Read Choked Up Online

Authors: Janey Mack

Choked Up (19 page)

“But letters are from you.”
“Julie signs my name better than I do.” Coles laughed. “Tonight. Can't wait.”
Stannis stood up, hit speaker on his phone, and dictated two letters to Julie with assistance from Leticia. One for supervisory excellence for her file and an open-ended extended-leave letter for mine. They would be delivered to the TEB within the hour.
It's official.
The pooch was 100 percent screwed every which way to Sunday.
“Your keys?” Stannis asked. I gave him the Hellcat's black key fob. He tossed it to Gorilla. “Bring car to penthouse. No damage,” he warned.
Gorilla shot Leticia a lusty ogle that she wasn't too offended to preen under. “May I call you?” he asked.
“You can try.”
Gorilla left. I got up and stood next to Stannis.
Leticia's lip raised. “McGrane still needs to come in once a week.”
Stannis weighed that over. “As favor?”
“Only if you wanna keep it all good to the gracious.”
Stannis held out his hand. “I do.” She shook it.
As we left the office, I paused at the door. “Hey, Chen called me
Sanlu
this morning.”
Leticia snort-coughed.
“What is it?”
“Tainted milk.” She slapped the table and chortled. “Damn, that's a good one.”
Stannis frowned. “Who is this Chen?”
I laid a hand on his chest. “No one. It's a joke.”
He pulled me in for a hug. “Come,” Stannis said against my hair. “We go buy you pretty dress.”
Chapter 25
Shopping with Stannis was more fun than I ever thought possible. We hit the Magnificent Mile on Michigan Avenue. He dropped a positively indecent sum on me at Gucci and Max Mara before having his driver take us to Blake.
His aesthetic was second only to his charisma.
But as I came out in the stellar dress he insisted I try on, his face was pinched, attention drifting. Something was bothering him and it wasn't the money.
With five older brothers, I recognized the symptoms immediately. Too much time had passed since the croissant carb overload.
A man with low blood sugar is as useless as dehydrated water.
I dialed Mom's office in the dressing room. It took less than a minute for her assistant, Anna Suchowian, to get us in at Anthony Martin's Tru for lunch. The Scottish salmon with winter radish and chive sauce was beyond exquisite. I could tell by the glow of Stannis's electric blue eyes he was pleased by my choice.
“This morning, I make you unhappy,” he said. “But now you work for me.”
“Yes.” I laid my knife and fork across my plate. “About that. You need to let me keep my job, Stannis. Half of my family are cops. The other half are attorneys.”
“Is no trouble. I am clean. In America. In Europe.”
“Well, it's trouble for me. They don't like Eddie V. And they really don't like Coles.”
“Maisie. Do not have concern.” Stannis sat back in his chair and rested his elbow off the back. “The McGranes. They will like me.”
Jaysus, Mary, and Joseph. They'll take to you like a Clinton to a congressional hearing.
I turned the conversation to old movies, and we took our time savoring dark Valrhona chocolates for dessert. When we finished, the hostess approached our table and asked if we cared to have our picture taken.
“Yes.” Stannis slid over in the booth and put his arm around me. We smiled on cue.
“May I have your names?” she asked. “We print one for you here and post to Facebook.”
“Stannislav Renko and Maisie McGrane,” he answered.
Super. My brothers were gonna be on this faster than a pod of orcas on a bloody seal.
Well, I'll cross that rotting indigenous rain forest rope bridge when I come to it.
“Miss?” Stannis said. “You take one more, please?”
“Certainly.” The hostess beamed, camera at the ready.
Stannis caught me by the chin and put his mouth to mine. The digital whir of the photo hummed. “This one,” he said with a wink, “is better, I think.”
Aww. Shoot.
 
Riding up in the elevator to Stannis's penthouse, I slipped my arm through his. “You look tired, Stannis.”
“Yes.” He waited for me to enter the foyer. We crossed into the great room. “I am weary.” He blew out a heavy breath and moved his palms a few inches apart. “What is the short sleep?”
