End Game (A Dark Romance)

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End Game (A Dark Romance) Page 24

by Waltz, Vanessa


  “How did you think we were able to bust all those mobsters in New Jersey? Your dad cooperated with us.”

  I forget about my plan the moment he mentions my dad. “What?”

  “We were going to make a deal with him. Information in exchange for a lesser sentence. The IRS audited your casino months ago.”

  No. Oh, no.

  “We need your cooperation, Ms. Toffoli. We began investigating your father over a year ago when a known associate of the Rizzo Crime Family in Jersey who worked at your casino became a murder suspect. We know they’ve been involved in money laundering operations in your VIP rooms, and we know New York is involved as well. We can offer you protection.”

  Fear fills my stomach like acidic soda, prickling and tearing at my insides. The whole thing is unraveled. I’m fucked.

  “You’re in over your head and you need our help.”

  Maybe he’s right. Whatever they drum up in their investigation will screw me over. The IRS already audited Dad. Oh, God. This is a fucking nightmare. Everything I was afraid of already happened a year ago.

  Pressure builds up behind my eyes until I’m sure my skull will crack. My hands shake and tears squeeze out of my eyes. What should I do?

  Joe’s face swims in my mind.

  Don’t say anything about us.

  Or what?

  Someone shoves a box toward me and I grab the white tissue. I bury my face into the paper and it soaks up my tears, turning it into a sodden mess in seconds. If they audited Dad, wouldn’t they have arrested Jack and the others already?

  “I’m sorry!” I gasp. “I won’t help you.”

  Agent Palmer leans forward, his bland tie dragging over the desk. “Marisa, these people are monsters. They’ll kill you the moment they believe you’ve talked to the FBI. You need us.”

  “What did you give my sister? Did you protect her?”

  He sits back, looking annoyed. “She only gave us a tip. She never negotiated any kind of deal with us.”

  I stare at him in shock. Aren’t they supposed to help people in danger? What chance does my sister have now that she talked to the feds and gave up who knows how many people? That fucker took her information and didn’t give a shit about what would happen to her.

  “She’s not safe!”

  The expressions on their faces say it all, really. They don’t care about my sister because she has nothing to offer them.

  They’re just as bad as the mob.

  “You fucking bastards.” I stand up from the table, legs shaking as I walk away from them, and pound the door. “Let me out!”

  I’ve got to save her.

  * * *

  They drop me like an abandoned dog on some street in Manhattan. I stand in a whirlwind of people bumping into me as some guy in a khaki trench coat pushes me out into the street. Then I’m left standing in the middle of the sidewalk as the car drives away, and I try to process what just happened.

  The IRS audited Worlds Casino and found multiple accounts of tax fraud, and gave Dad some kind of deal which probably lessened the jail time he would get, in exchange for ratting out the New Jersey mafia. They’re probably rifling through all the documents in my office right now, and they’ll find Jack Vittorio’s fronts, and then Jack will be furious.

  Basically, I’m screwed.

  Along with my annoying, self-absorbed sister, who in a weak moment of guilt signed her own death warrant. Along with mine. And Nathan’s. He must be furious.

  I head for the subway at once and call Jessica’s phone. No answer. I dial again and again. Nothing. Shit.

  “Pick up your phone!”

  The subway rattles slowly to Lower East Side, where Jess lives. I hug my knees on the subway and try not to imagine her lifeless body on her hardwood floors. They could kill her easily.

  Joe’s emotionless face and the callous way he wiped his face of blood burns in my mind. My hands shake as I call him.

  He picks up on the first ring.

  “Where are you?”

  “On the subway. I’m heading to my sister’s. She’s not safe, Joe.”

  His voice is cross. “You shouldn’t have left without me. I’m on my way, now.” The sound of him moving through the apartment crackles through the speaker. “Why do you think she’s in danger?”

  I bite my lip, eyes watering in the bright lights. “Is Vincent still there?”

  “No.”

  “She told them, Joe. She told the feds about Jamie and my brother. My dad’s been under investigation for a while.”

  “Don’t say anymore. We’ll talk when I get there.”

  A thick wall blocks my voice. “Please hurry.”

