Authors: Andrew Vachss
Tags: #Hard-Boiled, #Mystery & Detective, #Children, #Children - Crimes against, #Terrorists, #Mystery Fiction, #Saudi Arabians - United States, #New York, #Kidnapping, #General, #New York (N.Y.), #United States, #Fiction, #Crime, #Private investigators - New York (State) - New York, #Child molesters, #Private Investigators, #New York (State), #Burke (Fictitious Character), #Saudi Arabians
* * *
W
e cant hurt them, I said to Clarence. Theyve got to still be able to move when were done. You sure youre okay with this?
He fitted the silencer to his pistol, tested the trigger tension, nodded. Id reached out for him before Id left for Jesters. I knew I was doing wrong, bringing Clarence in. I knew what the Prof would say if he ever found out. Because if this gang wasnt going to listen, we were down to one option. Thats why Jester had a pickup truck waiting, its bed lined with heavy black plastic sheeting.
Four-fifteen a.m.
I went in first, a pistol in each hand. The basement was a blotch of murky darkness. You could smell humans down there, hear the muzzled sounds of marijuana-and-wine sleep.
The big pit was good. He never barked, but I could hear him charging up the stairs. When he got close enough for me to be
sure,
I shot him in the chest. He stumbled, shook himself, and started to rise. I shot him with my other pistol, point-blank into his thick neck.
The pit tumbled backwards down the stairs, rousing the gang. By the time they staggered themselves awake, they were bracketed inside a death triangle.
Id already pocketed the tranquilizer guns and switched to my .357. Jester had a double-barreled big-bore, cut down for close-up work; he held it in one hand as if it was weightless. Clarence played the laser-sight of his nine over each of them as I kicked the floodlight Id placed behind me into haze-filtered life.
You fucked with the wrong man, I said to the leader. I knew it had to be himhis eyes told me hed already figured out what the silencer was for, but not his next move.
He played for time. Look, man
Do not say one damn word to me, I cut him off, careful not to call him names. If I wanted him to go along, I couldnt disrespect him in front of his boys. I was on a tightrope, and my balance had to be perfect: just a man doing a job, not someone with a personal stake in any of this.
That man in the wheelchair, he has friends, I said, slow and clear. A
lot
of friends. Our boss, hes one of those friends. So we got our orders. The boss said it was our call, but if anything, and I mean
any
thing, happens to his friend, it comes back on us. You know what that means. Thats why were here. We have to take
something
back to our boss. We can take your word, or we can take your heads. Pick one.
The leader didnt hesitate. The minute you leave, we count to a hundred and we leave, too, he said. His voice was steady; I could see why he was in charge. We leave, and we dont come back. Never. Omarhe tilted his head at one of the crewhis baby mommas in the Ravenswood projects; she do whatever he tell her. We go there tonight, start looking for another spot to set up in the morning. Its easier to score over that side of the bridge, anyway. Look, on my life, we never cross your border again, okay?
You need to watch someone die, just to be sure were not playing? I asked him.
No, man. Just say what
What
you
said works. Its a good plan, I told him, letting him save face. But, you understand, we gotta be sure. So well be outside. Somewhere in the dark. We can count to a hundred, too. AllI looked around, countingfive of you dont come out, anyone left behind is a corpse.
Okay. Okay, sure, he said, holding up his hands, palms facing me.
Theres three cars outside, too, I told him, holding up a cell phone. You dont all stay together
pop!
They didnt make a sound.
I pocketed the phone, pulled out two rubber-banded packets, and tossed them on the floor. Theres five hundred cash in there, plus a dozen MetroCards. You all
walk
over to the subway, even if you see a cab along the way.
That one, I said, pointing at a kid with one leg wrapped in heavy rags, he has to limp, too fucking bad. You leave him behind
The leader nodded. The kid Gateman had shot nodded harder.
You stay together. You do
not
jump the turnstile. You do
not
get yourselves arrested this side of the bridge, not for
anything.
Got it? All right, theres just one more thing
.
Backlit like we were, all they could see was the hardware.
We need your pictures, I told them. Polaroids. Just keep facing me. Its not gonna hurt; we wanted you dead, we would have done it already.
They all took the flash in the face without moving. One of them even turned sideways after the first shot.
