Award-winning author Dan Simmons takes the reader on a trip with Kurtz through the cold, windy streets of Buffalo where one wrong move could mean a belly full of lead.
Once Joe Kurtz needed revenge—and revenge cost him eleven years in Attica prison. Now Kurtz needs a job, and the price is going to be higher. Out of prison, out of touch, Kurtz signs on with the Byron Farino, don of a mob family whose son Kurtz had been protecting on the inside. Farino enlists Kurtz’s help to track down the family’s missing accountant—a man with too much knowledge of family business to have on the loose.
But someone doesn’t want the accountant found—and with enemies inside the family vying for his throne, and turf warfare just around the corner, Farino needs an outsider like Kurtz to flush out who’s really behind this latest affront. As the story twists and turns and the body count rises, Kurtz no longer knows who he can trust. Everyone seems to be after something, from the mob boss’s sultry yet dangerous daughter, to a hit man named The Dane, an albino killer who is good with a knife, to a dwarf who is armed to the teeth and hell-bent on revenge. Kurtz has always been an ace investigator. Now he’s about to discover that to get at the truth, sometimes you have to go after it—hard.
Release date:
September 16, 2014
Publisher:
Little, Brown and Company
Print pages:
272
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LATE ONE Tuesday afternoon, Joe Kurtz rapped on Eddie Falco’s apartment door.
“Who’s there?” Eddie called from just the other side of the door.
Kurtz stood away from the door and said something in an agitated but unintelligible mumble.
“What?” called Eddie. “I said who the fuck’s there?”
Kurtz made the same urgent mumbling noises.
“Shit,” said Eddie and undid the police lock, a pistol in his right hand, opening the door a crack but keeping it chained.
Kurtz kicked the door in, ripping the chain lock out of the wood, and kept moving, shoving Eddie Falco deeper into the room. Eddie was several inches taller and at least thirty pounds heavier than Kurtz, but Kurtz had momentum on his side.
Eddie swung down the 9mm Browning. Still shoving the taller man across the floor and into the wooden blinds on the window side of the apartment, Kurtz had his arm blocked across Eddie’s chest, his right hand squeezing the base of the man’s upper bicep. He quickly slid his left hand across the top of the Browning.
Eddie squeezed the trigger. Just as Kurtz had planned, the hammer fell on the webbing between the thumb and forefinger of Kurtz’s hand.
Kurtz took the weapon away from Eddie and back-handed him into the wall.
“Fucking sonofabitch!” yelled Eddie, rubbing blood off his face. “You broke my goddamn—” Eddie made a lunge for the pistol.
Kurtz tossed the Browning out the open sixth-floor window, held Eddie off with his left arm, and kicked the other man’s legs out from under him. Eddie’s head hit the hardwood floor with a bang. Kurtz knelt on his chest.
“Tell me about Sam,” said Kurtz.
“Who the fuck is…” gasped Eddie Falco.
“Samantha Fielding,” said Kurtz. “The redhead that you killed.”
“Redhead?” said Eddie, spitting blood. “I didn’t know the bitch’s name, I just—”
Kurtz put all of his weight on one knee and Eddie’s eyes bugged out. Then Kurtz held his left hand palm out, jabbed hard, and flattened Eddie’s broken nose against the screaming man’s cheek. “Talk nice,” he said. “She worked with me.”
Eddie’s face was alternating chalk white and dark red under the blood. “Can’t breathe,” he gasped. “Get… off… please.”
Kurtz stood.
Eddie gasped some more, spat blood, got to one knee slowly, and then threw himself through the kitchen door.
Kurtz followed him into the tiny kitchen.
Eddie swung around with a butcher knife. He crouched, feinted, lunged, and then seemed to levitate up and back as Kurtz place-kicked him in the balls. Eddie came down hard on a counter filled with unwashed dishes. He was gasping and retching while he rolled, smashing soiled dishes under him.
Kurtz took the knife and threw it at the far wall, where it stuck and vibrated like a tuning fork.
“Sam,” said Kurtz. “Tell me about what happened the night you killed her.”
