The Tanner Series - Books 1-11: Tanner - The hit man with a heart
Page 36
“He lives in that back booth. It’s like his office.”
“And it’s right across from the entrance to the kitchen, so we go in, blast Adamo and use the produce truck to get away.”
Sophia nodded. “Let’s do it.”
She climbed over the fence as if it wasn’t there and Tanner knew she must have been a tomboy as a kid.
He followed, landed beside her, and they sprinted toward the back door with their guns up and ready. When they reached the door, they slowed, hid the guns against their sides, and walked into the kitchen as if they belonged there.
They received odd looks from the kitchen staff, but no one spoke to them or attempted to stop their progress.
Tanner went in first, cursing when he saw the empty booth where Adamo should be, and then brought up his gun to fire toward the bar, where a blond man was reaching for the piece on his hip.
Tanner hit the man twice in the side, as Sophia fired on a man behind the bar who was bringing up a shotgun.
A bald man burst from the bathroom at the other side of the large room and fired a shot that hit the wall an inch to the right of Sophia’s head.
“That’s Adamo!” she shouted, and Tanner took note, but he was also busy returning fire from a fourth man with a beard, who had also been sitting at the bar. He and the man missed each other, as Sophia fired a shot at Adamo that shattered the front window.
Adamo and his bearded man hid behind a corner of the bar as Tanner and Sophia took position behind a thick glass-block wall.
“You’re dead, bitch!” Adamo shouted. “I’ve got troops headed here for a meeting.”
Before the words had even left Adamo’s mouth, Tanner saw two cars pull up in front as another went past and entered the alley. He could tell by the dark shapes visible that the car held several men.
“We have to go!” Sophia said and made a move toward the doorway that led to the kitchen.
She was driven back by a barrage of gunfire delivered by Adamo and his man, and moments later, more men entered the restaurant through the shattered window, as another man shouted from the kitchen.
“Vic, me and the boys are back here, what’s going on?”
Vic was Vic Conti, the Calvino boss; he answered with authority.
“Stay back there, Mikey, and don’t let anybody in or out. We got a situation here.”
Adamo shouted. “It’s Sophia Verona. The bitch tried to kill me.”
“Sophia, is that you over there? What’s going on?” Vic called out.
Tanner wasn’t certain which of the new men he was, but he had a rich voice that made him sound as if he were in charge, while Adamo spoke in a tone tinged with fear.
“Anthony Cello and his boys tried to kill me this morning, Vic, that’s what’s going on.”
A mix of voices came from behind the bar, and they belonged to Vic, Adamo, and at least two other men. When the discussion died down, Vic spoke alone.
“Come out in the open unarmed and I promise you won’t be hurt. You know me, Sophia. I’m not lying.”
Sophia gave Tanner a strained look and then called out.
“I tried to kill Saul, I don’t deny that, but it was because he tried to kill me, and we both know he had something to do with killing my father.”
“That’s bullshit!” Adamo called out. “I had nothing to do with Jackie going missing. He was my friend.”
“Come on out, Sophia, you and whoever is back there with you, and I promise we’ll listen,” Conti said.
Sophia looked at Tanner. “We don’t have a choice, do we?”
“Do you trust this guy?”
“I do, Vic Conti and my father were best friends. But who the hell really knows anybody?”
“We could fight, but our odds aren’t good.”
“I’ll go first,” Sophia said, then she tossed out her gun and stood with her hands in plain view.
The bearded man who had been with Adamo took aim at Sophia, but Conti slammed the butt of a gun into the side of his head, making him drop to the floor.
“Goddamn it! I gave my word she could come out. Anyone else tries to shoot her and I’ll kill them,” Conti said.
When nothing else happened, Tanner followed suit, but he was ready to reach for the gun he kept secured in an ankle holster.
A man Tanner took to be Vic Conti walked toward them holding a gun at his side. The man matched the voice. Conti was tall, well built, with just a bit of gray at his temples.
He scowled at Sophia. “This better be good, or I’ll kill the two of you myself, understood?”
Tanner understood and wondered if Romeo was about to have a very short life.
119
Intervention
“You’re salesmen, am I right or am I right?”
Merle and Earl sent Matthew Burns half-hearted smiles as they nodded in agreement.
“I knew it as soon as I saw you two get out of your car, and you can just skip my house altogether. There’s been a plague of your kind around here lately, everything from driveway sealer scammers to solar power hucksters, why I’ve had two of your type just this week. But tell me, what are you guys selling?”
Merle looked down at himself and then over at Earl. He had to admit, the new suits did make them look like salesmen. He looked back at Matthew Burns and smiled.
“We ah, we sell life insurance.”
“Whole life or term?”
“Huh?”
“What kind of policies do you sell?”
“Oh, um, all kinds, right Earl?”
“That’s right, yeah, we’re salesmen.”
“All I need is another beer, so unless you’re selling booze, I’m not interested.”
Merle attracted the bartender’s attention and pointed at Burn’s mug.
“Bring our friend another beer, and us too while you’re at it.”
Once he had his fresh beer in hand, Burns raised his mug in a toast.
“You guys are all right. Hey, do you like football?”
