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Corridor Man

Page 25

by Mick James


  “That change to the LLC with Zimmerman didn’t sit very well with Noah.”

  “And it certainly wasn’t originally drafted with the best of intentions for Mr. Montcreff, which is who I’m looking out for at the moment. I redrafted the document, Montcreff agreed, in the end so did Zimmerman. The firm’s client, Mr. Montcreff saw that ultimately we were looking out for his best interests. He can’t ask for more than that. And by the way, Noah Denton signed the thing, which suggests to me he gave his approval.”

  “Well, like I said Noah Denton does not like to be second guessed.”

  “What do you know about that car catching fire at Mr. Denton’s?”

  Bennett poured down another third of his drink. “The car fire. Not much, I don’t believe it was a mechanical failure if that’s what you’re asking. Local hoodlums, probably someone associated with Noah’s daughter. She’s, how should I say it, a handful.”

  “Trouble?”

  “Oh, trouble may be too strong a word. They had her late in life, an only child. I think she’s somewhere in her early-to-mid-thirties. She’s probably dropped out of half a dozen colleges around the country. I think Noah spent close to forty thousand a year just for her high school education. She and her mother seem to be constantly at odds, I’m not sure she interacts with Noah at all. She’s an artist by self description.” He mockingly pronounced the word ‘ar-Tiest.’

  “She seems to run with a pretty fast crowd, always has. Still lives with her parents, which might be part of the problem. The car fire was probably just some jilted one night stand, still all in all a rather frightening event for everyone.”

  “Was there something spray painted on the driveway, a warning or a threat I thought I heard?”

  “I wouldn’t know anything about that,” Bennett said and drained his glass. The bartender reappeared before the empty glass hit the bar.

  Bennett shook his head no, then said, “Oh goodness, look at the time, I’ve still got to choose a wine for dinner, we’ve guests coming.”

  Thought you said you had a meeting you jerk.

  “Bobby, can’t thank you enough for the time, and the beverages, but I had better skedaddle. Please, take your time here, but I’m running late.” Bennett grabbed Bobby’s hand, squeezed it in a vice like grip and shook a couple of his chins back and forth. “Enjoy, see you bright and early tomorrow.” Which for Bennett probably meant something around ten.

  Bobby sipped his bourbon and thought about what Bennett had told him regarding Noah Denton’s heart problems, his apparently estranged wife, the rebellious daughter and he suddenly smelled opportunity.

  Opportunity and a lot more…

  To grab your copy of Corridor Man 2: Opportunity Knocks just click on the appropriate link.

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  Thank you for taking the time to read Corridor Man. If you enjoyed this read please tell 2-300 of your closest friends. If you have a moment, please consider leaving a review, just click on the appropriate link. Thanks, it really helps.

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  Please check out my Dev Haskell series. A sample of Russian Roulette, the first in the series is on the next page and don’t miss the FREE offer for Bang after the sample.

  Mike Faricy

  Russian Roulette

  Mike Faricy

  Published by Credit River Publishing 2011

  Copyright Mike Faricy 2011

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior and express permission of the copyright owner.

  All characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Copyright 2011 by Mike Faricy

  Russian Roulette

  ASIN# B004V4AHYU

  Acknowledgments

  I would like to thank the following people for their help and support:

  Special thanks to my editors, Kitty, Donna and Rhonda for their hard work, cheerful patience and positive feedback.

  I would like to thank Roy and Julie for their creative talent and not slitting their wrists or jumping off the high bridge when dealing with my Neanderthal computer capabilities.

  Last, I would like to thank family and friends for their encouragement and unqualified support. Special thanks to Maggie, Schatz, Av and Pat for not rolling their eyes, at least when I was there, and most of all, to my wife Teresa whose belief, support and inspiration has from day one, never waned.

  To Teresa

  “The very first kiss she gave him was electric…and he was toast.”

  Mike Faricy

  Russian Roulette

  Chapter One

  I was sitting in The Spot bar, minding my own damn business, content in a mild and steadily growing alcoholic haze. A client had paid me. The check was enough to cover my overdrafts and fund a night or two of partying.

  I saw her come in the side door and look around for fifteen seconds. She was blonde, hot looking, thirty something, maybe wearing a little too much makeup, dressed in a delightfully slutty sort of way. Conversation didn’t stop, but heads turned as she walked past. She headed toward an empty stool. There were four on either side of me. Her chest was like the prow of a battleship and plowed a firm, bouncy course down the length of the bar. She passed the first three empty stools and pulled out the one next to me. It was red vinyl and edged in worn duct tape.

  “Is anyone sitting here?”

  I caught the slightest hint of an accent.

  “Not that I can see.”

  “You are Mr. Devlin Haskell, right? The private dick?”

  She batted her eyes a few times, which at the moment struck me as extremely sexy. Her perfume wafted over me like a plastic dry cleaning bag and forced me to gasp for breath. It was strangely spicy.

  “Yeah, that’s me. Although it’s not all that private,” I joked.

