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
* * *
I
used my key on the three-pound padlock, opened the chain-link, and stepped into their territory, a gallon thermos of Mamas beef-in-oyster-sauce in one hand.
The big stud strutted out, eyeballing me same as always. His world was like his little girls coat: black and white. Either he recognized me, or I was a dead man.
Nova was a special brand of warlord: he
expected
tribute, but trying to bribe him would be suicide.
I poured out the contents of the thermos on the marble slab Id installed over the concrete for just that purpose. Nova walked over, followed closely by his mate
and that orca-spotted little female Id been courting so long.
While the others tore into Mamas cooking, she slipped behind me and deftly snatched the solid cube of filet she knew would be waiting, just for her. Thats my good little girl, I said.
Then I squatted down and patted her. A real one this time, not just a quick touch of her head, like Id been doing. I even scratched her behind one ear, just to make sure.
This time, she didnt trot away.
You want to come home with me?
She sat, eyes shifting from my face to her father and mother.
Its time, I told them.
The stud just watched. The mother looked at me. Into me.
Judge and jury, side-by-side. The only role still up for grabs was executioner.
I waited for the verdict.
Counted to fifteen in my head.
Then I started up the Plymouth. Let it reach operating temperature, the way I always do. Id been keeping the passenger-side door open while I warmed up the engine for months now, getting them all used to the sight.
Usually, they all went right back into their dog condo as soon as I started up. This time, none of them moved.
The temp gauge said the Roadrunners engine was ready. I took one more look. Nova was nowhere to be seen. But his killer-witch wife was still there, standing next to her last child.
I opened the passenger door, patted the seat, said, Come on, sweetheart.
The dog I knew I was finally ready for jumped in next to me. I reached across her, closed the door. Her mothers body was a statue, but her eyes crackled with death-threats.
I drove out slowly. Stopped. Went back, locked the gate behind me. And took my puppy home.
* * *
S
hes a
beauty,
boss!
She sure is, Gate, I told the man in the wheelchair who slipped his hand back from under his guayabera shirt when he saw me come in the front door of the flophouse he managed from behind a thick wooden plank.
Yours?
I hope so, brother. You know what they say.
Time will tell, the shooter replied, confirming the only test a born convict recognizes.
* * *
I
f being carried up a few flights of filthy stairs bothered her, she didnt let on. I opened the door to my place, put her down, said, Its yours, if you want it, Rosie.
Thats when I realized Id named her.
* * *
T
raining a dog isnt any more complicated than immediately rewarding them anytime they do something you want them to learn. Every time they do it, you add praise and a command, so they make the connection. Eventually they dont need the treats anymore. But thats just the mechanics of training, not the heart.
Rosie was a young dog, not a puppy. Id never had a semi-grown one before, but I knew this much: if she was ever going to be really, truly mine, I had to be hers first.
She spent hours inspecting the place. I encouraged her verbally, but I didnt try teaching her anything. That night, I made her a bed out of thick blankets, right across from my cot.
When I opened my eyes the next morning, she was curled up next to me.
Some wino on a lower floor started screaming. Rosie jumped down and charged the front door, snarling, wagging her tail happily at the prospect of battle.
Defending her home.
* * *
W
hen I had to, I used to be able to leave my Pansy alone for days; I rigged it so she could get food and water by herself. But Id raised Pansy from a pup, and she knew Id
always
come back, so I never worried about her getting all anxious while I was gone. Neos arent exactly Jack Russells, anyway.
For the next couple of days, I took Rosie everywhere I went, but I didnt want her to think thats how it was always going to be. So I started leaving her. The first time, it was only ten minutes. The second I walked back in, she started spinning in place with excitement, then rushed me so hard she almost took me down.
Gradually, I increased the time between returns. Ill
always
be back for you, Rosie, I told her, every single time.
Gateman was crazy about her, so I started leaving her with him, too.
Watch this, boss! he practically shouted when I came in late one night. Rosie had run over to me, and I was patting her and telling her what a perfect, beautiful girl she was, when Gateman yelled out: Rosie, sit!
And she did.
Yeah! Gateman cheered. Come and get it, girl!
She gave me a look, then trotted over and took whatever Gateman slipped her, swallowed it in one gulp.
I never had a dog, the wheelchair-bound shooter said. I know she aint minecatching a look from mebut Im part of her family, right?
True blood, I notarized. Then I glanced behind the counter, saw the trailer-hitch eye-bolt screwed into the floor, attached to a length of heavy chain.
Got to have it, boss, he explained. This little girl sees anybody coming through that door, she just
goes.
No yap-yap bullshit for her; shes a natural.
He didnt have to add killer.
I know it, Gate. But, look, that means, if any of our crew shows up and shes up there with me
I call up and warn you, bro. Shes gonna be one of us, but we go step by step, am I right?
