From The Twisted Mind of Money Lloyd
Chapter 1
The First Domino to Fall
Las Vegas, Nevada, 1:13 am, Current Day
Gangster fantasies are being realized.
It was only two seconds but that was more than enough time for the player to recognize.
"Hit or stand?" The blackjack dealer asked the player.
But the player was engrossed, searching the bustling casino crowd. I know I saw that cat at the other spot earlier, he thought to himself as he scanned the scene for that not so familiar and not so friendly face.
"Hit," the dealer repeated, "or stand, sir?"
"Daddy, he's talkin' to you," said the scantily clad vixen posing by his side. She was all lips and legs. Though not pretty in a classy sense, she more than made up for her lack of natural beauty with raw sex appeal. She worked the stereotypical lollipop in her mouth like the professional that she was.
"Shut-up," he said. "Let me think."
He rubbed the three-day-old stubble on his chin, eyed his drink, the impatient dealer and finally his cards. They couldn't have tracked me down that fast. They can't be here. The hell they can't. It's gotta be nerves. I should get the hell outta here. I'll let the cards decide, he thought. He had a nine of clubs and a three of diamonds. Easy decision.
"Hit me."
The dealer dealt. "Jack of Spades and bust."
"Damn, " he cursed and downed his drink, then glanced around furtively. Maybe I'm just paranoid, too much coke, pussy and hard alcohol and not enough sleep. Shit, I need a hit. Fuck that, I'm trippin'.
Clumsily, he pulled a pack of Newports from his loud silk shirt and lit a cigarette.
"Bet, sir?"
"Not on your life. Definitely not on mine. The cards don't lie."
"Ain't no thang, " the vixen said. "We'll win the next hand."
Abruptly he stood, removing the whore's arm from his. "Ain't going to be another hand. I'm outta here."
"What you talkin' about, Daddy?"
"I'm not talkin', I'm gone. Holla at me laters."
"Gone. Holla at you later?" All the hooker came out of her now. "Naw mutha-fucka holla at me now! I didn't come all the way out here to kick it with you fa' free."
She was making a scene and that he didn't need so went into his pocket and retrieved a bankroll of bills. It looked like a miniature newspaper rolled in his hand. After peeling a crisp new one hundred dollar bill he handed it to her.
"A hundred dollars, " she was scandalized. "Oh hell no, you cheap son-of-a-"
This shit is getting out of hand. He snatched two one hundred dollar trips off of his tray shoving them into the hooker's hand. "Shut the fuck-up and shake the spot, bitch. I'm payin' you to bounce."
Then he grabbed his tray of chips, tossed a fifty dollar chip to the dealer and spun off. Unwilling to let the big one get away, the hooker was in hot pursuit.
"Hold up, Daddy-"
"Get it through that crystal-fried brain of yours," he said without slowing his stride. "I'm done, kick rocks, tramp!"
"Cheap bastard. All that money and-"
He turned back saying, "You can break yourself but you can't break me. You never met a player like-"
The slick words choked in his throat. There was no doubt about it now, he'd been followed. He was staring at the nameless face of that dude from the MGM and Caesar's. First a thin tendril of icy fear ran down his spine. Next he froze completely; the cigarette fell from his lips as he caught sight of none other than Murder Mitch Mitchell, the underboss of the Black Mafia Family. Though he was the boss this psychopath still put in his own work when the notion suited him.
A knowing smile spread across the face of his pursuer. It was not pleasant; the smile of a coldblooded killer. His killer suit marked him as a professional.
Endless seconds passed as they locked gazes, predator and prey.
Then the player begins to play a different game. Survival is the name of this game.
"Free chips over here!" He screamed tossing his tray into the air. Forty-eight thousand dollars worth of playing chips rained down upon the crowded playing floor of the Luxor creating a Sharon Stone/Casino like diversion. The greedy masses swarmed in a feeding frenzy. Under camouflage of the commotion he ran to the elevators and pushed the button and waited impatiently. Of course the elevator was taking forever to arrive. He alternated between frantically pushing the button repeatedly and literally looking everywhere at once, completely oblivious of the people staring at him like he was a mad man.
