One:
September 7th 2019
Mitchell – If
you’re reading this, I am very likely dead, though I suppose there is some
small, heartening chance that we are sitting together over a dram of Jameson’s
Black Barrel, chuckling over my morbid fatalism, as I read this gloomy note
aloud. For the moment I am alive and dead at once, Schrödinger’s cat in a
sealed Embassy envelope, and hopefully a “hep” cat, as my Beatnik uncle used to
say.
Did I make you
smile, there, dear boy? I always treasured being able to do that, just as I
treasure being able to muster a smile myself, even at a moment as dark as this
one.
To wit: I am now
convinced that Bradley Constable and his cohort at the NSA’s Clandestine Action Directorate are
attempting to undermine, and discredit the Central Intelligence Agency, as one
part of a larger scheme to dismantle the entirety of what certain individuals
have taken to calling “The Administrative State”. As to the people behind CAD
and their ultimate purpose, I can only speculate, though we both know which
dangerous foreign actors would benefit most from such a disruption of our institutional
governance.
Whatever the
ultimate outcome, months or years from now, the danger facing us this morning
is critical and immediate. An encrypted private communication from CAD asset
Nicholas Borolino, sent at great personal risk, has confirmed my worst
suspicions. I only fear that it has come too late, with you and Darren
incommunicado at Kilzilay Square. The actual purpose of your operation was to
very publically humiliate the CIA, who were to be blamed for your calamitous
misadventure. An ancillary benefit of this stratagem, or perhaps a central
feature of it, was to be the elimination of Longbow as a functional entity. If
we no longer exist, and have never been officially acknowledged, no blame for
this mission can be deflected onto us, and our friends in Langley will have to
take full responsibility for our blunder.
According to
Borolino, the server farm in Idaho backing up all our files has been destroyed
by a chemical fire, our operatives in five countries involved with CAD
operations have been rounded up and executed … I managed to send an alert to
our unassigned assets. Those with the resources to disappear will do so, I
hope. The operation was meant to include you and Darren, and may well have. I
am uncomfortably aware that I may be writing these words for no one and to no
purpose.
However, I
choose not to dwell on that prospect. Both you and Darren have proved
spectacularly hard to kill in the past.
I know that I
will be questioned, to disclose the identities and whereabouts of all Longbow
personnel; I know just as well that I could never stand up to the “enhanced
interrogation” techniques employed by the intelligence community.
But don’t
concern yourself about that. If they come for me here, I will be dead before
they arrive.
The only
remaining evidence that Longbow ever existed lies in your hands, along with everything a DOJ
lawyer would need to disable the CAD and arrest its executive cadre for war
crimes, international narcotics trafficking,
numerous human rights violations, and of course high treason. Bradley Constable
only met you once, no one else at CAD
has ever seen you, and even Brad never learned your real name or even your
nationality, as Longbow employs assets from half a dozen countries, all of whom
speak English at the “Native speaker” fluency level. One Dutch operative, whom
I have reason to think escaped the CAD dragnet, studied English in Texas and
speaks with an alarmingly authentic South Houston accent. The closed-cell
operation structure of Longbow means that no operational team is aware of any other,
so no, even if captured and tortured, no one can identify or locate you.
In other words,
dear boy, this is your white crow.
These files and
documents represent your final line of defense. I suggest turning them over to
a randomly selected lawyer with a simple DIRT protocol. Set the Designated
Interval Report Time trip wire for one week, choose a trusted media outlet to
receive the information – the Intercept?
The Washington Post? Al Jazeera? Perhaps all of them.. That will be your
best insurance.
I know your
first impulse will be to turn these documents and files over immediately. I beg
you not to sacrifice yourself in this way. Frankly, I’m not even sure it would
do much good. You would only slow the process down, not stop it. Still, while
the documents remain hidden and the results of making them public remain
unknown, these people will fear you. That by itself might save your life.
You’ve given the
last twenty years to the service of your country and your country hasn’t done
very much for you in return – not that you ever asked. You’ve always been a
hero. I know that better than anyone. So this is my final request: Be an
ordinary man for a little while. I will die happy if I can believe that some
good has come from this ruinous betrayal.
Take your life
back, and live.
You’ve earned
it.
--Walter
TWO:
Deitz returned with a can
of beer in his hand. Mitch half-stood to pass him the letter. Extending his arm drove a needle into
his bruised ribs. The pain seemed to focus his sorrow and his rage. The hate
thundered through him -- an express
train through a local station -- deafening the ears, battering the nerves in a
blast of filthy wind. He sat as he had stood during those trips to the city as
a boy, hands jammed over his ears, waiting for the train to pass, waiting for
the assault to end.