“Nap?”
“Yes. Come. Nap with me.”
The physicality between us was as easy as it was between me and my brothers.
I followed him into his bedroom, a jaw-dropping masculine room of ebony wood and charcoal accented in army green. The bed, a king, was covered in a dark linen duvet cover and mounded with pillows. Stannis pointed at the left side. “Always, I sleep near to door.”
I slipped off my new heels and climbed onto the right side of the bed. I reclined against the pillows. Stannis bounced down on the bed next to me. He threw an arm high over my rib cage and laid his dark head on my lower abdomen. “You see inside me like I am man of glass.” He let out a heavy breath. “My heart is hot with anger.”
Angry?
Within the last eight hours, he'd scared the iridescent panties off Leticia, got me unlimited unpaid leave, dropped ten grand on clothes, and had a stellar meal. The very last emotion I'd have considered was anger. I reached down and very gently put my hand on his head. He nestled into me and I stroked his hair. He gave a quiet groan of pleasure.
I traced my fingers over his skull and the nape of his neck, feeling his muscles slacken. “Why are you angry?”
“Your nails too short. I fix tomorrow.” He sighed. “
Chyornyj yastreb
ended what was not meant to be stopped.”
“Cheeronee yah-streb?” I said. “What's that?”
Stannis chuckled. “
Chyornyj yastreb
is Black Hawk. Russian. Goran Slajic chooses him for operation. But now
Chyornyj yastreb
is friend. Good friend.”
I traced a line around his ear.
A new player. Did the BOC know?
“What did he stop?”
“Me.” He put his hand over mine, pressing it to his cheek. “But now I have you,
mali anđeo.
My angel. So, perhaps the devil does not deserve my anger at Black Hawk.”
“Perhaps not,” I said, smiling. He let go of my hand and I smoothed the lines on his forehead, waiting.
“I was born with the veil, yes?”
Born with the amniotic membrane intact. “Sure.”
“A sign of bad magic in my village.” He gave a bark of bitter laughter. “Perhaps true. Sandžaklije filth murder our parents. My sister and me, we are alone. Is difficult.
“A year later, the Sandžaklije return for my sister.” His voice grew hard. “The men on the farm . . . They could have saved her. Kill the Muslim filth. Yet, they are cowards. They do nothing.”
“Oh, Stannis. I'm so sorry.”
“She fight very hard.” He shook his head against my stomach. “Her blood is on all things.”
A bubble of a sob rose in my throat.
“Head severed. The Sandžaklije leave bayonet between her legs.”
Sweet Jesus. The evil of this world ...
“Later . . . I take bayonet.” Stannis stilled for a long moment. “Barefoot, wearing blanket, I go to farm. But I am boy. I know these men. Is no good. They will kill me before I can kill more than one. They are laughing and drinking, searching for courage to sleep as they had none to fight the Sandžaklije for my sister.”
Tears tracked down my cheeks and dripped onto my collarbone.
“Superstitious peasants.” He gave a harsh bark of laughter. “I see the great bull sleeping in field. And I know what I must do. I throw blanket over the beast's head. Cut its throat. I open its belly, take innards out, and climb inside. The men find me with the sunrise. I am reborn from the bull. Baptized in the devil's blood. And my sister is with me.”
He sounded so victorious it broke my heart.
“The men fear me and call me
Bik
. The Bull. They did not yet know I will come for them one by one. Next I kill the Sandžak-lije. I take very special time with each.”
And who could blame you?
Hank's Law Number Eighteen: Even savage actions have explanations.
He leaned back, looked up at me, and frowned. “Do not cry,
mali anđeo
.”
“But—”
“No.” He reached up and brushed my wet cheek with his knuckles. “Each life has a path. Uncle Goran hears I am Bik. He brings me to his world, makes me important man.”
“Is that what they call you?
Bik?
The Bull?”