"C'mon, come on," he pleaded.
Finally the elevator arrived and he rushed in before even the first occupant could exit. He must have looked as desperate as he felt because few of the people waiting with him entered the car. It was only after the doors closed and he was safely headed to the garage level that he began to relax. Once the doors opened the crippling anxiety returned but subsided once he saw the garage level was void of people. Capitalizing on the solitude he pulled a thirty-eight snub nosed revolver from his leg holster.
"That was close," he chuckled to himself as he headed to his ride. The eerie echoes of his footsteps were all he heard initially. The parking lot was huge and though well lit it was full of shadowy areas. The sounds of elevators returning, car doors opening and closing and a million other minutiae set his heart pumping again. He wasn't out of the woods yet.
A couple's sudden laughter almost made him jump out of his skin. But he found solace in his heater as he brandished the weapon.
Once he reached his Tahoe a wave of relief washed over him. But wait what if it was rigged to blow? He laughed aloud at himself. You have to do better than that to catch the kid.
"Close but no cigar, suckers." He pressed his key chain disarming the alarm with a loud reverberating chirp.
It was then the figure emerged from around a nearby pillar. "Who's the sucker now, Deal? It's over."
They'd found him but it was far from over. Without pause, without turning his body he pointed his pistol and fired from the hip. The explosive muzzle-flash illuminated the face of the figure even as the hollow-tipped bullet tore through it leaving a gaping hole in its wake and setting off an orchestra of car alarms. The report of the gun blast was still echoing through the lot when he opened the SUV door. That's when he was hit with a blow to the back of the head, dropping him on his face.
"Damn," a voice said, "this muthafucka got J."
""Turn his ass over," another said. "He's done and I want him to see who did him."
Through a haze of blood and dizziness Deal recognized two of Mitch's hitters, killers on the payroll, especially the one with the hand cannon in his face. Then he felt the kiss of cold steel when the pistol was pressed to his eye.
"You're through, partner." Charlie C. said.
"Back-off, C." Mitch said. "You can have what's left of his sorry ass after I'm through with him." His voice was rough like sandpaper across gravel.
"I'm going to hold you to that, Mr. Mitchell." Charlie C. shoved the pistol into Deal's eye, knocking his head to the side.
Mitch leaned in close to Deal. "You're lucky Domino wants you alive, punk."
He raised a large caliber pistol over his head and it then it was lights out.
◊ ◊ ◊
Oakland, California
Deal's head felt like it had been squeezed in a vice. Correction, it was still being squeezed in a vice. He could feel the pressure steadily building, threatening to pop his eyeballs right out of his throbbing skull. The bitter, coppery taste of blood filled his mouth. He was in a world of darkness and pain and vaguely remembered being worked over by Murder Mitch, then Charlie C. before being revived to get worked over by Murder Mitch again.
"Bring the fool around."
Although he'd never seen him in person there was no mistaking the rich baritone of Domino. Then his whole being was shocked by a brutal open-handed blow. His head reeled and he opened his eyes.
"There we are," Domino said. "That should help you get your bearings."
The vice that was squeezing Deal's head had let him go before smacking him. If not for the rope that tied him into his chair he would have collapsed to the floor. As I was he just slumped into his seat like a discarded ragdoll.
"Look at me when I'm talking to you, you insignificant wretch." Domino said. "You had better wake up. This is your last chance, boy." He was the epitome of dangerous calm.
Deal cocked his head facing the man, and Domino was a huge hulk of a man, standing almost seven feet tall. He weighed over two-hundred and sixty pounds but wasn't fat. An impeccable, hand-tailored, old school, double-breasted suit fit like the proverbial glove around his muscular frame. His features looked like they had been etched from stone.
