Authors: Ronald Damien Malfi
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Horror, #Government Investigators, #Crime, #Horror Fiction, #New York (N.Y.), #Organized Crime, #Undercover Operations
As he drove, he glanced around the interior of the car to make sure everything looked presentable and in order. The Camaro was not his; likewise, the license plates and registration did not correspond to his home address. It was a seized vehicle, used for undercover work and assigned to him. The registration was made out to a false last name—Esposito: the same last name John used as an alias on his falsified driver’s license and American Express card. It would be as John Esposito that Mickey O’Shay would come to know him.
Looking around, he noticed something in the back seat. Hitting a traffic light, he glanced behind him. His father’s wool coat lay folded on the seat, forgotten from his mind after he’d taken it from his father’s house.
“Goddamn it.”
He hit the bridge, and there was already traffic. Why the hell Mickey O’Shay wanted to meet in Manhattan on Thanksgiving Day was beyond him.
He glanced at the clock on the Camaro’s console: 8:35. The parade would begin at exactly nine o’clock at 77
th
Street and Central Park West, and drip slowly down the park until it turned onto Broadway toward Herald Square. The entire event would last roughly three hours, from nine till noon, and John knew from experience that the city would be a madhouse. Mickey’s directions had been to go through the Theater District and wait in his car at the corner of 57
th
and Ninth. And although the parade would not have trickled down that far by the time he got there, he would essentially be cutting through the parade route, which was cordoned off. Which meant he would have to go down and around Broadway instead of crossing it north of Herald Square.
Son of a bitch
, he thought.
There is no way I’m going to make it there in time. No way in the world
.
And Mickey had to know this.
Either he’s whacked out of his mind, or he’s got something up his sleeve. No one with brains fronts a hundred grand in counterfeit bills to a guy unless he’s your brother
.
The compact bulge of his gun pressed against the small of his back.
He had been right about the city: straight off the bridge, traffic shuddered to a complete halt. Horns blared, cars edged between other cars and scooted down alleys only to be trapped there moments later. He would have had better luck turning a steamship around in a closet. It occurred to him then that he could probably go up Broadway and flash his badge to gain passage through the parade route, but in the end his instincts warned him away from such an exercise.
Up ahead, traffic broke off into two directions and he got swept up in one lane, unsure what street he was on. Beside him, the driver of a Honda GR-V gunned his engine. In front, some of the cars inched closer toward an intersection and, just as it looked like there was going to be a break in traffic, a mob of people rushed across the intersection, eliciting honks and swears and upraised middle fingers. According to the console clock, it was already nine o’clock.
Uptown, the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade had begun.
He could hear music before he ever saw anything. Marching band music: heavy on the drums, heavy on the horns. And finally, when he
did
see something, it was mostly people and balloons. Handheld balloons, not the massive helium-filled cartoon characters that would soon blot the sky. He moved down an alleyway cluttered with wooden crates and stinking offish, and popped out onto a crowded section of Eighth Avenue. The sounds of snare drums and brass horns and thousands of feet filled the air. He was aware that he was the only person actually
walking
, actually
moving
, and that everyone else remained stationary along the cusp of the avenue, peering down the block for a glimpse of the parade. Yet all that was visible was the throng of other spectators.
He paused to light a cigarette, smoked it down to the ass, then pitched it in the gutter. He was of medium height and had some difficulty peering over the heads of the crowd that had formed along Eighth Avenue. Two uniformed police officers stood in the street, waving their hands to partition the gathering and create a narrow passageway for people to traverse. One block up, Broadway pulsed as the heart of the parade. A clutch of balloons were let go several yards ahead of him and, briefly, he paused to watch them sail up into the sky.
Scratching at his ears like a flea-bitten dog, he turned and headed east on 57
th
in the opposite direction of the crowd. Someone slammed into his shoulder but he didn’t lift his head, didn’t look up. Behind him, a bray of trumpets pierced the air.
Shivering against the cold, vapor billowing from his mouth, Mickey O’Shay moved among the crowd like a ghost unseen.
It was almost ten o’clock when John parked the Camaro at the corner of 57
th
and Ninth. He was roughly an hour late, and he felt aggravated as he watched the crowd of people mill down 57
th
Street. Had he missed him already? This was a horrible place to meet, and now John had his doubts whether or not Mickey had ever planned on showing up at all. That notion only angered him more—the thought of the little son of a bitch calling the shots. Was he somewhere right now, laughing to himself? And then it suddenly occurred to John and the revelation was like an electric shock: he had no idea what was going on. Moreover, he had no idea what was going through Mickey O’Shay’s mind. For seemingly the first time in the two years since he’d been on the Secret Service, he couldn’t think ahead of his target, couldn’t outstep him. Peering through the windshield, he watched the bundled onlookers filter down toward Broadway. With the car shut down, it grew cold; he rubbed his hands together to keep warm. How long should he even sit here and wait?
Two short taps against the passenger side window. Jerking his head around, he saw O’Shay’s mottled canvas coat and nondescript pants framed within the window. Only the tips of Mickey’s fingers could be seen poking out of the cuffs of his coat.
John leaned across the passenger seat and popped open the door. Wasting no time, Mickey climbed in and shut the door, bringing with him the thankless stink of cigarette smoke and the bitter cold. Mickey shook his long hand with his fingers and snorted.
“You’re late,” he muttered. He looked John up and down, as if deciding whether or not he was worth his time.
“You gotta be kidding me. Maybe you haven’t noticed, but there’s kind of a big parade goin’ on.”
