Seemingly
taking away all the light from the room, the man stood over Benny Russo. He extended his arms and with punishing
strength took hold of his neck. Like a
rag doll, Benny Russo was hauled from the floor, then jostled, then
tossed...maneuvered to find the perfect grip for his enormous hands. When he found it his grip instinctively
tightened. He then asked Benny Russo if
he wanted to die fast or slow, teasing him with kind mirth in his eyes. When he tried to reply, his throat was seized
in a vicious clamp. Gasping for air, his
immediate reaction was to reach up and jerk himself free. But he couldn’t...the man was incredibly
strong and smiled at his attempt, as if it were some sort of game. Benny Russo
struggled and writhed, trying desperately to tear from the iron grasp which was
crushing his windpipe. But nothing
would. His face turned red and then
deep purple. After what seemed an endless horrible eternity, there came a car-rack, and Benny Russo was gone. And his last living thought, crazy and perverse
as it was, was that the whole time he never stopped thinking about the young
blonde. Would she have been a good lay?
Afterward,
the huge assassin carried the body into the bathroom and laid it in the
tub. The young blonde was next. A set of pleated curtains were pulled. At the same time, the smaller gentleman went
through the apartment, finding it empty.
Moments later, there was a smooth click of a door being closed from the
outside, followed shortly by a vehicle pulling off. Though cruel, such events
were necessary to keep things running smoothly.
There was a formidable operation to maintain. And everyone knew what
time it was. As well as the results for incompetence.
There was a golden rule in place: Whatever could go wrong would go wrong. Murphy’s law. And there was one particular individual who
lived by it, the head man-in-charge. Nino Cutaro.
In realizing this, he constantly strive to anticipate
any problems, and if one did arise, have a contingency plan already in
place. The way he saw it, if you ran
things right and you were smart, you stayed out of trouble by preventing it
from happening. Which
was why he regularly made cash bonuses to the right people connected with his
operation, and could always be counted on for a favor. He maintained his political contacts
religiously, burnishing his reputation for dependability and total discretion.
He was also known to be shrewd, loyal, and resolute, as well as scrupulously
punctual. If he gave you a date and
time, you could depend on it, no matter what.
As a result, in all the years he’d been in business, he never had a
problem he couldn’t handle. A delivery
truck became inoperable? An employee got
drunk or high and made a fool of himself? Or even worse, ran off at the mouth? Nothing to it. At the snap of his fingers, the irritant
would disappear. Permanently. It was the only way he
worked.
In
his ball game, it was one strike, and
no more.