SLACK FRIDAY: NOVEMBER 28, 2014
Avoid crazed shopping crowds!
Keep calm and carry on at home with these great
Merr-E Holiday Treats from Pocket Star eBooks!
BLOND CARGO
John Lansing
October 20, 2014
$5.99
The second Jack Bertolino
thriller by John Lansing
“An unyielding pace, vigorous characters and explosive ending.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“A fantastic read…This
extremely fast and well-thought-out thriller will remind some of James Patterson’s early
works.”
—Suspense Magazine
“Blond Cargo an extraordinary, must-read detective thriller. Can’t
wait for the next installment! Look out Patterson, someone’s gaining on you!”
—Amazon Reviewer
SUMMARY:
Blond Cargo is the highly
anticipated second Jack Bertolino installment from New York native and now Los
Angeles author John Lansing. This gripping eBook from the former
writer/producer of Walker, Texas Ranger
and Co-Executive producer of the ABC series Scoundrels
continues the story that began in The
Devil’s Necktie.
Jack Bertolino is back…in
the sequel to John Lansing’s bestseller The
Devil’s Necktie!
Jack’s son, Chris, was the
victim of a brutal murder attempt and Vincent Cardona, a mafia boss, provided
information that helped Jack take down the perpetrator of the crime. Jack
accepted the favor knowing there’d be blowback. In Blond Cargo, the
mobster’s daughter has gone missing and Cardona turned in his chit. Jack discovers that the young, blond mafia
princess has been kidnapped and imprisoned while rich, politically connected
men negotiate her value as a sex slave.
John Lansing taps into the
real life world of cops, crime, drugs and murder in Blond Cargo to deliver another sizzling whodunit.
EXCERPT:
Jack Bertolino moved briskly down the polished terrazzo floor of the
American Airlines terminal at San Francisco International Airport. He walked
past travelers who were deplaning, waiting to board, eating, drinking, and
queuing up at ticket counters. Through the windows on either side of the
crowded terminal he could see a line of Boeing MD-80s and 737s.
Jack had his game face on. One thought only: take down the manager at
NCI Corp who was dirty.
Todd Dearling had been hired as one of five project managers,
developing a new generation of semiconductors meant to challenge Intel’s
control of the market. Yet the new engineer was plotting to steal the
proprietary architecture for the company’s most advanced technology and sell it
to an Argentinean competitor.
Jack had done a thorough background check on Dearling and found no
skeletons in the man’s closet, no gambling issues, no drugs, no priors; it was
greed, pure and simple. Cruz Feinberg, Jack’s new associate, had arrived in
Silicon Valley two days prior and wirelessly inserted a program onto Dearling’s
iPad while the stressed-out manager was sucking down his daily chai latte at
the local Starbucks. Any text or e-mail sent to or from Dearling was cloned and
sent to Cruz’s laptop. A piece of cake to pull off for the young tech whiz.
Jack was being well paid to catch the thief in the act—let the money and the
technology change hands, and then drop the hammer.
Todd Dearling had made reservations at the Four Seasons Hotel in East
Palo Alto. A car would be waiting at SFO to ferry his Argentinean counterpart
to the suite where the exchange was scheduled to take place.
Jack had booked Cruz into that same suite two nights earlier, where he
had set up wireless microcameras and wired the room for sound, to be routed to
the suite next door, where Jack’s team would document the crime.
Jack lived for these moments. Outsmarting intelligent men who thought
they were above the law. Badge or no badge, Jack loved to take scumbags down.
Ten minutes ago, Flight 378 from Buenos Aires had flashed from black
to green on the overhead arrivals screen. Dressed in a gray pinstripe business
suit and wheeling a carry-on suitcase, Jack walked toward a limo driver
stationed near the exit door of the international terminal. The man held a sign
chest-high that read emilio bragga.
Jack reached out a hand toward the driver, who was forced to lower his
placard, shake Jack’s hand, and make quick work of grabbing up Jack’s bag. Jack
headed quickly toward the exit, explaining to the driver that he was traveling
light and had no checked luggage.
