Read The Payback Assignment Online

Authors: Austin S. Camacho

The Payback Assignment (28 page)

           
“Powder burns?”
 
Paul stared down at the corpse’s face, showing no emotion.

           
“Nope.
 
Wasn’t that close.”

           
“But he wasn’t running I see,” Paul said, squatting down.
 
“That’s an entry wound in his chest.”

           
“Hey, who are you, Columbo?
 
Why don’t you go chase an ambulance or something?”

           
Paul responded to the policeman’s ire with a smile.
 
“You’ve been very helpful, detective.
 
Mind if I check the inside of the building while I’m here?”

           
“Help yourself.
 
Just stay out of my people’s way.”

           
“Oh, I always try to do that,” Paul muttered under his breath.
 
He stepped up the outside stairs and entered the darkened hall.
 
He noticed the broken light bulb hanging above him.
 
With his automatic held close to his right thigh he climbed the stairs, avoiding the broken ones.
 
At the top he examined the body in the hall, sitting up against the wall.
 
It was J.D. Griffith, a merc and a gunfighter.
 
He knew the man only by reputation, but that reputation was excellent.

           
The apartment door was ajar.
 
He pushed it just enough to slip through and pushed it almost closed behind himself.
 
Once inside he drew a penlight from his jacket pocket and quickly checked the room.
 
To his seasoned eyes, scattered shell casings and bullet holes in and around the tattered couch told a story.
 
Not far away he found a splotch of blood on the floor behind the easy chair.
 
It was too red to be the result of a bullet wound.
 
Blood from a shallow cut, he thought, or from someone’s mouth or nose after a blow.
 
Further in he found the fat man Stone had saddled him with.
 
No need to touch him to know what had happened.
 
The left side of his neck was torn, and a hole above his left eye was crusted over with dried blood.

           
“Amateurs,” Paul muttered.
 
His contempt for them was so often justified.
 
Pocketing his light, he slipped out of the flat and down the stairs into daylight.
 
Across the street he got into his brown, two door mid sized Chevrolet and pulled away.
 
He would let the police discover the mess upstairs on their own.

           
A block away, he was still shaking his head at the incompetents who turned up in his profession.
 
He had offered the fat man and his Mexican friend a chance to step up, to play in the big leagues.
 
An error, certainly, but perhaps not a waste.
 
Natural selection had cleared the field of two men who did not belong there.

           
And he learned that he had certainly underestimated this Morgan Stark.

-25-

           
What a wild nightmare, Morgan thought.
 
He had been trapped in a circuit of sensory overload.
 
He had experienced the sex act both as a man and as a woman does, simultaneously.
 
For a man who had not known fear in years, it was as close to terror as he could come.
 
Thank God it was over.

           
But when his eyes popped open he realized his dream had been reality.
 
His cheek was pressed into a soft stomach.
 
His right hand rested on a creamy thigh.
 
The rest of the visible world was varying shades of blue.
 
The sheet he was on, the comforter he was under, the walls, the ceiling, the carpet, all blue.
 
Images of the rest of the previous evening returned, and he remembered where he was.

           
“Finally awake, sleepy head?
 
About time.
 
Must be a couple of minutes after six.”
 
Felicity was sitting up, propped against two pillows.
 
His head was in her lap and the fingers of her right hand were in his hair.
 
With her left she scanned the Sunday New York Times.
 
A pot of coffee sat on her nightstand, next to a plate of Danish pastries.

           
“Morning,” Morgan smiled up at her.
 
“Do you ever look at a watch?”

           
“Never,” Felicity said, holding a Danish to his face.
 
“I just have this weird time sense.
 
Now bite this.”

           
The smell of fresh baked pastry awakened his hunger.
 
He filled his mouth with the Danish, which was warm and just short of too sweet.
 
He sat up and Felicity handed him coffee.
 
It was hot, black and strong.
 
Perfect.
 
How did she know?

           
He could not remember the last time he had just sat in bed with a woman.
 
She looked so comfortable and relaxed - comfortable with her nakedness, comfortable with him.
 
He had to admit that he was pretty relaxed too.
 

           
“So you have a clock in your head and can see in the dark?”
 
Morgan said, playing with her hair.

           
“Yep.
 
I think the time thing’s a side effect of my photographic memory.”

           
“Jesus, you really are some kind of freak.”
 
He meant it as a joke, but regretted the words as they came out.

           
“This from a man who tells me he can find north without a compass and judge distances down to the centimeter.
 
And let’s not forget that danger sense.
 
You must have been designed to be a soldier.”

           
“And you to be a cat burglar,” Morgan said, reaching over to snare a chunk of newspaper.

           
“Looking for the sports section?”
 
Felicity asked.

           
“Actually, I always start with the international news.
 
Got to keep up, you know.
 
That’s how I know where my next job opportunity’s likely to be.”
 
