Monday, July 20, 2020

New Release: Hitman Vs. Hitman!

Hi darlins!

Two things today. First and foremost, I have a new release out with L.A. Witt, Hitman Vs Hitman. It's an m/m action/suspense novel with more snark than you can shake a stick at, and it's only going to stay $.99 for a VERY limited amount of time, so get it while it's highly affordable! An excerpt and Amazon link are below.

Also highly affordable--free, actually--right now is Double or Nothing, the first book in our Double Trouble series. That one is also linked below.

And tomorrow, if all goes well, more Rivalries! Stay tuned, darlins :)



Chapter One

 

Once in a while, Ricardo Torralba hit the hired gun jackpot and scored a job in a high-rise office building. For all the owners of those places convinced themselves their properties were ultra-secure, they were… not. Hundreds of people came and went all day long, and sometimes that continued well into the night. Security had neither the time nor the inclination to give photo IDs more than a cursory glance, and those who did were quickly chewed out by important people in a hurry to conduct important business. Briefcases were as much a part of the scenery as frazzled workers, shouted cell phone conversations, and the ever-present marcato of dress shoes and high heels on hard floors.

About the only thing Ricardo didn’t like about working in an office building was that he usually had to wear a suit to blend in—God, he hated suits—but the hits paid top dollar and most of those places had excellent coffee shops on their ground floors. A hundred grand and a perfect caramel macchiato? He couldn’t complain. Those jobs were the best.

Today, Ricardo was on a job, but he wasn’t going into an office building.

No, this contract meant working in his absolute least favorite venue—some rich asshole’s fortified citadel of a mansion. In this case, the multimillion-dollar monstrosity belonging to tech billionaire Lance Baldwin. Ricardo was more than happy to take out that fuckwit for a lot of reasons, but his liaison had insisted it had to happen at Baldwin’s home.

It doesn’t matter why,” she’d told him after giving him a laundry list of strict rules about the when, where, and how. “This is the job. Take it or leave it.

He would’ve been happy to leave it. After all, he had plenty of money and plenty of work, and he didn’t need that kind of bullshit in his life. The problem was all the bullshit that could follow on the very rare occasion he did turn down a job. “Take it or leave it” in this line of work basically meant “take the job, or get shot because you know about the job.”

At least the employer had sweetened the deal this time with a five-million-dollar payday. In cash. With half of it upfront.

Okay, fine. Twist his arm.

In the moment, all the inconveniences associated with infiltrating the mini Fort Knox home of a self-important prick had seemed minor in comparison to the suitcase full of cash. This afternoon, as he drove a shitty exterminator van toward the Baldwin compound, his thought process was basically Damn it, past-Ricardo. What were you thinking?

No matter. He was here, he’d taken the deposit, and there was no turning back until Lance Baldwin was dead. And at least he didn’t have to wear a suit, though his tactical gear was a little uncomfortable beneath the stained gray Pest Assassin coveralls. He could live with it.

In an effort to hide in plain sight, Ricardo conspicuously drove past three of the wall-mounted cameras in broad daylight before reaching the southwest gate, which was a service entrance. Seriously, who the fuck had a service entrance at his house? Lance Baldwin, that was who, but as ostentatious as it was, it did make Ricardo’s life a little easier, so while he judged the shit out of it, he didn’t complain. It would probably be the last piece of Baldwin bullshit that worked in his favor tonight.

At the gate, Ricardo pulled up to the security booth, eased the Pest Assassin van to a halt on its shrieking brakes, and rolled down the window.

A tired-looking security guard shuffled out. “You here to deal with the rats?”

Ricardo smiled and tapped the magnetic sign on the driver’s side door. Carefully masking his Catalan accent with an American one, he said, “That’s what they pay me to do.”

The guard grunted. “Good. Baldwin’s wife sees another rat, she’s going to blow a gasket.”

“Can’t blame her.” Ricardo handed over his fake identification and a clipboard containing the work order for today’s extermination. “I’ll get ‘em out of there.”

With a nod, the guard took his documents. He skimmed over them, then nodded again and handed them back. “You’re all set. I’ll let the staff know you’re on your way up.” He motioned at the driveway beyond the gate. “Just follow that, and when it splits off, hang a right. It’ll take you where you need to be.”

Ricardo nodded and offered a congenial smile. “Thank you.”

