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The Hunters.
A Henry Parker Story.
by Jason Pinter.
AUTHOR NOTE.
Dear Reader- Thank you for downloading my brand new, never-before-published novella THE HUNTERS. Now, my guess is that you fall into one of three camps: 1) You've read all of my Henry Parker novels 2) You're a new reader who recently finished my latest book - THE FURY 3) You have no idea who I am or what I write but decided to give this free ebook a shot.
Whether you fall into group 1, 2 or 3 I'm glad you're here, because you're literally right smack in the middle of what I consider the most exciting work I've ever written.
First, let me fill you in a little bit on how THE HUNTERS fits into my Henry Parker series. I recently published a novel called THE FURY, and in that book I introduced a storyline that will continue into my next book, THE DARKNESS. I always envisioned these two novels as bookends to one, ma.s.sive story. So THE DARKNESS picks up pretty much right where THE FURY ends...almost...
You see, there's one night in between the end of THE FURY and the beginning of THE DARKNESS. Now, if you're like me, your average night might be spent having dinner, maybe watching some television, doing work, having a drink or cup of coffee, and likely falling asleep long before the witching hour. But not these characters. And that's where THE HUNTERS comes in.
You see, even though one night is only a scant few hours between sunset and sunrise, a whole lot can happen when darkness rules the night. If you've read THE FURY, in THE HUNTERS see just how much trouble is yet to come. If you're reading my work for the first time, you'll be introduced to a world full of intrigue, violence, love, s.e.x and conspiracies that go back decades. Whichever of these groups you belong to, I think you'll enjoy THE HUNTERS both as an exciting stand alone story, or one that complements and fleshes out characters you've grown to love and hate (some perhaps at the same time). Either way, get ready for one wild night.
Thank you for reading THE HUNTERS. Just remember, a whole lot can happen once the sun goes down...
Jason Pinter September 2009
Chapter 1.
It's gonna be a long night.
Those were the words I spoke to Amanda just as Jack O'Donnell left us, heading back to wherever it was that he'd left months ago. The past few days had left me drained, cold, but seeing Jack was a shot of espresso after a long sleep. I felt strong, invigorated. Strange feelings, considering I was in the middle of trying to find out who killed my brother.
Amanda and I were packing up my apartment, getting ready to move in together at a new rental farther downtown. This old place held a lot of memories, but like Jack, perhaps it was time to start over. Come clean. At some point, even the good memories are overshadowed by the bad ones, and a fresh perspective can help you hang on to the ones you want to keep and forget the ones you don't.
But as I told Amanda, it was going to be a long night, and memories didn't wash away that quickly.
Once the final box was packed, and sealed with enough duct tape to strap it to a cruise missile, we hopped in a cab and followed the driver down to our new place on 87th Street. It was a nice neighborhood, populated by young families and young professionals-which meant plenty of parks and playgrounds, and a whole lot of dive bars. Amanda and I were somewhere in the middle of those two worlds: not ready to face the mortgage and two-point-five children yet, and not quite in the mood to wear baseball caps while spilling beer over ourselves because our team scored a touchdown. For us, the mating ritual seemed over. We preferred quiet conversation to boisterous applause. A cold bottle of beer in front of one television beat a watered-down draft in front of twelve.
G.o.d, I sounded old.
We watched warily out the window as the moving van seemed to steer directly into every pothole on the street. I cringed every time the wheels jumped, and I waited for the moment when the axle would just snap in half and all of my oh-so-valuable possessions would come flying out the back like stuffing from a slit couch.
When the van finally came to a stop, I jumped out of the cab and met the movers at the back of their van. When the driver, a man with ma.s.sive biceps and an even bigger gut, wearing a back brace that could have been used in those World's Strongest Man compet.i.tions, went to pick up my stuff, I leaned in to help. Then I felt Amanda's hand on my arm.
"What are you doing?" she asked.
"I'm going to help carry stuff," I said. "It's my junk, after all."
"Yeah, but you paid them to carry it. It's their job."
"I know," I said. "I'm just not used to someone else doing the heavy lifting."
"Would you feel better if I did it?" Amanda said, her hand on her hip.
"Actually," I replied, smiling, putting my arm around her, "I would."
She stood on tiptoe and gave me a small peck on the cheek. I'm not sure how wide I was smiling before, but now I was positively beaming.
