Robert B. Parker
still talking with Hood.
    Newman felt disconnected. His jaws hurt and he realized he was clenching his teeth. He relaxed his jaw. He couldn’t seem to feel the gun against his groin as he had before. He ran his left hand over the area as if scratching a bite. The gun was there. He waited for the surge of reassurance but nothing came.
    Emptily he moved onto the balcony and opened the first glass door. The room was windowless and empty. The only light came through the open door and the frosted glass partition that separated it from the next office. There was a gray metal conference table and five folding chairs in the room. On the table was a newspaper and an empty cardboard pizza box in which a few crusts of pizza remained. Two paper coffee cups were near the box. In the corner of the room there was a stand-up electric fan. There was nothing else in the room.
    Newman closed the door as quietly as he could. Every movement he made he had to think of. Nothing was natural. Nothing automatic. He stepped back from the door. There was light in the next office.
I could tell Chris I tried and it was locked and that there was no one up here. I could turn now and go down and out and go home. And be safe
.
    He stepped to the next door. There was light behind it. He could hear a voice. From the floor below a voice said, “Hey, what the hell are you doing?”
    His fear saved him. He was numb and slow with itand didn’t react. Instead, mindless and terrified he turned the knob and walked in.
    Adolph Karl sat at a desk facing the door with his feet up and his coat off talking into the telephone.
I could shoot him now
. To his left, at a small table against the wall, the two men who’d been with him all day were playing cards. In front of each there was a card up and a card down.
Blackjack
, Newman thought.
    Karl said into the phone, “Hold on,” then he put the phone down on the desk and swung his feet down onto the floor. He looked at Newman.
    “Yeah?” he said.
    The two men against the wall both turned toward Newman. One stood up and took a gun from under his coat and held it against his leg. The man with the gun had thick lips and a long face. His hair was curly, and his skin was very white. The other man, still seated, was immense.
Three hundred pounds
, Newman thought. His chest was vast. His stomach stretched tight against his white shirt but it looked hard, like a Russian weight lifter’s. His shirt sleeves were rolled back two turns over his forearms, and his wrists were as thick as cordwood. He stood up too and took a step toward Newman. He was tall and his back arched slightly. He was clean-shaven and his hair was slicked back and shiny. He looked very clean.
    “The man asked you a question, douche bag,” he said. Newman knew the voice.
    There were no windows in this room either. Just a cinder-block back wall painted yellow. In the left corner a gray metal file cabinet. There was no rug on the floor. The only light was an overhead hanging fluorescent. The huge man took another step toward Newman.The man with thick lips stood without movement, the gun held against his right thigh.
    Newman took the card from his hat band and held it out to the big man. The man read it.
    “It’s a fucking dummy, Dolph,” he said. “He’s scrounging.” The big man handed the card to Karl. Karl read it.
    “Throw him the fuck out,” he said. He crumpled the card and threw it on the floor. The big man took hold of Newman’s shoulder and turned him around.
    Karl said, “Tell those fucking assholes downstairs that if anybody comes wandering up here again I’m going to cut their balls off.”
    The big man held onto Newman’s shoulder with his left hand and shoved him out the door. Newman made no resistance. He was afraid he might fall. His legs had no feeling. The big man shoved him along the corridor and down the stairs, moving him faster than he wanted to walk, so he stumbled and had to hold the banister going downstairs. Newman had a

Similar Books

Prosperity Drive

Mary Morrissy

Wife With Amnesia

Metsy Hingle

She's Mine

Sam Crescent

I'm No Angel

Patti Berg

Black Kerthon's Doom

Jim Greenfield

Blood Prize

Ken Grace