Wet Work: The Definitive Edition (24 page)

BOOK: Wet Work: The Definitive Edition
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Nick looked away, zipped the case and went downstairs.

He’d try Sandy one more time from the house, and then call again from the Precinct. But the fact she hadn’t picked up didn’t bode well.

Let her be safe,
he thought.
Please, God.

He dialed.

On the second ring, the receiver was picked up.

Answered by a man’s voice he didn’t recognize.

 

 

BROOKLYN.

9:30 P.M.

 

The phone rang and Dick nearly hit the roof.

He was trembling with fear and adrenaline as he stared down at the body of the man he’d killed.

I killed him.

The words flashed in blood-red neon.

Blood.

God, it was everywhere.

He dropped the open razor and looked at the woman lying unconscious at his feet.

Which was when the phone rang.

He picked up without thinking.


Hello?”

Dick heard someone at the other end breathing heavily.


Hello?” he asked again, looking down at the dead man.

I killed him
.


Who’s this? Roger?”


No, this is Dick.”


Who the hell’re you?” the voice demanded. “Where’s Sandy?!”


Huh?”


What number’s this?”

The woman on the floor gave a strangled cough and moved.


What?” Dick replied. “Number? I don’t know. I don’t live here.”


Where’s Sandy?!” the voice at the other end bellowed.


Is she blonde?” he asked, looking at the woman, whose eyelids were fluttering.


Yes. Where is she?!”


Here.” Dick paused. “I think she’s been hurt.”

The voice at the other end breathed deeply.


I heard a scream. I…I climbed the fence. I—there was a man. I killed him.” He spat the last three words out. “Who is this?”


My name’s Nick Packard. I’m Sandy’s husband—is she okay?!”


Don’t shout,” Dick replied. He was starting to feel light-headed. “I think so.”


What happened? Tell me,
please. Is she okay?


Yes,” he said, not sure, and repeated what had happened.

Sandy’s eyes opened.


Nick?” she whispered.

Her head hurt.

The voice on the phone—Nick—said something else, but Dick wasn’t listening. He watched the woman as she tried to sit up and noticed for the first time how attractive she was. Blonde. Like Ruthie.


Look, hold on,” he said, putting the receiver down, bending towards her.


You okay?” He reached out a reassuring hand. She flinched and he withdrew.


Nick’s on the phone.”

Sandy swayed as she tried to get to her feet.

Dick went back to the phone. “I think she’s okay. Here.”

The woman—Sandy; her name was Sandy—was staring at the body.


The phone.” Dick said softly. “It’s your husband.”

He took her hand. This time she didn’t flinch. She swayed. He pulled a chair around from the kitchen table for her to sit on and gave her the phone.

 

 

WASHINGTON HARBOR COMPLEX.

9:57 P.M.

 

The face in the mirror was his, but the Dominic Corvino reflected there was alien to him. He reached out, touching the mirror for reassurance. Dried blood covered his throat, his clothes. His mind was sluggish, as if he’d been drugged.

Why was he coated with blood?

Whose blood?

What had happened?

The last thing he could remember was a phone call awakening him. Something about driving towards the airport. Corvino slammed his hand down on the sink. Why couldn’t he remember?

The sound of the man’s neck snapping cracked loudly in the stairwell
.

He’d killed two men.

But was it before or after he’d driven to the airport?

A familiar voice called his name, a gun exploded.


What’s happening to me?” he whispered.

Exhaustion clung to his body like wet clothes. His back was stiff, his joints ached, and his chest was sore. He placed a hand on his forehead. It was cold.


You’re dead,”
a voice echoed inside his head—
his voice.


No.”

You’re dead. Someone shot you. And now you’re alive again. Something is terribly wrong.

He pulled open the bloody shirt to examine the bullet hole directly over his heart.

The Corvino in the mirror creased his brow, frowning as he probed the wound.


I’m dead,” he said to his reflection.


