UNPROTECTED: A Dark Bad Boy Baby Romance (Hanley Family Mafia)

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UNPROTECTED: A Dark Bad Boy Baby Romance (Hanley Family Mafia) Page 27

by Zoey Parker


  But the shots hit the back of his car, and after another few turns, things already don’t look good. We’re nearly losing him. These rich people residential roads are too empty, and Carlos’ Mercedes was built for speed, is flying along like he’s on a highway, while our bulky van, which was built for fun times in the ‘80s, totters along behind.

  When the lime speed demon turns onto a commercial road, and then the 401, however, I begin to have hope. The highway is bumper to bumper with cars. Carlos is only a few ahead.

  We are the spider advancing toward the fly: the highway is our web. It’s only a matter of time now.

  Jaws pulls over to the far right lane, goes onto the shoulder and starts zooming ahead.

  Horns are blaring, we’re zipping past car after car, nearing the green target.

  But the green target won’t give up without a fight.

  It swerves into the middle lane amidst shrieking brakes and blaring horns. But the new lane is just as bad as the old one, because the highway is the web, everything is on our side and our advance is relentless.

  We’re almost beside it now. I’m rolling down the window, getting out my gun to prepare.

  The green car swerves back to the right lane, then right again, onto the shoulder. Right in front of us.

  I lean out the window and shoot. The green car jerks, but keeps going.

  “Time for righty,” Jaws says delightedly as I lean out again.

  The sound of a gunshot and I duck just in time, a bullet whizzing by my cheek. I lean out, but now we’re careening onto an exit, following the green car around a huge bend.

  By the time we get to the main road, Carlos’ car has skidded over two lanes and is turning in front of a building complex.

  “No way…” Jaws whispers.

  He’s clearly thinking the same thing I am: Is the bastard actually dumb enough to lead us right to his lair – the Piccolo office we’ve been trying to find for months now?

  When Carlos pulls his Mercedes up to the front of a black-glassed building, which is one of the possibilities we’ve narrowed it down to, leaps out and runs in, we have our answer: Yes, yes he is.

  Jaws pulls up to the building right behind him, and we run in after Carlos.

  The lobby is a black-walled, black-floored box with neon green plants, a Morgan Freeman desk man, and, by the elevator, Carlos.

  Seeing us, he takes off to the corner of the room.

  We follow him.

  There’s shouting somewhere – hell, my own heartbeat is shouting: You’ve got him! Just a bit more now!

  I throw myself forward faster.

  We’re so close. We can’t let him get away now.

  Through the door are stairs. The slam of his footsteps above us echoes down, the explosion of shots fast behind. Ducking, we dash up the stairs after him.

  The ascent is a wheezing, gasping, race to the death. Carlos is fast, but gradually, his harried curses and stumbled steps grow louder.

  We’re gaining on him.

  As we reach the fifth or so floor, mid-run Jaws turns to me, his eyes glittering excitement, his hair spikes literally standing on end, “Can I, Boss?”

  I scan his face. He’s barely breaking a sweat, the gym rat bastard.

  If anyone’ll catch that Carlos piece of shit, it’ll be Jaws.

  I nod.

  “Be careful.”

  Jaws nods, his whole face lit up now, and sprints up the stairs ahead of me.

  A few second later, there’s the bang of shots, then an “Ouf!”

  “Jaws?” I call, but the only response is a scuffling sound.

  My legs spasming with fatigue, I throw them ahead more.

  “Jaws?” I call again, the question coming out a strangled cough, “Jaws, you good?”

  For a few terrifying seconds, there’s no response; only the diminishing sound of footsteps.

  Then there’s a gurgled cough, and, “Yeah.”

  Next thing I know I’m in front of a ragdoll version of Jaws. He’s slumped, the pool of his own blood from his twisted leg growing.

  He tries at a smile, then gives up, grimaces.

  “Bastard got me, but I got him too. You can finish him, Boss.”

  I’m hardly hearing him. All my attention is on his upper left thigh, where he’s balled up his jeans to try to staunch the blood.

  Jaws gives his head a painful-looking shake, then strains his head up so the scar on his neck is visible.

  “Don’t be an idiot, I’ve had much worse. Go now – you may not get another chance.”

  I don’t move.

  If his reminding me of the last time I nearly cost him his life is the way to get me to leave, then it’s not going to work.

  Jaws’ eyes are boring into mine.

  The footsteps above are getting quieter.

  Jaws shoves his hand in his pocket and gets out his phone. He jams some buttons, then presses it to his mouth and says, “Pip, my man. Yeah, why don’t you come on down? Yeah, maybe make it fast-like, got a bit of a situation.”

