The Fifth Avenue Series Boxed Set (136 page)

BOOK: The Fifth Avenue Series Boxed Set
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“Carmen,” she said.
 
“It’s good to meet you.”

“You don’t look at all how I imagined,” he said.
 
He nodded at Spocatti.
 
“I thought you’d be taller, beefier, a real bruiser, but you’re none of those things.”

“I don’t need to be.”

“Well, great.
 
I love confidence.
 
And it’s nice to meet you, too.
 
Are you ready for this?”

“We’re eager for this.”

“Then let’s do this.
 
Just let the man see my face.
 
He’ll be taken aback.
 
That’s when we act.
 
My gun doesn’t have a silencer.”
 
He looked at Spocatti.
 
“Does yours?”

“It does.”

“Let me borrow it.”

They traded guns and Wolfhagen turned.
 
The building was soon upon them.
 
They walked up the stairs and Wolfhagen moved his arm behind him, suggesting that they should step far to the right.
 
Spocatti and Gragera did so, pressing themselves out of site.

Wolfhagen cocked the gun, knocked on the door and cupped his hands behind his back.
 
A moment passed, then a huge man in a black suit opened the door slightly.
 

“Well, look who it is,” Wolfhagen said.
 
“Bobby.”

The disbelief on the man’s face was unmistakable.
 
Years ago, at the original Bull Penn, Wolfhagen had personally hired him.
 
The door opened wider.
 
Big Bobby peered out to look around, but Wolfhagen was enough to block his view of Spocatti and Gragera.
 
“Mr. Wolfhagen?” he said.
 
“What are you doing here?”

“I’m here to see Carra and Ira, and not just because their names go so well together.
 
Would you mind leading the way?
 
They’ll see me.”

“I don’t think they will.
 
Shit’s changed.
 
You know that.”

He needed to get off the street before anyone saw them.
 
“They’ll see me, Bobby.”
 
In a flash, he drew his gun, pressed it against Bobby’s forehead and pulled the trigger.
 
The back of the man’s head exploded, but the noise was muffled.
 
Wolfhagen was stronger than he looked.
 
He hooked his arm under the man’s armpit and helped him down while he started to bleed out.

His heart quickening, he looked into the room beyond.
 
It was intentionally small and dimly lit.
 
It was this room that offered the additional sound barrier.
 
Beyond it would be where the real action took place.
 

He titled his head to the left and saw the door that led to it.
 
He was surprised to find it partly open.
 
With his gun held out at arm’s length, he took a step into the smaller room.
 
He could feel Spocatti and Gragera behind him.
 
He eased himself to the door, knowing that anyone could be behind it.
 
Spocatti knew it, too.
 
He went to the door, pressed Wolfhagen back and then got on his own back.
 
He looked up at Wolfhagen, put a finger to his lips and motioned to him that he was going first.
 

Gragera stepped beside Spocatti and crouched with her back against the door frame.
 
Wolfhagen watched Spocatti lift his knees and push himself forward, so his head was only slightly in the room.
 
He kept his gun near his face, ready to fire if anyone was inside.
 
He looked around the room, then nodded at Gragera, who peered carefully inside and then swung back.
 
She did it again, but took a longer look.

And each relaxed.

Spocatti got to his feet.
 
“No one’s in there,” he said in a low voice.
 
“Where would they be?”

“At the old club, a good deal of the wilder stuff took place in the basement,” Wolfhagen said.
 
“It’s still early.
 
If they use the basement here, they could be there, setting up.”
 
He shrugged.
 
“But that’s a guess.
 
I don’t know how this is set up.”

“Then we’ll take the risk.
 
You follow us.”
 
He held his hand out for his gun, which Wolfhagen gave him in return for his own.
 
“Stay behind us.
 
If anything happens, drop to the ground.
 
We’ll cover you.”

Together, each eased into the room.
 

Though the lights were dim even here, Wolfhagen could see that the area was large and open.
 
Chandeliers hung from the ceiling, but the lights were barely burning.
 
Leather chairs were in the center of the room.
 
Off to the right were two metal cages.
 
Beside them looked to be a necropsy table, not unlike the one he’d sliced that man’s throat on all those years ago.
 
Though Wolfhagen couldn’t make it out completely, what appeared to be a bar was to the far left of the room.
 

And then, as all of the lights suddenly flashed to full brightness, he was certain that’s what it was.
 
Just beyond it, he could see Carra stepping into the room.
 
She was wearing a black leather catsuit.
 
Her dark hair swung as she turned to look at him.
 
Wolfhagen took a step back, raised his gun to shoot her and pulled the trigger.
 

But nothing happened.
 
He tried to fire again, but the gun just clicked.
 
It was empty.
 