As soon as the two men exited the building, Jack’s second employee,
Mateo Vasquez, dressed in a black suit, moved into the same spot, carrying a
sign that read Emilio bragga.
Jack and Mateo had once been on opposite sides of the thin blue line,
Jack as an NYPD narcotics detective, Mateo as an operative for a Colombian drug
cartel. When Jack busted the cartel, he made Mateo an offer—spend thirty years
in the big house, or come to work for the NYPD as a confidential
informant. Mateo had made the right choice and Jack had earned himself
a loyal operative when he became a private investigator.
Thirty seconds later, the real Emilio Bragga walked up to Mateo,
stifled a yawn, and handed off his carry-on. He was short and stocky with a
rubbery face.
“Buenos días, Señor Bragga. I hope your flight was acceptable?”
Mateo asked deferentially.
“Barely. First class isn’t what it used to be.” Bragga’s accented English
was spoken in clipped tones. “Take me to the First National Bank. I have
business to attend to.”
Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars’ worth of business, Mateo might
have added, but refrained.
Jack arrived at the Four Seasons, generously tipped the limo driver,
and hurried up the elevator to the suite where Cruz was waiting. Once Jack
stripped off his suit jacket, he joined the young genius by his array of
monitors.
“They should make these baby ketchup bottles illegal,” Cruz said as he
tried to pound the condiment out of the room service minibottle of Heinz.
Growing frustrated, Cruz shoved a knife deep into the viscous ketchup and
poured a heaping red mound onto his fries. Happy with the results, he chowed
down on three drenched fries before wiping his hands on his jeans and returning
his gaze to the computer.
“It looks like he’s getting ready for a date,” Jack said as he took a
seat. Cruz kept his eyes trained on the four screens corresponding to the four
different camera angles of the room they were covering.
“Guy’s squirrelly,” Cruz said, biting into his cheeseburger.
They watched as Todd Dearling twirled a bottle of champagne in the ice
that had just been delivered from room service, along with a tray of finger
sandwiches and crudités. He was a slight, pale, middle-aged man with thinning
hair that he kept nervously brushing back off his forehead. He shrugged out of
his tweed sports jacket, but when he saw the sweat stains in the armpits of his
blue dress shirt, he slid it
back on. He hurried over to the thermostat near the door, appearing on
a new screen, and turned up the air.
Jack checked his watch and then his phone to make sure he was
receiving enough bars to communicate with Mateo. “I’m getting a little nervous.
You?” Cruz asked before sucking down the last of his Coke. He crumpled the
aluminum can with one hand and executed an overhand dunk into the bamboo trash
bin.
Cruz’s mother was Guatemalan, his father a Brooklyn Jew who founded
Bundy Lock and Key. That’s where Jack first met him. Cruz, who took after his
mother’s side of the family, looked taller than his five-foot-nine frame.
Darkskinned, intelligent brown eyes, a youthful angular face, and at
twenty-three, he could still pull off the spiky short black hair.
“I’ve got some energy going,” Jack said, “but it’s all good. You’d have to worry if you didn’t feel
pumped.”
Just then Jack’s phone vibrated and the number 999 appeared on his
text screen, code for It’s a go. Mateo and Emilio Bragga had just pulled
up to the front entrance of the Four Seasons Hotel.
“We’re on,” Jack said with a tight grin.
In another minute, a loud rap on a door made Cruz jump. “Is that
here?” he asked, and glanced over at the door to their suite.
“No, it’s next door. Great sound, Cruz,” Jack said, trying to keep his
newest charge calm.
Jack and Cruz watched as Dearling’s image moved from one screen to the
next, went over to the door, unlocked it, and ushered in Emilio Bragga. The man
of the hour wheeled his carry-on across the white marble floor, pushed the
retractable handle down into the bag, and gave Dearling an unexpected bear hug,
lifting the thin man off his feet. Once the blush faded and he had regained his
composure, Dearling
was all smiles. He could smell his fortune being made. “First, tell me
you have them,” Bragga said brusquely, his smile tightening.
“I have them and more, Emilio. There are even some preliminary
renderings for the next series of chips. Consider it goodwill,” Dearling said.
