Why would a man risk his life for a mother who abandoned him as an infant? Yet when Doug Sutherland is passed a scrawled note by a mortally-wounded Mexican, he's forced to overcome his resentment and related phobias to rescue her, recover a priceless pre-Hispanic artifact, and battle a ruthless smuggler to save himself. For Sutherland, a young Chicago entrepreneur, the dying man's note is meaningless and the warning that his Mexican mother is in danger presents a quandary. Even if true, why should he care? She deserted him thirty years earlier under suspicious circumstances. Besides, his life is already complicated by his love life, deadlines for his real estate project, and debilitating nightmares. In his dreams, he's stalked by a "burning man", trapped in a small space, and thrown into an icy water grave, images he associates with his phobias, his mother, and her disappearance from his life. He tries to convince himself that the message was meant for someone else. But then his apartment is invaded, he receives threatening calls from a Mexican smuggler, the police accuse him of drug dealing, and a DEA agent harasses him. Sucked into a maelstrom, he must fight or become another victim.
Doug
Sutherland lay face-up and spread-eagled, his fingers digging into the
mattress. The room had stopped spinning, but the bed rocked under him
like a boat at anchor. Uneasy, he listened. Sensing only his rapid
breathing and the central heat, he stretched into Kelly’s territory and
confirmed that he was alone. So what had dragged him from his stupor? As
if in answer, his telephone rang.
Opening
one eye, he peered into the darkness. The digital clock said 1:10. It
had been thirty minutes since he’d crawled out of the cab that brought
him home. He reached for the handset and knocked the phone to the floor.
Groping around the carpet, he found it.
“Yeah? What?” His voice sounded like gravel in a steel drum.
“Mr. Sutherland? Jimmy here.” It was the doorman. “Sorry to keep calling, but you got a visitor.”
“She forget her key?” Kelly must have decided to come after all.
“It’s not Miss Matthews. It’s a guy.”
“Who the fu …” Sutherland muttered.
“You all right, sir?”
“No.” His throat felt hot, his tongue dry. Who the hell visits at this hour? “Tell him to go away.”
“He won’t leave. Some Latino.” Someone said something in the background. “Name’s Primo or something.”
Sutherland turned on the reading light and squinted toward the bathroom. He needed cold water and aspirin.
“Can you talk to him?” Jimmy said, a note of urgency in his voice. Or was it something else? Maybe fear?
“Gimme
a minute.” He stood up and stumbled to the bathroom. He frowned at his
bleary-eyed image in the mirror—five o’clock shadow, faded tan, eyes
more red than blue. No photos please. He filled a glass with water,
fumbled three aspirins from a bottle, and washed them down.
Returning to the phone, he said, “Put him on.”
“Buenas noches. Soy Javier, su primo.” It was the anxious voice of a young man.
Primo? Cousin? Sutherland was perplexed. “Sorry, wrong guy.” After midnight, still half in the bag, and some chico wanted to test his Spanish. He tried to concentrate, searching for the words. “I’m not your cousin. No soy su primo.”
“Sí, señor. My mother she is Isabela Castellano.”
The
name stopped Sutherland. His own mother was a Castellano. She could
have dozens of relatives with that name. But who cared? He’d seen her
once in thirty years.
“Look, it’s late. Demasiado tarde, comprende? Come back tomorrow, okay?”
“Por favorrr,” the man begged. “Es muy importante.”
“Give me the doorman. El portero.” He heard some mumbled words and then Jimmy spoke again.
“This guy’s sick, Mr. Sutherland. Or hurt. What the? Jesus … blood …”
Suddenly, a sharp clatter forced Sutherland to jerk the phone from his ear. Had the doorman dropped his phone?
“Jimmy,”
Sutherland shouted. No answer. “Shit.” He hung up and stared at the
rumpled bed, tempted to fall back in. Instead, he dialed the lobby
number. Busy. Should he call 9-1-1? What could he tell them?
Cursing,
he grabbed his pants from the floor and struggled into them. He found
his tuxedo jacket on the doorknob and pulled it on over his bare torso.