I tapped fists with him. When I said, Home, Rosie charged up the stairs like a Great White who just heard a surfer convention was in town.
* * *
R
ose is such a beautiful name, Michelle said, stroking my dogs triangular head. Why do you have to call her Rosie? Thats a washerwomans name. Not fit for a princess, is it? she asked the pit.
When you train a dog, you need a two-syllable name, I told Michelle. Its all about getting them to focus, lock in on whatever youre saying, pay attention.
Oh, for the love of
I know what Im doing, honey.
Yes, you
are
quite the expert when it comes to females.
Give it up, I told my sister. Youre not winning this one.
Men are like that, she said to my dog. Arent they,
Rose
?
* * *
O
nly a certified imbecile licenses a pit bull these days. Theyve got that born bad tag on them so deep that lawmakers all over are trying to make them illegal. Theyre even a banned breed in some countries, and the disease is spreading. Pits cant hire lobbyists, so nobodys running around screaming about their right to own one, even if they can be dangerous in the wrong hands. I mean, its not as if they were something sacred
like guns.
You know how those gangsta-boy punks train their dogs to fight? They feed them gunpowder. Ulcerates the lining of their stomachs until theyre in so much pain all the time that it turns them vicious. I guess that doesnt qualify as ironynot cute enough for the bloggers, and too nasty for the poets.
I couldnt wait for Michael Vick to find Jesus, snatch himself some forgiveness, and go back to pro football. I could watch every game, hoping hed get his spine snapped. Then they could just push his wheelchair into a swimming pool, and throw in a plugged-in space heater. Hey, if he cant breed, what good is he, right?
Still, I wasnt going to let Rosie walk around without tags and give some cop an excuse, so I did the good-citizen thing. The clerk didnt even blink when I put down Taurus Uniqua as her breed. I wrote Rose for her name.
You pay the money, you get a dog license, no questions asked. But if you want AKC credentials, you have to paper the provenance. Otherwise, you cant enter one of their oh-so-special shows.
The Nazis would have loved the spectacles those dog lovers put on: the winner is the one who comes closest to the physical-perfection template. Blue blood, blue ribbon, big bucks. Thats why some breeders cull their litters. Cant have below-standard pups running around; those defective genes could pollute the perfection pool. A German shepherd with a spotted coatnow,
thats
a sin against nature.
I had Rosie microchipped, too. Things happen. If she was running loose, a Good Samaritan might get her to a shelter. The phone would ring at Mamas, and one of us would go get her.
Plus, I didnt want some Animal Control idiot stopping Gatemans wheelchair for walking Rosie without tags. I consider it my civic duty to prevent violence.
* * *
T
hey had to take the leg, Prof, I said. Straight out, the way I knew hed want it.
Kind of suspected so, the old man said. That skinny little nurse, Taralyn, I could see it in her eyes.
Prof
Whats wrong with you, Schoolboy? I didnt lose nothing Im gonna need. I look like fucking Bojangles to you?
You look like you always do, I told my father. Sound the same, too.
He looked around for a long few seconds. Said, This setup, its not no charity ward. Am I right?
Yeah.
Whatd you do, son? Sell your soul to the Devil?
Not my soul, I told my father.
Then I told him the rest.
* * *
T
he papers quoted the cops as saying they had a person of interest in the double homicide that had been dominating the headlines. The crime was perfect fodder for tabloid slop, with a little TV-cop talk sprinkled in. Both victims had been shot in the back of the headexecution-style, of courseso the Mansion Murders must have been the work of a professional.
The kids in temporary foster care, Terry said, looking up from his laptop screen.
That didnt take long.
Come on, Burke. My part shouldnt even count as an exploit, not with all the social engineering you did first.
It was good to know I still had the phone skillsscamming the names of a random group of CPS caseworkers had been easier than bribing a congressman.
Terrys first trickaccessing public records to get the vitals on each onehad hit pay dirt. They let them use anything they want for a password, he explained, shaking his head in disgust. They dont even require alpha-numerics, just has to be six characters or more. Pathetic. Most people, they just put in their own name or birthday. Hit it on the third try.
I patted the kidI was going to have to stop calling him that, even in my mindon the shoulder.
Nice work, T. Probably means the little girl told the cops what that woman they found next to her father was really there for. And you
know
the cops looked at the fathers computer. It was a crime scene, right? No warrant required. Maybe the whores prints were already in the system, too.
The medias gonna be all over this, so theres no way CPS gets to look the other way
not with people looking at
them.
Guaranteed theyll be asking that mother some questions.
Ive got some questions Id like to ask her.
Leave that to the insurance investigators, T. Those cold-blooded bastards will be looking for as much ammo as they can stockpile. See, heres a trifecta you can bet the farm on: the mother files a claim on the fathers big-bucks life insurance; the company denies it, and she sues.
