wants me to take out, but whoever he is he has DiGrassi worried.
We continue our staring contest for another ten or so seconds. DiGrassi blinks first. His rock-hard expression melting a bit, he tells me, “Lenny, if you have to postpone your wedding, you gotta do it. This has to take priority, and that comes straight from the top. But there’ll be a bonus in this for you, more than enough to make up for any inconvenience.”
I look again at the name DiGrassi gave me. I don’t know the guy. If he’s in the game, I’m clueless how.
“Who is this guy?” I ask.
DiGrassi regains his ice-cold demeanor. “Why the fuck does that matter to you?”
I shrug, tell him it doesn’t.
He starts to leave, stops himself to warn me to be careful with this one. Those little worry lines are once again cracking his icy exterior. After six hits all done without worry or fuss, this is the first time he suggests to me about being careful. I wonder briefly what’s up with that.
That was four days ago. I know Jenny is furious about me leaving town. I gave her some bullshit reason and I’ve talked to her a few times over the phone since then, and she’s not at all happy. If it wasn’t for all the travel arrangements her relatives had made, she probably would’ve called off the wedding. That’s how pissed she is.
This guy I’ve been after has been tough to get close to. He’s careful, cautious. Maybe he knows about the contract on him, maybe it’s just his nature. And to make my job even harder, I can’t leave anything behind. His body has to disappear, no trace, no evidence of a killing.
After four days I finally have my opening. Security on his house is tight, and he keeps a Rottweiler loose in his yard so the damn thing will bark up a storm if anyone goes near the property. Earlier I took the dog out quietly, the silencer muffling the shot, the dog dying before he could get out as much as a whimper. That was hours ago. Now it’s late and I’ve been standing in the shadows outside his home. Until twenty minutes ago I’d been hoping I wouldn’t have to go in and massacre his whole family. It’s so much damn harder to make a whole family disappear.
I don’t have to do that any more. Twenty minutes ago he left the main house and entered a converted workshop in the back of an attached garage. Now he’s using a hacksaw on something, I can’t tell exactly what. With the lights off in the house it means his family is in bed. Yesterday evening when one of his kids had that Rottweiler out for a walk, I used the opportunity to tamper with one of the windows in the garage.
He’s had his back turned to me the last ten minutes, and I’ve opened the window enough so I can slide the barrel of the gun underneath. Two silenced shots is all it takes. I open the window all the way and crawl in, taking in with me the duffel bag filled with chemicals that I’ve brought.
It turns out he’s been using the hacksaw to cut off both barrels of a shotgun. That gets me curious. I start searching his workshop, and I find a false wall. Hidden inside is a large arsenal loaded with knives, guns and rifles of all different calibers, stacks of extra magazines, and even a few hand grenades. This makes me even more curious about my target.
I take some choice weapons out of the arsenal, then fit the false wall back in place. Then I go to work. He has his car keys on him which saves me from having to break into the car. I wrap his body with a plastic sheet that I had folded in my duffel bag and dump it in the trunk, then use the chemicals I brought to erase any forensic evidence. When I’m done I fix the lock on the window leaving it as good as new.
I open the garage door as quietly as possible so I can retrieve the Rottweiler’s body and dump it in the trunk also. Earlier I’d cleaned up the area where I’d shot the dog as best I could. If someone starts looking for blood there they’ll find it, but then again, why should anyone? What’s