  A pause, and then three worms of irritation wiggle on Jaws’ forehead.

  “No I don’t know where we are, can’t you just track the call?”

  A sigh, then the worms disappear.

  “So, you’ll stop by? Yeah, maybe disable the elevators first. Yeah, yeah, the Boss is just going actually.”

  Jaws shoots me a significant look, and I do.

  I go. I go without looking at him. Because if I do, if I take in that beet red color his face’s taken on, then I won’t be able to leave at all.

  I leave my friend, so I can find my sister. So I can end this.

  I run up the stairs after the sound that’s now nearly inaudible, but I can still just make out. Footsteps, high, higher up.

  The only other sign that I’m headed the right way, that Carlos didn’t dash into one of these other floors, is the occasional dribble of blood.

  Jaws must have got him good.

  On every level, my legs protest more, and I push them on harder.

  Chunks of thoughts occur to me, all dismissed indiscriminately:

  How many flights is this now? 20? 30? 60? How many more can I take?

  Throwing myself up another flight is always the answer. However many it takes. I have to do this.

  Every new thought is a new ratchet of pain, my feet now throbbing remote sacks of meat.

  And yet, the one thing driving me forward, that sound, that pitter-patter of footsteps, is getting the slightest bit louder every flight.

  Until it vanishes altogether.

  I race up the next flight and immediately see why: I’m at the Penthouse. There’s nowhere else for Carlos to run now. I’m here.

  I throw open the door to a desk that looks very recently empty: the guestbook’s page is still half-turned, the swivel chair twisted to the side.

  I take out my Glock, scan the area once, then again. There’s a hallway with several doors, any of which he could be behind.

  Now, which door contains the fearful little shit that I’m going to put down like the dog that he is?

  My gun stops at the first door, which is as good a guess as any. After all, Carlos just got here, didn’t have hours to plan out where to hide.

  I kick open the door and a shower of bullets greets me.

  I lunge behind the desk.

  Guess door #1 it is.

  My breath is harried with exhilarated fear. I inhale, then exhale. Inhale, then exhale, then throw my arm out and shoot at the door.

  “Where’s my sister, Carlos Piccolo?” I yell.

  A series of bullets from several directions fly an inch over my head.

  I freeze.

  One gun can’t shoot from several directions.

  “Not here,” a male voice yells back.

  “If we let you go, then go!” another voice yells.

  I pause there, crouched behind the desk.

  Should I take the voices up on it? There’s clearly several of them, all of them armed.
>
  A new volley of bullets votes in favor of going.

  My knuckles are white on the gun.

  I swear.

  I’m so close. I’m so fucking close I can practically hear his strained wheezy little breath.

  My phone rings, more shots explode beside me, and I pick up the phone.

  “Not a good time,” I say.

  “It’s Jaws. Pip is almost here, but the boys won’t be for another 10. You good?”

  Some shots fly by my other cheek.

  “Yeah, I will be,” I say.

  A pause, then, “Uh, is that you coming down the stairs?”

  I curse.

  “No.”

  Jaws lets out a nervous whinny of a laugh, then says, “I’m sure it’ll be fine.”

  “I’m coming,” I say and hang up.

  Looks like the decision’s been made for me.

  I lift my hands, rise and run.

  “I’m going!”

  And then I do.

  I run back to the door like a smart coward, like a strategic fool. Like a good friend.

  Sometimes I hate doing the right thing.

  As I race back down the stairs I raced up mere minutes ago, I make a promise under my breath, “You’ll pay for this Carlos Piccolo. I don’t care if it’s the last thing I do; I’ll make you pay dearly for this.”

  Descending seems to take a third as long as ascending did. Maybe it’s knowing that there’s an end to these seemingly nonstop steps, maybe it’s that Jaws could very well be dying down there, but I race down with an energy I didn’t know I had left.

  By the time I get there, Pip is just arriving.

  His black eyes looked goggled in his round bowling-ball head.

  I speak between wheezes for air.

  “They’re up there” – huh-huh – “Too many” – huh-huh – “Another time” – huh-huh “Fuck ‘em.”

  I freeze, then scrutinize Jaws. There’s no way Pip came from above.

  “Hey, where’s…”

  Even through his clenched face of pain, Jaws manages a smile.

  “I lied. Knew you’d rather die than let them get away.”

  Fury surges through me. I step forward, ready to hit Jaws, kick him – anything. But he looks so pitiful, slumped half-dead there that I can only swear, and let Pip lift his poor broken form.

  As Pip and I run down the rest of the stairs, in Pip’s arms, Jaws provides an unwelcome accompaniment as he admonishes us to turn around:

  “Awww, fuck ‘em is right! We’ll be back! They’ll be sorry! Can’t wait ‘til I get my hands on that shithead Carlos, he’s gonna be sorry he was ever conceived.”