You know why we did that, I told the leader. Our whole crews gonna have copies by tomorrow morning. And dont even think about running your mouths,
ever.
We can find you on Rikers even easier than we did here.
Jester walked over to the tranqed-out pit, knelt, and scooped him up with one arm, keeping his shotgun trained on the gang. Then he hoisted the pit gently over his shoulder. One punks mouth dropped open at the sight.
Whose dog is he? I asked.
He mine, a dark-skinned kid in a red tank top said, probably thinking the money Id tossed on the floor was some kind of payment.
Jester stepped forward and hooked him to the gut. The kid dropped, but he didnt pass out. The real pain wouldnt come for a while yet. Jester dropped to one knee, leaned in close. I ever hear you got yourself another pit, you gonna die
real
slow. He stood up, kicked the kid in the ribs, and backed away to give us cover.
You can take that one with you, too, or just leave him here, I told the leader. But when you walk into an ER once you get across the border, you better tell a
real
good story.
Drive-by, the leader said, smoothly. We over near the Plaza, just chillin. A bunch of white boys jump out of a Jeep, swing on us with baseball bats. Hector here gets hit in the stomach. We all running when we hear a shot, and Tony catches one in the leg.
If this was a crew that carried off its wounded, maybe their leader was the real deal. Or maybe he was just good at mathwe werent going to do
one
of them and let the rest just walk away.
I had counted up to ninety-one when all five stumbled out of the basement. One was limping, but still moving pretty good. The dark-skinned kid had both hands pressed to his stomach.
* * *
I
was in the alley next to the flophouse, behind the wheel of my Plymouth. Gateman was inside, with Rosie. Clarence was behind the mirror.
The cellular throbbed against my chest.
They walked a
long
way, Terry reported. Sat together on the 1 Train until Forty-second, then they all got on the 7. I didnt
You went deeper than you needed to, I told him. Its over now. Get gone.
Rosie watched with only mild interest as I used a small sledgehammer on the cell phone. Gateman said hed take care of the disposal. Clarence went back to the hospital.
I returned the Plymouth, docked it, and then reported to Jester.
I already got a spot for this one,
ese,
he said, tilting his head toward the big pit, still unconscious, double-chained inside the cinderblock garage where Jester kept his office. Putting him out back would have been premeditated murder. By tomorrow, he be in good hands.
I tapped my heart with my fist. Twice.
* * *
T
he next morning, I entered the hospital through the service entrance, held still for the retinal scan, then punched in the numbers that would match it.
Inside, I moved past a guard. His weapon was holstered, but his palm partially covered a big red button. He was holding it down the way you do a grenade after the pins been pulled. Even if an intruder managed to slip past the scanners and put one between his eyes, his dead hand would still trigger the alarm. Instantly, the intruder would be caged. And whoever was watching the monitors would make sure the dozens of tiny jets implanted in the ceiling had gassed him into unconsciousness before signaling the capture team to move in.
The back way opened into an atrium that reached straight up to an all-glass ceiling. This was the break room for doctors and other high-ranking personnel, featuring a dozen different seating arrangements, a coffee urn that looked like it cost more than a Korean car, and a long table of fresh-baked pastries. Mini-trees in individual planters were scattered all around, each with its own auto-mist system. The floor was rubber-tiled; the walls were lined with glowing fiber-optic bands.
Nothing but the best was the message. One of them, anyway.
I had started over to the elevator when I noticed Taralyn, sitting by herself at a table in the corner. She smiled and waved. I knew it wasnt an invitation, just her natural Island politeness. I returned the courtesy and was about to move off when I spotted a medium-height white man strolling over toward her.
His suit coat was open, displaying a shoulder holster. Regulation haircut, gym-sculpted body. He moved with the flat-footed shuffle of a man who expected people to step aside.
Good luck with that,
I thought to myself, figuring a woman like Taralyn must have years of experience repelling advances. But then I caught a glimpse of Clarence, his back to the scene, waiting patiently for an opening near the coffee urn, a cup and saucer in each hand.
I immediately flowed into a change of direction. Thunder was booming, and our house needed a lightning rod. I moved the way Max had taught me, covering the ground quickly without looking like I was in a hurry. I got there too late to hear whatever the bodybuilder had already said, but I heard Taralyns response real clear: No, thank you. I am waiting for someone.
