of the owner of the mansion. He worked
the shirt down over the corpse’s shoulders, exposing its chest. He inspected each
shoulder. The large cross tattooed on the left, the skull on the right.
The locations of the designs showed that he was indeed a Russian mafia kingpin, that
he had been acknowledged as a leader by his fellows.
He was a boss. The tattoos proved that. Not in one of the new organizations, however.
He belonged to the old mafia; he was a product of the Soviet system.
Having found the proof he wanted, the old man let slip a smile. A smile so subtle
his face remained all but expressionless. “Nighty-night, Vor,” he murmured.
The old man wasted no time. A minute later, he was inside. Not a light in the entire
building. Two buff corpses sprawled in the parlor, shot dead in the middle of a card
game; on the sofa behind them, the body of a carefully made-up young woman in a flashy
dress. These bodies had been there for an hour or so.
Another body in the hall.
The old man stepped into the half-hidden security room behind the parlor.
A young man was waiting inside. Alive. Terrified. Drenched in sweat. Drops fell periodically
from his face, his neck. He was sitting on a chair, his posture oddly strained, straight
as a rod.
“If you are hot, why not take off your sweater?” the old man said.
“I can’t move,” the young man replied.
“Sure you can, just take it off,” the old man repeated.
Desperation in his eyes, the young man nodded and stiffly, tensely, stripped the sweater
off. Underneath the sweater he had on a paratrooper shirt with horizontal blue stripes.
The wall behind the young man was completely taken up by ten television monitors.
Images from the security cameras were projected on their screens. Or not. Some were
blank. From where he sat, the young man could operate the recorder, and he had a microphone
that let him respond to communications from outside.
“You give them the all-clear, like I said?” the old man said.
“I did exactly as you told me to,” the young man said. “Everything.”
“Good job,” the old man replied. “You did well.”
“Don’t kill me!” the young man pleaded. He was perched oddly on his chair. Sort of.
There was an object between his butt and the seat, like a little pillow. It was a
hand grenade. The pin had been pulled. The young man’s butt was holding the safety
lever down. If he shifted his body the slightest bit, if the grenade happened to slip
out from under him, it would explode.
The old man turned to the monitors. He spent a few moments checking the screens, or
their blankness. The young man was still sweating. The old man was right beside him,
but the young man couldn’t turn to face him. There was a sound by the recorder, like
duct tape coming off.
“Look at all this crap,” the old man muttered. “With all this, you would think…”
With all this, you would think…what? the young man wondered, terrified.
“…you could do better.” The old man answered the boy’s unspoken question, his tone
crisp. “Amateurs. That is what you are. A bunch of amateurs.”
A sound the young man had heard once before: a pin being drawn.
It came again, then a third time.
Huh? he thought.
The old man left the security room. On his way out he turned and fired a 9mm bullet
into the young man’s head, just like that. The young man jerked backwards, then fell,
causing the grenade he was sitting on to explode. A second later the three grenades
on the video recorder were going off, one after the next, destroying all evidence.
Two minutes later, the old man was in the back garden.
He stood before a low, gray, concrete enclosure. A row of cages with chain-link doors,
some open, some closed. He had passed four dead Doberman pinschers on his way here.
They had been poisoned. He himself had carefully stirred the poison into their food.
There were still some dogs in the kennels, though,