He lifted the champagne bottle out of the melting ice with a flourish,
dripping water onto his dress shirt.
“A celebratory drink and then business.”
“No, business first,” Jack
said.
“No. Show them to me. Now,” Bragga ordered, his voice unyielding.
“Now we’re talking,” Cruz said to Jack, barely able to control his
excitement.
The next knock was more subdued than the first, just a quick double
knock.
“That’s here,” Jack said as he slid out of his chair and opened the
door. Mateo was thirty-nine years old, tall, handsome, with striking gray eyes,
long brown hair, and a thousand-dollar suit. He beamed at his old friend as he
walked in, bumped fists, and moved into position behind Cruz, eyes trained on
the computer screen.
Emilio Bragga placed his carry-on luggage on the couch as Dearling
pulled a slim buffed metal briefcase from behind the table and snapped it open
on the tabletop. Inside was a series of blue, red, silver, and gold flash
drives, seated in foam cutouts next to three bound technical binders.
Bragga leafed quickly through one of the binders, visibly relaxed, and
placed it back inside the case. He looked at Todd Dearling and nodded his head.
Then he smiled.
“This is the money shot,” Jack said. “Make it the money shot.”
Emilio Bragga walked over to the couch, ceremoniously produced a key,
and opened the lock. The sound of the zipper ratcheting around the
circumference of the bag got everyone’s full attention. And then Bragga flipped
open the canvas top.
Two hundred and fifty thousand, in crisp, banded hundred-dollar bills.
Jack’s team could almost hear Dearling’s breath catch in his throat.
“You see those appetizers?” Bragga said, gesturing to the tray of
crudités. “That is what this is.” He turned his gaze to the thick stacks of
money like it was nothing. “Antipasto…before the meal.”
The two men shook hands. The deal was consummated. It was all gravy
now, Jack thought. He would contact Lawrence Weller, CEO of NCI, who would have
Bragga quietly arrested at the airport and Dearling picked up outside his
condominium, thereby avoiding any negative publicity regarding the security
breach that could affect the value of NCI’s stock.
“Start taking sick days as we get closer to the rollout date,” Bragga
advised. “Then you’ll take a forced medical leave. I’ll set you up with a
doctor in San Francisco who’s a friend. He’ll recommend you spend a month at a
local clinic to recuperate while we launch and beat NCI to market. Six
months later and with two million in your account, you’ll give notice and head
up my division. Did I ever tell you how beautiful the women in Mendoza are?”
Bragga’s speech was interrupted by another knock on the door.
“Room service,” a muted voice said.
“We’re good,” Dearling shouted as he moved toward the door while
Bragga instinctively closed the lid of his bag, covering the money.
Jack gave his team a What the hell? look. “Who are these
jokers?”
“Complimentary champagne from the management of the Four Seasons,”
intoned the muffled voice.
“Don’t open the door,” Bragga
hissed.
“Don’t open the door,” Jack said at the same time. But Dearling had
already turned the handle.
Three men dressed in navy blue blazers with gold epaulettes pushed a
service cart draped with a white cloth into the room with a bottle of champagne
in a silver ice bucket and a huge bouquet of flowers in a crystal vase. “Three
men on one bottle,” Jack said as he pulled his Glock nine-millimeter out of his
shoulder rig and headed for the door.
“We weren’t the only ones who hacked his computer,” Cruz intuited.
“Don’t leave the room,” Jack told him over his shoulder. He quickly
exited the suite, followed by Mateo. Cruz nodded, but his wide eyes never left
the computer screen.
The lead man pushed the cart toward Dearling, but instead of slowing
down, he muscled the cart up against the timid man’s waist, picked up speed,
and forced him to backpedal across the room. Dearling’s eyes bugged, his face a
mask of terror. The flowers and champagne tumbled off the cart, and the crystal
vase shattered on impact. The champagne bottle exploded. Flowers and glass and
water and bubbly
flooded the slick stone floor. Dearling’s body slammed into the
television set on the far wall; his head whipped back and splintered the flat
screen. Glass rained down on the Judas as he slid to the floor behind the cart.