“No.” He yawned and nestled his arm under my body, hugging me to him. “Not since I was boy. As man, I am called
mesar
. The Butcher. Is not elegant but is truth.”
I lay with his head on my lap for a solid ten minutes. Trying without success not to let the horror of his life sink as far into my heart as it had into my brain. Eventually, Stannis rolled off me and onto his stomach. His back rose and fell. Steady, even.
If I didn't go now, I knew I'd never find the courage.
I felt slimy and traitorous just thinking about it.
I slid off the bed and tucked a chenille throw around him. He didn't move.
Time to strike.
I got the document scanner pen out of my purse and stuck it down my bra. On tiptoe, I made my way to his office. At the doorway, I clicked the watch button three times and waited. The display lit up. Basic Wi-Fi signal, no devices transmitting from inside.
Don't look at the aquarium. Jaysus Criminey, don't look, don't look . . .
I went straight to the desk, pulling the scanner from my bra. A thin pile of papers lay atop it. Invoices from the CEC Intermodal Transport Company. Commercial descriptions of goods, quantities and estimated worth. Weight and lading bills. Shipment and container numbers.
Holy cat. Talk about taking candy from the devil's reborn baby . . .
My fingers were frozen, numb as I tried to activate the document scanner. Adrenaline overload messing with my fine motor functions.
Come on, Maisie. Put your Donnie Brasco pants on and do this.
I slid the top paper off, copied it, and hit the next one. My ears pulsed with Stannis's voice, “
The Butcher. The Butcher. The Butcher.
” I scanned the next and the next.
Halfway through the pile I got the yips.
Bad.
Hank's Law Number Twenty-Four: Never ever ignore your gut.
I replaced the papers exactly as they were and slipped the document pen back down my dress.
“Maisie?
Mali anđeo?
” Stannis called from the hallway.
Cripes.
I stepped away from the desk and popped into the armchair nearest the aquarium, tucking my feet up beneath me.
“Maisie?” Stannis padded into the room on bare feet. He flipped on the dim recessed lighting over the fireplace, a confused smile on his face. “Why are you here?”
“I wanted to . . . see.” I dropped my face in my hands. “But then, I just couldn't.”
Stannis walked over and dropped to one knee. He peeled one hand from my face and clasped it in his. “Is good. Curiosity feeds cat, yes?” He pressed his lips to my knuckles. “Mmm. Cold fingers.” He smiled and tugged me to my feet. “Do not fear.”
We walked to the granite plinth holding the darkened glass cage. He leaned forward and hesitated. “Is different inside now. Yes?”
The beetles have cleaned Raw Chicken's finger up shiny and new?
I raised my shoulders in accord.
“Black Hawk stopped me but not at first. You know this. Yes?”
I nodded, having no idea what he was talking about and not really wanting to know.
Stannis flipped the light.
My free hand flew to my mouth.
In the case were six fingers, five far fresher than the driver's. But it was the fingerless man's hand, severed at the wrist, that had me biting the insides of my cheeks to keep from screaming.
Chapter 26
Stannis and I spent the early evening playing backgammon and watching
The Quiet Man
. “The Butcher” liked John Wayne and cuddling, which was especially disconcerting, as I couldn't stop thinking about the hand in the aquarium.
“I go out tonight,” he said.
“Yes.” To Atlantis for another strip club rendezvous with Coles. “I should go home.”
“I call driver?” His eyes searched mine.
I gave him a big smile I didn't feel in the slightest. “Yeah. It's copacetic.”
The driver, Raw Chicken, was no less repellent. But at least his skeevie glare had been replaced with a perma-frown.
When we arrived home, the Dodge Hellcat was parked on the street in front of my house.
The sickest, coolest muscle car ever.
Hank.
Six-feet-three-inches of steel and sex appeal ready to marry me, and yet, I spend the day with a guy into carrion beetles and severed fingers.
Because I'm a selfish idiot.
I wanted it all, everything, wrapped up in brown paper and tied with string. For Hank to love me as fiercely and desperately as I loved him. And a place at the Table Club.