The guard stepped back into the security booth, and a second later, the gate began a slow inward arc while twin rows of tiger teeth and a pop-up barrier descended into the ground. Ricardo rolled his eyes. If the gates were this secure, the house was probably something out of an Indiana Jones movie. His favorite.

That was the problem with jackwagons like Baldwin: they were narcissistic enough to believe entire armies might come after them, and they also had the money to protect themselves from those imagined armies. No one gave enough fucks about Baldwin to send in an army, but he had pissed off enough people that someone was sending in Ricardo, and that meant Ricardo had to deal with the inconvenience of an obstacle course comprised of paranoia-induced security protocols.

All of that was why he’d gone to the lengths he had to gain legitimate-looking access to the house, rather than trying to infiltrate the property and the structure like a wannabe ninja. Crap like that only worked in the movies. People who wanted to stay alive, get the job done, stay alive, get out, still stay alive, and live long enough to get paid… didn’t learn the trade from Hollywood.

Ricardo slowly followed the long, winding driveway, looking around like someone who wasn’t entirely sure where he was supposed to be going. On any of the ridiculous number of CCTV cameras watching him now, he’d appear to be clueless rather than giving his surroundings a tactical sweep and memorizing potential escape routes, hazards, and annoyances.

The landscaping was, unsurprisingly, designed for more than just aesthetics. Dense bushes that were useless for cover even without taking into consideration the poison ivy growing along the edges. Narrow, well-lit pathways monitored by cameras mounted on the many trees. Ponds that looked deceptively like a place someone could hide in a pinch… right up until he noticed the swan standing with water just barely cresting its knees. Did swans have knees? Well, whatever that joint was. And the swans were an issue too—they could be even meaner and louder than Canada geese, which said something. There were also a few Beware of Dog signs, which may have been a bluff (the dogs hadn’t eaten the swans after all) or they may have underscored what assholes those birds could be if they roamed fearlessly on the same turf as guard dogs.

Guard swans. Awesome. That was exactly what Ricardo needed. The feathery bastards were probably armed and everything.

After the driveway had taken him through nearly a mile—seriously, a fucking mile—of forest and landscaping, the house came into view. Ricardo had been surprised when he’d scoped out the property online. He’d expected a tech guru to have one of those ridiculously over-the-top modern houses with a bizarre angular design and too many windows. Instead, Baldwin had gone for an enormous plantation style mansion with soaring white columns out front. Maybe after this job was over, Ricardo could ponder how nauseatingly poetic it was for a man known for exploiting workers both here and abroad to be living in a house that gave oversized homage to the people who once owned slaves.

But there wasn’t time for that now. He had a job to do.

The driveway split, and as instructed, he followed it right. Several cameras were mounted here, probably to alert staff that someone was heading their way. A gate closed behind him; good to know for when he made his escape, especially since this one also had a pop-up barrier and tiger teeth. If things went well, he’d drive out as casually as he’d driven in, but if things went to shit, that gate could be a problem.

Yes, this job was definitely going to be a pain in Ricardo’s ass. Possibly a literal one, he realized when he saw that Baldwin even had rosebushes under all the windows. Cliché, perhaps, but effective. Ricardo squirmed at the memory of tumbling onto a rosebush during a botched burglary in his youth. Those thorns had left some nasty scars, including three that were still noticeable on his left butt cheek—something that had thoroughly amused the last few men he’d taken to bed.  Needless to say, he never threw himself blindly out windows anymore.

The driveway led him to a covered portico behind the house. There were a couple of security guards waiting for him out here along with a white man in a suit who looked like he wanted to be anywhere else.

Ricardo stopped the van and got out.

As he did, the man in the suit approached, tapping his watch. “You’re late.”

Adopting the American accent again, Ricardo said, “I know, I’m sorry. The last place took a little longer than—”

“I don’t want your excuses.” The suit jabbed a finger at Ricardo. “We’ll be expecting a discount.”

Ricardo arched an eyebrow. This guy was lucky Ricardo had a policy of only taking out his target or people who directly threatened him. He’d had to crawl through traffic to get here, and right now, his moral compass was kind of tilting in the direction of being okay with shooting someone just for being an asshole.

But he schooled his expression and his tone. “Of course. I’ll be happy to take thirty percent off the final total.”

