Death Wish (5 page)

Read Death Wish Online

Authors: Iceberg Slim

BOOK: Death Wish
8.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Mayme and baby brother Larry fled into the most desolate depths of the mountains. They lived in the trees and caves with wild birds and animals that befriended and warned them when Poteau was about.

One afternoon in the third summer, they fled deep into a secret network of caves to elude Poteau. It was the home of the Queen of Voodoo, Bhaleur, the most esteemed and powerful of all priestesses. Ancient Bhaleur wept at the sight of their pitiful neglect and vowed to protect them against Poteau.

Bhaleur nourished them and taught them the three R's by candlelight. Bhaleur began to reveal the secrets of voodoo to Mayme on her fifteenth birthday.

Bhaleur died shortly thereafter. She was said to be one hundred and forty years old at her death.

Mayme won esteem and power as a priestess of voodoo at the age of twenty-five.

Larry blossomed into a black Apollo, renowned for his prowess as a fistfighter in the alleys of Port-au-Prince. The peasants dubbed him “Love Bone” because his sugary persuasion was fatal to maidenheads for miles around.

One afternoon Larry almost killed, in a brawl, the most feared street fighter in Port-au-Prince over a Haitian sexpot. Tourist Mario Rizzio, James Collucci's cousin and employee, was mesmerized by Larry's granite physique and ferret reflexes. Over the years Collucci had failed a half-dozen times to develop a fighter who could win the heavyweight crown.

Mayme respected the warning of the voodoo spirits that Larry's legion of enemies planned to trap him and lop off his love bone. So she gave her blessing to Larry's departure for Chicago for Collucci's evaluation.

Mayme remembered the ecstatic day of revenge on her thirtieth birthday. She let feeble old Poteau fondle the bait of his death trap. Then with his own machete, she cut his throat and beheaded him beside a mountain pool. Ironically, it was the same where Poteau had abused her as a child.

Now in her closet temple, Mayme chanted and hurled powder into an urn that burst indigo fire to summon the Loas. Her hand blurred as she repeatedly stabbed a dagger into the eye sockets of Poteau's skull.

Mayme stripped and placed the urn on the bedroom floor. She humped and belly danced around it until her sweat-glistened body reflected the blue flame.

Suddenly she groaned ecstatically. She collapsed and lay panting on the floor. Her thighs quivered violently in orgasmic release.

She stiffened and sat up as she heard the satin whispering of the voodoo spirits rise to shrill chanting:
“Larry's lost! Study the entrails of a beast! Larry's lost! Study the entrails of a beast!”

Mayme went to the phone and called Bone's apartment. She listened as it rang unanswered. She hung up and felt guilty because
she had half expected him to answer after the Loas's notice of Larry's death. She called Central police headquarters and the city morgue.
No Larry!

She heard hubbub on the street. She went to the front window and watched Mack Rivers's guests start to spill out to the sidewalk.

The two dozen or so guests were the Southside numbers bankers and their bank managers with their women. These bankers were under the protection and control of Mafia enforcer James Collucci.

Mayme left the window and went to a giant tomcat glaring at her from its cage in the bathroom. She baby talked the cat as she reached behind her back and gripped the butcher knife she would use to disembowel the beast. She must read its entrails as commanded by her beloved voodoo spirits.

Downstairs in the Palace, Mack Rivers beamed his crooked little smile on the last of his guests and locked the door. He stood at the door glass watching several smile and wave back from their flashy machines as they gunned away.

Chumps!
he thought,
they ain't never gonna wake up that Old Mack fingered them and their banks to the Mafia. Mr. Collucci fucks them for sixty percent off the top. Old Mack, the genius and president of the chumps' organization, gets a freebie pass to run his own bank.

4

A
ngelo drove down an unpaved driveway past Collucci's darkened Sweet Dream Roadhouse. He stopped at a rambling barnlike building a hundred yards behind the roadhouse. Phil and Stilotti rolled back wide doors. Angelo eased the Caddie into the dim building.

They got out of the Caddie. The four of them stood talking in low voices. The bright eyes of the Mexican girl stared at them from the open trunk of Phil's Pontiac. They walked to a far corner of the building and stood in a semicircle before Bone. The only light in the big barn was a yellow glow from the parking lights on an old truck near Bone.

Bone was naked, gagged, and bound to a metal office chair with baling wire. His eyes stared up at Collucci. He made grunty noises behind the gag.