It took just under an hour for the movers to transport all the boxes and secondhand furniture up to our second-story walkup. In New York, real estate prices were often dictated by how high a floor your apartment was on. A general rule of thumb: the higher the floor, the more costly the apartment. I figured in a walkup, the reverse applied. I'd rather pay more to live on a lower floor. Lugging groceries up five flights would be a b.i.t.c.h; two was just fine.
Once the movers were done and satisfied with their tip, Amanda and I walked into our new place. Amanda's few things were already there. None of the boxes was unpacked, none of the furniture was where it was supposed to go. The bed frame was set up, but the mattress was on its side against the foyer wall. We hefted it up, brought it into the bedroom and left it fall onto the plywood with a thunk. thunk.
I sat down on the edge of the bed and took a deep breath. Looked around. Amanda sat next to me.
"Everything okay?" she said.
I looked over at her. Smiled.
She was a true beauty in every sense of the word. That auburn hair that fell around her shoulders like a sunset, the small mole on her collarbone that I loved to kiss. When we met, I felt like the luckiest man on earth simply because she'd saved my life. Now, I felt like the luckiest man on earth because she'd saved my soul.
"Thinking about Jack?" she said. "I didn't know he was still alive, let alone in our neighborhood. The least he could have done was brought over a housewarming gift."
I shook my head. "Not thinking about Jack," I responded.
"Then what is it?"
"Stephen. I'm thinking about Stephen."
Amanda nodded, stayed silent. I didn't know what to say-how would she?
A few days ago, I found out that I had a brother. A man I'd never met in my life, who until he was thirty years old had never met or tried to get in touch with me. And the day he finally did reach out to me...he was murdered.
I wasn't exactly a good luck charm when it came to family reunions.
I checked my watch. It was nearing midnight. I'd promised Jack to be at the office early the next morning. Which meant that if I was hoping to go in refreshed, I'd have to hit the sack pretty soon. And considering that our bedsheets were sealed inside any one of twenty boxes and that it was likely underneath pounds of junk (the penalty for packing quickly and not labeling your boxes), it'd be 2 a.m. at the earliest.
Not that I could fall asleep.
There was too much at stake. I still didn't know who was behind Stephen's death, and I still wasn't exactly sure what Jack had in store for me in the morning. And hardest of all, I had a beautiful girl that I loved sitting right next to me.
"I don't think I can sleep," I said.
"Want to unpack?" Amanda asked. "Take your mind off of things?"
"Not really," I replied. "Just...not sure what I want to do. A little scared about how things are going to play out. Worried that this thing runs a lot deeper than I thought it did."
Amanda sighed. She understood as well as she could, but also knew I was going through something that she wasn't a part of.
"At least let me help a little," Amanda said.
"Oh, yeah? How can you do that?"
When I felt her lips caressing my neck, that answered the question for me.
"We don't even have any sheets on the bed," I said as Amanda lowered me onto the mattress, throwing her leg over mine.
"Then I guess," she whispered in between kisses, "we won't have to worry about doing laundry."
"I like the way you think," I said. And gave in completely. I can't say I wasn't still thinking about the next day...but Amanda had a pretty good way of making me focus on the pleasant things in life.
Chapter 2.
"We're gonna be late," the blond man said. His manner conveyed a slight annoyance, even a sense of frustration, but he never would have let his emotions cross the line. The woman he was speaking to deserved more respect than that, and he considered any lack of patience on his part a reflection of his own personality defects, not of her tardiness.
He was a solid six foot two, and though he was wearing a bulky coat it was clear that beneath the fabric was a well-oiled machine. It was easy to tell from the way he walked, the way he carried himself, like a leopard that might move gracefully but could strike at any moment.
His hair was so blond it was nearly translucent, the dark roots only visible if you got close enough to look. And very few people got that close.
Everything she had worked for and planned for until now had come together perfectly. This was not the time to second-guess anything. When she needed to be on time, she was. When she wanted something to happen at her convenience, she made sure it did. So the fact that they were half an hour late to the meeting, and doing nothing but standing a block away killing time, may have made him anxious, but he knew there was a reason for it.
The woman standing next to him was tall and lithe, nearly six feet herself and possibly even more athletic. She was of Latin descent, and her dark skin brought out her emerald-green eyes. Those eyes rarely showed any outward signs of emotion. But on this night, those eyes were just a little wider, a little warier. They both knew how much was at stake, how much they'd worked twenty years for.