The suit blinked, mouth open and pointed finger hovering in the air as if he’d been poised to argue, but had been caught off guard by the generous accommodation.

Ricardo smiled. “So. Could you show me all the places where rats have been sighted?”

 

*          *          *

 

It was common knowledge that when rats started fleeing a ship, humans would be wise to follow. As much as people didn’t think much of rats, they collectively understood the animals’ survival instincts and their ability to sense that something wasn’t right, especially once the ship started filling up with water.

Even the most self-important paranoid billionaire, however, didn’t stop to question why a colony of rats had suddenly arrived in his house. Or if it was perhaps unwise to, regardless of the desperation to be rat-free, give an exterminator a thorough tour and near unlimited access to one’s home, particularly the basement and attic.

Ironically, Baldwin’s propensity toward overworking and underpaying his workers extended to his household staff, and that had worked to Ricardo’s advantage. For someone barely pulling in twenty thousand dollars per year with no health insurance and two kids to feed, a fifty thousand dollar bribe was irresistible. Baldwin could put in millions upon millions of dollars’ worth of security and fortifications, and in the end, all it had taken was fifty grand to get one staff member to turn a bunch of rats loose in the basement, and another fifty to compel a second staff member to call a specific exterminator to take care of the problem.

Two bribes, a few dozen rats, and some fake decals later, no one even blinked when “Marty” from Pest Assassins asked to see where the rats had been spotted.

It took a good hour and a half to show Ricardo all the places where the rats seemed to be congregating.

“They just came out of nowhere,” the suit—whose name turned out to be Kyle—told Ricardo on the way down to the wine cellar. “There’s never been any issue with pests in this house. Never. Then suddenly we have rats!” He huffed melodramatically. “If Mrs. Baldwin sees another one, I swear she’s going to fire us all.”

“The rats aren’t your fault,” Ricardo said blandly. “A couple of them must have come in through a weakness in the foundation. Once they’re inside, it only takes a few months for a single pair to produce hundreds of descendants.”

Kyle blanched. “Oh God.”

“Don’t worry.” Ricardo gave his shoulder a friendly pat. “I’ll have them out of here soon. We might have to fumigate, though, and that’s—”

“Fumigate?” Kyle squeaked. “But the party is tonight!”

Ricardo froze. “Party?”

“Well, yes!” Kyle flailed a hand toward the stairs they’d come down into the wine cellar. “Didn’t Ian tell you when he called?”

“Um. No?”

Kyle huffed as if Ricardo were the most clueless man on the planet. “The Baldwins are hosting a joint fundraiser for Governor Hall and Mayor Young. Everyone who’s anyone in town—in the entire state—is going to be here tonight.”

Ricardo’s blood turned cold. Everyone who’s anyone… and all of their security. He had no doubt about that. They wouldn’t leave their heavily-armed entourages at home just because they were going to a well-protected fortress; how could they demonstrate how important they were without their own personal mini-armies? Plus it wouldn’t be a Mayor Young event without some representatives from the police department, and Governor Hall was forever harping on the fact that he had an exceptionally good relationship with both the National Guard and the brass at a nearby Army base. Ricardo would be genuinely stunned if no one from those bases showed up.

Fuck. Fuuuck. This was not good.

In theory, he could bail on the job, but his liaison had been specific that it had to happen tonight. She’d made it clear that whoever had arranged this job would have Ricardo’s head—literally—if Lance Baldwin survived to see dawn.

Keeping his voice calm and his American accent in place, Ricardo cocked his head. “I’m surprised there’s no press here already, with a crowd like that showing up tonight.”

Kyle huffed. “Oh, no. Mr. Baldwin kept this event very hush-hush so the press wouldn’t show up and no one would try to sneak in.” He lowered his voice. “You know how he is with security.”

Ricardo’s mouth had gone dry. Oh yeah, he knew how Baldwin was with security.

A sick feeling crawled up the back of his throat. Someone who was willing to shell out five mill to drop Baldwin had to have been thorough. His employer had to have known about this party. Was that why it had to go down tonight?

His blood turned even colder. Either his employer had been spectacularly unprepared, or they were completely prepared and knew exactly what they were doing. Both of those options meant Ricardo was on his own in an elaborately protected house that was about to be filled with hired security, cops, National Guardsmen, and soldiers. That meant that this was most likely a setup, and Ricardo was leaning heavily toward that being the case. He wasn’t as paranoid as Lance Baldwin, but he had a healthy suspicion of anyone and everyone, especially those who were willing to pay a hitman.