Dead but alive…and this…this is insane!” he bellowed, punching the mirror. His reflection fragmented, cracks spreading out from his fist. Slivers of glass dropped into the sink, smashing in the bowl. He raised the fist towards his face. His knuckles were cut. Corvino licked his hand. The blood tasted good.

He wandered into the bedroom.

It was insane. Nothing made sense. Reality was melting like one of Dali’s soft watches.

Two men had tried to kill him.

Someone else had succeeded. He was dead, dreaming, hallucinating. He had to be hallucinating. Someone had drugged him: that had to be the answer.

Corvino sat on the futon. Whatever was going on, he needed help. And there was only one person he trusted—Ryan.

Picking up the phone, he dialed Del Valle’s number.

A recorded voice clicked in seconds later.


We are sorry. All lines are busy. Please hang up and try your call again later.”

He pressed redial.


We are sorry—”

Corvino hung up, unconsciously sucking his bleeding knuckles.

He tried again. This time the line connected at Del Valle’s house in Belvedere, Virginia. The phone rang. And rang.

What was he going to say? “
It’s Dominic. I’m dead and need help. I don’t know what a dead man’s supposed to do.”
He laughed nervously. The phone continued to ring.
Yes, that’s right, Ryan, I said I’m dead. Yes, dead as in shot. In fact, I have a nice chest wound and I feel as cold as ice and I’m confused as hell and why don’t you answer your goddamn phone?!

The receiver at the other end rang for the twenty-seventh time, and he hung up.

Maybe he was at the Farm, as HQ was referred to. He picked up the handset, pressing the autodial number for Langley.


We are sorry. All lines are busy. Please—”


Hang up and try your call again. Thank you,” he muttered irritated.

Sitting in his apartment wasn’t going to solve anything. He needed answers, and the only place to find them would be the Farm. Should he wait until dawn? No, he needed answers now.

He went to the window and gazed out across the Potomac. Houses were burning in Colonial Village, the residential area next to Arlington Cemetery. Sirens screamed faintly in the distance. Plumes of flame licked the black horizon. It wasn’t just he who was mad—the world was going crazy for no apparent reason. But he’d find out why. There was always a method to the madness.

Corvino opened the wardrobe, selecting a Kevlar vest and a black combat uniform from the row of military garb hanging neatly alongside his karate
gi
s. He stripped down to his undershorts, stroking his fingers almost lovingly over the chest wound. It was sensual in its fatal beauty. If he’d worn the bullet-proof vest he wouldn’t be dead. He traced the circumference of the hole. A good shot. Directly through the heart. If he’d been the one pulling the trigger, he would have gone for a head shot. But then he wouldn’t be standing here now.
C’est la vie.

He dressed quickly, then removed a box of ammunition from the cupboard. Six clips for the 9mm Browning, six clips for the .45 auto he kept as a backup. A Navy SEAL knife. He slipped the latter into his boot sheath.

He was ready. It was time to seek answers.

He paused in the living room to glance fondly at the photograph of Billie Holiday. He’d never see it again, or hear her voice, he felt certain. He touched a finger to his lips, then placed it on the glass over hers.


Goodbye.”

Corvino left his apartment for the last time.

 

 

THE FARM (CIA HQ).

THURSDAY, JUNE 1.

11:58 P.M.

 

Ryan Del Valle leaned up on the makeshift bed in his office and sipped a glass of water. His throat burned and his glands were swollen. His temperature was climbing, and he knew he was going to die. He had the plague. What started as a slight cold had mutated into something deadly. Within twelve hours he’d be dead. Only unlike the others, he had no intention of coming back. There was no guarantee he would, but there was a chance and he refused to face that final indignity.

Jeannie had died that morning, and the disposal crew had taken her away to be buried in a mass grave. There was no time for tears or sad goodbyes anymore. God, what a mess. In the space of under a week, civilization had come apart at the seams.

He reached for the gun lying next to the glass and picked it up. Its weight reassured him. Best get it over with.

He hesitated. Although he was now agnostic, he’d been raised a Catholic, and the lessons learned in childhood clung to him. Suicide was a cardinal sin. If he took his own life, would he damn his soul?