She is just as guilty as
More, I said to Clarence, who had been standing quietly, watching the computer screen. But thats the kind of trafficking that they dont do TV specials about. I was thinking of Beryl, the little girl Id saved so many years ago. Thinking about what shed becomeeven psychopaths will tell you the truth if they want to.
And how
very
much Beryl had wanted to.
* * *
Y
ou didnt ping me to make a progress report, Pryce said. And you didnt need a meeting to get more money. So you must want something done.
A meeting. But not with you.
Who, then?
This prince of yours.
Look, Burke, this isnt a man you can just
Ill play by whatever rules you lay down. But if you want a win, Ive got to get in the game. People always know more than they think they know, only that never comes out unless you ask the right questions. If this guy really wants the baby as bad as he
What are you trying to say?
Trying? I already said it.
Pryce looked at me, no expression in his inky eyes. An apex predator isnt programmed for deep analysis. On
this
island, Pryce was a Komodo dragonevery living thing was his potential prey. He wasnt trying to read me; he was reading the menu.
Theres a lot of talk about you, he finally said. A man could get a headache, reading through all of the files.
Is that right?
Yes, he said, almost sorrowfully. The problem is, one piece of intel contradicts the other.
Thats because its not intelligence, its politics. Like a Supreme Court judge: He doesnt give a fuck about the law; he just knows what
he
wants. So he orders his clerks to go find enough bricks to build his opinion with. Like that partial birth abortion pile of crap they came up with.
You think everyones bent, dont you? Pryce said. Not being sarcastic, looking for that straight-from-the-source intel that hed spent his life collecting. And using.
No, I told him. Not just because it was the truth, but because I dont like pigeonholes any more than I like prison cells. And I dont think every man has his price, either. No pun intended.
But the law itself?
Bent? Its downright twisted, I cut him off. All the way from the root to the branches to the dirty blossoms with that foul smell. In this city, the lower-court judges are merit appointments
meaning the mayor gets to pick whoever he wants. The higher levels, you have to run for election
meaning the party bosses get to pick whoever
they
want. Nothing to do with politics, right? Or money? Take it all the way to the top, it doesnt change. Ask George Bush how this Miers broad got herself qualified to be nominated for the Supreme Court.
Whats with the innocent act, all of a sudden? You actually think any of those judges
dont
have a personal position on abortion? Or capital punishment? Or gay rights? No matter what they say, they know their real job is to make the Constitution dance to the tune of whoever appointed them, okay?
Come on, tell me Im wrong. Tell me they
dont
come in with their own agendas, and twist their rulings to fit. What else are you selling today? Lobbyists got that rich by playing the horses? Congressmen made their fortune in the real-estate market? Jesus.
Pryce just did his thing: watched, and listened.
And, despite knowing I should have shut up minutes ago, I hammered on, hating myself for falling under his spell. Maybe youre even one of those mopes who thinks jury nullification is some kind of black protest thing? Better not ask the jury on the Emmett Till case. How come states rights was good enough when they had to justify segregation, but it went down the tubes when medical marijuana showed up? How come kids whove been abused get actual lawyers in some states, but others only give them a warm, caring amateur who has to kiss the judges ass if she wants to be allowed in the courtroom at all?
Just Us, Pryce said.
Spare me the Paris Hilton stories, pal. A guy like you, youll never get it. Sure, thats how cons spell justice, but thats not like saying youre innocent; its saying you didnt have enough coin to buy a walk-away. You rolled the dice and crapped out, thats all. You dont sit around and wait for things to
be
fair; you just learn to never
fight
fair.
He looked at me for what I guess he thought was a long time. Then he said: I mentioned intel for a reason, BurkeIm not the only one with access to it.
Meaning, this prince guy has got friends who can pull files?
And thats just what he
will
do, on anyone he meets with.
Including you? I asked, guessing that it was one of the no-budget-line government departments that had contacted Pryce, not the Prince himself.
That parts no problem, he said dismissively. Im on the books. Youre not.
So put me on them. Pick a name, make up a backgroundyou know, whatever they do for you, every time they send you out.
Youre not listening, he said. There is no
Central
Intelligence Agency. Pryce would knowhe spent his life sliding through government walls like cigarette smoke through a window screen. The Sheikh might have access to more than one source. Especially from the international desks.
So?
He leaned back, a boxer dropping his shoulder to launch a hook. Does the 4 Commando unit ring a bell with you?
Huh? I slipped the shot, throwing back the look of honest confusion Id been perfecting in police interrogations since I was a kid.
Mad Mike Hoares crew, he went on, unruffled. In Katanga, it was the
5
Commando. After that, he disappeared for a little while. Resurfaced in Biafra sometime in 67 or so. Rumor has it that it was his team who escorted Ojukwu out of the kill zone, once it became obvious that Nigeria was going to wipe out the rebels.