“So.” Kyle gestured toward the rows and rows of wine racks. “Can you take care of the rats before tonight?”

Ricardo swallowed. Oh, he’d be taking care of some rats soon, but not the small squeaky kind. “Let me have a look around down here, see if I can locate the nest, and I’ll see what I can do.”

“All right.” Kyle tapped his foot on the concrete floor. “But hurry up. The last thing Mr. Baldwin needs is a rat showing up on the hors d’oeuvre table during an event like this.”

Ricardo forced a laugh. “I’ll get it done.”

“Good.” Kyle checked his watch. “I need to go chase down the decorators and make sure food will be ready on time.” He thrust a business card at Ricardo. “If you need me, just call my cell.”

Accepting the card, Ricardo nodded. “Will do.”

Kyle took a deep breath, then hurried back up the stairs. “Jessica,” he was calling as he walked. “Any word on the ice sculptures?” Then the door shut behind him, cutting off his voice, and Ricardo exhaled hard as he pressed his shoulder against a post.

Fuck. This was bad. He had to assume the worst-case scenario, which was that this was a setup. That he had unwittingly become the rat in the exterminator’s crosshairs. Someone (he had no idea who) had sent him into a trap (he had no idea why), and he had to—

A footstep on concrete straightened his spine. He was just about to turn around when cold metal dug into the back of his neck.

“Don’t move.” The voice was smooth, lyrical, familiar…and as cold as the gun muzzle biting into Ricardo’s skin. “Or I will blow your fucking head off.”



And don't forget, this one is free!

Double or Nothing


Rich Cody joined the U.S. Marshals to hunt down bad guys, not babysit witnesses. Orders are orders, though, and now he’s protecting a hacker with ties to the Albanian and Sicilian mobs. It’s just another exciting day in WITSEC.

Leotrim Nicolosi was born into a world of crime and bloodshed. When that bloodshed hits too close to home, taking down Leo’s boyfriend—the son of a notorious mob boss—Leo is determined to destroy the Grimaldi family. He’s got evidence that will send every last Grimaldi to prison, he’s got the family’s wealth in an electronic chokehold, and he’s got a vendetta that can only be settled with the blood of the man who killed his lover.

When a routine transfer to a safehouse goes horribly wrong, Rich and Leo narrowly escape with their lives. With the Marshals compromised and Leo being framed for murder, he and Rich are on the run from criminals and law enforcement alike. They have no one to trust except each other, and nowhere to go that their enemies can’t reach.

And the only way out might mean making a deal with the Devil.

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Rivalries: Chapter Four, Part One

Notes: Heeeeeeeere's JOHNNY! Not that Johnny, lol.

Title: Rivalries: Chapter Four, Part One

***

Rivalries, Chapter Four, Part One

 

Johnny Gibilisco pushed his way through the crowd of students surrounding Stheno High, all of them whispering behind their hands and casting sidelong glances at the school. As soon as they realized who he was, they stepped aside for him—“Mr. Gibilisco” was the school counselor, and in a lot of places that would have made him roundly despised by the student population, but at Stheno he was appreciated. He knew every one of their names, even though they had twice as many student as at Euryale Academy, and he did his best on everything from dealing with knacks to coping with bad family situations.

He caught sight of the principal, currently being lambasted by the school resource officer, and immediately veered their way. “Principal Cochrane!” he called out.

Principal Cochrane turned with a look of pure relief on his face. “Mr. Gibilisco, they managed to reach you after all!” Ira Cochrane looked like a middle-aged Santa Claus—graying and portly, with a friendly smile that was nearly a permanent fixture. Not today, though. His suit jacket was missing, and his tie was so loose around his neck that it was nearly untied. “I’m sorry to pull you our of your treatment, but as you can see—” he waved at the school “—this is an emergency.”

“This is a matter for SWAT, is what it is,” Stheno’s resource officer snapped. Julianne Rosewood was a blonde, burly, and a little too eager to use force, as far as Johnny and most of the rest of the staff were concerned. She didn’t have a knack, and used that as a reason to get her department to authorize her to carry a gun instead of the standard taser on school grounds. “That little shit’s already done serious damage to the school!”