  Incredibly she smiled, but didn’t comment. After a moment she said, “Mr. Haskell, I’ve been looking for you. Of course, the other places were a little nicer than this.” She gazed around at the dingy brown, smoke-stained ceiling. Maybe she caught the two bullet holes in the front door now filled with putty and supposed to have been painted sometime just before Obama took office. Maybe it was the 60s-style cheap wood paneling on the walls, or the eau de beer reek of the place. Maybe it was the worn wood-grain Formica tables in the booths or the twenty-watt bulbs in the light fixtures. Or maybe it just didn’t matter. She sat up straight, spun toward me on her stool, and thrust her death-defying cleavage in my face.

  “You were looking for me?” I asked, wondering if my luck had finally begun to change.

  “Yes, a friend gave me your name.”

  “Really? What can I do for you?” thinking maybe a getaway weekend to a quiet lake, a bed and breakfast with a Jacuzzi in the room, or just your basic tawdry night at my place.

  “Well, I hope you won’t think I’m strange.”

  At this point Grace, the bartender, stepped in front of us. An experienced little voice inside my head said ‘Just smile, finish the drink and get the hell out of here before you get in real trouble.’

  “Buy you a drink?” I asked.

  “Will you have another?”

  That experienced little voice whispered ‘no.’

  I nodded ‘yes’ toward Grace who rolled her eyes.

  “Yeah, okay, I guess I’ll have a double vodka martini, two olives,” she ordered quickly, then smiled at me.

  A double, my kind of girl.

  “So, I was about to think you’re strange?” I said.

  “What? Oh yes. Look, I wanted to hire
you to sort of find someone. I’ll pay you,” and with that she dug in a small beaded handbag suspended on a chain over her shoulder.

  I hadn’t noticed it before, but then I’d been otherwise engaged making careful notes as to her physical characteristics.

  “Oh, sorry,” she said as she snapped the handbag closed with an audible click and then reached into her front pocket. She pulled out a small wad of hundred-dollar bills. I was actually more amazed there was room for anything thicker than a dime in her pocket. The jeans looked to have been sprayed on over her perfect thighs.

  “Here is five hundred dollars, I can get you more if you need it.”

  “You still haven’t told me who you want me to ‘sort of’ find. A name would help, for starters. Not to mention you know my name, but I don’t know yours.”

  Grace brought our drinks, and grabbed a ten off the bar from the small pile in front of me.

  “Oh yes, sorry, I’m Kerri.” She held out her hand to shake.

  “Nice to meet you, Kerri. Call me Dev. Your accent?” I asked.

  “Ahhh, French.”

  She nodded, batted her eyes innocently, then proceeded to drain nearly half her martini glass.

  “Mmm-mmm, that is a very good vodka,” she gasped. “Yes, French, but from a long time ago. I was just a little girl. Dev, I hope you’ll help me find my little sister.”

  “Your sister?”

  “Yes, she is called Nikki.”

  “Hmm, Kerri and Nikki, sisters. Anyone else in the family? Mom, Dad, brothers, more sisters?”

  “No, we are the only ones. My, I mean, our parents passed away eight years ago, maybe six months apart.” She made a quick sign of the cross, in the Orthodox way, reverse order to the Irish Catholic I grew up with then washed it down with a hearty sip of martini.

  “Oh, sorry.”

  “Don’t be. My father killed himself, one drink at a time. And my mother was a religious crazy woman. She wore herself out trying to put a stop to anyone thinking of enjoying himself. You know the old question? Which came first, the alcoholic husband or the long-suffering wife?”

  “Can’t say that I do, but I know a couple or two it might fit.”

  “Yes, well.”

  “So, Nikki?”

  “Oh, right. I have not seen her in maybe two months. Not that we were really close or anything, but she hasn’t been home for quite a while as far as I can tell and her phone is disconnected. Her car remains in the same place, in her driveway. I have a key to her house. I went through it, but nothing seemed unusual, you know? It was not trashed or ransacked or some-such.”

  “Husband, boyfriend, kids?”

  “Not that I know about. She had a boyfriend about a year and a half ago, but he did away with her. Actually, he was keeping her on the side and had a regular girlfriend. He married that woman last spring. Nikki read about it in the newspaper.”

  “That’s a tough way to find out.”

  “Yes. I think he was maybe four years older than Nikki, Bradley Cadwell. Brad the Cad we called him. He is a lawyer now. But I must be honest, she only spoke of him, I never really met him.”

  “But a lawyer?”

  “Yes.”

  “Say no more.”

  She didn’t. Instead she drained her glass and left the olives. With a nod, I had Grace mixing a new double just after her empty glass hit the bar. Things became a little bit bleary after that.

  I remembered checking the rearview mirror constantly on the drive home to make sure she didn’t lose me, although I couldn’t swear to the exact route we took. I remembered she could drink vodka like a fish, and that she had a gorgeous figure. She was trimmed as opposed to shaved and had a little Victorian-looking angel with wings sitting on a cloud tattooed on her right butt cheek. I was too drunk to read the writing that encircled the angel.