  At the last statement, he suddenly flops back motionless.

  When we finally reach the bottom of the stairs, we race into the lobby.

  Morgan Freeman is eyeing us like a bull ready to stampede, but just as he gets up from his desk, we get out of there.

  Miraculously, our van is right where we left it, parked at an incredible curve beside the curb.

  We throw ourselves into our 80’s throwback van, and I start driving.

  Jaws is still out cold. Pip is silent. My own disappointment is the loudest passenger in the car:

  Why couldn’t I have waited 10 minutes? Or better yet, not let my anger get the best of me, follow Carlos from a distance, have him lead us straight to his office, hit it when he least expected it?

  I’m planning a surprise attack on their house, why couldn’t I use the same caution for their office? I could’ve just missed out on my best chance to save Hannah.

  My hands on the steering wheel are so white and tense they look like they might snap off.

  And now? We’ve got nothing. The boys will get there too late.

  Pip’s low baritone breaks my reverie, “Pulse and his guys have arrived. You still want them to go in?”

  “Yeah,” I say, suddenly realizing where I should be.

  Back there, leading the charge, telling them where to go, what to watch out for.

  I literally just left them blind and clueless, walking into what could now be a trap.

  “Hey Boss?” Pip says, his voice hesitant.

  “Yeah?”

  “I told them you were on the penthouse, that the guys were armed.”

  I exhale in relief.

  “Thanks Pip. Don’t know what I’d do without you.”

  I stop just in time for the red light, the whole car screeching to a noisy, bad halt.

  I pull down the mirror and look into it. I look the same as ever, just a bit shaken.

  What’s gotten into me lately? I’m getting sloppy, making mistakes.

  I put the mirror back up.

  I know what’s gotten into me – or rather, who. It’s an absence and a presence. Two women I care entirely too much about.

  Ten or so minutes later, when we get to the hospital, I let Jaws and Pip go in while I sit in the car, call Pulse.

  Let’s see how the guys are doing. If they’re fast enough, maybe they can hit the Piccolo office before it’s too late and there’s nothing left to hit. Maybe they can find something that will help me find Hannah. Maybe this is it.

  “How’s it going?” I ask.

  “Gabey, brother,” Pulse’s nasally shrill comes back, “Right, we’re here. The big black office place. We got them on the fly. Running, burning shit. We didn’t kill anyone, but the place is trashed.”

  I curse.

  “So what, you want me to hold the place 'til you get back here, right?”

  The casualness of his tone gives me an idea.

  “Yeah, and Pulse?”

  “Yeah Boss?”

  “How… long exactly do you think you could hold it?”

  Not missing a beat, Pulse says, “Aw, s’long as you want it. The only resistance we got was this Morgan Freeman guy on the first floor, wagging his tongue at us. My guy bought him off with some muffins or some shit, right. But you make sure to come down in the next week, you got me? I got shit to do, can’t have my guys sitting ‘round here watching porn for a week. It’ll make ‘em fat, lazy.”

  A loud hee-haw laugh, then, “Right, really just fatter and lazier, who’m I kidding?”

  “Great man,” I say, “Thank you. I owe you… beans next time we hang. See ya.”

  I hang up the phone, check the time and pump my fist up in victory.

  It’s 10:45. I still have time. I’ll be late, but I still have time.

  For all of it.

  Now I can check on Jaws, see Tony, get laid, search the Piccolo office and live happily ever after.

  I lift the chain on my neck, look down at it.

  No. No, I won’t be happy until I’ve found my sister, but I have to keep myself sane in the meantime.

  Inside the hospital waiting room, the front desk nurse is a bitch.

  “Your friend… Jaws,” she says, pausing pointedly at the name, “Has just been taken in for surgery.”

  “I know that,” I say in my most patient voice, which, right now, isn’t all that patient at all.

  “But he’s going to be okay. He’s not going to lose his leg or die.”

  The blonde bitch lifts her glasses so they’re a further barrier between us.

  “I’m not at liberty to say.”

  And that’s it. My time is up: I’m supposed to sit down.

  I don’t move.

  She returns her attention to her computer, clicking away, as if she doesn’t notice that I’m still standing here, waiting for a real answer, ready to bash her head into her stupid white MacBook.

  “Boss,” Pip says, putting a hand on my shoulder.

  I shrug him off.

  “Boss,” he says again.

  “Pip,” I say, not turning, my voice now a furious boom, “This woman….” – I check her flower-stickered name tag – “Ms. Marple here, was just about to give me a real answer.”

 

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