He wanted to kill them all
– Constable and the rest CAD gangsters, and all the politicians who backed them
and the money people behind the politicians, all of them.
But it was pointless.
Walter was right.
Walter – writing that
letter, minutes ahead of the attack, with saxitoxin pill sitting on the desk
beside him. He could have run, and left his agents to be captured or killed, he
had the resources to disappear, Mitch had seen the beach house in Costa Rica,
purchased by a shell company years before, untraceable.
Instead Walter had chosen
to remain, to hide the files and documents, to secure his protégé’s future, to
scrawl a last message -- unhurried, unflappable, with all of his old
self-denigrating charm, the wry smile that dismissed sentiment and self-pity.
This was a person who as a twelve year old boy, fleeing a house fire, returned
to gather up his sister’s Breyer plastic horse collection, including the
treasured Appaloosa foal that had fallen under the bed.
Walter hadn’t changed.
People didn’t, he always said that. It was true. He had remained that valiant
little boy, right up the moment of his death.
And he had been left,
anonymous and abandoned, piled on the floor to be hauled away like trash.
Dietz handed him back the
letter. “What a guy.”
“Yeah.”
They sat in silence for a
few seconds, then Dietz said, “What’s a white crow? I didn’t get that part.”
“Wait was obsessed with
the concept of the Black Swan -- ”
“The ballet movie with
Natalie Portman?”
“No, the book by Nassim
Taleb.”
“You lost me.”
“Taleb defines a Black
Swan as -- it’s an unpredictable event, something huge and
bad that comes out of nowhere and fucks everything up – an earthquake, Pearl
Harbor, 9/11. We can’t cope so we try to
come up with reasons and explanations –like those conspiracy theories about
9/11. Or blaming yourself for the blow out that caused the car crash.”
“I should have checked
those tires.”
“The tires were fine. The
truck was overloaded and the night was hot. Then you hit a pot hole that hadn’t
been there two days ago. It was nothing but bad luck, Darren.”
“Okay so what does that
have to do with Walter’s crows?”
Three
“Walter always believed in
the opposite of the Black Swan – the good thing that comes out of nowhere and
makes things better. Unexpected blessings. Like all the stuff scientists
discovered totally by accident – penicillin and corn flakes, insulin and
super-glue. Or something like Dunkirk. Hitler could have wiped out the entire
British Expeditionary Force in two days, and for some crazy reason he didn’t.
Or winning the lottery. Or check this out --Vicki Fleishman’s grandfather
almost ran over a Colonel when he was delivering mail at Fort Lejeune. This was
late September, 1950. He was
court-marshalled and sent to the brig. He was sitting there when his company
was sent to Korea. Two weeks after they arrived, the Chinese crossed the Yalu
River and re-took Seoul. It was a huge
offensive – thousands of casualties. Every single member of Gus Fleishman’s
unit died at Chosin Reservoir. But not Gus. He was stuck in a North Carolina
stockade. Gus got his discharge, and married his high school sweetheart, and
had five kids, and one of them had Vicki. I would call that a White Crow for
me.”
“And Longbow disappearing,
along with all the evidence of our existence … that’s a White Crow for us.”
“Yeah.”
They sat still in the dry
cool air-conditioned apartment for a minute or two, contemplating the bizarre,
inexplicable vagaries of hazard and luck. Walter was dead, Longbow was
finished.
And they were free.
Finally, Dietz said, “So
what do we do now?”
“What do you want to do?”
Dietz took a long pull
from his beer, pondering the question. “Well … I have a quarter of a million
dollars, a small arsenal, a case of Gran
Patro Burdeos tequila, two passports, and three girls named Melina … all waiting
for me in Athens.”
“Three girls named
Melina?”
“Always pick girls with
the same name, brother. No mistakes, no confusion, no hurt feelings.”
“You’re a prince, Darren.”
“Anyway, I guess I’ll hole
up in Athens for a while. See what happens. How about you?”
Mitch didn’t need to think
about it. He’d known his answer before he finished Walt’s letter.
“Me?” he said. “I’m going
home.”