“Damage to a building!” Principal Cochrane exclaimed. “My goodness, yes, what a marvelous reason to call a bunch of gun-toting, trigger-happy goons onto the school grounds, so they can hunt down a young man who—”

“Hey! Watch what you’re calling my fellow officers, Cochrane, you don’t talk about the people who protect and serve like that!”

“If you think for one minute I’m going to allow you to send SWAT in after a student in need of help, you’re delusional!”

“Who is it?” Johnny interjected.

They both looked at him like he’d lost his mind. Principal Cochrane recovered first. “Oh goodness, didn’t I say in the message? It’s Roland, Mr. Gibilisco.”

Of course it is. Johnny felt his headache crank up another notch. Roland was a recent transfer, a foster child who thus far hadn’t made much of an effort to get along with anyone at his new school. He was a late bloomer, as far as knacks went, and his previous family—the family that had hoped to adopt him—hadn’t been deemed acceptable to take him permanently after the change. In response that he was going to have to move, Roland had used his knack.

The family’s house had ended up utterly destroyed.

No one was injured, and to their credit the family had still tried to intervene when state authorities took Roland away, insisting that he didn’t mean to do it, but the results of their efforts had been interpreted as “normal families can’t take in children with knacks.” Never mind that most kids with knacks came from completely normal parents who handled them just fine.

Now Roland was under the “care” of a local family with military ties. The husband had a similar elemental knack and, theoretically, could have been helping Roland with controlling his, but from the little Roland had told Johnny in their first few meetings, there wasn’t a lot of bonding going on. He was sixteen, he was angry, and now he was—

A rumble began, quick and shuddering, the ground underfoot going from a complete standstill to jiggling like jello in a second. Kids fell over, careened into each other—Johnny grabbed Principal Cochrane’s elbow to keep the big man on his feet. A few seconds later, it stopped, but the damage that the principal and Officer Rosewood had been referring to earlier was even worse. A long, vertical crack went up the front of the building. It was thin, but it was undeniably there.

“See!” Officer Rosewood shouted. “You see that? This could have been prevented if you let me call SWAT in to take the kid out!”

“Neither you nor any other officer will be taking out a student at my school!” Principal Cochrane shouted right back.

“Ahem.” Johnny cleared his throat. Both of them looked his way, the anger on their faces slowly dissipating. “Let me try to talk him down first.”

“Yes!” Principal Cochrane extended a grateful hand toward him. “Yes, thank you, this is what I had to pull you away from treatment for. This situation calls for delicacy and understanding and tact, not the business end of a gun, and don’t give me any song and dance about nonlethal options. A child with a knack was killed by a SWAT team in Georgia last year by one of their so-called “nonlethal—”

“Principal,” Johnny butted in, both to save time and save another argument, “I think it would be best if I went in after him now. The sooner the better, right? We don’t want the school to fall down on top of him.”

“We certainly don’t,” Principal Cochrane agreed.

“What’s he going to do, talk the kid into giving himself up? Please,” Officer Rosewood scoffed, but she sounded less adamant now than she had a minute ago.

“Talking is always the first and best option,” Johnny said calmly. “And it’s my job, so I’d like to go in and do it, if you don’t mind.”

“Fine. You get ten minutes.”

“What!” Principal Cochrane shrieked, just as Johnny said, “Make it half an hour, and in the meantime you should see about getting the rest of the kids away from here. I think it’s safe to say that there aren’t going to be any more classes today.”

That gave them something new to focus on. “Right…of course,” the principal said, wiping his forehead with the end of his tie. “I’ll get in touch with our bus drivers, make sure parents are being contacted...”

“I’ll back these kids up into the athletic fields,” Officer Rosewood said, scowling but determined. “But half an hour only, Mr. Gibilisco, otherwise I’m getting SWAT in here no matter what you two have to say.”

“Thank you.” Johnny turned to look at the school. The ancient concrete slab reading “WELCOME TO STHENO HIGH” that had hung over the front door since the place had been built in the fifties suddenly came crashing down to the stairs in front of it, shattering. Students yelled, teachers jumped, and Officer Rosewood’s hand went straight to her gun.

Better head in before she gets ideas. You’ll be fine. Juuust fine. Johnny squared his shoulders and marched up to the school, over the remains of the welcome sign, and in through the front door.

Hang in there, Roland, I’m coming.