The Baseball That Saved A Mafia Boss Exposed His Fiancée’s Secret-Tep

The gun came out of the rain before Dominic Caruso understood the meeting had been built around his death.

At 9:47 p.m., the freight warehouse south of Chicago looked abandoned enough to fool a stranger.

Dominic was not a stranger.

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He knew which doors rusted shut and which ones opened when money changed hands.

He knew which cameras worked, which lights flickered because of bad wiring, and which puddles hid potholes deep enough to break an ankle.

Rain struck the broken pavement in hard silver sheets, bouncing off the toes of his shoes and running down the back of his black coat.

The air smelled like diesel, wet metal, and the river.

A loose chain tapped against the gate every time the wind moved.

Tap. Tap. Tap.

It sounded almost patient.

Dominic stood beside the open rear door of his SUV while his driver checked the dock-access sheet again.

Only three people were supposed to know about that meeting.

Dominic.

His driver.

The man who had requested it.

That was what the file said.

That was what the security log said.

That was what made the pistol appearing from behind the shipping container feel less like a surprise and more like a signature.

A man stepped out of the rain with his arm already extended.

The gun was level with Dominic’s chest.

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