Never met him. The truth. Never even heard of him. A deliberately transparent lie.
You
do
understand that youre still listed as a war criminal by the Nigerians?
Whats a war criminal? I said
a more polite form of I dont give a fuck.
Good question, he answered, surprising me. Everybody knows about the Geneva Convention. Because it was supposed to establish rules for armed combat between nations, it was assumed the combatants would be
members
of those nations. Of course, that never was the truth, but it wasnt until the late Seventies that anyone admitted it. Then the Convention was amendedcalled Protocols Additionalto cover hired guns.
Boiled down to the essentials, the Protocols say that mercenaries arent soldiers, theyre common criminals. If captured, theyre not entitled to POW status. They cant be repatriated to their home country, because their home country isnt at war with the country they were fighting in. Ask Simon Mann.
So, what they get is a trial, he said, parboiling the last word in a thick soup of sarcasm. If the court finds the combatant to be a mercenary, they can do whatever they want to him.
Even if?
A few years after Vietnam, some guerrillas in Angola were put on trial right after they were captured. About a dozen in all. Three British nationals were sentenced to death. One American, too.
Sentenced?
They were executed about two weeks later. Firing squad. The rest of them got the kind of prison sentences nobody expected them to survive.
Im guessing there was no U.S. Embassy there.
What if there was? America never signed that protocol. Why should we? America never uses mercs, it only sends military advisors. If a private citizen commits a crime in a foreign country, hes on his own.
Fuck you
and
your Protocols, Pryce. Isnt there one about not using child soldiers, too? For my money, we should tell the UN to find a new place to live, turn the whole building into condos.
I was just giving you some info I thought you might
What,
use
? This war criminal crap, its just another way of saying that a tourist visa to Nigeria would only buy me a one-way trip. Is that supposed to be news?
I thought you might be interested in knowing the Nigerian government has a long memory.
Which government would that be? The guys who won that last election?
Dont be deliberately stupid, Burke. The Prince is a Muslim. And Muslims rule most of Nigeria, no matter whos supposedly in charge. Sharia is the only law in the parts of the country they control, which is most of the land.
So?
So
they
have a list of every mercenary who served in the Biafran conflict.
I made a so what? gesture.
Thats right, he agreed. All they have is the name you were using at the time. No photographs, no fingerprints. But they
do
have access to an individual who says he can identify all his
former comrades.
I bet they do. The mercs who fought there were a real mixed bag. Some were just nigger-killers, some thought they were fighting Communism. But most of them were strictly about the cash. Not just the salary, the finders-keepers booty. A diamonds not a rare stamp or a painting. It doesnt have a history that can be traced. Fits in your pocket, too.
So, yeah, Im sure they got one of them to point out anyone hed ever seen in-country: Peace Corps volunteers, before they had to flee. Red Cross workers, before one of their supply planes was shot down. Even the priests who never left Săo Tométhat was the staging area, wall-to-wall with mercs coming and going.
Is that where you flew in from?
Is this where Im supposed to tell you if your guess is right?
I dont guess, Pryce said. And Im not dumb enough to buy what I already own. Those Canadian pilots are incredible, arent they?
I thought the Count was Swedish, I said, acting as if he was talking about the mad-with-courage Quixote who built the Biafran Air Force out of spare parts, instead of the no-nerves pilots who flew ancient Connies over the war zone through the black night, diving down to a dirt runway lit only by flares, as casually as if they were dropping off a truckload of Budweiser behind a 7-Eleven.
You were lucky, he said, giving up.
I was stupid, I told him. A stupid kid who thought he was going to be a hero. But if
you
dont know what I was doing there, Id be real surprised. And if you think Id ever so much as set foot on that
continent
again, you should change therapists.
He gave me a look that could mean anything.
You think Katanga isnt
still
a butcher shop? I said, deliberately referencing where hed started this game. He was an opponent I couldnt KO, maybe, but I could take whatever he threw. For as many rounds as he wanted to go.
I understand, he said, calmly. But the Prince could still have sources we dont know about.
What he doesnt have is a photograph, I said, confidently. And even if he did, it wouldnt resemble what youre looking at now. Theres no risk.
What would I tell him? Pryce asked, throwing in the towel.
Why tell him anything? Im a man you hired. I dont need a name for that. He wouldnt expect me to give him one.
You dont want to give him anything else, either, Pryce warned.
You dont seriously think Im walking into some
embassy,
do you? I half-laughed. Heres how it goes. I pick the spot. I dont search him; he doesnt search me. He can bring anyone he wants, but the only DNA left behind at the scene is going to be his.
Hell never
This ones nonnegotiable, I told the shape-shifter. He doesnt like it, fuck him. At least youll find out how bad he really wants that baby back.