Кен Бруен - Tower

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Кен Бруен - Tower» весь текст электронной книги совершенно бесплатно (целиком полную версию без сокращений). В некоторых случаях можно слушать аудио, скачать через торрент в формате fb2 и присутствует краткое содержание. Город: Houston, Год выпуска: 2009, ISBN: 2009, Издательство: Busted Flush Press, Жанр: Криминальный детектив, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

Tower: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Born into a rough Brooklyn neighborhood, outsiders in their own families, Nick and Todd forge a lifelong bond that persists in the face of crushing loss, blood, and betrayal. Low-level wiseguys with little ambition and even less of a future, the friends become major players in the potential destruction of an international crime syndicate that stretches from the cargo area at Kennedy Airport to the streets of New York, Belfast, and Boston to the alleyways of Mexican border towns. Their paths are littered with the bodies of undercover cops, snitches, lovers, and stone-cold killers.

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“Get out.”

I looked at the street sign, Franklin, and what I knew about it was it cost. You had a place here, it was serious bucks. We stood before a renovated building, and Griffin took out a set of keys, let us in. Course, I had to ask

“You have a key to her place?”

He ignored the elevator, took the stairs, said

“I have keys to everything.”

Second floor, a brightly painted door, had little flowers on the top. He sniggered, then knocked. There was the sound of music, Whitney Houston? Then a woman’s voice,

“Who is it?”

Without missing a beat, he said

“Fed Ex.”

There was a peephole and she could obviously see him. She opened the door. The first thing she did was sigh and I was with her there. Griffin at your door, you’d sigh too. She was barely twenty, barefoot, in halter top and jeans, her hair wet, like she’d just been in the shower, and she was a looker.

Oh yeah.

Puerto Rican maybe, that brown sheen, glistening, and that was almost funny as Boyle was, like so many Micks, a raging bigot, spitting invective about niggers and tar babies, sand Arabs and spics. If she was intimidated by Griffin, she was hiding it well. Put her hands on her hips, demanded

“’Cho want, Griffin?”

Before he could respond, she let her eyes settle on me, asked

“Who’s the kid and who moved his nose?”

Griffin was enjoying it, especially as he knew what was coming down the pike. He didn’t even look at me, said

“The hired help.”

She dismissed me thus. Riled me? Yeah, a little. Griffin had a scan around the apartment, all leather furniture, covered in plastic for the most part and I tried not to see Boyle, Bible in one hand, mounting her on the couch, probably wearing his socks. Micks and their socks, like Texans and boots. Griffin made a big production of shooting his cuff, checking his watch, a Tag Hauer, and he wore cuff links. I mean who, apart from freaking Donald Trump, wore them any more? You could see they were tiny harps, the whole Irish variation of wearing your heart on your sleeve. He went

“You’ve got, lemme see, okay, one hour to get your arse out of here, pack up your shite and get the fuck gone.”

She was stunned, took her all of a minute to digest it then, eyes blazing, she retaliated

“You cho don’t tell me to move. Only Papi does that, he want me to move, he come here, be a hombre, tell me hisself.”

She’d balanced herself on the balls of her feet, ready to ignite. I stood well back, hoping to fuck she’d launch, tear the smug bastard’s eyes out. Griffin was delighted with the reaction, put his hand in his jacket, said

“Chickee, you’ve been screwing around. You think you can give it away when the boss is paying for exclusivity? I have a little going away pressie for ye, so you don’t, you know, go away, empty handed.”

He took a vial from his pocket. You could see a liquid rolling in there. He unscrewed the top and before anyone could act, he threw the contents in her face, said

“Acid, baby. Like your tongue.”

It wasn’t.

Just ordinary tap water. But for one horrendous moment, she and I were believers. My response was

“Holy fuck.”

And she, she clawed at her face, shrieking

“Dios mio, madre del Jesus.”

Religious reaction all around, you might say.

