The Woman in the Warehouse (Costa Family #9) Read Online Jessica Gadziala

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Mafia, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Costa Family Series by Jessica Gadziala
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Total pages in book: 81
Estimated words: 77124 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 386(@200wpm)___ 308(@250wpm)___ 257(@300wpm)
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“Keep following me, fuckface, and you’re going to become intimately acquainted with the third rail,” I hissed at the guy who was practically breathing down my neck as I walked down the platform away from the subway.

“Bitch,” he grunted.

“You have no idea,” I agreed, jogging up the steps and getting smacked in the face with the smell of food cart hot dogs and relish.

My stomach, full of nothing but coffee that was likely burning a hole in my stomach lining, let out a gurgle.

I stood there for a moment, weighing the pros and cons of eating processed meat for breakfast before grabbing one to eat on the walk to the warehouse.

It was probably generous to call it that.

Back in my grandfather’s day, it had been a smaller scale print shop that mostly specialized in business cards and wedding invitations. It was a rectangular three-story brick building with a single loading dock out back that I’d had someone come in and turn it into a ramp, so that I could use it to drive my car up and park inside the lower level.

What can I say? Parking was either hard to come by or expensive in the city. And I didn’t actually need all three floors of the warehouse to conduct my business.

I saved a piece of the hotdog and tossed it over the fence between my warehouse and the building next door where someone’s dog always seemed to be left out, barking and snarling at anyone who came too close. Because her owners were into some shady shit. But, y’know, who the fuck wasn’t?

“Hey, pretty girl,” I said, risking my fingertips as she came over to sniff them, her butt tentatively wiggling. “At least it’s not hot out here anymore, right?” I asked, rubbing my fingers up her snout. “I’ll bring you something better tomorrow,” I promised the block-headed tan pittie with her obnoxious chain collar.

I walked up to my building, plugged in my passcode then waited to hear the click, before moving inside.

The lower level was empty except for the SUV with blackout windows that was parked right in the center of the floor.

Nothing felt wrong.

Not right at first.

Until I was walking past the car on the way to the stairs that led up to the second floor. And I noticed the utility cart that had been up on the second floor the last time I used it was sitting near the door to the loading dock.

Like it had been used to…

“Fuck,” I hissed, running up the steps, my heart starting to punch against my ribcage as a sick feeling rose up my throat.

I had security, damnit.

I had security on top of my security.

I flew onto the second floor, rushing toward the row of oversized black garage totes.

Not that I needed to.

The bright yellow tops were all off, strewn carelessly around the floor, a few even stepped on and cracked.

“No no no no,” I growled, peering into the tote that had been home to some of the more important merchandise. “Goddamnit!” I snarled, picking up the empty tote, and throwing it across the room. Then checking the one below it.

Empty.

Same with the ones piled next to them, then next to those.

“Fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck!” I yelled, my voice echoing back to me through the empty space.

Three-hundred thousand.

That was what my whole supply was worth on the street. Fifty-grand of that I still owed a small percentage on to the fucking biker club I’d bought the guns from in Jersey. And they weren’t exactly the kind of guys who did shit on loan. But we had a history. They wanted the merchandise moved, and knew I was someone who could do that.

Except when, of course, someone stole from me.

I turned away from the empty storage tubs and made my way to the steps, rushing up to the third floor. My office. A place where I kept really fucking sensitive information.

Unlike the open second floor, though, the third had another door. Solid steel. With another security handle.

But with a different code.

And a retinal scanner as well.

Harder to break into because I had it set up to work as a safe room in case anything ever went down that would require me to hide out.

The door beeped as it opened, then closed with a solid click behind me as I slid the internal locks before looking around the space.

This, I was almost certain, was untouched.

My walls of whiteboards with their specially developed cipher that only I knew the code to were intact. And my notebook with an even more complicated code that listed my clients was still exactly where I left it, in a false bottom of my desk. Even my dozen or so personal weapons were all stashed where I kept them.

Not that my personal guns would do me much good when my entire supply was missing.


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