  The phone dies and I slide it back inside my purse, my eyes anxiously watching the subway map. Next stop. The doors hiss open and I bolt outside, taking the stairs two at a time. The streets roar with a cacophony of traffic and honking. It’s chaos, like the noise in my brain. I feel like I’m screaming as I sprint across the streets because everything is wrong. The moment Dad died, everything went to hell.

  Please be okay. Please.

  I make a silent prayer to my sister’s brownstone as I leap up the steps, my lungs burning. I hammer my fist on the paned glass and shortly a rippling figure approaches me. It’s much too large and my heart squeezes painfully.

  The door flies open and Nathan stands in the doorway. The bruises are healed, but there’s still a bandage over his nose.

  “Who is it?” Jessica’s voice calls out from the living room.

  “Jessica! Are you all right?”

  Nathan snarls and tries to slam the door in my face, but I throw my leg inside and wince as the heavy wood crushes my leg.

  “Let her inside!”

  Jessica appears next to him, frowning. The mascara runs down her face in black rivers as Nathan steps away with a black look of disgust.

  “Why are you here?” I ask, shoving my way inside.

  I slam the door and lock it. Immediately after doing it, I regret it. The last time Nathan and I were together, Joe was beating the shit out of him. I’m alone now. His face twists with a malicious smile.

  “I was just telling our dear sister what a monumental fuck-up she is.”

  She holds a hand to her mouth as her dark eyes crumple in pain. “Shut up!”

  “Jessica, the FBI was investigating Dad for a long time. They just used your information as a springboard to raid the whole place. It would’ve happened eventually.”

  My sister looks so fragile in her little black t-shirt and yoga pants. She trembles as she climbs into a plush armchair. My brother slinks into the room and Jessica hugs her knees, looking thoroughly depressed.

  “Jessica, you need to leave town.”

  “What?” she sniffs. “Why?”

  I shoot my brother an angry glance. So, he didn’t even tell her, did he?

  “The man you met, Jamie Tucci, is involved in the New Jersey mafia.”

  “The mafia?” she repeats incredulously.

  “Yes, dammit. We don’t have time for you to second-guess me. They will kill you once they find out you ratted them out. They already kidnapped me from work. He promised what would happen if I didn’t do what he said.”

  She shakes her head as tears streak down her cheeks. The sound of her sobbing fills the room. “Marisa, I didn’t mean to cause all this trouble! I swear! I just couldn’t stand w—what Nathan did.”

  “Which was?” His low voice erupts from the center of the room.

  “You know what you did!”

  “Jessica! It’s not worth fighting over, understand? Get your shit together and drive out of here. Now.”

  Jessica stumbles out of the chair and the sound of her feet running up the stairs as her crying echoes throughout the apartment makes me close my eyes. A shiver of pain runs up my spine as a ghost image of Jessica’s pink feet stomp up the stairs, wailing. Nathan stood at the foot of the stairs, holding the remains of her favorite doll.

  The same man stands at the foot of
the stairs, twenty years older. Instead of a doll, he holds the banister, twisting and twisting his hands around it as if it was a neck. He rounds on me, his face tightening with rage.

  “When they come after me, I’ll tell them it was you.”

  A knife twists in my chest, puncturing my lungs of air. Malice brightens his eyes as he stares at my throat, and then I remember George. My pet frog that he taped to a stick and beat to death. Tears spring into my eyes. I found him in the backyard, what was left of him anyway. I used to hold him in my hands, loving the damp feeling of his skin as he hopped down my arm. His pink innards were squashed out of his sides as if Nathan had stretched him on concrete and stamped hard. All because I used his Smash Mouth CD without his permission. He made me swear never to tell Mom and Dad, though I suspected Dad saw the body, because afterward Nathan was sent to a therapist.

  “Why do you hate me?” Angry tears slip down my face as he watches me impassively.

  “You took everything away from me.”

  “I didn’t even want it.”

  “It doesn’t matter. In fact, that makes it worse.” His high, cold voice echoes in the high ceilings.

  “I—I never told them what you did to George.”