"Should we go in yet?" he asked, making sure the words came out as pure question. No insinuations whatsoever.
She checked her watch. Her long, black hair was tied into a tight braid that flipped around like a scythe. She portrayed no hurry, and very few emotions at all. She had filled him in on her reasons for this meeting and what they hoped to achieve from it.
A rapper, she'd said. Li'l Leroy, or something like that. So many rappers had Li'l attached to their name, as though they wanted to make you think they spent their nights swinging on jungle gyms or bouncing on trampolines.
Not this Li'l, however. What he was going to do tonight would most certainly get his Li'l card revoked.
"It's time," the woman said. The blond man began walking. No time wasted with a nod or salute or even a word. If it was time, every second mattered. And then she spoke, as if she'd read his mind. "I want him to be anxious," she said. "He doesn't know what he's getting into. He doesn't know what he thinks he's buying. I want him fl.u.s.tered and on edge."
"Why?" the blond man asked. He felt that was a fair question. He wasn't imposing, just asking her to elaborate.
"Because once he tries the product and thinks back to this meeting, he'll know that we came late for a reason. We're doing him a favor by even being here. So the next time we come he'll be sweating like a junkie. He'll eat out of our hands if we want him to."
The blond man nodded. Despite his shortcomings-and the man knew he had many-he had remarkable self-awareness. He did not have the calculating mind that she did, but he had enough confidence to admit it. He had the utmost respect for the woman, and if she was sure about what she was doing, so was he. So while this rationale did not completely make sense to him, he knew it did to her. And that mattered more.
His mind may not be as sharp as the edge of a knife, but it was as powerful as a sledgehammer. He may not have been subtle, but he got the job done.
The woman said, "Let's go."
They approached the building, located in uptown Manhattan on 135th Street off Adam Clayton Boulevard-right near the neighborhood YMCA. The building was completely devoid of tenants. Well, that was the technical truth, as there were no tenants who lived there on a permanent basis. The owner of the complex was named Leroy Culvert. Leroy Culvert was worth well over thirty million dollars.
While there were no permanent tenants, the building was not kept in a state of disrepair. It was not an eyesore like so many other unoccupied projects in uptown New York, but rather, Culvert kept it in good enough shape that it was never approached by squatters, never frequented by junkies and never attracted the homeless population who a.s.sumed that a building in total disrepair was one where not too many people asked questions.
Culvert kept it in just good enough shape that it went unnoticed in the neighborhood. It wasn't nice enough that it would stick in peoples' minds, but not dilapidated enough that it would pique their interest for other reasons.
In fact, the dark-haired woman was moderately impressed by the security system. A reinforced steel door and roving camera setup that was partially obscured by tree branches. Just enough to keep the bad guys out without alerting pedestrians as to what-or who-was being guarded.
The blond man punched out a number on his cell phone. After two rings, a man with a deep, baritone voice answered.
"Whozis?"
"Mr. Malloy and a guest. We're here to see Mr. Culvert."
"We ain't hear n.o.body buzz upstairs."
"We don't 'buzz.' And we both know that your buzzer system also records fingerprints. I'm mildly impressed with your security, but Mr. Culvert knows how we do business."
"Hang on a sec."
Malloy smiled. He could hear mumbling on the other end. The man with the deep voice clearly said "Whatchoo want me to do?" several times. He didn't bother to put the phone on hold, just covered it with his palm.
Amateur hour.
Finally the man got back on the line.
"A'right. You can come through. Eighth floor. And you better not be packin'."
"Don't worry," Malloy said. "We're simply here to do business."
The buzzer sounded, and the blond man pushed open the door with his elbow. He held it as the dark-haired woman entered. She gave him a quick pat on the shoulder to let him know he'd done well. The blond man nodded his acceptance.
The corridors were well lit, but the apartment doors looked like they hadn't been opened in years. Culvert clearly had his command center and had no use for the other apartments in the building. Yet there were cameras everywhere. The blond man made a note of them. Cameras meant a security log. A security log meant there was a recording station somewhere inside the building. He would have to find it before they came back.
"Cameras," the woman said.
"I'm on it."
"We're not leaving without the tapes."