After slipping on his loafers, he scooped his keys off the dresser and
ran out of his apartment to the elevator. When the doors opened onto the
lobby, no one was in sight. With the lights dimmed for the night, the
large space felt like a mausoleum, its granite walls and marble floor
cold as death itself. The only movement was a soft snowfall beyond the
windows that spanned the front of the building.
The
reception desk sat in the center of the rectangular lobby, opposite the
entrance. Sutherland moved cautiously, approaching it from the side.
First he saw the cowboy boots sticking out from behind the desk. Edging
closer, he saw the jeans and then the body lying on its side. The legs
were bent and pulled up into the belly. Long black hair stuck to the
face, covering it. Blood-slicked hands clutched the stomach. If that was
his visitor, he was having a bad night.
Behind
the desk on the floor, he saw the blue uniform, the brass buttons and
the ample gut. The face was as white as the marble tile, but there was
no mistaking Jimmy, the doorman.
For
a moment, Sutherland was dazed, standing in the darkened lobby with two
bodies sprawled on the floor. But he was jarred alert when he realized
that whoever did this might still be there. He glanced around, but
didn’t see anyone else. Outside the window, the driveway was deserted.
Whirling snow formed halos around the streetlights.
He
called, “Jimmy?” His voice echoed from the granite walls. The doorman
didn’t move. He was on his back, his eyes rolled upward and vacant. But
there was no visible bleeding.
He
studied the other man, Javier. His hands were clutched to his stomach.
Blood seeped through his fingers, shiny in the dim light. Suddenly, his
torso heaved, and his head snapped around to face Sutherland. His eyes
were red and pained.
“Señor
Sutherland?” His voice was weak and raspy, like glass shards scraping.
He was young, no more than eighteen, with the round face and thick lips
of an Olmec statue.
“Sí. Qué pasó?”
“Me pegaron un tiro.”
He glanced at his stomach and lifted one hand to show where “they” shot
him. Sutherland could only see a large, dark stain on the already
stiffened shirt. Who were they? Had they shot the doorman as well?
He
circled the desk and stepped over Jimmy while looking for the phone
handset. He had to pull it from under the man’s leg where it had fallen.
Dialing 9-1-1, he took a deep breath, trying to control his shaking.
When the woman answered, he gave the address and said a man was dying
and another might be dead. Jimmy certainly looked dead. There was no
blood, but his eyes were blank, and drool trickled from his gaping
mouth. Sutherland checked for his pulse, pressing on his neck where the
artery should be. With so much flesh there, he couldn’t feel anything.
Then Jimmy belched, and his eyelids flickered. A second later, Javier groaned. Which one was he supposed to help?
“Señor!” The desperate cry and the blood decided for him. He sprung over to Javier and knelt by his shoulder.
“The ambulance is coming,” Sutherland said. “What can I do? Cómo puedo ayudarte?” He pushed the wet hair away from the boy’s face. Fear-filled eyes stared back.
“Mi bota. Quítemela.”
“Take off your boot?”
“Sí, la derecha.”
The kid wanted his right boot removed. What for? A last wish to avoid
dying with his boots on? There must be a better way to help the poor
kid. The metallic odor of fresh blood and the spreading dark stain
indicated a serious injury. But Sutherland’s only training for that much
bleeding was a tourniquet.
Not
knowing what else to do, Sutherland grabbed the right boot. Pulling it
from side to side, he eased it off and was hit with a foul stench. “The
other one? La otra?” he asked.
“No,” Javier wheezed. “Dentro.”
Sutherland
held his breath and peered inside the boot. Nothing there but dark
streaks on the lining where blood had run down Javier’s leg. “Nada,” he said.
“La …” The boy’s chest heaved. “La punta.” The point.
Sutherland
reached into the toe of the boot, felt something moist wedged there,
and pulled it out. It was a wad of paper inside a plastic wrapper. He
held it so Javier could see it. “Éste?”
“Sííí.…” He exhaled. “Para usted. Muy importante.”
Sutherland
heard Jimmy cough. He stood up, jammed the small package into his
jacket pocket, and returned to the doorman. Jimmy stared at the ceiling.
He was alive, thank God, but Sutherland doubted he knew where he was.