  “Still with that fucking frog?” He gives an angry sigh, stepping around me. “You know people eat frogs, don’t you?”

  “You killed him.” My voice trembles. “I loved him and you killed him anyway for no reason.”

  The backyard rang with my screams when I found the body. I’ll never forget the pain. It was just a stupid frog, but right now I feel more anguish for that damned thing than I do for my own dead father.

  “You got your fucking revenge. I spent weeks in therapy, trying to convince Mom and Dad I wasn’t insane,” he says in a bored voice. “Because I killed your stupid pet. Grow up.”

  Grow up.

  Rage boils under the anguish and all the injustice bursts from my throat in a scream. I launch myself at Nathan’s taller, much stronger body and smash him into the window. I rain fists on his head, reaching for the bandage over his nose. I want him screaming in pain. I want him to feel the horror inside me, but it’s clear that the only kind of pain he can feel is the physical kind.

  “I HATE YOU!”

  “Fucking BITCH!”

  Jessica’s hurried footsteps make my nerves blaze with fear. “Stop, Nathan!”

  A sharp blow connects with my temple and I stumble, stars bursting in front of my vision. Another dull blow sends me crashing down. My face explodes in pain as it crunches on the wooden floor. I’m dazed in a fog of pain. He opens the front door and grabs my shirt, so that my head is pushed between the door. Oh, God. He grabs the edge of the door. I know what he’s going to do—

  SLAM.

  Someone’s screams pierce my ears as a throbbing, deep pain cracks my skull. I am dazed. Hands grapple with the door, and I somehow flop over. From my position on the floor, I see Jessica’s arm twist behind her back as Nathan yanks it, tears streaming down her face. I somehow stumble to my feet and charge at him blindly. His back slams into the banister.

  I scream at her. “Go! Take your keys and go now!”

  Then I grab his nose and twist it. Sobbing, she grabs her keys and runs out the door, and I’m knocked to the floor, air crushed from my lungs. My hands seek the doorknob, ready to die to stop him from hurting her. I won’t let him chase her.

  The squeal of tires from outside sends relief through my head, even as Nathan places a palm on my chest and shoves hard. I fly through the door. My legs trip, and hard, unyielding cement stabs my back, my head.

  The blond demon stands at the doorway. “Goodbye, sister.”

  Then a pair of hands grab my arms, and a black bag shoves over my head. There’s nothing but darkness.

  * * *

  My whole body hurts like a bitch and the floor rumbles. There’s a sharp pain in my skull, like a nail trying to pound into my brain. Tap. Tap. Tap. Tap. My back hurts badly and the position I’m in makes it throb even worse.

  “…do her in Pine Barrens. The brother swears it was her, and she’s already threatened to go to the cops. All right. Yeah, I know. We should be back before seven. Bye.”

  A thick Jersey accent. The sound of a phone dropped back into a cup holder.

  Pine Barrens. I know that place.

  Slowly, I make sense of my surroundings. I’m in a car and they’re driving me to South Jersey for some reason I’m not yet aware. My cheek rests on something hard. A shoe, which is connected to a leg. I sit up and a pair of hands help me onto the seat, but I immediately pitch forward.

  “Where am I? Who are you?” There’s no hood on my head anymore.

  Three unfriendly faces turn back to me. The driver who made the phone call speaks. “We’re taking you to the hospital. Then you need to talk with Jamie.”

  The way he says it almost sounds plausible. I want to believe him. My heart pounds against my chest and it’s going to break my ribs. If that were true, we wouldn’t be driving to a heavily forested area of New Jersey. I wouldn’t be surrounded on both sides by two men.

  They’re driving me there to kill me.

  I’ve heard about how people react when they know they’re going to die. There are those who calmly accept it, who are afraid but swallow it down anyway, and there are those who freak the fuck out.

  I freak the fuck out.

  I launch forward and manage to grab the steering wheel, wrenching hard to the right. Someone grabs my hair and yanks me back, but not before the car swerves violently.

  “Fuck!”

  The car trembles and there’s a scream of rubber. Then suddenly a shriek of metal as we smash into the guardrail. I’m thrown to the side.

