Spiro frowned at the name. “Save it. Mr. Russo will be here in a minute.” He slipped off his camouflage coat and laid it on the workbench.

“Silenzio!” Valentino commanded.

The door opened and Johnny Russo entered, water dripping from his trench coat. He merely glanced down at the deputies as he crossed to the table. He lifted Hank's cell phone, pressed a button, read the number from the display, and turned it off. He looked at the weapons, using the flat of his index fingernail, he flipped open one of the badge cases.

Russo said, “What you fellows up to, besides trespassing?”

“We were checking out the place next door,” Hank said.

“The last number you called-who was it to?”

“I ordered pizza,” Hank said. “They should be delivering it shortly and we can all share it.”

“Next smart-ass shit to come out your face is gonna cost you some teeth, old man.”

“What's this old man crap. I'm only fifty-seven.”

Russo's eyes flashed his impatience and he snapped his fingers loudly in warning.

“Local deputy,” Hank said. “For directions.”

“How'd you know about this place?”

“An assistant attorney general just said that some judge was overheard talking about this place and how Manelli hunts ducks here. We're scouting because the attorney general is thinking about planting some listening gear in those blinds in time for duck season. He was thinking that Manelli-”

“Mr. Manelli to you,” Russo snarled, his face reddening.

“That Mr. Manelli might talk business while he was in a duck blind.”

“The FBI didn't send you?”

“Why would the FBI tell us anything? We're glorified errand boys doing whatever the judges can dream up or nobody else wants to do; like come out in shit like this and be bullied by people like you. Look, Mr. Rosco, we didn't know anybody was back here today.”

“Mr. Manelli is retired from anything any prosecutor would be interested in,” Russo replied, oblivious to the slight.

“I must have missed the announcement in the Mafia Gazette. I don't give a bird fart about Mr. Manelli, you, or your gun boys.”

Russo turned to Winter. “The old guy telling the truth, fellow?”

Winter nodded. He didn't believe Russo would do anything to them given the fact that he didn't know who else was around. The duck blind story seemed reasonable enough.

“Let us go and we'll get off Mr. Manelli's land,” Hank told Russo.

Russo laughed expansively. “I just bet you would.”

“Let me talk to him,” Hank said.

“Tell you what I will do. I'll tell you a story. Once upon a time,” Russo started, obviously enjoying himself, “there were two dumb-ass deputies who, just after they called their local deputy pal, drove right off into the canal. The older man was driving-bad eyes, no headlights, and the rain and all-and he panicked when the water rose so they both drowned in their car, screaming like women.”

Hank said, “We swim real good.”

“If you can swim out of this, you're way past good.”

“Listen, you can't be so stupid you think you can just kill federal officers,” Hank said. “You, Mr. Manelli, and these other freaks will be on death row before you can kiss a cat's ass.”

“It's been a rotten week for you marshals,” he said smiling maliciously. “I doubt two more dead feds will make much difference.”

“Mr. Manelli is not going to like it when he takes a fall for your knee-jerk decision,” Hank said.

Russo replied, “I doubt he'll give it any thought. Nobody is ever going to know I was here today.”

Winter turned his head to watch Russo cross to the winch and grab the dangling command bar. When he pressed the up button, the spool turned and a large moss-encrusted steel cage emerged from the water. Dark brown crabs fell through the grid and rained back into the water, leaving behind an enormous bone with quills of shredded tissue standing from it.

We are not going to die here. We will find Sean alive, and this sadistic bastard and Manelli will pay for everything they have done, Winter told himself.

Russo unlatched and threw open the top of the cage, wiping his hands together to dry them. “Give them ten minutes each, Spiro. Then get these young men to help you put them in their car and drive it into the canal on the other side of the fence. Then you come back to the lodge.”

“Sure,” Spiro said. “It'll take a while to lug them back to their car.”

Russo stared at the cage, thinking.

“After you drown them, go get their fucking car and bring it to the canal. Then put them in and submarine it.” Russo inclined his head toward the two guards. “On second thought, just drown the fuckers and throw 'em off into the canal. I mean, who gives a shit.”

“Sure, okay,” Spiro said, nodding slowly. “I get it.”

“Do it, then!” Russo snapped. “Then come back to the lodge.”

Russo started for the door. “Gotta run.” Waving his hands and snapping his fingers, he said something to Yul in Italian. The guards listened intently, waited for him to finish and nodded. “Si,” Yul told him.

“Addio,” Russo said, saluting the young guard like a soldier.

After he left, Yul turned to Valentino and said “La testa della scimmia.” Valentino snickered.

Winter watched over his shoulder as Spiro leaned his high-powered rifle against the wall near the winch.

Hank winked at Winter before he shifted so he was facing Spiro.

Spiro stared at Hank, then raised his hands high over his head, made fists, and brought his arms, like bird's wings, down slowly until his fists were knuckle to knuckle. His red T-shirt looked like it was painted on his torso. As he repeated the motion with his arms, his muscles seemed to inflate and the tendons in his neck stood out like steel wires. His face trembled and his eyes looked as though they might fly from their sockets. The guards exchanged looks, fighting back laughter.

Valentino told Yul something else in Italian and they both snickered.

“Let's get this over with,” Spiro said, crossing to Winter.

“You don't speak Italian? Kind of like Spanish, especially the insults,” Hank told Spiro as the giant moved to where Winter sat with his shoulders hunched.

“Come on, boy. Time to swim.” Spiro knocked Winter's cap off and grabbed him by the shoulders.

“That bald boy called you a queer.”

“I don't give a happy shit what that gibberish means.” But the giant's tight lips showed he did very much care.

“Don't have to get your panties in a twist. They say steroids shrink up your dick to where it looks like a newborn's.”

Winter kept his head down, fighting the urge to look directly into Spiro's eyes.

“Technically speaking, it isn't an insult if it's true,” Hank told Spiro. “Oh, they don't have to speak English to know you'd suck a dick. That squaw-looking hair. I bet you got sphincter muscles that'd pinch the head off a catfish.”

“Watch out, old man!” Spiro warned.

“A hundred dollars says when you smell Old Spice you get a hard-on.”

“Shut up, he's going to kill us!” Winter exploded. “This is all your fault.”

“He's a faggot and it's my fault?”

Spiro released Winter's shoulders and turned to Hank. Winter lowered his head and started rocking in place. The handcuff key in his shirt pocket might have been in the marsh for all the good it would do him.

Spiro wagged his finger at Hank. “You're trying to get me to lose my shit and break you up so people could know it wasn't no car accident. You're wasting your time. I ain't stupid.”

“Even that moron Rosco knows you're stupid. I just wanted one last blow job and I know you'll give it to me.”

“It's Russo, you…” Spiro dropped down on one knee and punched Hank hard in his stomach.

Вы читаете Inside Out
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату