Two stories below, the elevator stopped. Wordlessly, Monk shoved Pearson out of the elevator car and into the room directly across the hall. Pearson was about to ask what was going on. When Monk entered, locking the door behind him, all doubt was eliminated.
Pearson glanced around the room. It was dimly lit, maybe fifteen by twenty feet. The room had no windows, no other doors and no furniture. The single door had no knob or lever, just a slot in the lock plate to accept an electronic pass card. The silence implied a soundproof room, although Pearson’s footsteps echoed coldly around him in it. The stains on the cinder block walls looked like dried blood, and the air carried the musty smell of the crypt. A horizontal bar on the wall to the far left looked like it could be the handle to open a small chute, like the incinerator door in his first apartment.
A most vicious terror seized his heart. He had expected to be roughed up for his failure, maybe have a bone broken. Now he realized he had outlived his usefulness to Stone. Monk was not here to punish him, but to dispose of him. And he knew it would hardly be a fight. There was no question in his mind that this brute would certainly kill him. But maybe with luck, he could take an eye, or an ear, or something.
With a speed born of desperation, Pearson spun a powerful right cross into Monk’s face. He was following it up with a claw hand blow before he realized how badly his knuckles were hurt. Monk clamped the incoming left in his own ham-like hand inches before it reached his face.
Shock dragged despair into Pearson’s heart. He had expected Monk to be inhumanly strong, but who would have guessed he was so fast?
That was Pearson’s last coherent thought.
Monk casually twisted Pearson’s wrist until the bone splintered. Pearson battered impotently at him with his good fist until Monk slapped him on the side of his head, sending him sprawling. Pearson lay dazed until Monk reached down, wrapped a hand around Pearson’s right leg just below his knee and lifted him into the air. While Pearson hung helplessly, Monk shifted his grip so he could get both hands wrapped around one thigh. He put his thumbs together, pushing out in the same direction.
Monk was not a sexual creature. He used no drugs, and rarely did he drink. He could barely read and certainly never would unless he had to. He was not perceptive enough to enjoy most television or movies. He did not even like music. There was just one thing he really enjoyed. The crack of bones breaking in a live body, that was his favorite sound.
Pearson’s screams reverberated in the soundproof room, but they could not drown out the snap of his leg breaking. His screams abruptly ended as the pain overwhelmed him and he passed out.
Monk grinned at the breaking noise and shrugged when Pearson went limp. For him, this was a pretty good one. He had no bloody mess to clean up. It was too bad that Pearson fainted after only one bone. Monk would have preferred a longer experience. But, since he stayed in one piece, disposal was easy. Monk simply opened the incinerator hatch and stuffed Pearson down the chute head first.
18
Some people go through layers of sleep. They drift slowly down into dark stillness. Then when morning comes, they rise from it, one layer at a time, until they open their eyes, focus through a groggy haze and slowly gain consciousness.
Felicity had never been one of them. Some days, when the nightmares came, she would walk past that same old parked car, watch it explode and see her parents splattered against a wall. She would wonder why not herself. The dream would end abruptly, and she would burst into wakefulness, panting and dripping with sweat.
Other days, like today, she would simply pop awake. Her eyes snapped open and in an instant she was alert and ready for action. First, she sent her senses around the room, confirming her location. This was her New York penthouse. It was nine thirty-seven a.m. and she was alone in her bed.
Seven minutes later she was in the hallway, her hair brushed out and her face glowing, wearing very tight jeans with an oversized white blouse unbuttoned to her breastbone. She needed no bra.
She found Morgan in the kitchen facing the stove, wearing black jeans and those ever-present boots. His black tee shirt said, “nuke ‘em ‘till they glow” across the back. Conspicuous to her by its absence was his shoulder rig and the weapons it carried. The crackling sound told her that he was pouring beaten eggs into a pan, filling the room with the smell of slightly burned butter.
“Well, the man’s an early riser I see.” She stepped up behind him, went up on her tiptoes, and placed a gentle kiss on his neck.
“Thank you,” she whispered.
“For what?”
“For staying when I needed you,” she said while she pulled china from a cabinet. “And for not, you know, taking advantage.” She waited for a response but when she heard none she looked over at him. He was too dark to blush, but was that embarrassment she saw on his face?
While Morgan worked in the kitchen, Felicity set up a small, low table on the mezzanine at the other end of the room. When the food was ready, the pair took their scrambled eggs and toast to that table in front of the big window. Orange juice, fresh pears and cheese completed their breakfast menu. Chewing absently, Morgan settled back on the big pillow Felicity provided and got lost in the view.
“It doesn’t feel like being in the world’s fastest city at all, now does it?” she asked.
“You’re right,” Morgan said, pushing egg onto his fork with his toast. “It’s kind of like I’m sitting on the edge of a tranquil crystal lake.”
Felicity found her eggs scrambled hard, the way she preferred them, and quite peppery. That made them unexpected good. “Eloquent for a soldier,” she said. “But that’s just the feeling I get here. It’s like that’s New York over there, on the other side, half a mile away, while we sit here on a peaceful floating island. So. What shall we do today?”
“Business,” Morgan answered. “You hired me to do a job, and I’m on the clock.”
His response surprised her. It seemed that after sharing a relaxed moment in fantasy with him she had pulled him back to reality. “Oh yes,” she said. “You said you’d help me find this Stone character.”
“That’s why I was up so early,” Morgan said. “Made some phone calls. Which reminds me. I’m going to need some more spending cash because I’ve got a lunch date. Old contact of mine, another dude who worked for Stone in the past. We haven’t been in touch much, but he might know who Stone is working for now and where to find him.”
“Perhaps I should be doing the same,” Felicity said, her voice cooler. It disturbed her a little for Morgan to be all business. However, she realized she had created that relationship. Not wanting to be the damsel in distress, she had hired him instead of asking him for help. On that basis he probably felt that needed to show results. “You know, I could check with some of my friends in the business,” she continued. “The new owner is sure to want to wear that brooch I stole, to show it off you know, then hide it before the insurance investigators start looking this far away. A bauble that unique suddenly appearing in society will excite imaginations in my circles.”
“Good idea,” Morgan said, rising from the table. He took his plate and glass to the kitchen. Curiosity made her follow. She had to pry into his quietness.
“Morgan, I have to ask you something. Is it bothering you, spending my money?”
“Not at all, Red,” he responded. “I could always hit a cash machine. But I’m on a mission. You pay expenses.”
“And after?” she asked, hating the apprehension in her voice.
“After? If you mean about the money, I’ve got a couple hundred grand American dollars stashed away in a Swiss bank account. If you mean, what happens after we find Stone, well, I intend to harass his mysterious employer enough to get him to pay us both a bundle to back off.” He lifted the green flap over his watch. “I’ve got to run.”