Raw Chicken pulled up next to the Dodge, hit the hazards, got out, and opened the door for me. I stepped out and he held out his gloved hand, the key on his palm. I took it, pretending I didn't notice the little finger of his glove was empty, and walked slowly up the drive to the gate.
Thankfully, he saw no need to wait. The Range Rover receded into the night, and I turned around and trotted back down the driveway, got in the car, and sped to Silverthorn Estates.
I pulled into a visitor's spot, collected my gear, and went in to see who was around to debrief me. Anita met me at the elevators. “Looking sharp, Rook. What gives?”
“Thanks.” I was still wearing the exquisite black Gucci dress and heels Stannis had bought me that morning. “Walt, Danny, or Edward around?”
“Sawyer's out.” Anita jerked her head down the hall. “Kaplan and Dunne are in the dining room.”
I found them in the empty room in the corner, whiskies at the elbow, papers and laptops covering the table. “Me-oh-my, look at this fine bit o' stuff.” Edward stood up, hands out. “Hullo, Maisie, me gel.” I put my hands in his and he kissed me on each cheek. “To what do we owe this unexpected pleasure?”
“Debrief?”
“Take a seat, McGrane,” Kaplan said.
I took a seat in the club chair between them and took the document scanner pen from my purse and handed it to her. She plugged it into her laptop and pushed it slightly away from her so both Edward and I could see the screen.
“Where did you get these?” Kaplan scrolled through the invoices and bills of lading.
“From the desk in his office.”
Ever the skeptic, Kaplan gave me a bitter smile. “Renko just let you in?”
“He fell asleep. I took the chance.”
“And won the lottery.” Edward whistled, reading the screen over the tops of his glasses. “The lad's brazen, I'll give him that. Christmas came early, Danny. A paper trail.” He grinned and held out his hand. “Give it over.”
Kaplan removed the scanner and handed it to Edward, who plugged it in and downloaded the contents.
“Ready for a lesson in shipping?”
“You bet,” I said.
“Trains move billions of tons of freight annually. Every possible thing you can think of is shipped by rail.” He waggled his brows and pulled up an invoice from ShipCEC. “This is a service schedule, representing the CEC portion of the trip.”
He pointed to the screen. “CEC is an intermodal transport company. Intermodal freight containers are the lifeblood of business. They're the same cars on trains, which are then pulled by semitrucks. You want to sell car parts, you need to ship them across the country. Using only semitrucks, the cost would be so exorbitant, you'd be out of business before your parts arrived at their destination. Instead, you load your container at the warehouse and have a semi transport it the short distance to CEC.”
I nodded, listening hard.
Edward continued, “At CEC, a crane picks up the container or your semi's entire trailer—wheels and all—and loads it onto a railroad car. A few days later, it arrives at the destination, where another crane takes the freight container off the train and puts it on your other semi, which transports it the short distance to the freight's final destination.” He clasped his hands across his stomach.
Kaplan nodded. “The system works just as well for criminals transporting stolen goods. With so many cars, only the smallest fraction are ever inspected. And of that fraction, even fewer have a reason to be checked.” She brought up a bill of lading on her computer. “Renko is using standard transmodal shipping containers.”
“Those are twenty feet long, eight and a half feet wide and high,” Edward said. “The space per load is twelve hundred cubic feet and could weigh fifty-five thousand pounds. So, lass, how are you as a single inspector going to check the freight of even a single car in one day?”
“It's impossible,” I said. “The containers have only one opening, so you'd have to unpack the entire thing. For one person to unload even a fifth of the car—”
Edward tapped the side of his nose. “Exactly. So a smart chancer would . . .”
“Pack a false front.” I drummed my fingers on the table. “Load the first two or three feet with what you said you were shipping and then fill the rest with whatever you wanted.”
“Precisely.” Danny nodded. “If the load was inspected, the odds of even the most dedicated inspector going deeper than three feet would be nonexistent.”