Collucci was dressed all in black right down to a black turtleneck sweater. He stood with his hands jammed into his overcoat pockets. He studied Bone with a blank face for a long moment.

Collucci's three underlings all watched Collucci's face for the subtle signals that would be flashed there. Collucci was a past master at this kind of fatal choreography.

Collucci raised his right eyebrow slightly. Angelo stooped and removed the gag. Bone coughed and opened his mouth to speak. Collucci glared at him and flung his palm into the air like a Nazi salute to silence Bone. He said softly, “Where are the eight kilos?”

Bone's mouth gaped open. He stuttered, “Co . . . co . . . Come on now, Mr. Collucci, don't do me like this. You know I told you the truth about them kilos.”

Collucci smiled thinly and winked his right eye. Phil and Angelo quickly left the scene. Stilotti shucked out of his overcoat, and Bone's eyes were trapped by a glittery apron of knives around “The Surgeon's” middle.

Angelo and Phil came back and unloaded Bone's girlfriend and the four kilos, plastic wrapped, on the floor before Bone. Bone swung his eyes from her to the kilos of cocaine. Bubbles of sweat popped out on his face.

Collucci stroked his index finger across his right cheek. Angelo, wearing brass knuckles, took a step toward Bone and their eyes met. Angelo cocked back his arm. But he hesitated, bit his lip, shot a look at Collucci who raised his eyebrows. Angelo clenched his teeth and smashed his fist against the side of Bone's face. The brass gouged a red rill from chin to ear lobe. Bone's face was a fright mask of hate. His mass of muscle corded and puffed against the baling wire.

He screamed up at Angelo, “You cunt wop stinking motherfucker!”

Collucci nodded at Phil. Phil stepped in close and like an unhorsed picador grunted and plunged an ice pick to the hilt into Bone's upper thigh muscles and spun away leaving it buried. The shock of the thrust relaxed Bone's angry face to childlike awe. He stared down at the ice pick handle.

Collucci said casually, “Look at me, Bone. Look at your good friend that you double-crossed.”

Bone raised his glowing eyes and his head shivered a spray of sweat. He stammered, “I ain't . . . double-crossed . . . uh—”

Collucci widened his eyes in threat to cut Bone off and said softly, “Where are the other four kilos?”

Bone licked his grayish tongue across his lips and dipped his head. He said with a quaver, “You ain't gonna let them fuck with me no more?”

Collucci shook his head.

Bone blurted, “Mr. Collucci, I been doing my own secret thing on them bastards that heisted me and Mack Rivers. I Dick Tracy'd to one of ‘em and copped back four kilos. I kicked the shit outta him, and he put the finger on a young dude they call Charming Mills.”

Bone shook his head mournfully at the cruel irony of it all. “Mr. Collucci, I was gonna run Mills down and them other kilos. All your stuff woulda been safe back in your hands before the New Year.”

Collucci shot a look at his men. His mouth exploded a scornful laugh. Stilotti, with surgical knife in hand, stepped in and scalpeled off Bone's right earlobe. The lobe fell and glistened in Bone's crotch hair. He gazed down at it with mouth agape.

Collucci said, “Bullshit! I've got mug shots of most of the Warriors. Mills is one of them. Taylor executes them if they don't immediately destroy all narcotics they confiscate.”

Bone said, “Yeah . . . but lemme . . .”

“Where are the four kilos?” Collucci intoned.

Bone strained forward against the wire across his chest and said, “I ain't lying. Taylor don't know Mills is doing his side thing with a gang of dope-jacking pushers. They already killed over twenty dope dealers all over the state. You got to be dealing their dope or paying them two bills a day to deal your own dope . . . if you don't wanta die.”

“How do you know they aren't all Warriors?” Collucci said.

Bone said, “I know the rest ain't Warriors 'cause Warriors don't kill no outside black people, and no poor people at all.”

Collucci glanced down at his feet and nodded at Angelo and said, “Where can I put my hands on Mills and the four kilos?”

Bone swallowed and bit his lip. Angelo pulled back his right leg and kicked Bone in the side. Bone swayed his head, closed his eyes, and groaned.

Collucci said, “Bone, you got a terrible memory. You told me a moment ago you were going to bag Mills and check in the kilos by New Year's Day.”

Bone gazed down at the blood oozing down his chest from his wounded ear into a gooey pool between his thighs. He had a seizure of bellowed retching.

Collucci stared down at the girl. Her pink dress was wrinkled, stained, and soggy with urine and feces. Phil and Stilotti removed her gag.

