Chicagoland Gail Martin (best novels to read for students TXT) š
- Author: Gail Martin
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āUnless someone changes the rules with a one-of-a-kind weapon,ā West muttered.
Davisās lips twitched in a half-smile. āRight you are. Give the man a kewpie doll.ā
West rolled his eyes. āCute. Who was Caponeās witch, and where are they now?ā
āCapone is a do-it-yourself kind of guy,ā Davis replied. āMust have inherited some power from his grandmother, and he taught himself what he thought he needed to know. But thatās Capone, overconfident bastājerk,ā he said, glancing at Sarah, who just smiled.
That explains why everything weāre finding seems cobbled together, words from all different languages, symbols from a hodgepodge of sources. Capone was making it up as he went. No wonder it started to unravel as soon as he wasnāt here to keep an eye on things.
The most dangerous witch is one whoās untrained.
āLassiter. We need to talk.ā The stranger strode up to the table like he had a right to confront the clubās owner in his own space. Two of Lassiterās bodyguards closed ranks from the side, cutting off the newcomer. The stranger had his own goon behind him, although he was sizable enough to bounce the bouncer. I wondered how he managed to get by Tiny at the door.
āI have nothing more to say, Jules.ā Davis sounded pissed. āThe answer is still no.ā
āIf youāre playing coy, I canāt hold the opening for you forever,ā the man warned.
Davis looked at him with annoyance. āWhen have I ever played coy? Seriously, Jules. Iām not changing my mind. Leave now. Or I will make it happen.ā His voice veered from weary impatience to dangerous steel by the end, a shift that the newcomer seemed to register.
Julesās expression tightened, and his eyes narrowed. The effort at goodwill heād mustered for his attempted negotiation dropped like a discarded mask, and his lips thinned with anger.
āIāll be interested to see how that works for you, Lassiter,ā he said, threat clear in his voice. He gave a dismissive look to Davisās bodyguards. āI can see myself out.ā He turned and headed back across the club with his goon in tow. Davis nodded to his guards, and one of them followed.
āSorry about that,ā he said. āSome people just donāt know when to quit.ā He paused as if debating with himself about how much to say.
āThe Canadians I mentioned? Jules Duval is one of them,ā he went on. āHeās Rocco Perriās manāCaponeās counterpart in Toronto. We canāt figure out whether he was sent to spy on Capone or make deals behind his back. He didnāt waste a day after Capone got taken away before he was moving in on all of his partners, offering them better terms, trying to cut his organization out of the deals. Thatās not how business is done,ā Davis said, reproach clear in his voice.
āJust one guy? Iām surprised someone hasnāt come after him,ā I said.
Davis shrugged. āHeās slippery. And Caponeās organization is in chaos right now. Thatās the problem with a strongmanādoesnāt trust their lieutenants enough, so thereās no one to hold everything together.ā
Davis, like Sarahās friend Kirkpatrick, struck me as a new generation of mobster. More educated and refined than the guys who had clawed their way up from the back alleys and never quite left that brass knuckles attitude behind them. Still all shark, but wrapped in expensive suits and pricy haircuts. That made them even more dangerous in my book because no one would mistake Capone for being an upstanding citizen, but these slick guys could pull it off, which made them a lot harder to deal with.
After that, Davis and West talked shop for a little while, with Sarah chiming in when someone she knew came up in conversation. I fell back into being a bodyguard, scanning the room for threat, making note of faces, paying attention to who was with whom. Never knew when that might come in handy.
At a certain point, Davis seemed to disengage, and West realized weād been dismissed. We left amid promises to stay in touch, which I didnāt know whether West meant or not.
No one had paid us any attention when we walked in since we hadnāt been of importance. But after spending most of the evening with the big man in private conversation, it was clear others had noticed and regarded us with an evaluating gaze, sizing up our threat level. I gave them a dead-eyed glare, suggesting Iād shoot them and step over their bodies without thinking twice about it, and the room parted for us as West and Sarah swept through like the homecoming king and queen amid their court.
Once we were back in the alley, we didnāt need to discuss wanting to put distance between ourselves and 86. The big guys still loomed in the alley, and although seeing us leave the club meant Westās defiant whistle wasnāt necessary, we felt a little more welcome coming than going. A stray dog followed us, probably looking for a handout. I didnāt relax until we were back in the safety of The Drake Hotel.
It was well after midnight, and the night clerk gave us a bored once-over. Since he didnāt summon security, we must have passed his scrutiny.
We gathered in the suiteās parlor to make plans for the next day before turning in for the night.
āIām going to chase down the murder house angle,ā I said before anyone else could claim it. Holmes had been executed decades agoāhis tomb encased in concrete to deter grave robbersābut that didnāt rule out dangerous energies. Iād be less vulnerable than either of them, which is why I claimed the task and hoped we didnāt have to argue.
āI think a discussion with the owner of this āfamousā occult bookstore is in order,ā West mused. āIf Capone was a regular, maybe he knows what topics interested him. That could help to
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