Hard Candy Saga (32 page)

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Authors: Amaleka McCall

BOOK: Hard Candy Saga
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Chapter 24
Players and Traitors
New York 1984
 
“Hit him again,” Grayson Stokes growled, circling the victim like a buzzard over a dead body.
Stokes possessed the body of a U.S. Marine and the face of a Calvin Klein model; yet he was as ruthless as a black widow spider. His new mission had come directly from the director of the Central Intelligence Agency—an honor for an agent as high as being knighted by the queen of England.
At his direction a huge gorilla-shaped man approached. The man's meaty hands held the opposing ends of two battery cables; the clamps squeezed open like the hungry mouth of a shark. Stokes nodded at the man, giving him the signal.
Without any facial emotion the man roughly clipped the menacing metal clamps onto the victim's exposed nipples.
The other man fiddled with a box; soon there was a crackling electric sound, like an old transistor radio. Guttural screams emerged from the victim's diaphragm and echoed off the walls. Stokes rubbed his chin, contemplating his next move.
“Rolando DeSosa . . . the Dominican kingpin of New York City,” Stokes said sarcastically, circling again. “Are you going to tell me to go fuck myself again, or are you going to get with the program?” Stokes pushed DeSosa's suspended body, causing it to swing like he was a slab of meat in a butcher shop.
DeSosa's
body was racked with tremors; he was a far cry from the cocky, slick-talking Tony Montana–wannabe who had strode into the room earlier.
“Fuck you,” DeSosa rasped, his throat feeling like he'd swallowed acid.
Stokes's eyebrows arched high at DeSosa's bravado. “Fuck me, huh?” Stokes laughed. Then his smile faded as fast as it had formed. Stokes quickly nodded to his henchmen. One of the suited thugs came forward with a scalpel.
DeSosa moaned. There was only so much pain a man could tolerate in his lifetime. “No, no, no,” he mumbled, his battered eyes assessed the torture tool. His mind was barely able to comprehend the cruel trick that fate had played on him, for surely he would suffer dearly for his sins before he died.
The thugs made several small incisions on DeSosa's chest, like tribal initiation markings. Then they poured salt and alcohol onto it. DeSosa didn't have any sound left in his voice box; his mouth just hung open in sheer terror.
Stokes turned his back, anxiously rubbing his fingernails on the breast of his suit. He closed his eyes as DeSosa finally got enough wind in his lungs to let out a bloodcurdling scream.
“Now, Rolando. Again, let me tell you who I am. Maybe your English is not too good, so you didn't understand me the first time. I work for President Ronald Reagan. You do know who that is, right? He's the man who allowed scum like you to enter our country, only to find out that you came here to get rich by selling drugs,” Stokes said condescendingly, addressing the top of DeSosa's downturned head.
DeSosa couldn't and wouldn't dare answer. He'd had enough.
With the flick of his hand, Stokes's people were pulling DeSosa down from the chains and relocating him to a cold metal chair. His head was fighting a major battle with his neck; eventually it lobbed forward until his chin hit his chest. Stokes stood menacingly in front of him.
“You feel better sitting on the chair?” Stokes continued, not giving DeSosa a chance to even respond. “So, now, this little thing we want you to agree to. It's sort of like an immunity deal. We take you out of prison. We give you access to the newest spin on cocaine, and you do our good president a favor by finding the right people in the worst neighborhoods to distribute this new phenomenal wonder drug—which we call crack cocaine—to. You following me, DeSosa?”
Stokes grabbed a handful of DeSosa's thick, dark hair so that he could look him directly in the eye. DeSosa could barely keep his battered eyelids open long enough to stare back.
“Rolando, I have about twelve more ways to make you say yes. Why don't we avoid using those methods? All you need to do is just open your mouth and repeat after me: ‘I, Rolando DeSosa, will agree to help this great country of the United States, which allowed my cockroach spic ass to come here and make money off its people,'” Stokes dictated. “Or should we start with that machine right there? I believe it does something permanent. Tell me, how much do you value your eyesight, Rolando?” Stokes threatened in a maddeningly calm tone.
DeSosa still did not acquiesce right away; instead, it took four more methods of torture before he finally cracked. In the end he agreed to the CIA's program to distribute crack cocaine in low-income neighborhoods in New York City and Los Angeles.
At the time no one, not even the CIA, knew the distribution was being used to fund Reagan's Contras. Stokes had only agreed to the program because he was told that controlling the distribution of this new and cheap spin on regular cocaine would help the government rid its country of the worst ghettos, like a self-inflicted genocide.
Stokes had signed on because he was a loyal employee of the government. He had thrown his moral compass in the trash compartment many years ago, and had no intention of retrieving it anytime soon.
 