He looked up, noticing Felicity was deep in the fashion news and the society section.
 
The significance of their choices was not lost on him and, he guessed, not on her either.

           
After being shot at and shot, ambushed, lured and captured, set up and pursued over the last three days, exhaustion had kept him asleep through nearly fifteen hours.
 
Morgan had slept for the first time in years without a gun within easy reach.
 
Now, fully rested and relaxed, his mind started wandering around the present situation, peeking at it from all different angles.

           
“Morgan?”
 
Felicity’s voice shook him out of his reverie.

           
“Yeah, Red?”

           
“You know, I didn’t think a person in your line of work would be so literate.
 
What made you become a mercenary?” she asked, not looking up.
 
He thought for a moment, sipping his coffee.
 
He could never remember anyone asking him that question before.

           
“Well, you know, when I was in the Army, crawling through tunnels, killing commies, I guess I felt like I’d come home.
 
After Vietnam ended, I was discharged, but the idea of coming back to New York after that, it just didn’t feel right.
 
So, I wandered for a few years, trying to see everything, do everything I could think of.
 
After a while I just started picking up merc work because it seemed like a way to go back to doing what I figured I did best.
 
It hasn’t been a bad life, really.
 
Got to admit, I still envy you, though.”

           
“Me?”
 
Felicity’s emerald eyes glinted with surprise.
 
“Why on earth?”

           
“You might not guess it, but I’ve done a lot more than fight in my time,” Morgan said, ticking off the list on his fingers.
 
“I’ve conducted safaris in the Congo, dived for sunken treasure off the coast of Mexico, climbed mountains in Switzerland, hustled pool in Philly, raced motorcycles in France, even flown photo surveys for prospectors in Canada.
 
Been around a lot, but I still can’t do what you do.”

           
“What do you mean?” she asked.
 
“You’ve got the moves to be a great thief.”
 

           
“Not that stuff,” he said.
 
“What I mean is, I can get by in a couple different languages, but I can’t order properly in a French restaurant, you know?
 
I can choose gear for combat, but I can’t dress myself for a night out at a fancy ballroom.
 
What you got, lady, is class.
 
Maybe I just need to hang around somebody who could teach me that stuff.”

           
“What I’ve got,” mused Felicity, “is a lifetime of shoehorning my way into upper crust society.
 
You know, I’ve never told anyone about those times.
 
I was seventeen when I made my first big heist.
 
One rich lady’s jewels can go a long way.”
 
Her eyes drifted off into the past, and Morgan stretched his arms behind his head.
 
He was drifting off with her.
 

           
“Before that I was ragged, living hand to mouth, travelling with some friends all over the Irish countryside.
 
I could have stayed there and probably lived off that one score for months.
 
Instead I sold that jewelry to a fence and bought some decent clothes and a ticket to Monte Carlo.
 
Lord, I wanted to meet the beautiful people, the people who had real money.
 
I figured I’d just look around and go home when I ran out of cash.
 
But the rich turned out to be the easiest pickings.
 
It was like walking up on money lying in the street.
 
I couldn’t just leave it there.
 
Anyhow, now I’m one of the people who’s got real money, but sometimes I wish I’d never left my old friends behind.
 
I’ve built a great life for myself, but I must admit I miss having people to share it all with.
 
It’s hard in my business to have people who are really close.
 
I’m not talking about a lover, mind you, but a real mate.
 
Someone special.”

           
“Well, we ought to talk about doing some travelling together or something,” Morgan said.
 
“I mean, after we get our money.
 
And that means we need to get moving on finding your precious brooch.”

           
“Well, that’s no problem, my lad,” Felicity said.
 
“I reasoned that no one would hunt out a piece of jewelry so unusual just to sell it.
 
And no man would want to keep it.
 
On the other hand, no woman would want to hide it.
 
So, I looked in the most obvious place.”

           
“And just where was that, Sherlock?”
 
Morgan asked.

           
Felicity raised an eyebrow.
 
“Was that skepticism I heard in your voice?
 
For shame, lad.
 
That place would be right here, in the society page.”
 
He followed Felicity’s long index finger down to a grainy black and white photograph in the newspaper.
 
It was a party scene as far as he could tell.
 
The kind of thing that passes for fun among the cocktails and hors d’oeuvres set.
 
One member of the tuxedo-draped crowd was a short, portly man with pockmarked cheeks.
 
A slightly taller, heavyset woman in a dark evening gown hung on his arm.
 
Morgan could see that at one time the woman must have had fabulous legs.
 
An oval piece of jewelry sat at her throat.
 
He figured it to be less than two inches long, and a little more than an inch wide.
 
A large teardrop diamond dominated the center of the piece.
 
Pearls surrounded the gem, ranging from the smallest at the top to the largest at the bottom.
 
The pearls were perfectly symmetrical.

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