This will be the third man Iâve whacked today, and Iâve run out of patience for their useless begging.
Typically, I leave this job to the enforcers in the Salvatore family, but ending a manâs life offers a release unlike any other vice. Cigarettes, whiskey, birdsânone of them have the same effect.
Itâs their damn talking that threatens the peace I find after making a heart stop.
âNo, no, wait! Let me explain!â the kid pleads, his nasally voice cracking from terror. Itâs past midnight. The biting air and thick fog have settled around us on the Aurora Bridge.
His desperation gets the best of him, and he attempts to land a blow on my left side. The kid is stupid to think Iâm not used to men attempting to take advantage of my disability. I slap his fist away easily, then pop him in the nose for daring to try.
Blood spurts from his nostrils, and while he groans and mutters insults beneath his breath, I loop ropes around his ankles and tie them into a tight knot. Sweat and grease mat his overgrown hair to his forehead, and motor oil stains his navy-blue coveralls, now joined by the blood pouring from his nose. By trade, heâs a mechanic, but his interests have always been in the Mafia. His mother had ties to a family in New York City, but she refused to raise him in the family business. Heâs a cugine. For the past few months, heâs strived to be made and has pledged his loyalty to the Salvatores.
A pledge he failed to keep.
Which is why Iâve tied cinder blocks to his feet. If anyone discovers his body, theyâll find a bullet through his mouthâa clear message of his crime.
âYouâre a rat, Worm. You were feeding information to the Baldellis,â I remind him dryly. Angelo nicknamed him for his pinched facial features and grating voice. Not sure what his real name is, but Iâm sure his obituary in the Seattle Times Sunday newspaper will confirm it, assuming heâs ever found.
The media will recognize the message and know his death resulted from organized crime. And the public will undoubtedly look at the Salvatores.
Angelo has owned Seattle for the last two decades and been declared the capo di tutti i capi. Heâs allowed other families to conduct business in Seattle with his permission and, of course, with the understanding that heâll receive a cut of their profits.
However, five years ago, Don Manny Baldelli found an issue with that. He claimed his great-grandfather migrated from Sicily to Seattle first, making him the rightful owner of the city. After which, word got out that Manny was withholding Angeloâs tribute and dealing guns under the table. Since then, war has broken out, and men are getting burned left and right. Families are choosing sides, and to this day, several bodyguards surround Angelo at any given hour.
Itâs a dangerous time, and none of us walk the streets without checking over our shoulders.
âYouâre givinâ me a bum rap!â Worm insists vehemently. âI ainât no rat, Ronnie; you know me! The Baldellis forced me in that car, but I didnât tell them nothinâ. Please, you have to believe me!â
One of our crew, Lloyd, spotted him getting into a Baldelli car two nights ago, and it just so happens Worm showed up in an expensive suit yesterday with a brand-new Rolex on his wrist. The timing wasnât a coincidence, and the kid made it obvious that the rival family had paid him off.
âDonât call me Ronnie,â I clip.
Itâs the only response I bother to give him. There isnât any point in arguing with the kidâheâs already marked. If Iâm not the one to ice him, one of Angeloâs enforcers will.
Worm opens his mouth again, preparing to plead his case some more, but I take the opportunity to shove my revolver in his mouth and pull the trigger. A car passes, but rather than slowing, they hit the gas.
I make quick work of removing the Rolex from his wrist and stuffing the piece in my pocket. Later, Iâll return it to the Baldellis to let them know their investment has been wasted.
Next, I slump Worm over the railing and lift the cement blocks, tossing them over. His body careens over the edge and into the canal, the following splash echoing in the night air.
Finally. Some goddamn peace and quiet.
I roll my neck, relieving the tension gathered in my shoulders. Not only is their begging useless but quite bothersome, too.
Heading back toward my car parked on the other side of the bridge, I whistle the tune to âJust One More Chanceâ by Bing Crosby.
âThe numbskull got sauced and lost three hundred dollars to Tommy, but did that stop him from playing another round? Of course not! Now, he owes Tommy five hundred.â
Itâs late in the morning, and Iâm on my way to report back to Angelo about completing Wormâs contract last night, when Santinoâs words catch my attention, his voice ringing out from the family room in Angeloâs estate. Quickly, I detour in his direction, tucking the rucksack with Wormâs bloody Rolex inside in the inner-breast pocket of my trench coat. I take it upon myself to stay informed when it concerns the family. Tommy and Santino are Angeloâs cousins, so if someone owes Tommy money, that means they owe Angelo money.
I round the corner and lean against the doorframe, catching Santinoâs attention. Heâs sitting on the sofa next to his mother, Kay, who is scoffing at the sap whoâs now indebted to the Salvatores. And for quite a bit of money, at that.
âWhoâs this guy youâre talkinâ about?â I ask, folding my arms over my chest.
Santinoâs only seventeen, and while heâs invested in the family business, heâs also a blabbermouth. Today, itâs a good thing. But one day, it might get him iced.