Merle and Earl brightened at the mention of their favorite sport.
“We’re Cowboys fans,” Earl said.
Burns grinned at them. “Me too, but I’m a fool for the college teams. I’m a Notre Dame fan and I just love the Fighting Irish.”
Merle shook his head. “We’re Razorbacks fans.”
“With those accents I’m not surprised. Are you boys from Arkansas?”
“We sure are,” Merle said, as he and Earl settled in for an afternoon of conversation with their new friend, Matthew Burns, having forgotten all about the fact that they’d been sent to kill him.
Sara walked along the streets of Midtown Manhattan while keeping one eye peeled for signs of trouble. She had penned an investigative piece on Frank Richards and MegaZenith that would let the man know she had him in her sights.
Although the blog post wasn’t inflammatory, it did provoke thoughts about the man’s integrity and asked embarrassing questions about some of MegaZenith’s dealings with other companies; in particular, it brought up the violent fate that had befallen many of the heads of its competitors. It was a list that seemed to stretch the bounds of mere coincidence.
While Sara wasn’t looking for a violent reaction to the piece, she was hoping for a reaction. One that would grant her access to the big man himself, but so far, Richards hadn’t taken the bait.
Sara arrived for her lunch date with Jake Garner and was surprised to see her sister seated beside him. Garner stood in greeting before offering her his own seat and then he sat across from Jennifer, who was seated on Sara’s right.
Jennifer leaned over and kissed her on the cheek in greeting and Sara saw the worry in her eyes.
“Don’t be so nervous, Jenny. I already know about you two.”
“What do you mean?”
“I happened to see you and Jake leaving a bar together yesterday, which should have you wondering why Jake would accept a lunch invitation from me today. What were you thinking Jake, that you could add another s
et of sisters to your scorecard?”
Garner gave her an odd look for a moment, but then he got it.
“Sara, Jennifer and I aren’t sleeping together, and I thought that this lunch would be just that, two friends eating a meal together.”
“Friends? Is that what we are, Jake?”
“I’d like to think so,” Garner said.
Jennifer reached over and took Sara’s hand. “Jake cares about you… even though you once tried to kill him.”
Sara freed her hand and swiveled her head back toward Garner. “You told her about that?”
“Yes. I thought she needed to know. I thought that someone in your family should know just how obsessed and wounded the loss of Brian Ames has left you.”
Sara spoke through gritted teeth to keep from screaming. “You had no right to drag my sister into this, or to breach my privacy this way.”
“You need help, Sara. I told you that when you visited me in the hospital and I still believe it’s true. Tanner dying didn’t cure your obsession. If I needed any proof, I found it in that blog post you wrote about Frank Richards. He’s your next target, isn’t he?”
“Of course he is. I believe he hired Tanner to kill Brian. Why wouldn’t I go after him?”
Jennifer touched her sister gently on the cheek. “Oh baby, Jake is right, you do need help. It’s not healthy to be so angry.”
“Angry?” Sara said and this time her voice rose high enough to cause the nearest patrons of the restaurant to turn and look at her, while one of them, an older woman with short white hair, left the bar and walked toward their table.
“I’m not angry, Jenny. I’m fucking pissed beyond words that Brian was ripped away from me and… and I miss him. I miss him every moment of every day.”
With these last words, a tear escaped, and Sara wiped it away, as the woman with the white hair sat across from her.
Jennifer gestured at the woman. “Sara, this is Dr. Whitaker. Dr. Whitaker specializes in helping people overcome depression.”
Sara stared at Dr. Whitaker and saw the woman smile kindly at her.
“Hello Sara, I’m Alice Whitaker. Your sister and your friend are very worried about you and I’m here to offer my help.”
Sara’s mouth dropped open and she blinked in surprise as the truth hit her. She looked first at her sister and then at Garner.
“What is this, an intervention?”
Garner took her hand and gazed at her with deep concern showing in his eyes.
“I arranged all this because I care about you.”
Sara freed her hand from his grip, grabbed her purse, and rushed from the restaurant as if it were on fire.
120
Hunger Knows No Fear
On Staten Island, Tanner sat beside Sophia in the second-floor office of a warehouse. The warehouse was where the various parts from stolen vehicles were housed, before being shipped overseas.
They weren’t cuffed, but Tanner had been stripped of his gun, along with the weapon in the ankle holster. There were six men in the office with them, while more were scattered throughout the warehouse.
Vic Conti had listened to their stories before hearing Adamo’s plea of innocence. Tanner could tell that there was little love lost between Vic and Adamo.
“They got no proof that I did shit,” Adamo said.
Conti looked at Sophia with a sad expression showing. “Saul’s right, Sophia.”
“What are you talking about? What about the crew he sent to kill me?”
“Tony Cello is the one who’s dead,” Adamo said. “And I don’t know anything about that.”
“Sammy Vega tried to rob Johnny R’s strip club last night, but he got killed for his trouble. Did you send him there?”
“The Giacconi Family are our brothers, Sophia. Why would I send Vega to rob them?”
“What about my father? I bet you know what happened there, don’t you?”
