Â
D EAD F ALL
A Joe Hunter Story
T HERE WAS ONLY one way up to Mick OâNeillâs penthouse apartment on Davis Islands, South Tampa. Two ways down. You could take the express elevator up, which required use of a key to access the private floor. Coming down you could also use the elevator. Orâoption twoâfall sixteen stories to the unforgiving sidewalk if OâNeillâs protection team tossed you off the roof. No one but a suicidal fool would choose option two, but it appeared that this was the case with William Murray.
Murray was a fool but Iâd never tagged him as being suicidal. He enjoyed life too much. It was because he valued his hide that heâd made the mistake of answering the summons to OâNeillâs lofty pad. Murray had angered the Irishman, but thought he could charm his way out of a kneecapping. Sadly, when heâd hit the ground at one hundred and twenty miles per hour, his kneecaps were the least of it. Heâd burst on impact and there was little left of him that was recognizable. Apparently, if the Medical Examinerâs report was to be believed, heâd broken ninety-two percent of the bones in his body. CSI examiners had used tools akin to snow shovels while removing him from the sidewalk.
Not a pretty image.
William Murray was a low-level street hawker, his wares not entirely lawful, and beneath my usual circle of friends, but he was likable in his own way. He didnât deserve ending up as sidewalk pizza for Mick OâNeillâs amusement.
It didnât take a genius to figure out what had happened up on the sixteenth floor.
Murray had gone in, cap in hand, tried to lighten the mood somewhat with a self-deprecating joke or two, but his geniality hadnât won him any friends. Mick OâNeill was someone Iâd been hearing a lot about lately, and none of it had anything to do with his humanitarian ways. Murray would have been slapped around, threatened perhaps, and then OâNeill would have lost any patience he had with the man and ordered that Murray take an impromptu swan dive from the roof.
Thatâs the way the cops believed that events transpired, and I for one was with them. However, there was no evidence, no witnesses coming forward to offer their support. In fact, all four men and two women in OâNeillâs penthouse at the time of Murrayâs death swore that they hadnât seen him. The first they knew of his âsuicideâ was when the sirens of the first responders arrived on the scene and one of OâNeillâs âhome helpersâ took a look over the balcony. OâNeill had extended his assistance to the police investigators, throwing open his home to them, and no trace evidence had been found to place Murray in the apartment. The cops knew OâNeill was lying, and even pulled himâplus his palsâin for questioning, but with no evidence to incriminate him or any of the others in Murrayâs death, they were released without charge, and OâNeill was offered a humble apology for wasting his valuable time.
The police moved on.
They understood that they couldnât make anything stick to OâNeill, and to try was a waste of their resources, their time, and their energy. Their best strategy was to hope that OâNeill would slip up another time, and theyâd send him down for this future crime. Typically, I didnât have the patience to wait.
Iâve never been known to keep my peace. Iâm impulsive. When something bites me, I bite back. And right now the fact that OâNeill was smirking over the crushed body of a friend was gnawing at me like a junkyard dog on a bone.
My initial response was to front the Irishman in his lair, then beat the truth out of him before letting him feel the breeze in his thick mane of silvery hair as he plummeted to earth. To do that Iâd also have to send his protection detail off the roof, because no way would they be blind
Christina Courtenay
Nellie C. Lind
Cecily von Ziegesar
Juliet Anderson
C.C. Humphreys
Kate Bloomfield
Lawrence Scott
Chris Sciabarra
Cheyenne Meadows
Rori Shay