In the media manipulated public eye Damien Victor Domino was a billionaire, a self-made titan of industry with the largest import/export firm in the United States, whereas Mitch Mitchell was the crown kingpin of the Black Mafia Family. In reality murder Mitch worked under Domino an absolutely monolithic figure in the underworld of organized crime. The fact that he was here to deal with Deal personally couldn't be good.
Stark fear gripped Deal like a physical thing.
"M, m, Mr. Domino, " he stammered. "I'm s, s, sorry, man. I wasn't stealing your money. I invested it in a can't lose-"
Domino towered over deal. "Cease your mindless prattling, fool. There is nothing you can say to save yourself, nothing you can tell me that I do not already know. However if you continue to speak you will only incense my anger and should that happen, let me assure you, you sniveling little worm, you will beg to be killed before I leave this room."
Deal, silent as the dead, focused on Domino.
"Good. Now it is quite fortunate for you that I have a use for your otherwise worthless carcass. It is this and only this that grants you one last chance."
"Yeah, yeah one last chance and I'll make good on everything, I swear." Deal pleaded.
Domino grimaced at the interruption, crossed his can across his arms. "Mr. Mitchell."
On cue the vice that was standing behind Deal delivered a savage blow to the side of his head, knocking him and the chair he was strapped to into the floor.
When he came to he was sitting upright again. As he regained his bearings he recognized where he was. The place smelled of old wood, rusted steel, oil, and chemicals. The artificial light of the fluorescent lights hurt his eyes. This was one of the Black Mafia's warehouses in West Oakland.
Domino still stood with his arms crossed. Deal couldn't be sure if she was there before but now he saw the woman standing next to him. She was a stallion, purebred sex in a dress, Domino's daughter, the socialite seductress Dominique Domino. And on Domino's left stood the vice, murder Mitch. They all shared the same look of contempt and disgust. The slim, professional killer turned kingpin chuckled.
"It's not funny, Mitch," she said. "He's pathetic."
"True, Dominique, he is a cretin; a subhuman species of a subculture spawned from a materialistic and oppressive society. Yet even a pawn such as he can be of value if used properly." Domino's eyes gleamed as he spoke to Dominique. "This is the reason I brought you here this morning, to enlighten you and continue your education."
"Then you're wasting your time. I'm already a master of manipulating men, powerful men." She responded arrogantly.
"Indeed, short-termer" Domino laughed. "Watch and learn of the long term."
He turned his attention to Deal. "Back to you, now that I have your undivided attention and we are crystal on the consequences of not remaining silent whilst I pontificate. In terms someone of your diminutive intelligence can understand – let me run it down for you fool. You cannot take anything from me. While one-hundred and fifty thousand dollars is everything to one such as you it is nothing to me. You see I am a man of principle. It is a matter of principle. And you still do not know what to do with that. It could have been a million yet it may as well have been a thousand dollars. It makes no difference you still would have run to … Las Vegas of all places, and literally doped and squandered it on cheap whores and cheap thrills."
"I know you better than you know yourself. I knew what you would do long before the thought ever entered your simple, limited, miniscule mind." Domino addressed his daughter.
"Everything that has occurred has done so according to my design."
Returning his penetrating gaze to Deal, he continued. "You are nothing but a puppet and I pull the strings. You are to be the bait I will use to ensnare my true quarry. How he came to befriend one such as you I will never know. It matters not. You are going to make a telephone call to your main man. He moniker he used back in his active days was?"
"S, Shark?"
"How astute of you." Domino gripped Deal's jaw in his enormous hand. "And you will be most compelling as if your life depends on it because make no mistake it does. Yes?"
With the look of a deer caught in the headlights still transfixed on his face, Deal simply nodded his compliance.
"Now listen closely and I will tell you exactly what you are to say."
Readjusting himself, Domino assumed an even more regal posture turning triumphantly towards his daughter. "Opening gambit: The first pawn has been put into play. Time to bring the knight into the game."
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