Eddie lifted his head and squinted at Kurtz. “Fuck you!” He grabbed another, shorter kitchen knife from the countertop.
Kurtz sighed, forearmed the thug in the throat, bent him back over the sink, and jammed Eddie’s right hand down deep into the garbage disposal. Eddie Falco was screaming even before Kurtz reached over and turned on the switch.
Kurtz gave it thirty seconds and then shut off the disposal, ripped Eddie’s bloody undershirt down the front, and wrapped the rag around the stumps of the man’s fingers. Eddie’s face was now pure white under a spattering of blood. His mouth was open and his eyes were protruding as he stared at what was left of his hand. Someone began pounding on the wall from the apartment next door.
“Help! Murder!” screamed Eddie. “Somebody call the cops! Help!”
Kurtz let him scream for a few seconds and then dragged him back into the main room and dropped him into a chair next to the table. The pounding on the wall had stopped, but Kurtz could hear shouts from the neighbors.
“The cops are coming,” gasped Eddie Falco. “The cops’ll be here in a minute.”
“Tell me about Sam,” Kurtz said softly.
Eddie clutched the bloody rag around his hand, glanced toward the open window as if expecting sirens, and licked his lips. He mumbled something.
Kurtz gave him a hearty handshake. This time, the screaming was so loud that even the neighbors fell silent.
“Sam,” said Kurtz.
“She found out about the coke deal when she was looking for that runaway brat.” Eddie’s voice was a gagging monotone. “I didn’t even know her fucking name.” He looked up at Kurtz. “It wasn’t me, you know. It was Levine.”
“Levine said it was you.”
Eddie’s eyes flickered back and forth. “He’s lying. Get him in here and ask him. He killed her. I just waited in the car.”
“Levine isn’t around anymore,” said Kurtz, his tone conversational. “Did you rape her before you cut her throat?”
“I tell you it wasn’t me. It was that goddamn Le—” Eddie started screaming again.
Kurtz released the shapeless pulp that had been Eddie Falco’s nose. “Did you rape her first?”
“Yeah.” Something like defiance flickered in Eddie’s eyes. “Fucking cunt put up a fight, tried to—”
“Okay,” said Kurtz, patting Eddie on his bloody shoulder. “We’re about done.”
“Whaddaya mean?” The defiance turned to terror.
“I mean the cops will be here in a minute. Anything else you want to tell me?”
Sirens wailed. Eddie lunged to his feet and staggered toward the open window as if to scream at the cops to hurry, but Kurtz slammed him against the wall and held him in place with a forearm hard against his chest. Eddie squirmed and struck at Kurtz with his left hand and the ruins of his right fist. Kurtz ignored him.
“I swear I didn’t—”
“Shut up,” explained Kurtz. He grabbed the bigger man by what was left of his shirtfront and dragged him closer to the window.
“You’re not going to kill me,” said Eddie.
“No?”
“No.” Eddie twitched his head in the direction of the window just inches away. Six stories below, two police cruisers had slid to a stop. Neighbors were broiling out of the apartment building, pointing toward the window. One of the cops drew his gun as he saw Kurtz and Eddie. “They’d send you away forever!” gasped Eddie, his breath hot and rank in Kurtz’s face.
“I’m not that old,” said Kurtz. “I have some years to spare.”
Eddie lunged away, ripping what was left of the rags of his shirt, stood in the open window and waved and screamed at the cops below. “Hurry! For fuck’s sake, hurry!”
“You in a hurry?” said Kurtz. “Here.” He grabbed Eddie Falco by his hair and the seat of his pants and threw him out the open window.
Neighbors and cops scattered. Eddie screamed all the way down to the roof of the closest police cruiser. Pieces of chrome and glass and Plexiglas from the gumball-flasher array on the top of the cruiser flew in all directions after Eddie hit.
Three of the cops ran into the building with their weapons raised.
Kurtz stood silent for a second and then went over to open the door wider. He was on his knees in the center of the room with his fingers linked behind his head when the cops burst in a moment later.