Easy Hardaway was recruited into Operation Easy In, after his name had been passed to DeSosa by an NYPD detective named Francis Moore. Francis Moore was a decorated police hero; he was a rising rank-and-file detective, street legend and hard-nosed narc, who had put the worst of the worst behind bars for life.
Rolando DeSosa knew Moore differently. He knew Moore as the dirty detective he had kept on his payroll for years. Their relationship had proved very beneficial to DeSosa. Each and every time he had a run-in with the NYPD, his name would be cleared; then he'd be back on the street in a matter of days, and sometimes hours, thanks to Moore's diligent work.
Until Moore's only daughter, Corine, had begun dating a scraggly street kid known to every cop and detective as Easy, his life had been pretty uncomplicated. As the protégé of Early, a longtime criminal, Moore naturally had concerns about the safety of Corine in the presence of Easy.
One night Moore stormed into DeSosa's hangout spot in Harlem, sweating and visibly upset. He had been searching for DeSosa for days. He needed DeSosa to take care of his little “problem.” But clearly, DeSosa had problems of his own.
“What the hell happened to you?” Moore asked, noticing the healing cuts and bruises on DeSosa's face, neck and hands.
DeSosa had waved off the questions. “What is it that you want from me, Detective Moore? I haven't been out there, so I don't have anything for you.”
“What makes you think I want something?” Moore asked defensively.
DeSosa raised an arrogant eyebrow. “Because dirty cops only come around when they want something.”
Moore explained the situation with his daughter. He believed Eric Hardaway to be a no-good street thug who had stolen his daughter away from him and his wife.
DeSosa dismissed Moore's paternal concerns, at first. “I'm not doing jur fuckin' dirty work. You have a personal vendetta against the kid, ju handle it,” DeSosa said dismissively.
Moore was his employee, not the other way around. DeSosa didn't fucking have time for this personal bullshit—what with the government breathing down his back.
Moore, however, persisted like a bulldog with a bone. He simply knew that if Easy Hardaway stayed romantically involved with his daughter, Corine would end up dead in a back alley. It simply wasn't a risk he was willing to take.
Exasperated, DeSosa heard Moore out, but he considered a different course of action. Why kill a perfectly good drug dealer? The instruction Stokes provided to DeSosa was to recruit specific types of people for the program—poor people, illiterates, high-school dropouts. These recruits also needed to be hungry for fast money and posses a work ethic strong enough to generate a decent cash flow.
Easy, in many ways, was a highly qualified candidate for the program. Easy was like a wrapped Christmas gift that had been left under the tree for DeSosa.
Moore gave DeSosa information about Easy's last whereabouts, as well as his street affiliations, daily routine, known accomplices, etc. He had done all of the legwork, which meant all DeSosa had to do was track him down and make him an offer he couldn't refuse.
Easy was a kid coming up on the street, making a name for himself; he was known to many for being the quiet kid who ran in silence and violence. Easy was always hungry for his next dollar. He beat the block, day in and day out. He worked tirelessly at his job and was very smart at evading the police radar. No matter how many times they tried to snag him, Easy had strategically avoided detention and arrest. If the cops thought they had enough probable cause to do a “stop and frisk” of Easy's car, they never found what they were looking for, because there was never enough evidence to haul his ass off to jail.
Easy was smart about his hustle; he knew Early would have been proud of the name he had worked hard building for himself. Easy became especially careful in his dealings, however, after falling in love with and impregnating the daughter of a cop. He didn't want to jeopardize his newfound family by making rookie mistakes. Now his main responsibility was feeding the unborn children who grew in his girl's belly and protecting them all from harm.