She sank to her knees, sobbing, all the spunk gone out of her. Griffin hovered over her, tapped his crotch, said

“You’re down there, you want to give me one for the road?”

If I’d been packing — and why the hell wasn’t I? — I’d have shot the bastard. I did find my voice, said

“Enough.”

He turned to me, smiled like a cobra, then back to her, said

“I was wrong. I said an hour, the clock is ticking, mi puta, so you got, what, forty five minutes? The next time, it won’t be water.”

And he walked out of the apartment. I went to her, asked

“Are you okay?”

Christ, was I kidding?

She managed to look up, her face a ruin of fright and rage, spat

“What kind of hombre are you?”

Good question.

I got in the car. Griffin said

“You give her a little comfort, you do that, fellah?”

I was too agitated to answer. He put the car in gear and we burned rubber. We pulled into Boyle’s. Griffin took out a set of keys, asked

“How’d you like to live in Tribeca? Nice place, huh? You can see yourself there?”

I was taken aback, asked

“You’re giving me her place?”

He shrugged.

“You want it or not?”

I couldn’t get a handle on this, tried

“So who’d I have to kill for that?”

Without missing a beat, he said

“Your buddy, Todd. Kill him, the apartment is yours.”

He had to be even more deranged than he seemed. I gasped, then

“Why on earth would I kill my best friend?”

Griffin was opening a packet of cashew nuts, tore at the cellophane, put a pile in his mouth, chewed loudly and I wondered what happened to the no eats in the car rule. He said

“Because he’s a cop.”

How did I respond?

Badly.

Very.

I followed Griffin into Boyle’s office, my mind a pit of savagery. I wanted to kill someone, Boyle and Griffin topping the poll. Boyle was chewing on a hot dog, grease dribbling from the corners of his mouth. He’d a large bottle of Dr Pepper, and gargled from that, all of it in stereo. Between bites, he asked

“So, how did it go, kid?”

I looked at Griffin, and Boyle said

“Don’t be scared kid. Speak up. I don’t much like scaredy cats.”

Where the fuck did he find that? Was it possible he’d heard of Dr. Seuss?

Naw.

I cleared my throat, always a sure sign you’re about to pop a whopper. I said

“Mr. Griffin got the job done.”

Can you believe it?

Like the girl asked

“What kind of man was I?”

Boyle spluttered his drink and even Griffin seemed amused. He said

“I like it. You got cojones, kid, you know that?”

The good book as usual was resting on the desk and wiping his leaking mouth with his sleeve, he opened it, read

“Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin; and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death.”

He looked up, his face shining, a mix of grease, sauerkraut and fervor. Mad bastard. He asked

“You got a copy of this here volume?”

Oh sure.

I was going to say

“Caught the movie.”

But went with

“Yes, sir.”

I have no reason, no explanation for my next action. I shot my cuff and looked at my watch.

Fuck.

Few insults to equal it.

Instead of taking offense, Boyle squinted, asked

“What’s that you’re wearing?”

Was he blind? I nearly said

“Like, hello, it’s a watch, one of those items, got little hands, like you. And you know what, tells you the time, how cool is that?”

I said

“A Timex, sir.”

Bought it off a guy in Times Square, cost me all of ten bucks but what the hell, it did the job. Boyle sat back as if he’d never heard such a thing and I was thinking, hey fellah, it’s far from any freaking watch you were reared, sounding eerily like my old man, not a good thing. Boyle got a toothpick, dug deep into his teeth, extracted some meat, popped it back in his mouth, said

“Be-Jaysus, no one in my crew is going to be a cheapskate. Lemme see.”

Pulled open a drawer, rummaged round then took out a watch, offered it across the desk.

My jaw dropped. I thought that was an expression, like in books and shit, but I could feel my face droop.

A gold Rolex.

Griffin was amused at my reaction. Boyle said

“Don’t just gape at it, try it on.”

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