IN THE old days, they would have opened the front man-door for Kurtz and let him leave wearing a cheap new suit, with his possessions in a brown paper bag. These days they provided him a cheap vinyl bag for his possessions and gave him chinos, a blue button-down shirt, an Eddie Bauer windbreaker, and a bus ride into nearby Batavia.
Arlene Demarco picked him up at the bus station. They drove north to the Thruway and then west in silence.
“Well,” Arlene said at last, “you look older, Joe.”
“I am older.”
About twelve miles farther west, Arlene said abruptly, “Hey… welcome to the Twenty-first Century.”
“It arrived inside, too,” said Kurtz.
“How could you tell?”
“Good point,” said Kurtz and they were silent for another ten miles or so.
Arlene ran her window down and lit a cigarette, batting the ashes out into the brisk autumn air.
“I thought your husband doesn’t like it when you smoke.”
“Alan died six years ago.”
Kurtz nodded and watched the fields go by.
“I guess I could have come to visit you once or twice in eleven years,” said Arlene. “Keep you up to speed on things.”
Kurtz turned to look at her. “Why? No percentage in that.”
Arlene shrugged. “Obviously, I found your message on the machine. But why you thought I’d pick you up after all these years…”
“No problem if you didn’t,” said Kurtz. “The buses still run between Batavia and Buffalo.”
Arlene smoked the rest of her cigarette, then tossed it out the window. “Rachel, Sam’s little girl—”
“I know.”
“Well, her ex-husband got custody, and he still lives in Lockport. I thought you’d want to—”
“I know where he lives,” said Kurtz. “Attica has computers and phone books.”
Arlene nodded and concentrated on driving.
“You’re working with some legal outfit in Cheektowaga?”
“Yeah. Actually, it’s three law offices in what used to be a Kwik-Mart in a shopping center. Two of the firms are ambulance chasers, and the third one is just a capper mill.”
“Does that make you a full-fledged legal secretary?”
Arlene shrugged again. “Mostly I do word processing, spend a lot of time on the phone tracking down the claimants, and look up the occasional legal crapola on the Net. The so-called lawyers are too cheap to buy any law books or DVDs.”
“You enjoy it?” asked Kurtz.
She ignored the question.
“They pay you what?” said Kurtz. “Two thousand or so a month?”
“More than that,” said Arlene.
“Well, I’ll add five hundred to whatever they’re paying you.”
She snorted a laugh. “To do what?”
“Same thing you used to do. Just more of it on computers.”
“There some miracle going to happen to get you your P.I. license back, Joe? You have three thousand bucks a month set aside to pay me?”
“You don’t have to be a licensed P.I. to do investigations. Let me worry about paying you. You know that if I say I will, I will. You think we can get an office near the old place on East Chippewa?”
Arlene laughed again. “East Chippewa’s gotten all gentrified. You wouldn’t recognize the place. Uptight little boutiques, delis with outside seating, wine and cheese shops. Rent has gone ballistic there.”
“Jesus,” said Kurtz. “Well, office space near the downtown will do. Hell, a basement would do as long as it has several phone lines and electricity.”
Arlene exited the Thruway, paid the toll, and headed south. “Where do you want to go today?”
“A Motel 6 or someplace cheap in Cheektowaga would work.”
“Why Cheektowaga?”
“I’m going to have to borrow your car tomorrow morning, and I thought it might be more convenient for you to pick me up on the way to your job. You can give them notice tomorrow morning and pack your stuff, I’ll pick you up in the early afternoon, and we can look for the new office.”
Arlene lit another cigarette. “You’re so considerate, Joe.”
Kurtz nodded.
ORCHARD PARK was an upscale area out near the Bills’ Stadium. Arlene’s car—although just a basic Buick—had one of those GPS navigational LCD-screen doohickies set in the dash, but Kurtz never turned it on. He had memorized the route and had an old road map if he needed it. He wondered just what in the hell had happened to people’s sense of direction in the last decade if they needed all this electronic shit just to find their way around.
Most of the homes in Orchard Park were upper-middle-class or better, but a few were real mansions, set behind stone walls and iron gates. Kurtz turned into one of these, gave his name to a speaker grille, and was told to wait. A video camera mounted on a pillar by the gate had ceased its slow arcs and now stared down at him. Kurtz ignored it.
