I hardly even knew the bitch! And she hated me, remember?”

  “I’ve got your word for that.”

  Gwen frowns. “I see. And we’ve already established I’m a liar.”

  “Just to level the playing field,” I say.

  She gives me a look that’s not quite anger, but awfully close. “You’re totally killing the mood here, you know.”

  “I know.”

  Gwen’s on the verge of throwing a pout. I’m okay with that. I’m trying to accomplish two things here. First, I want to know if she’s got the device. Second, I want to get laid again, and see if we can improve the experience by coming at her a different way. On the one hand, I don’t want to make her too angry. On the other, I need to secure the device.

  I say, “If it makes you feel any better, I believe you.”

  She turns both palms up. “You’d have to. Phyllis was fucking my husband. We didn’t like each other. She wouldn’t have given me anything important, and I wouldn’t have accepted it
if she had.”

  “At the time she told me, it made sense. Now that I understand the relationship, it doesn’t. Are you sure she hated you?”

  “Yes. And Lucky didn’t make things any easier by rubbing her nose in it.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “He made her give me all those spa treatments, plastic surgery, chemical peels…”

  “She didn’t charge him?”

  “Well, of course she did.”

  “Well, isn’t that why she’s in business?”

  “Do you know anything about women?”

  I take a breath before answering.

  “No. I talk a good game…but no. Every time I think I’ve finally got a handle on women, I realize the handle isn’t connected to anything. In the end, I’m just holding a handle, without a clue.”

  “It was a rhetorical question.”

  “Oh.”

  “God, you’re good looking when you do that,” she says.

  “Do what?”

  “That whole clueless thing. You need to cultivate it. It works for you.”

  This is something I already know. And she’s right. It does work. Problem is, it’s not an act.

  “Let me give it to you from a woman’s perspective,” she says.

  “Okay.”

  “I’m young and sexy, Phyllis is a drone. I’m not being cocky or putting her down. These are the facts. Phyllis wanted Lucky. Don’t ask me why, but let’s assume she wanted him.”

  “Okay.”

  “They probably met around the time Lucky and I got married. They were certainly having sex before Lucky made her start fixing my flaws.”

  “You’re saying she didn’t like the idea of making you even more appealing to him?”

  “Exactly.”

  “Because she considered you her rival?”

  “There may be hope for you yet.”

  I think about that a moment, and then it hits me.

  I know exactly where the device is hidden.