“The railroads have crack teams of bomb and drug dogs, as well as thermal detectors.” Edward raised his glass and took a sip. “But for stolen goods? Without a tip-off from law enforcement, it's a drop of water in the whiskey.”
“But what about CEC or the other intermodal companies?” I asked.
“Any monkey with a computer can open an account. All they have to do is pay the transport and arrange for container dropoff and pickup.” Kaplan clicked onto a separate ShipCEC invoice. “Renko's upcoming shipment.”
Edward opened the same document and turned his laptop to me. “Five cars, carrying ten twenty-foot containers.”
I pointed at a code to the left. “What is q300?”
“A sly dog, our Renko.” Edward chuckled. “That's the freight code for slow ship. Kind of like the bulk rate at the post office. Low insurance rates. Even lower inspection rate.”
“And that number there?” I asked.
“STCC: 8066602,” Edward read aloud. “That's code for
Company Material-Misc. Car Parts
. It means scrap metal.”
“The simplicity of it is pure cunning,” Kaplan said. “Why, even if he didn't preload it with scrap, all the inspector will see are chopped car parts.”
“Cocksure, as well, this one. Do you see”—Edward tapped at a coding on the bottom of the bill—“he's insured his five cars are locked. Traveling together in a ‘five packer.' Taking no chance that one load of his freight ends up somewhere else.”
“Makes sense,” I said. “Pay a little extra for the assurance you'll be treated better.”
“And that'll be his fall from grace, me gels.” Edward rubbed his hands together. “I've the perfect plan.”
“Not so fast,” Kaplan said. “There is a very real possibility The Bull is setting her up.”
Hardly. He'd seen me half-naked, took me shopping, showed me his legacy, messed up my meter maid cover, and is a massive cuddler.
Instead I said, “The nickname ‘The Bull' is from his childhood. They call him
mesar
now.”
“Oh?” Danny said. “
Mesar?

It took a lot to keep the smirk from my mouth. “The Butcher.”
“Lamb of the Lord Jesus. I don't care for that. Not a wee bit.” Edward slipped his hands in his cardigan pockets. “Sawyer needs to know.”
Kaplan gave him an impatient wave. “If this is legitimate, and that's a very big ‘if,' this is the best intel we've had to date.” Her bony fingers flew across the laptop's keys. “From a cursory glance, Renko's running a shell game with the company ownership, but it's been properly recorded.”
“Exposing his operation? For a test?” Edward snorted and shook his head. “May the cat eat you, and the devil eat the cat. The ten trailers he's shipping to Newark are chopped parts.” He collected his papers and laptop. “Well, I'm off to track down Walt. According to this, Renko's containers begin their journey tomorrow.”
Edward gave a pleasant good night and left the dining room. Kaplan and I were alone.
“What happened to the boy from the hospital?” I asked. “The kid with no fingers on his left hand who was an eyewitness to two murders?”
“WITSEC.” Danny rolled her eyes. “Again, not your concern.”
“Why? We could have arrested two murderers.”
“Frankly, McGrane, I find your naïveté tiresome.” She closed her laptop. “Aside from the fact that they're killing thieves and other killers, we can close those murder cases whenever we wish. Special Unit's priority is and will always be Operation Steal-Tow. We cannot afford to jeopardize our objectives.”
I'd had my fill of runaround. “Which are?”
“To cripple Goran Slajic's chop-shop operation, to remove as many of Don Constantino's men as possible, and lastly and perhaps most importantly, to stop Renko from starting a small arms trading empire in Chicago.” She pulled a pile of folders in front of her and opened one. “Your direct orders are to uncover and relay the maximum amount of information possible.”
I smoothed a wrinkle from the skirt of my dress. “Are you going to stop the train cars?”
“We'll see.”
Are you feckin' kidding me, lady?
She glanced at my face. “If you know, you'll show.” Her lips split in a frosty smile. “The idea of working undercover is to remain seamless in the face of surprise.”

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