  I’ve got a bite mark on my left nipple, scratches on my back, my bed’s a mess, and the place reeks of stale spicy perfume. My head is pounding and I just finished reading a note that says she only took a hundred dollar bill from the five she gave me out of “professional consideration”.

  She penned her phone number at the bottom of the note, just after she wrote to hold onto her emerald green thong from Victoria’s Secret should I run across it.

  I needed aspirin, coffee, and a sauna. Any phone call to Kerri could wait until after those things were accomplished. And, ever the professional, I made a mental note to find out her last name.

  Chapter Two

  While recovering I sat in a back booth at Moe’s a little after one in the afternoon. Moe’s was my morning office at least three days a week. The earlier sauna and aspirin were working their magic, and the third cup of coffee kept me going until breakfast was delivered. I was just finishing up the last of my hash-browns, dragging the remnants through a slick of heart-stopping hollandaise sauce as I phoned Kerri. Her phone message kicked in, but the voice didn’t sound like her at all.

  “Hey baby, thanks for calling. Sorry I’m all tied up at the moment. Leave your name and number, and one of us will get back to you just as soon as we can, bye-bye.”

  My guess was Kerri didn’t work for a pediatrician. I checked my watch as the beep sounded to leave a message.

  “Hi, Kerri, Devlin Haskell here. Please give me a call when you can. I’d like to schedule an appointment so we can review some facts on your case and I can begin my investigation. It’s Wednesday afternoon at one-thirty, you can reach me at ….”

  I’ll be the first to admit it was a bit presumptuous to suggest I’d be able to review facts on her case. I really only had four facts, Kerri’s first name, her sister’s name - Nikki, Kerri’s phone number, and five, make that four hundred dollars cash in advance.

  A half hour later I was behind the wheel of my car, debating about starting it up or going back into Moe’s for a couple more aspirin when my phone rang. I glanced at the number coming through like I always did and just like always couldn’t read the numbers.

  “Haskell Investigations.”

  There was a very long pause on the other end before a female voice sounding somewhat confused said,

  “I think I must have the wrong number,” then hung up.

  The phone rang again less than a minute later, I did my routine of looking at the incoming number, just like before I was unable to read the damn thing.

  “Hello,” I said in what I thought passed for pleasant, considering my hangover.

  It was the same voice from a minute before, female, young sounding.

  “Yeah, I’m calling for Devil.”

  “That would be me, Devlin, actually,” I said, enunciating the last syllable in my name.

  “What do you need, baby?” she asked, sounding decidedly unimpressed with my attempt at correction.

  “I need to speak with Kerri, actually. Is she available?”

  “She can’t do nothing I can’t do better, honey. You don’t need her, do you?” She hissed the word nothing, suggesting maybe there was a space between her teeth.

  “Actually, yes I do, I need to talk with her. Is she there or is there a number I can reach her at?”

  “You a cop?”

  “No, I’m not. But look, I’ll call the cops and give them this number unless you have Kerri call me in the next half hour. If I don’t hear from…” Whoever she was, she was so impressed she hung up.

  I decided to venture home, grab some aspirin, maybe close my eyes for a few minutes. My mood improved as I considered I could be sitting on the easiest four hundred dollars I’d ever made.

  I had just put my feet up for the briefest of moments when my phone rang. Yes, I looked at the number. No, I still couldn’t read the damn thing.

  “Haskell Investigations.”

  “Oh, no wonder Da’nita thought you were with the police. Do you always answer like that?”

  I recognized her voice immediately. A hazy, torrid scene from the previous night replayed in my mind.

  “Kerri?”

  “Dev?”r />
  “Yes.”

  “Dev, I’m returning your call. Remember? You wanted to set an appointment. I think we should. No drinks please. At least not until we’re finished with the serious business,” she chuckled.

  “You tell me where and when.”

  “How about your office?”

  “My office?” I swallowed, the throbbing in my head returned with a vengeance.

  “Yes, that is okay, no?”

  It would be okay if I had an office, so I dodged the question.

  “No, I mean, look, I think I owe you at least dinner, after last night and all. You free this evening?”

  “I can be.”

  “Okay, tell you what. You know Malone’s?”

  “It is a place on the corner, with the black awning.”

  “Yeah, you got it. I’ll make reservations, say seven, seven-fifteen, no alcohol. At least not until we’re done discussing. Sound okay?”

  “Yes.”

  “Great. Oh, Kerri, can you bring some pictures of your sister? And I’ll need her address and if you have a spare key to her place that would help too.”

  “Maybe I should just bring her.”

  “Huh?”

  “Joking, never mind. I will see you at Malone’s.”

  I was pretty sure I wouldn’t need a reservation, but phoned anyway.

  “Yeah, I’d like a table for two at about seven tonight.”

  “Not a problem, you won’t need a reservation.”

  “Let me make one anyway, so I look important.”

  “A reservation here is gonna make you look important? Jesus.”

 

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