She spurted words. “Sir, the black bastard lied to you. He lied to me. He never meant to give the stuff to you. I sold many, many fifty-dollar bags from the kilos for him. Please! Please let me go back to my mama and baby in San Antonio. I will keep my silence about everything.”

Collucci said, “You think Bone is a Warrior?”

She said, “No, too much pig for dope and
punta.

Collucci shrugged and said, “Where can I find Mills and the four kilos?”

She wailed, “Please! Let me clean myself and give me one day and I will find Mills for you.”

Collucci closed his eyes, shook his head, and pursed his lips. Angelo stooped and regagged her.

Bone surged in the chair with excitement and the killer instinct he'd had in the ring. He noticed that a section of the wire strung across his chest was rusted thin between his right chest and right
bicep. They had used one long piece of the wire to quickly tie him into the chair while he was still groggy.

He stole a glance at a vertical section of the truck's front bumper, just two feet away. If he could tilt the chair and fall forward at exactly the right angle he could snag the weak section of wire on the bumper and snap it with his two hundred and fifty pounds.

His arms and hands would be instantly freed. They were not tied together, but against the back of the chair by the same half-dozen strands crisscrossing his chest. The wire around his sweat-greased feet he was certain he could slip or snap with his hands in the blink of an eye. His heart boomed at the thought that before they killed him he'd get a chance to spill some of their blood.

Collucci said, “Bone, I want Mills and the kilos.”

Bone closed his eyes, flopped his head from side to side, and said weakly, “Mr. Collucci, it's . . . so hard . . . for me to hear. I feel . . . fun . . . ny. I need . . . a croaker.”

Collucci looked at Phil, who dangled a cigarette from his lips. Collucci brushed his index and middle fingers across his lips and dipped his head at Bone.

Phil grinned and stuck the fiery cigarette tip into Bone's ear. Bone cried out and reared against the wire. He tilted the chair toward the bumper and balanced it for an instant on two front legs. He scraped his toenails against the concrete for a bit of thrust. Then he plunged down toward the bumper.

He heard the wire zing when it snagged on the bumper. Next, he heard it snap and uncoil from his chest and arms. He crashed to the concrete. With flesh-peeling violence he jerked his feet free of the wire and immediately kicked up into Phil's crotch and collapsed him into a half-conscious heap.

He ducked his head down as Stilotti chopped a knife at his throat. Stilotti slashed his forehead to the bone. The buried ice pick in his thigh made a sucking sound when Bone jerked it out and scrambled unsteadily to his feet.

Bone felt a sharp stinging sensation on his neck and back. He whirled and through a fog of blood flowing from his forehead saw Stilotti's hand holding a knife high to hack him again. He sighted for Stilotti's temple and rammed the ice pick at it. Stilotti slipped in a puddle of Bone's blood. As he fell backward, the point of the ice pick went into Stilotti's cheek and punched out under his ear.

Bone heard an explosion behind him. He felt a blow like a sledgehammer against his shoulder that knocked him violently against a wall. He turned and through a wavy red mist saw Angelo fumbling with a jammed automatic. Beyond Angelo he saw Collucci pull his Magnum pistol from its shoulder holster.

He hurled himself blindly at Angelo's throat, but found his hands clutching his face instead. He hooked the fingers of his hands into the corners of Angelo's mouth and ripped the corners loose into the cheeks.

Hopping on one leg, he rushed Collucci's vague shadow in slow motion. He saw orange fireflies in the distance. His bloody face grinned as he fell to his knees and thought he'd sure as hell top all the liars in the barbershop on Forty-seventh Street. He'd throw them his true tale about the fireflies that flashed miles away and at the same instant knocked him flat on his ass.

Bone knelt like an ebony buddha on the concrete. Flaps of flesh hung from his blood-soaked body. Collucci, standing over him with gun in hand, heard Bone mumble his last words, “Mayme! Mayme, darling! They kilt your baby brother!”

Collucci turned away and glared at his wounded and bloody troops moaning in a cluster beside the truck. “You careless, stupid bastards almost committed suicide. Phil, you feel in shape to drive yourself and those two to our doctor?”

Other books

Innocence Enslaved by Maddie Taylor, Melody Parks
One Wild Cowboy by Cathy Gillen Thacker
Woman by Richard Matheson
Mark of the Lion by Suzanne Arruda
Los gozos y las sombras by Gonzalo Torrente Ballester
Summer Sisters by Judy Blume
The Carbon Trail by Catriona King