DeSosa sent a man with a message for Easy. “Rolando DeSosa, the biggest kingpin in New York, wants to see you. He heard about how hard you work out here on these streets, and he wants you to come and talk to him. He wants you to move fuckin' weight for him.”
Always the skeptic, Easy didn't take the guy very seriously. In fact, Easy looked the little Hispanic dude up and down, scowling, and said, “Get the fuck outta here with that fantasy bullshit. Y'all niggas always tryin'a set a nigga up. A nigga like me been on these streets for a minute. I was born at night, nigga, not last night!” The small man scampered away like a dog with his tail caught between his legs.
After that encounter Easy stepped up his arsenal of weapons, strategically placing them at home, in his car and on his person. He didn't trust a damn soul anymore.
It wasn't until DeSosa sent his own men, and not a street flunky, to deliver the message personally to Easy that he even considered the possibility of working for DeSosa.
He had spotted them walking feverishly toward him from a heavily tinted car. Easy was on the high ready, reaching for his waistband, but they responded by opening their trench coats and showing their bare waistbands. With hands raised in peace, one
guapo
boomed, “We bring a message from our boss.”
Still wary of their presence in his territory, Easy kept a safe distance from them. DeSosa really wanted to see him; this was the general song the honchos were singing.
Easy had some questions that needed answering first. “Little ol' me? Why me? Of all the hustlin' dudes in BK . . . why me?”
The men assured him that all of his questions would be answered when he met with their boss.
Though Easy was flattered by the offer, he worried that he was being set up. Perhaps DeSosa wanted to get rid of all the competition and expand his own enterprise. Everyone knew DeSosa—he was the man pushing the fast-moving cocaine, which not only cost less than other street drugs, but brought in more profit by sheer volume of sales than heroin or weed could ever net.
After two sleepless nights of weighing the pros and cons of doing business with DeSosa, Easy finally had decided he would strap up and at least meet the man in person. He would hear the man out; and if DeSosa even hinted at taking over Easy's spots, the meeting would be over before the shit even started.
In the meantime, Easy remained cautious with whom he shared his news. He knew better than to blab his mouth to any of the jealous dudes he worked around on the streets. In fact, there was only one person Easy trusted, aside from Corine, and that was Rock Barton.
Easy appeared in DeSosa's Spanish Harlem club office. His baby face was clear of blemishes, wrinkles or worry. The budding goatee he grew was the only indication that he was even old enough to drive. Easy stood a gangly six foot two inches; his rail-thin frame was covered in his best digs. He was decked out in a butter-soft leather blazer, cashmere mock neck sweater, Potenza slacks and his first pair of suede Salvatore Ferragamo loafers. A lone gold crucifix with a ruby crown at the top sat in the middle of Easy's chest, a diamond pinkie ring graced his left pinkie. His gaudy way of dressing screamed
drug dealer
or
pimp.
This was something his friend Rock had been lecturing him to change lately.
“Sit down, Easy,” DeSosa instructed in his thick accent.
Easy nodded respectfully and took a seat. Easy's heart hammered and his palms were soaking wet. He splayed them open, flat on his pants legs, and rubbed them dry.
DeSosa's style was simple. No jewelry, no flashy clothes, just a very regal presence that said,
I'm in charge.
DeSosa stubbed out his customary cigar and leveled Easy with a look.

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