Damned if you do; damned if you don’t.

Do it,
he urged himself.
Get it over now, while you still have the strength.

He tried to ease himself up into a sitting position. His arm trembled. He ached all over, and he could feel his strength deserting him.

The door to the office suddenly swung inwards, revealing empty corridor.


Who’s there?” he asked hoarsely.

Hershman stepped into view, a dark grin on his face.


Suicide, Ryan?” Hershman said, continuing to smile as he walked into the room. “It doesn’t surprise me. You’ve always been weak. But if you do it, you’ll never know what you missed.”

Del Valle turned to see Skolomowski standing in the doorway. The Pole grinned.


It feels good,” he said. “Better.”

Del Valle hadn’t seen Hershman in over twenty-four hours. He’d assumed the executive officer was dead. No one knew for sure, but then no one cared. It was all falling apart so quickly you couldn’t keep track.


It is good,” Hershman agreed. “Invigorating. Difficult at first. But once you get used to it, it feels wonderful.”

He sat on the desk. Skolomowski remained in the doorway.


You’ll never know.”

Skolomowski produced a large gun with his right hand from inside his combat jacket.

Del Valle said nothing.

The Pole looked at Hershman and laughed.

He shot Del Valle in the kneecap.

Del Valle screamed.

Skolomowski fired again. Twice. The bullets slammed Del Valle’s body against the wall as they entered his chest.

The Pole closed the door, and stepped inside, licking his lips.

They ate in peace.

 

 

SLEEPY HOLLOW, VIRGINIA.

FRIDAY, JUNE 2.

3:02 A.M.

 

Corvino had made good time despite traveling on foot, and three hours after he’d left Georgetown he was in Sleepy Hollow, a quiet suburban area a little south of Route 66. He’d crossed the Potomac via the Key Bridge after skirting a roadblock on the approach ramp, scaling a slope behind the six National Guardsmen who were stationed around the row of jeeps and a truck which blocked the roadway. Getting onto the bridge had been easy. Getting off hadn’t, and he’d killed a guard who’d nearly stumbled on him hiding in the shadows as he crept towards the exit ramp in Virginia where the bridge joined the Washington Memorial Parkway. He’d silenced the man with his knife, laying the body down beside the fence, hidden by a support. But the corpse had been discovered by a second guardsman within minutes, as he was slipping away from the off ramp. The guardsmen had searchlights at the roadblock and he barely managed to duck behind a clump of bushes before they lit up the surrounding area. Fortunately, an explosion in Colonial Village distracted them long enough for him to break cover and make for the Curtis Parkway on the other side of the Washington Memorial Road.

Colonial Village was a chaos of flame and smoke. The suburb burned street by street, with firemen and the National Guard unable to contain the conflagration as police and Emergency Services evacuated residents from nearby houses. A fire-department helicopter hovered overhead monitoring the steadily spreading flames.

Using the shadows, Corvino stuck close to Wilson Boulevard. Running parallel to Route 66, he knew Wilson would take him towards Falls Church. He’d made it across the Fairfax County line at Seven Corners and stopped. He was suddenly tired.

He remembered killing the woman who had been tearing flesh from the doorman’s corpse.

Self-disgust seared like acid in his mind. He wasn’t Dominic Corvino anymore, he was a ravenous cannibal, and the knowledge sickened him. He relished the succulent taste of the dead man’s flesh, the hot, salty flavor of the blood. His mouth salivated at the memory, his stomach churning.

He had to get out of the open, find somewhere safe and ride out the vile craving. He couldn’t do it again—
wouldn’t give in to the desire
—however much his insides cried out for food.

A large white house stood five hundred yards back from the boulevard, screened by a row of fir trees. Corvino slipped through the open gateway and skirted the front yard. The house was dark. If anyone was home they were asleep. Fine. All he wanted was to get into the cellar, rest up for a few hours and depart before daybreak. He crept around to the left where he could see the faint outline of storm-cellar doors that would lead under the house.

BOOK: Wet Work: The Definitive Edition
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