Bragga placed himself in front of his bag of cash and took a gun
barrel to the side of his head. The gash spurted blood, drenched his shirt,
turned his legs to rubber, and took him down onto one knee. The gunman made a
fast reach past him for the bag, but Bragga grabbed the thug around one thigh
and tried to bulldog him to the ground.
“I’m gonna shoot you, you dumb prick,” the gunman grunted, rapidly
losing control of the situation.
“So much for keeping it on the QT,” Jack said to Mateo as he kicked
the door open and followed his gun into the room.
The third uniformed man spun as the door smashed against the jamb and
Jack’s fist exploded into his face. The man’s head snapped back, and blood
streamed out of his broken nose. His arms flailed, and his gun was suspended in
midair for a split second before the man and the gun hit the floor.
The man who’d pushed the cart turned his weapon on Jack, who fired
first, blasting the man in the shoulder. The force of Jack’s bullet propelled
the gunman’s body backward onto the cart before he flopped to the stone floor,
landed on his shoulder in the broken glass, and cried out in pain. The gun
discharging in the close confines of the hotel suite stopped the action. The
room smelled of cordite,
the only sounds heavy breathing and Todd Dearling’s whimpering. Mateo
picked up the third man’s pistol and covered Jack’s back.
Jack turned his Glock on the second man. “Give me your gun or your
friend’s going to bleed out,” he stated with extreme calm.
Before Jack could take control of the weapon, Bragga stripped it from
the gunman’s hand and smashed him in the temple with surprising violence. Then
he swung the confiscated Colt back and forth between Jack and Mateo, stopping
them in their tracks.
“Nobody move and nobody follow,” Bragga said as he half-zippered the
suitcase with one hand and picked up the carry-on bag.
“Drop your weapons,” he ordered Jack and Mateo through clenched teeth
as blood continued to drip down the side of his face. They complied, knowing he
wouldn’t make it as far as the lobby. Bragga walked around the couch on
unsteady legs, muscling the heavy bag. His eyes bored into Mateo, the “driver”
who had betrayed him, and ordered him to clear the doorway with a sharp wave of
his gun barrel. Mateo took a half step to the side, gave the short man just
enough room to pass, and pistoned with his full two hundred pounds of muscle,
leading with his elbow and hitting Bragga in the back of the head, just above
the neck. The Argentinean went down hard.
The overstuffed bag bounced on the floor, the luggage’s zipper split
open, and a green wave of banded hundreds cascaded out onto the polished white
Carrara marble. “That was a cluster fuck,” Jack said with disgust as he picked
up his Glock and surveyed the carnage in the suite. Mateo collected the fallen
weapons, grabbed a towel off the wet bar, and used it as a compress to stanch
the first gunman’s bleeding wound. He was all business. “Call 911 and have them
send an ambulance,” Jack said to Cruz, who he knew could hear him over one of
the multiple microphones.
“That was insane.”
Jack turned around and found Cruz standing, wild eyed, in the hall
directly behind him.
“Call 911 and lock the door. Did we get it all?”
“I copied Lawrence Weller and you on your cell, iPad, and laptop.”
“Good man,” Jack said.
“No, really, you, Mateo . . . man.” Cruz shuddered as he pulled out
his cell and dialed the emergency phone line. Jack was not one normally given
to second-guessing, but at the moment he found himself seriously questioning
his new career choice as a private investigator.
Muttering a curse, Jack holstered his nine-millimeter, crossed the
room, and proceeded to snap plastic flex-cuffs on the broken assembly of
thieves.
AUTHOR:
John Lansing spent five
years writing for TV hit Walker, Texas Ranger, and another three years
studying the life of an NYPD Inspector. What emerged from his combined writing
about a cop and time spent with an actual cop was Jack Bertolino—a fictional
character with very real-life stories. Lansing was also a Co-Executive Producer
for ABC's Scoundrels. John's first book was Good Cop, Bad Money,
a true crime tome with former NYPD Inspector Glen Morisano. The Devil's Necktie was his
first novel. A native of Long Island, John now resides in Los Angeles. Please visit http://www.johnlansing.net/.
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