The Fifth Avenue Series Boxed Set (38 page)

Cain turned to Michael.

“Here’s what’s going to happen,” he said.
 
“We’re going to cross this street and enter your apartment and you’re going to act like we’re friends.
 
Because if you don’t, if you make even one false move, I’m blowing your fucking head off.
 
Got it?”

Michael was pale with fear.
 
He nodded.

Satisfied, Cain turned to the man seated at Michael’s right.
 
“You’re coming with me,” he said.
 
“And if you even sense he’s about to try something, I want you to shoot him. Understand?”

The man smiled.
 
He understood.

“And you,” Cain said to the other man.
 
“I want you to get rid of the driver and the cab.
 
Dump them both someplace close and hurry back.”
 
He opened the door and stepped into the morning sun.
 
“I might need you to dispose of another body.”

 

 

*
  
*
  
*

 

 

They entered Michael’s apartment.

“Sit down,” Cain said.
 
“We’ll talk in a minute.”

While Cain went to the window to see if the cab had left, Michael glanced around the small room, looked at his unmade bed and went to it.
 
His legs were trembling as he sat—both from exhaustion and a sudden surge of hope.

Beneath the mattress would be the loaded gun he purchased a week ago for protection.
 
He could almost feel its steely hardness pressing against his thigh.
 
Earlier, there was no time to grab the gun before he fled his apartment.
 
Now, if he could somehow slide a hand under the mattress without being seen, he could kill these men and leave before the other returned.

He looked over at the man blocking the doorway, saw the hard, probing eyes taking in every inch of him and turned away, afraid that his secret would be revealed on his face.
 
There was no question this man would kill him if he went for the gun.
 
If I don’t get him first.

He glanced across the room at Cain, who was leaning out the open window, his jacket slightly parted.
 
Between the shimmering folds of black leather, Michael could see the man’s shoulder holster and gun.
 
There’s no way I’ll be able to shoot them both
, he thought.
 
No matter how quick I am, it won’t happen.
 

Still, he knew if the opportunity presented itself, he would take the chance.

“You know,” Cain said as he turned away from the window and leaned against the sill, “I’m a big fan of yours.
 
I’ve seen your films, read your books.
 
You’re quite big in Europe.”

Michael had to turn slightly to look at him.
 
He used the motion as an opportunity to lift himself and position his hand closer to the gun.
 

“Yesterday, when I got the call from Santiago, I have to tell you I was disappointed. Not because I was being given the opportunity to kill you—that has been surprisingly challenging—but because someone I respected so much had allowed themselves to get caught up in something so stupid.
 
With all of your novels and films, with all of your financial success—how could you possibly have run out of money?
 
Unless you were so careless as to have spent it all—which the fan in me seriously wants to doubt—then where did it all go?”

Although that very question had troubled Michael for weeks, he remained silent, watchful, wondering where Cain was taking this.

Cain shrugged.
 
He stepped away from the window and started pacing the room.
 
“I don’t know,” he said.
 
“Maybe you did spend it all.
 
Maybe you became so comfortable with your success, that you took all the books and all the films and all the money for granted.
 
If that’s the case, Mr. Archer, then someone should teach you a lesson in handling money.”

There was a silence.
 
Cain stopped pacing and removed from his jacket pocket a small box of matches and a pack of Gitanes cigarettes.
 
He struck a match, lit the cigarette and shook out the flame.
 
It wasn’t until he turned to look for a place to put the match that he stopped to look at the desk beside Michael’s bed.
 
On it were several empty cans of Diet Coke, innumerable magazine and newspaper clippings, a typewriter and a small stack of neatly typed pages that resembled a manuscript.

Cain tossed the match to the floor, stepped on it.
 
He picked up the stack of papers, thumbed through them and looked sideways at Michael.
 
“This your new book?”

Michael didn’t answer.
 
When he first learned what his father wanted in return for paying off Santiago, he started writing the book, knowing that if he gave his agent several chapters and a proposal, she would be able to sell it—and he himself could pay off Santiago.

Ninety pages were written.
 
Before today’s event, he planned on finishing the proposal tomorrow morning, knowing that if his agent could sell it before week’s end, he would be rid of his father forever.
 
And now this man held it in his hands—the only existing result of his hard work.
 