  “Crazy cunt! Kevin, let’s just do her here.”

  “Are you fuckin’ nuts? There are too many witnesses.”

  “HELP!” My screams tear through the car as I launch at the handle of the door. “HELP!”

  “Shut that bitch up!”

  A vicious slap to my mouth momentarily breaks my screams, and finally they decide to get out of the car. Suddenly I’m shoved onto the cement and told to walk into the forest line. Into the tall pines, which will be my graveyard.

  Oh, God. I’m going to die.

  I think of the man who’s probably waiting patiently at my sister’s house for me to arrive. Joe—his handsome, beautiful face and his lips sweetly caressing mine. My chest fills with warmth even though I’m trudging through this cold, damp forest. I love him! I love him and he doesn’t even know. I never got to tell him—

  “On your knees, you fuckin’ whore.”

  He kicks the back of my leg and I fall on my hands and knees, sprawling on a bed of leaves. I crawl furiously, sobbing. Their laughter rings in the forest. Still no gunshot. Faster. Faster. I’ll feel it in a second, a painful stab in my back. My hands scrabble through the dark earth, smearing all over my jeans and hands like bloodstains. Then I hear it.

  Crack.

  I wait for paralyzing pain, for the punch to my back.

  A male scream lifts in the air, and then another.

  Crack. Crack.

  I’m not being shot. They are.

  Suddenly, a bunch of earth flies into the air next to me and I stare at it.

  “Marisa!”

  I turn around on my side to search for the voice. Two bodies struggle on the earth, their sides heaving. The last man hides behind a tree, and then I see a familiar silhouette step out from the tree to aim it straight at him. The pop of more gunfire cracks the air, and then chunks of bark fly from the tree. He steps out and pulls the trigger. The empty chamber spins.

  “HE’S OUT!”

  At the sound of my voice, Joe steps out again and crack. The driver’s body stumbles backward as a bullet slams into his chest. He clutches his white sweater, which bursts with dark, arterial blood. Like a broken puppet, he falls on the floor. Joe walks to the two other men who are still breathing and fires more bullets into their chests. Their
bodies shake as death seizes them instantly, and then Joe turns to the last one to fire more into his body, even though he’s already dead. A terrible darkness seizes Joe’s face. I’ve never seen that kind of hatred on his face before. Only on that man, Vincent. Only when the empty chamber spins for several times does he stop pulling the trigger, and then he pulls a fresh magazine from his jacket and reloads.

  Crack. Crack. Crack.

  Right into his face.

  I turn my head away as blood splatters everywhere. I don’t want to see it.

  “Joe, please.”

  The sound of his heavy breathing and his footsteps crunching on dead leaves grows louder and then he stoops down. I fly into his chest, suddenly cold and shaking. I’m aware that I should be crying, but I just can’t feel it. The pressure of his arms is there, and my heart throbs at a rapid pace. I see Joe hugging me as though I’m floating above him, and then I wonder if I’m dead.

  “Baby, are you all right?”

  My head still rings with the shots.

  “I don’t—I don’t know.”

  He kisses my temple as his arms tighten around me, squeezing me painfully. “You’re okay. You’re safe,” he says in a tight voice. “Thank God you’re okay.”

  Slowly, several sensations come back. The leaves under my hands, his breath steaming over my skin, the sharp curves of his body, the stubble on his cheek, the beating I took, and the fear, which slowly purges from my body like alcohol during a hangover. Profound relief floods my body and I choke into his chest. He’s always been there for me, from the beginning. Even though he wasn’t family. Even though he barely knew me.

  “I was going to die and I didn’t get to tell you that I love you, too.”

  He inhales sharply and his fingers dig into my clothes. His lips touch my head. “I’ll never let you go.”

  * * *

  “Four dead men. Four dead made men who she witnessed.”

  Jack’s blue eyes kind of remind me of my brother’s, and I quickly look away. We’re in the back of a deli store, of all places. I sit on a chair around a wooden table across from the rest of New York City’s most dangerous men. Vince, the one I loathe, doesn’t glare at me with the same suspicion as the boss. His hand rests in his palm thoughtfully as he looks at us.

 

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