If he even comes home from the war after heâs drafted in a few months, that is.
âNameâs John Parsons. He and his detective friend, Frank Williams, been cominâ to the lounge for the past few months. He had the funds at first, but the dip keeps tryinâ to get his money back and canât pay no more. Tommy challenged them to a game of poker last night, and John couldnât seem to help himself.â
I raise a brow, surprised Angeloâs cousin was gambling with Frank.
Heâs one of the leading homicide detectives in Seattle and is typically the one working on the cases that have resulted from the war between the Mafia families.
Heâs also firmly in Angeloâs pocket and is very well-acquainted with the two of us, unbeknownst to John.
âTommy gambled with the fuzz?â
Santino grins. âNo oneâs ever called him a genius, Ronnie.â
Iâm tempted to bark at him for calling me Ronnie, but learning about this Parsons fella is more important than arguing with a kid about my damn name. Iâve smacked every male member of this family upside the head for calling me that, and every single one suffers from short-term memory loss.
Iâve always hated it. Reminds me of my father, who bore the same name, and even still, it hurts to think about him.
Angeloâs father called me by it as a young boy, and it lived on through his son. The rest of the family follows his lead, despite my misgivings.
âJohn Parsons,â I state, bringing his attention back to the matter at hand. âWho is he?â
Santino shrugs. âDonât know. All I know is he didnât pay Tommy a dime. Promised heâd come up with the money later, but I think we all know how that goes.â
âYou know anything else about him?â I question.
âJust that he owns Parsons Manor down by the Sound. He kept goinâ on about it while he was draining a bottle of whiskey,â Santino responds, annoyance in his tone. âFella wouldnât shut up.â
I push off the doorframe and head back toward the front door of Angeloâs estate. Iâll report to Angelo later.
âHey, Ronnie, if youâre gonna whack him, let me come, yeah?â he calls after me.
âSantino,â Kay admonishes.
I donât bother responding. If I wanted one of Angeloâs crew to handle anyone for me, I sure as hell wouldnât enlist a kid to do it.
Soon enough, heâll get plenty of experience pulling a trigger, and heâs better off pointing that gun toward a Nazi than someone like John Parsons.
Santinoâs got bigger things to focus on than the organization. Heâs got a war to worry about.
Parsons Manor is unlike anything Iâve ever seen before. If it were in downtown Seattle, itâd stick out like a sore thumb.
With the black siding and gargoyles poised on top of the roof, it looks like it came straight out of the Dracula film. Houses like these just donât exist in this city, yet here I stand.
Tucking my hands in my trench coat pockets, I stroll through the front yard. An array of colorful flowers bloom in front of the black-painted porch, making the house look like a gloomy storm cloud among a bright rainbow.
Itâs an interesting house, and it only strengthens my curiosity about who John Parsons is and why the hell heâs residing in a home like this.
My question is answered a moment later when movement in the large bay window catches my eye. A tall, curvy woman sits down in a chair directly in front of the glass. Instantly, Iâm riveted by the sight of her. Red stains her full lips, and her black tresses are curled to perfection. She wears a canary-yellow dress, the sleeves drooping down the sides of her arms, the fabric clinging to her curved waist.
My heart stills, like God himself froze time as I watch her peer down at something in her lap. One side of her mouth curls upward the slightest bit. By the way she angles her head and moves her arm, she appears to be writing.
Iâm entirely smitten by her, and though thereâs no way for me to know, Iâm confident she is the mastermind behind Parsons Manor.
Hypnotized, I drift toward her, my mind vacuumed into a trance that it canât seem to find its way out of.
Iâm not only riveted by her.
Iâm possessed by a need to have her.
And she must be mine.
As if she heard my internal proclamation, her head lifts, and her gaze locks onto me. It feels like a bolt of lightning strikes through me where I stand. Her mouth parts, shock rounding her eyes at the corners, and though it appears like fear is sinking its claws into her, sheâs no less vexing.
I came here to learn who John Parsons is, and the only thing I know is that he comes home to the most beautiful woman alive.
And he doesnât deserve it one damn bit.
Her hand drifts over her heart, a chunky gold pen woven through her fingers.
What is she writing? And will she write about me?
Iâd love nothing more than to be consumed by her words, no matter how they greet me. Whether itâs through those red-stained lips or from her delicate hands. I want to know every facet of her, every centimeter of herâmind, body, and soul.
Chest tight, my movement mirrors hers, and my hand drifts over my heart where it clenches almost painfully. It takes monumental effort to draw my gaze away from hers. To take a step away, then turn and slowly retreat down her extensive gravel driveway. The trek to my car parked on the street takes several long minutes, yet I donât remember a single second of it.
She plagues my mind, infecting it like a parasite and overriding any autonomy over myself. My free will is indebted to her, and without her, I am nothing.
I shut the door to my Cadillac and can only sit there and mourn the life of John Parsonsâs wife.
She will never be the same, as I am not.
Her husband has unintentionally dragged her into a world where she doesnât belong. Yet it is I who will never let her leave.