He looked at Spocatti, who was drawing away from him while he reached into his pocket and held out his hand—in it were the remaining bullets, which he rattled in front of Wolfhagen before tossing them across the room, where they rolled, jumped, clattered.

He’d been set up.

Now, Spocatti and Gragera were pointing their guns at him.
 
Wolfhagen stared at them in shock as another person entered the far end of the room.
 

This time it was Ira Lasker.
 
He was slightly hunched over and moving behind something.
 
Wrong.
 
He was pushing something.

Carra rounded the corner and started moving in his direction.
 
In her hand was a whip.
 
She cracked it for effect, the sound reverberated off the high ceilings, which she liked so much, she did it again.
 

On her feet were black leather boots that stretched past her knees and cupped her thighs.
 
She was the dominatrix he’d turned her into years ago, only this time, she was running the show.
 
Crack, crack, crack.
 
The whip criss-crossing in front of her and ready to strike.
 
She laughed.

“Max,” she said.
 
“How’s my little bitch pig tonight?”

Wolfhagen looked at her for a moment, and then turned to Lasker as he rounded a corner.
 
The thing he was pushing was a wheelchair.
 
Though he couldn’t fully process it because none of it made sense, his eyes didn’t lie.
 
It was Mark Andrews in that wheelchair.
 
It was Mark Andrews, who had been pummeled by bulls in Pamplona.
 
It was Mark Andrews, his former lackey who presumably was dead and buried.

It was Mark Andrews, and he was coming straight at him with a gun.

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

 

11:21 p.m.

 

This was her night, but if she was going to succeed in being done with the man who had ruined her reputation and humiliated her for years, she knew she had to move quickly.
 
Soon, Marty Spellman and Maggie Cain would arrive, presumably to come to a federal safe house, where Mark Andrews was waiting for them.
 

And he was waiting for them, against his will.
 
He also was holding an empty gun on Wolfhagen, against his will.
 
She needed to take care of Max before the focused shifted on Cain and Spellman.
 
They were too close to the truth.
 
Only when they were dead would she feel reasonably confident that she and Ira could walk away from all of this and be safe.

Carra watched as Max looked in disbelief at Mark Andrews.

“How?” he asked her.
 
“Why?”

She told him.
 
Along with Ira, over the past seven months she had devised a plan that had involved the deaths of the majority of those who had testified against him.
 

It had been simple—hire Spocatti and Gragera and, through Lasker, convince them that they were dealing directly with Wolfhagen.
 
She didn’t know them.
 
She didn’t trust them.
 
And so if anything went wrong and they were caught, she knew they would spill his name convincingly if they were pressed to do so in the event that they were caught before this was finished.
 
Moreover, if they were forced to take a lie detector test, they’d be telling the feds what they
knew
was the truth.
 
It was Wolfhagen who hired them.
 
There was no reason for them to believe otherwise.

In each conversation with them, Ira had mimicked Wolfhagen’s voice and demeanor.
 
Tonight, Spocatti and Gragera were informed that they’d been misinformed.
 
When they arrived, Ira told them everything.
 
They’d never worked for Wolfhagen.
 
They’d only ever worked for her and Ira.
 

If they were surprised, they didn’t show it.
 
They remained the professionals they’d proved themselves to be.
 
For their trouble, Carra gave each their $10 million bonus checks early.

Not long ago, her own guards called warning her that Wolfhagen was on his way.
 
He bribed them, just as she knew he would.
 
They took his money, just as she’d told them to.
 
They warned her that he asked for a cell phone and a gun, and that it was unlikely that he’d come alone.
 
Knowing Spocatti and Gragera were hers now, she asked them to take out Wolfhagen’s hired hit men when they arrived.

When they did, they were told that after this evening, they were free to go.
 
There would be no more killing outside of those deaths that happened in-house tonight.
 
Carra had everything she needed—the tapes of each person’s death, which would be sent by FedEx to the LaJolla estate tomorrow morning.
 

Each tape implicated Wolfhagen.
 
She was working with his assistant, who now was on her payroll.
 
That person had his orders.
 
He lived in an apartment on the La Jolla estate.
 
Part of his duties was to open the mail.
 
When the tapes arrived, he was curious and watched them even though Wolfhagen specifically told him not to.
 
But he did and he was horrified by what he saw.
 
Even though he didn’t want to get involved because what he saw frightened him, he knew he couldn’t allow Wolfhagen to continue.
 
And, so, he did the right thing.
 
He alerted the police and the media.

Even if no one bought it, Carmen still won.
 
The media would latch onto it.
 
By then, Wolfhagen would be dead and with him, whatever was left of his soured reputation would be finished when the footage was aired and word got out that he had hired two assassins to kill those people who betrayed him on the stand.
 

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