The bodybuilders hearing wasnt as good as mine. He picked up a metal chair with one finger, spun it expertly so it reversed, then straddled it and sat down across from Taralyn.
Maybe Ill just wait with you, he said. His voice was too thin for his bodysteroids will do that.
Please Taralyn started to say. But by then I was in position behind him. I leaned forward and spoke in a barely audible voice, adding a tinge of anxiety to assure him that I was no kind of threat. The young lady is waiting for her fiancé, I told the tough guy. You see?
He turned his head to look at me, not deigning to twist his whole body, letting his eyes send out the warning. Just in case I was too slow to understand, he popped the biceps of his suit jacket, adding an exclamation point to his unspoken threat.
Yeah, I see. And I think Ill wait along with her, he said. That all right with you, pal?
Not really, I said, apologetically, as I slid my right thumb and index finger deep into his wedged trapezius. I like bodybuilders; all that definition makes it easier to place the nerve blocks.
This young ladys fiancé, hes one of those crazy-jealous guys, I said, very quietly. You know the kind I mean, right? And hes over getting her some coffee, so this is kind of an awkward situation. How about if you and me find another spot?
Despite the macho nonsense, this guy was the real thinghe had the kind of pain tolerance you dont get from lifting weights. Sounds like a plan, he gritted out.
Great! I said, dropping my left hand inside his jacket, just above the hipbone. Lets go.
He stood up, slipping out of the nerve block on his neck as he did. But there was nothing he could do about my left hand without taking all kinds of risks. That wouldnt stop him in the street, but in this place, the risk was much higherI was an invited guest, and he didnt know who had issued the invitation.
We passed Clarence on his way back to Taralyns tableI dont think he even noticed us.
When the elevator car arrived, I stepped inside, releasing the bodybuilder and turning to face him as I backed to the wall. I wasnt surprised when he followed.
Whore you? was all he said.
Someone who just saved your life, I told him.
Is that right?
I didnt answer.
* * *
H
ow much longer? I asked the Prof.
Damned if I know, Schoolboy. I aint in no hurry. Only help I could be to you on this job is what Im already doing, anyway.
It wont always
Yeah, itll be different, the old man said. Different
way,
but the same play. Soon as I finish learning how to use that new leg, Im out of here. You tuned in?
Youll be ready to go when you can
walk
out.
That clue is true. Only a man whos been behind the wall can feel it all. Clarence, he thinks its about medicine
not that hes paying attention to anything but that girl he gonna marry.
Hes asked her?
Remember what I told you when you knew you were going to the Double K that first time? he asked. He was using prison-speak for Kangaroo Kourt, the Disciplinary Committee that got to decide if the ticket some hack wrote on you was valid. It always was; the only thing that mattered was what it was going to cost you.
Even in the bing, the canaries still sing, I answered him.
A grin transformed the old mans face. You dont forget
nothing,
do you, son? You get written up, you know you gonna get
some
time in the holeaint no fair allowed in jail. When we named them, we left off the last K, but you know what they say.
Im
Nigger aint a color, boy. There always be a way for them to pick us out of a crowd. Hell, back then, if you shanked some motherfucker, theyd lock you down even if they knew you didnt have no choice. But at least they always kept it in the house. Today, they actually put your ass on
trial
for that. I mean, take you down to the same court that
sent
you down.
The old con shook his head in disgust. Making your time harder, okay. But giving you
more
time, that is seriously wrong.
Its true, I said, remembering that first time I went before the Disciplinary Committee. The guy Id stabbed had it coming, and the guards sitting there all knew it. So, okay, they had to give me some time in the hole, but that wasnt for what Id done, it was for getting caught doing it.
You know that three-strikes bullshit they got now? the Prof said scornfully. A small-timer with two falls on his sheet dont even
think
about that until its all-or-nothing. Like that cop in California who got smoked cause the numbnuts who grabbed him and his partner figured they were headed for the gas chamber anyway.
You put the death penalty on kidnapping, you
telling
the snatch-men not to leave no witnesses. Thats why some useless junkie or a two-bit booster ends up blowing a cop away. He suddenly realizes hes going down for life-without even on a lightweight beef, so what the fuck? When you know you gonna die if you dont try, aint but one thing to do.
Hold court.
Amen.