He
heard sirens and rushed back to the boy. Javier’s eyes were squeezed
shut, his face contorted in a grimace. He wasn’t going to make it.
Flashing
lights lit up the driveway. A red-and-white ambulance from the Chicago
Fire Department slid to a stop on the snow outside. Doors slammed, and
two men hurried through the revolving door. Their rubber soles slapped
against the marble floor as they approached.
Sutherland
sat down with his back against the reception desk. He shivered and
pulled his tuxedo jacket tighter, trying to ward off the drafts from
outside. He hugged his knees and thought of his warm bed only twenty
floors above him. If only he was there and this was only a dream.
***
The
aspirins were losing to the cognacs Sutherland had downed three hours
earlier. It seemed like the bass drum in his temples was playing
background to the voices of the policemen around the reception desk.
Maybe they were making sense of what just happened. He certainly
couldn’t.
He
sat on a bench in the alcove off the lobby with his elbows on his knees
and his head in his hands. The lights had been turned up, and the glare
wasn’t helping his headache. If only he could go back to bed. He heard
footsteps approaching across the marble floor and looked up. It was the
detective again, a stocky, red-faced blond in his thirties. His name was
Dugan, Deegan, or something like that.
“Can’t
we finish this tomorrow?” Sutherland said. Another icy gust from the
door hit him. Why hadn’t he put on a shirt under his jacket?
“Just
a couple more questions.” The detective sat across from him in a
Barcelona chair. “If you never heard of this guy, why’d he ask for you?”
“A mistake.”
“He knew your name.”
“The
phone book? I don’t know. Look, officer, I was asleep. Hell, I’m still
asleep.” And half in the bag to boot. Better say as little as possible
until he could think straight. “The doorman called. That’s all I know.
Is Jimmy okay?” he asked.
“The doorman? Fainted is all. The kid’s bad though.” He looked down at his notebook. “No ID. What’d he say his name was?”
“Javier Castellano … I think.” He spelled it for him.
“You sure?”
“Just
a guess.” He stood and buttoned his jacket, as if that would make him
respectable. “It’s after two. I gotta crash,” he said. “Call tomorrow if
there’s anything else. Apartment 2001.”
The detective raised his hand. “Just a minute.”
“Aww, come on.”
“Was his boot off when you came downstairs?”
His
boot? Sutherland vaguely remembered tugging on it, but the image was
whirling in a blur of blood and contorted faces. “I might’ve pulled it
off.”
“Why’d you do that?”
His
stomach turned with a hint of nausea and he swallowed hard. “I think he
asked me to.” Feeling another wave of queasiness, he held up his hand.
“Sorry, gotta go. I don’t feel too good.” He hurried to the security
gate leading to the elevators and opened it with his coded key fob. It
closed behind him and locked.
“Wait!”
Inside
the elevator, Sutherland pushed the button for his floor and watched as
the detective hustled toward him. His index finger was raised,
indicating yet another question.. He was stopped at the security gate,
unable to pass. His face reddened, and he grabbed the gate’s vertical
bars. “You can’t! God dammit!”
As the cop rattled the gate, Sutherland said to himself, “Mañana. Everything will be better mañana.”About the author:
Gordon N. McIntosh began writing mysteries and thrillers after a master's degree from the University of Chicago and a successful real estate career. After an early retirement he and his wife traveled and lived extensively in Mexico, South America, Australia and Europe. Now they split their time between their homes in Chicago and Key West, Florida. When he’s not writing, he enjoys running, scuba diving, tennis, and travel.
My review:
I love love love this book. I cannot wait to read another book by this author. He is an amazing writer and I would so read this book like more times. I do not know if you my readers know this about me but I am not one who usually reads the same book multiple times. Even if I love it. I have always been that way. I might have to change that about me. (:
Stars I give this book:
***** (5)
(I have personally reviewed the product listed above. I did receive a free product to try out so I could evaluate and use it for my review. My thoughts & opinions in this review are honest and your opinions may be different than mine. I am not responsible for delivery of any giveaway items won from this blog, but if you have any questions about the item you have won, please email me and I will look into it.)
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