Adamo walked over and leaned down until his face was an inch from Sophia’s.
“You got nothing but maybes, girlie, and that’s not gonna save you and your friend here.”
“Back off, baldy,” Tanner said.
Adamo laughed at him. “Look at this guy. He looks like a clown. Is this the best you could do for a man, Sophia?”
“He was man enough to save my life and man enough to try to help me take you out.”
“How’d that work out for you, huh? Vic, enough talk, hmm? It’s time Sophia paid.”
“If it’s proof you want, I know where you can find it,” Tanner said.
“What are you talking about?” Conti said.
“There are two guys over in Jersey City that have been running their mouths off about how they helped Lars Gruber waste some guy for Adamo. They said they took him to an old box factory. Now that I know Sophia’s father is missing, I think maybe they were talking about him.”
Tanner had heard no such thing, but he had been there when Gruber killed Sophia’s father, Jackie Verona, and had later had Tim trace the license plate of the two punks that had delivered him for slaughter.
Tanner gave them the name and address and Conti sent three guys to check it out.
“The punk is just stalling,” Adamo said, but his face had gone pale. When he headed for the door, Conti called him back.
“No one goes anywhere, no one makes a call, not until this shit is settled.”
Adamo puffed out his chest. “This is how you treat your new Underboss, Vic?”
“Jackie is still the Underboss, Saul. That is, unless you know something I don’t.”
“I know that when a guy disappears it’s not good. And with Jackie gone, I’m next in line. Frank Richards said so.”
“Fuck Frank Richards,” Conti said, and took out his phone.
Adamo pointed at him. “I thought you said no calls?”
“Relax, I’m ordering pizza, we could be here for a while.”
“Let me call my restaurant and have them send some food over.”
“Pizza will do just fine. Sophia, you want sausage on yours?”
Sophia glared at Adamo. “I’ll take it plain, there’s enough pig in this room already.”
“I’ll take pepperoni,” Tanner said. “And how about some beer too?”
Conti smiled at him. “You’re not scared, are you?”
“No, I’m hungry.”
Conti laughed. “You’re a trip, Romeo. I see why Johnny sent you to help Sophia, and I really hope I won’t have to kill you.”
“That makes two of us,” Tanner said, and then he went back to thinking of ways to escape with Sophia.
Garner caught up to Sara when she was a block away from the restaurant and grabbed her arm to make her stop walking.
“Let go of me!”
“No, you’re going to listen to me even if you refuse to speak with the doctor.”
Garner guided her into the doorway of a shoe store and placed a hand beneath her chin.
“I care about you, Sara, and that’s the only reason I spoke to your sister about why you left the Bureau.”
“Is that really the only reason?”
“I don’t know what you mean.”
“Please, Jake, I’ve seen the way my sister looks at you and I know what you’re like. Have you bedded her?”
“The answer is no, and this has nothing to do with sex. Damn it, Sara. I’m worried about you. Frank Richards may be every bit as dangerous as Tanner was.”
Sara searched his face. “You know something, don’t you? Is the Bureau going after Richards?”
“Forget Richards and come back to the restaurant with me; Jennifer is worried about you.”
“I’m not talking to a shrink. And you can tell Jenny that too.”
“Please, think about getting help. It’s not normal to be as obsessed as you are.”
“What you call obsession I call justice, and I’ll see to it that everyone responsible for Brian’s death pays.”
Garner shook his head sadly and watched as Sara st
rode away.
121
Mary Ann, Of Course
Mario was leaning against the side of the limo and smoking a cigar when Joe Pullo tapped him on the shoulder.
Mario was so startled that the cigar fell from his grasp and hit the ground.
“Why so nervous, Mario?” Joe asked. “You got problems?”
“Ah, it’s nothing, boss; just a thing with my daughter, but it’ll be all right.”
“What’s wrong with Maria?”
“It’s nothing, just a problem at school.”
“Okay, but keep an eye out. The trouble we had at the club might not be the last of it.”
Mario nodded and opened the door for Pullo. He was a nervous wreck and had been ever since the FBI had interrogated him.
He had managed to bullshit and give them just enough to hold them, but they’d be back, and the next time they’d want much more. They might even ask him to wear a wire.
He’d heard about snitches in the past, some who had even been moved into the Witness Protection Program.
Mario always thought he’d rather squat and feed his balls into a meat grinder than rat on his friends. He also didn’t want to be shipped off to some Podunk town and pretend to be someone he wasn’t.
No, he didn’t want to be a snitch, but if he didn’t do it, his daughter would be the one to pay.
“Take me back to the club, Mario,” Pullo said.
“You got it, boss.”
“Just call me, Joe; I’ve known you since we were kids.”
“No, I’ll call you boss now; I did it for Johnny and I’ll do it for you.”
“Whatever,” Pullo said.
Mario studied him in the rearview mirror. He and Joe had always gotten along. Maybe he should come clean, tell Joe what happened and see if he and Johnny could think of a way to get him out of the mess he was in.
Mario opened his mouth and then shut it. What if they just killed him? It would be the simplest thing to do. Just kill him and let the FBI go find another snitch.
Mario wiped cold sweat from his brow.