your own."
"How far will you drive me?"
"I got all night, Ray. You name the town."
"I'd like to get some miles behind us before I start hanging around a bus station. How about Knoxville?"
"Knoxville it is. Where are you going from there?"
"I don't know. I need to get out of the country."
"With your friends, that should be no problem. Be careful, though. By tomorrow, your picture will be hanging in every sheriff's office in ten states."
Three cars with blue lights came blazing over the hill in front of them. Ray ducked onto the floorboard.
"Relax, Ray. They can't see you."
He watched them disappear through the rear window. "What about roadblocks?"
"Look, Ray. Ain't gonna be no roadblocks, okay? Trust me." Bud stuck a hand in a pocket and threw a wad of cash on the seat. "Five hundred bucks. Hand-delivered by the warden. You got some stout friends, buddy."
Chapter 34
Wednesday morning. Tarry Ross climbed the stairs to the fourth floor of the Phoenix Park Hotel. He paused on the landing outside the hall door and caught his breath. Sweat beaded across his eyebrows. He removed the dark sunglasses and wiped his face with the sleeve of his overcoat. Nausea hit below the belt, and he leaned on the stair rail. He dropped his empty briefcase on the concrete and sat on the bottom step. His hands shook like severe palsy, and he wanted to cry. He clutched his stomach and tried not to vomit.
The nausea passed, and he breathed again. Be brave, man, be brave. There's two hundred thousand waiting down the hall. If you got guts, you can go in there and get it. You can walk out with it, but you must have courage. He breathed deeper, and his hands settled down. Guts, man, guts.
The weak knees wobbled, but he made it to the door. Down the hall, past the rooms. Eighth door on the right. He held his breath, and knocked.
Seconds passed. He watched the dark hall through the dark glasses and could see nothing. "Yeah," a voice inside said, inches away.
"It's Alfred." Ridiculous name, he thought. Where'd it come from?
The door cracked, and a face appeared behind the little chain. The door closed, then opened wide. Alfred walked in.
"Good morning, Alfred," Vinnie Cozzo said warmly. "Would you like coffee?"
"I didn't come here for coffee," Alfred snapped. He placed the briefcase on the bed and stared at Cozzo.
"You're always so nervous, Alfred. Why don't you relax. There's no way you can get caught."
"Shut up, Cozzo. Where's the money?"
Vinnie pointed to a leather handbag. He stopped smiling. "Talk to me, Alfred."
The nausea hit again, but he kept his feet. He stared at them. His heart beat like pistons. "Okay, your man, McDeere, has been paid a million bucks already. Another million is on the way. He's delivered one load of Bendini documents and claims to have ten thousand more." A sharp pain hit his groin, and he sat on the edge of the bed. He removed his glasses.
"Keep talking," Cozzo demanded.
"McDeere's talked to our people many times in the last six months. He'll testify at the trials, then hit the road as a protected witness. He and his wife."
"Where are the other documents?"
"Dammit, I don't know. He won't tell. But they're ready to be delivered. I want my money, Cozzo."
Vinnie threw the handbag on the bed. Alfred opened it and the briefcase. He attacked the stacks of bills, his hands shaking violently.
"Two hundred thousand?" he asked desperately.
Vinnie smiled. "That was the deal, Alfred. I got another job for you in a couple of weeks."
"No way, Cozzo. I can't take any more of this." He slammed the briefcase shut and ran to the door. He stopped and tried to calm himself. "What will you do with McDeere?" he asked, staring at the door.
"What do you think, Alfred?"
He bit his lip, clenched the briefcase and walked from the room. Vinnie smiled and locked the door. He pulled a card from his pocket and placed a call to the Chicago home of Mr. Lou Lazarov.
Tarry Ross walked in panic down the hall. He could see little from behind the glasses. Seven doors down, almost to the elevator, a huge hand reached from the darkness and pulled him into a room. The hand slapped him hard, and another fist landed in his stomach. Another fist to the nose. He was on the floor, dazed and bleeding. The briefcase was emptied on the bed.
He was thrown into a chair, and the lights came on. Three FBI