Page 148 of Thankless in Death
Then he was gone, too, rushing out with the rest.
“Nan!” Sean sent Sinead a look of awe and joy. “They’re after the bad guy.”
“They are, yes. Well then, let’s go down, have a little tea.”
•••
Reinhold slept the sleep of the satisfied, and woke to Joe’s harsh, sobbing screams.
“Jesus.” Reinhold rolled, stretched, yawned. “What a pussy.”
He hit the bedroom AC for hot chocolate—extra whipped cream—and stood at his window wall, looking out at New York, at the city he knew feared him, while he drank.
When Joe didn’t show up at his mother’s by about noon, Reinhold calculated, to hang out with his stepfather, his brother, and his brother’s ugly wife and uglier kids, his fat cousin, Stu, who’d have his piss-faced grandmother in tow, they and the city would fear him more.
All around the Thanksgiving tables he’d be the talk. Jerry Reinhold, a killer who did what he wanted, who he wanted, when he wanted.
Taking his time, he dressed—crap clothes again because holiday or not he was working—then went into the spare room to activate the droid.
“Good morning, sir. Someone appears to be in distress.”
“Don’t worry about him. Don’t talk to him or listen to him. Got it, Asshole?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Go down and fix me, what is it, yeah, eggs Benedict, a couple slices of toast with strawberry jelly, and whatever ought to go with it. Then come up here and clean up my bedroom, take care of my clothes. I’ll let you know when to come down again.”
“Yes, sir.”
Before he went down himself, Reinhold checked himself out in the mirror. He thought he might dress up later, catch some football—which reminded him to tell the droid to get him some prime Giants tickets. Maybe he’d have some fancy drink out on the terrace, too.
He’d planned on keeping Joe around another night, having some fun there. But if the fucker was going to keep screaming...
He strolled down.
Joe looked worse for wear, that’s for sure. His face—and he’d always been a conceited fuck—all bloody and bruised. A lot busted in there. The shallow cuts had stopped bleeding, something he’d fix after breakfast. And the burns looked like circles and streaks of charcoal.
Reinhold picked up the sap, gave Joe an absent smack. “Shut the fuck up, or I’ll slit your throat and be done with it.”
“Please, God, please.” The words came garbled through broken teeth. “I think I’m dying. I’m hurt bad. Don’t hurt me anymore, please, man, please. I’ll do whatever you want. I’ll give you anything you want.”
“Oh yeah? That’s something maybe. You’ve got some money, Joe. The Vegas money, and more. Maybe if you give me your passcodes so I can take it, I’ll let you go.”
“Anything. You can have it. I—I’ve got my uncle Stan’s passcodes, too.”
“Is that so?” With a smile, Reinhold gestured to a nearby chair. “Set me up there,” he ordered the droid.
“I found them when I was helping him out with some stuff. He’s got some real scratch, Jerry. I’ll get it for you. Just let me go. Promise to let me go, and I’ll get you all of it.”
“I’ll think about it.”
“Please. I need water. Can I have some water, please?”
Easing into his seat, Reinhold took his knife and fork from the tray the droid gave him.
“Can’t you see I’m having breakfast? Shut up before you piss me off. You,” he said to the droid. “Turn on the screen. It’s got to be about time for the parade.” He smiled, cut into his eggs. “I’d hate for us to miss the parade, Joe. Just lie back and enjoy.”
EVE COORDINATED WITH HER TEAM EN ROUTE. She couldn’t afford the time or the exposure for a final briefing on site. Too many people with too many ways to get the word out that cops were gathering at New York West. A leak to the media, on the Internet, might alert Reinhold.
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