Mickey had no interest in small talk. That, or he was still feeling John out. He craned his head back and peered at the passenger side mirror. “Too many people here,” Mickey said. “Turn around and pull into that alley on your right.”
John turned the engine over and rolled the Camaro up the street until he spotted the alleyway Mickey had mentioned.
“Right here,” Mickey said.
He spun the wheel and eased the car up a slight incline. The alley ran directly behind Roosevelt Hospital. Mickey told him to stop the car before they pulled out onto the hospital’s tarmac.
“Yeah, this looks inconspicuous,” John mused, peering in the rearview. “But I’m done driving. What’s the deal, you givin’ me this stuff up front? I’m ready to deal.”
“You got a problem with trust?” Mickey said. He shifted in his seat, and John caught another whiff of cigarette smoke.
“Not me,” John said. “Not at all.”
“I didn’t bring the money,” Mickey said.
“What are you, yankin’ my chain? You don’t have the money, the hell did you ask me to come out for?”
“Because,” Mickey said, “cops don’t work holidays.”
“So now I’m a cop?”
“Relax,” Mickey said. There was a hint of casualness to his voice—a first for him. “Just wanted to see if you’d show.”
The smug look on Mickey’s face, coupled with his insouciant tone, made John’s blood boil. An image of Katie standing, dejected and heartbroken, over her trays of homemade cookies flashed across his mind. “You little jerk,” he said, “I had plans with my family, and you’re here wastin’ my goddamn time. I should bang you in the teeth.”
“So you’re a tough guy,” Mickey said, still relaxed. He was facing front now, not even looking in John’s direction. “I’m shittin’ all over myself.”
“Get the fuck outta my car.”
“Take a couple days to get your money together,” Mickey said, “and I’ll call you.”
“Fuck you and your money.”
Mickey popped open the passenger door, stepped out into the alley, and let the door slam shut. For a moment, Mickey O’Shay stood just outside John’s car, looking like someone desperately trying to remember something they’d forgotten. Then he dug a pack of cigarettes from his coat, turned, and headed back down the alleyway. John watched him walk away in the rearview mirror, resisting the urge to hop from the car, grab the punk, slam him a few times.
Because cops don’t work holidays
, John thought.
Also, cops flash a badge and they’re able to drive right through a parade route. In other words, cops show up on time
.
“Nice start, pal,” he muttered, “but I got your number.”
Just then his cell phone rang. Eyes still trained on Mickey in the car’s rearview, he answered the phone without looking at it.
“John,” he said.
“It’s Bill,” Kersh said. The connection was poor, and he could hardly make out Kersh’s voice. “I hate to spoil your holiday, but I figured you’d want to know …”
“What is it?” He watched as Mickey slipped onto 57
th
Street and disappeared among the mob of people. A second after that, and it was like he never existed. “What?” he repeated. A crash of thunder, and it started to rain.
“It’s Douglas Clifton,” Kersh said.
“What about him?”
“He’s dead.”
T
ODAY, IT IS DIFFICULT TO IMAGINE
H
ELL’S
Kitchen as having once been a lush, provincial countryside, its landscape defined not by red-brick tenements and fire-scarred shops, but by countless running streams and burgeoning grasslands. Slowly, over time, the region blossomed under the weight of immigrants fleeing their homelands—the Dutch, Italians, Irish, Germans. The land was fertile and strong, and in the mid-1800s, the Hudson River Railroad became the cornerstone on which a changing society was established. The railroad quickly attracted scores of hopeful immigrants, all hungry for work, all anxious to eke out an existence for themselves and their families in this brave new world. Shortly after the addition of the railroad, Manhattan’s West Side grew rich with industry, providing the foundation for glue factories and distilleries, slaughterhouses and sweatshops. The air, once pure and untouched, was soon tinged with the metallic reek of the abattoirs along West 39
th
Street—so overwhelming that, in the summer, everything smelled vaguely of blood. Tenements were constructed close together along what some people called Slaughterhouse Row or Abattoir Place, crammed with families that made their livelihood off the very industry that poisoned their lungs and corrupted their spirits. Runoff from the slaughterhouses pooled along the avenues, causing the gutters to swell with blood. Stray dogs lapped up the gore from the streets. Clothing strung out on clotheslines between tenements reeked permanently of slaughter. The West Side breweries combated the stink of the slaughterhouses with the softer, richer scent of barley and yeast—but mingled, the air simply grew more wet and heavy with stink. In the blink of an eye, the grassy fields and freshwater creeks had disappeared. The fresh air had vanished. And by the late-1800s, Hell’s Kitchen had already become what many referred to as the armpit of New York City.
Crime was always an element in Hell’s Kitchen, but it wasn’t until after the Civil War that the street gangs came to power. As colorful as the smells in the air and the blood in the streets, the gangs of Hell’s Kitchen appeared on the scene like schools of hungry piranhas seeking out a meal. There were the Gorillas, the Tenth Avenue Gang (later known as the Hell’s Kitchen Gang), the Gophers—each well-versed in the art of strong-armed manipulation and schooled in excessive, merciless violence. Of these gangs, the most notorious were the Gophers. The Gophers were shadows, swirling and shifting like devils beneath the hem of a blue-collar neighborhood. Their presence was known and feared by all. Behind them, a river of blood flowed—somehow much darker and more polluted than the foulness left by the slaughterhouses on West 39
th
Street. And with the passage of years, their trespasses broadened, enabling them to move beyond petty crime and violent murder and to eventually wrap bloody fingers around the throat of New York City politics.