The gate opened and three bodybuilder types in blue blazers and gray slacks came out.
“You can leave the car here,” said the smoothest-looking of the three. He gestured for Kurtz to get out of the car.
They frisked him well—even checking his groin area carefully—and then had him unbutton his shirt so that they could see that he wasn’t wearing a wire. Then they gestured him onto the back bench of a golf cart and drove him up the long, curving driveway to the house.
Kurtz did not pay much attention to the house. It was your basic brick mansion, a little heavier on security than usual. There was a four-car garage set back to one side, but a Jaguar, a Mercedes, a Honda S2000, and a Cadillac were lined up along the drive. The blue-blazered driver stopped the cart, and the other two men led Kurtz around back to the pool area.
Even though it was October, the pool was still filled and free of leaves. An older man in a paisley robe sat at a poolside table along with a balding middle-aged man in a gray suit. They were drinking coffee from fragile china cups. The bald man refilled the cups from a silver pot as Kurtz and his minders walked up. A fourth bodyguard, this one wearing tight slacks and a polo shirt under his blue blazer, stood with his hands folded over his crotch a few paces behind the old man.
“Sit down, Mr. Kurtz,” said the old man. “You’ll forgive me if I don’t get up. An old injury.”
Kurtz sat.
“Coffee?” said the old man.
“Sure.”
The bald man poured, but it was obvious that he was no lackey. An expensive metal briefcase lay on the table near him.
“I am Byron Tatrick Farino,” said the old man.
“I know who you are,” said Kurtz.
The old man smiled slightly. “Do you have a first name, Mr. Kurtz?”
“Are we going to be on a first-name basis, Byron?”
The smile faded.
“Watch your mouth, Kurtz,” said the bald man.
“Shut up, consigliere.” Kurtz’s eyes never left the old man. “This meeting’s between Mr. Farino and me.”
“Quite right,” said Farino. “But you understand that the meeting is a courtesy and that it would not be taking place at all if you had not… ah… provided a service to us with regard to my son.”
“By keeping Little Skag from being raped up the ass in the showers by Ali and his gang,” said Kurtz. “Yeah. You’re welcome. But this meeting is business.”
“You want compensation for helping young Stephen?” said the lawyer. He clicked open the briefcase.
Kurtz shook his head. He was still looking at Farino. “Maybe Skag told you what I had to offer.”
Farino sipped his coffee. The old man’s hands were almost as translucent as the expensive china. “Yes, Stephen sent word via his lawyer that you wanted to offer your services. But what services can you possibly provide us that we do not already have, Mr. Kurtz?”
“Investigations.”
Farino nodded but the lawyer showed an unpleasant smile. “You were a private investigator once, Kurtz, but you’ll never have a license again. You’re on parole, for chrissakes. Why on earth would you think that we need a killer ex-con washed-up P.I. on our payroll?”
Kurtz turned his gaze on the lawyer. “You’re Miles,” he said. “Skag talked about you. He said you like young boys and that the older and limper you get, the younger they get.”
The lawyer blinked. His left cheek blazed with blood, as if Kurtz had slapped him. “Carl,” he said. The goon in the straining polo shirt opened his hands and took a step forward.
“If you want Carl around, you’d better jerk his leash,” said Kurtz.
Mr. Farino held up one hand. Carl stopped. Farino put his other veined hand on the lawyer’s forearm. “Leonard,” he said. “Patience. Why do you provoke us, Mr. Kurtz?”
Kurtz shrugged. “I haven’t had my morning coffee yet.” He drank some.
“We are willing to reimburse you for your help with Stephen,” said Farino. “Please accept it as a…”
“I don’t want to be paid for that,” said Kurtz. “But I’m willing to help you with your real problem.”
“What problem?” said Attorney Miles.
Kurtz looked at him again. “Your accountant, a guy named Buell Richardson, is missing. That’s not good news at the best of times for a family like yours; but since Mr. Far. . .
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