As Cain began reading the novel’s first chapter out loud, Michael lowered his hand to his side. The gun was inches away.

 

 

 

FIFTH AVENUE

 

A novel by:

 

Michael Archer

 

 

BOOK ONE

FIRST WEEK

 

CHAPTER ONE

 

 

July

New York City

 

The bombs, placed high above Fifth Avenue on the roof of The Redman International Building, would explode in five minutes.

Now, with its mirrored walls of glass reflecting Fifth Avenue’s thick, late-morning traffic, the building itself seemed alive with movement.
 

On scaffolding at the building’s middle, men and women were hanging the enormous red velvet ribbon that would soon cover sixteen of Redman International’s seventy-nine stories.
 
High above on the roof, a lighting crew was moving ten spotlights into position.
 
And inside, fifty skilled decorators were turning the lobby into a festive ballroom.

Celina Redman, who was in charge of organizing the event, stood before the building with her arms folded.
 
Streams of people were brushing past her on the sidewalk, some glancing up at the red ribbon, others stopping to glance in surprise at her.
 
She tried to ignore them, tried to focus on her work and become one with the crowd, but it was difficult.
 
Just that morning, her face and this building had been on the cover of every major paper in New York.
 

 

 

*
  
*
  
*

 

 

While Cain read, Michael glanced at the man standing in the doorway, saw that his attention was on Cain, and started to slide a hand under the mattress.

But it wouldn’t fit.
 
The weight of his body was pressing the mattress and box spring together.
 
He turned slightly, carefully, and shifted his weight onto one thigh.
 
The mattress lifted an inch and he was able to force a hand inside.
 
He could feel the cool butt of the revolver.
 
His fingertips pressed against it.
 
He looked up at Cain, saw that his concentration was still focused on the manuscript and knew that if he was going to do this, the time was now.
 
At the same moment he wrapped his fingers around the gun, Cain finished reading the first chapter.

He looked at him.
 
“What is this?” he asked.
 
“Nonfiction?”

For a moment, Michael couldn’t move or speak.
 
Cain was standing diagonally across from him, no more than ten feet away.
 
Neither he nor the man in the doorway could see where his hand was.
 
He leaned forward, using the action to pull out the gun.
 
The bed creaked.
 
Michael began to sweat.

“That’s debatable,” he said.

“It says here that it’s a novel.
 
If that’s so, then how can you use these names?
 
These events and these places?”

Michael shrugged.
 
The gun was now pressed against his thigh, hidden from sight. “That’s a problem for my lawyers to figure out.
 
If things get out of hand, maybe I’ll use a pseudonym for protection.”

“It’s a shame,” Cain said.
 
“I bet this would have been a good read.”

Michael tightened his grip on the gun.
 
Would have been?

“And I bet you would have made a bundle—probably even enough money to pay off Santiago.”
 
He looked at Michael.
 
“Isn’t that what this is for?
 
These chapters, this letter of proposal?
 
A last ditch effort to pay off Santiago?
 
I’m not a stupid man, Mr. Archer.
 
I can see right through you.
 
The fear in your eyes is only slightly masked by your hatred of me.
 
But I can understand that.
 
I hold in my hand hours upon hours of your hard work. If I destroyed this, and if you were unable to pay off Santiago, he would rehire me and I would come back in a week to finish a job that I should have been allowed to finish today.”

He looked thoughtfully at the manuscript.

“Actually, I could use the extra money.
 
There’s a little villa in Nice that I’d love to spend my winters at.”

Motionless, Michael watched Cain hold the manuscript over the metal waste basket at his feet.
 
And then the man dropped the pages into the basket.
 
The sound they made was like the rapid beating of wings.

Before Michael could react, Cain reached into his jacket pocket, removed the box of matches, struck one against the side of the box and dropped it into the can. There was a moment when Michael thought the match had gone out, but then a flickering yellow flower began to bloom.

And he knew it was time.

He leapt to his feet, revealed the gun and aimed it at a surprised Ethan Cain.
 
He glanced over at the man standing at the door and saw that his gun was drawn and pointed directly at him.
 
“You shoot, and so do I,” Michael said.
 
He turned back to Cain.
 
“Put out the fire.
 
Now.”

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