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OUT OF SIGHT
Silhouette
Intimate Moments
December 2005
ISBN 0-373-27468-8
CHAPTER ONE
New York City, Four Years Ago
“
Time to go, Gantz.” Special Agent Will Bishop hoisted his prisoner up
by the arm from the motel room chair. “You’ve got a date in court.”
“
They ain’t gonna let me testify,” Gantz said. Sweat dripped from
the man’s meaty face and soaked through his Italian silk suit. A suit
that probably cost him more than Will made in a month. “I’ll be
dead before I get to the courthouse.”
“
You’re breaking my heart.” Ryan Thomas opened the door, letting
in a blast of hot humid air and early morning sunshine. He signaled to the
men standing guard around the perimeter of the lot.
It wasn’t often Will got to work with Ryan these days, but with his regular
partner still out on Maternity leave, they were paired for this case. It had
made the long shifts in this sleazy little motel guarding Gantz easier to stomach.
But he was glad it was finally over. His wife was really starting to nag him
about the long hours he’d been working. Which meant she’d been
nagging him only slightly more than usual.
“
Looks clear,” Ryan said.
“
Time to roll.” Will cuffed Gantz and shoved him toward the door. “Let’s
go.”
“
I’m telling you, man. The family ain’t gonna let it happen. And
don’t think they’ll stop at me. You guys are as good as dead.”
Ryan held the door open. “There are five agents in that parking lot.
If someone was out there waiting for you, we would know.”
“
What are you worried about Gantz, in a week you’ll have a new face and
a new identity,” Will said, unable to mask the disgust in his voice.
Lou Gantz, a hit man responsible for the deaths of at least thirty men--many
of which had been waiting to testify in court--was getting a walk in exchange
for his testimony against the Sardoni family, New York’s most vicious
organized crime organization. Until now, nearly every member of the family
had managed to avoid prosecution. Witnesses either recanted their claims, were
found floating in the river or simply disappeared without a trace.
Not this time. The family’s top associates were under indictment and
the bureau had taken every possible precaution to keep Gantz’s location
secure.
This time, they were going down.
“
Move it.” Will gave him another shove, out the door into the parking
lot.
Full-fledged panic crept into the man’s tone. “I’m tellin’ ya,
we’re all dead.”
Ryan opened the sedan door and heaved Gantz in the back, then turned to Will. “Call
and let them know we’re on the way.”
Will reached in his jacket pocket, but it was empty. “Hell, I left my
phone in the room.”
“
What’s with you and that phone?”
Will shrugged. He was always forgetting the damned thing.
“
I think it’s subconscious. I think you forget it so you don’t have
to talk to your wife.”
He laughed. “Yeah, could be.”
His current wife--bride number two--called him constantly. She was making roast
for dinner, was that okay, or would he prefer chicken--he would be home for
dinner, right? Or, she saw a dress on sale in the weekend paper that she’d
like to buy, did he mind? And by the way, the mechanic said it would cost an
extra fifty dollars to fix the car, should she tell him that was all right?
It was as if she couldn’t make a single decision without first consulting
him. Sometimes he wondered if he would have been better off staying single.
Of course, if he divorced her, he would be paying alimony to two ex-wives.
Between that and legal fees, it was probably cheaper to stay married--and miserable.
Ryan on the other hand had one of those perfect marriages that made even the
hardest of characters ripe with envy. He had a gorgeous, supportive wife, three
beautiful children. Five years more and he would be retiring from the bureau.
He had the kind of life Will had always wished for. Yet somehow he kept ending
up with clingy, dependent, whiny women. They had yet to hit their first anniversary
and already his second marriage had begun to feel like a heavy chair around
his shoulders, dragging him down.
“
Hurry up, we’re gonna be late,” Ryan said and slipped into the
drivers seat.
Will shouldered his way back through the hotel room door, spotting his phone
on the table next to the window. As he reached for it, he heard the car start,
then there was a flash and an earsplitting rumble. The window exploded and
he was flung back against the bed. Too late he threw up his arm to shield himself
from the blast, screaming in pain as shards of glass and debris tore into the
left side of his face. For a second he sat there, stunned. What remained of
the curtains hung smoldering in the window and thick black smoke belched in
from the parking lot. Then the reality of what had happened hit him square
in the chest.
Car bomb. And Ryan had been inside.
Noxious black smoke filled the room, gagging him, and through the ringing in
his ears he heard people shouting. He slid to the floor where the air wasn’t
so thick, trying to get his bearings. Keeping his body low to the ground, he
crawled toward the dim light coming through the open door. Pulling himself
up in the doorframe, he staggered out of the room, away from the searing heat,
gulping clean air into his lungs. Then he turned back to see the car. His knees
buckled and he went down hard on the blacktop.
It was completely engulfed in flames...
From the book: House
Calls
By: Michelle Celmer
Silhouette
Intimate Moments
Publication Date: 12/05
ISBN
0-373-27468-8
Copyright © 2005 By: Michelle Celmer