Four
Berat Yavuz, bulky in a
rumpled white suit, with a gritty stubble on his face, and a gold tooth in the
middle of his predatory grin, smacked the rickety table between them, like a
judge with a gavel, and said, “This will cost you a great deal of money my
friend. A very great deal of money.” He looked like the classic corrupt
official of the Levant, an Orientalist cliche at least a generation out of
date. Mitch couldn’t resist the obvious response. “Baksheesh.”
“No! This is no
disreputable underhand bribery trick. This is the true cost of doing business.
Let me tell you a story. When I was a boy growing up in Aksaray we had a
wonderful butcher and he was in love with my mother and I would go in and he
would give me the night’s dinner – rare cuts of beef, the shoulder tender and
the sirloin flap, wrapped in brown paper -- and I never had to pay a thing! Of
course I didn’t. My mother had an account there and paid monthly. Who knows if
she ever paid at all, the little man was so smitten! The result my friend, was
I grew up completely innocent of the cost of beef! Please – I knew it wasn’t
free! Of course I did. But it was not until I moved back into the neighborhood,
and took up my mother’s apartment after she died, that I truly understood. The
first meat bill demolished me! So much money for so little. And that is your
situation now, Mr. Osman Baykara, which is of course not your real name. Mother
is dead and now you must pay for your own beef.”
Mitch sat back, listening,
taking in the plain white-washed cinderblock walls and the narrow window that
showed a line of trucks waiting to enter Bulgaria at the Hamzabeyli/Lesovo border checkpoint, their engines idling in
the brooding late afternoon heat. Beyond them, chain link and razor wire, and
scorched fields rolling out like a dirty carpet to the foot of the distant
hills.
Inside the hut, a ceiling
fan stirred the toxic air. Yavuz lit another cigarette, a Sobranie
– obviously a cherished personal luxury, along with the American cologne
and the well-worn Italian shoes. His cheap nokia phone pinged with a text. He
pulled it out of his pocket, unfolded it for a moment, and then stood.
“I have a small problem
with some uninvited guests. I will return shortly. I leave you with this
thought – something slightly in excess of 58,000 Lira. Ten thousand dollars, if
you like. In cash.”
Five
Mitch shrugged as the door
closed behind the bulky official. The mingled smells of sweat, Brut aftershave
and tobacco lingered in the unventilated little room. Ten thousand was
manageable. He had thirty in the trunk of his car from the stash at the Ankara
safehouse, and he had actually expected to pay more. In fact he hadn’t known
what to expect. An arrest at the border, or simple and unceremonious bullet in
the back of the head, were not out of the question. If his cover was blown, if
Yavuz’s cover was blown, if Walter had over-looked some piece of incriminating
documentation, left some crucial computer file undeleted, if someone in the
safehouse, Carmody or that kid Blake, had talked before the CAD killed them …
but speculation was pointless and this checkpoint was his best bet to
exfiltrate himself from Turkey. It was all a coin toss, and it looked this one
this one had come up heads.
In fact, up to now the
trip had been relatively easy. First, there was getting Walter’s Opel Manta
from the underground parking in the City hotel – a squat, ugly cube of brown
cement, dominating a square block of the Yildizevler neighborhood, just a short
walk from the safe house. Walter was paid up to the end of the year and the man
in the booth was lost in his iPhone and scarcely looked up as Mitch drove past,
flashing his ticket. The car was Walter’s secret, and he had always been sure
the the CAD and the NSA knew nothing about it. His tradecraft was good, but
Mitch wasn’t sure that anyone’s tradecraft was good enough to evade the massed
computer power of America’s secret agencies. Mitch knew he would have to get
rid of the Opel at some point. But first things first – the Manta would serve
to get him out of Turkey. That was enough for now.
Driving west from Ankara
on the D 200, the city had unraveled gently into broad swaths of ploughed farmland – miles and
miles of flat green fertile earth running all the way to the low mountains on
the horizon. He seemed to be going back in time as well as distance, passing
small villages of white washed buildings and road side stands selling plums and
apricots from the straggling orchards. He passed man-made hills covering
ancient Roman burial sites, lonely road signs that seemed to point nowhere, but
few signs of life -- the occasional figure far away in a field, dressed all in
black despite the baking heat, lifting an arm in acknowledgement, a stray dog,
a shepherd with a scrawny herd of goats.
Only the big eighteen wheel trucks roaring by or passing him in a
battering gust of wind, located him in the twenty-first century.
The wide empty landscapes
and the hot dry rush of air through his window scoured his mind clear and he
was happy to occupy himself with nothing but the steering wheel under his
hands, the pedals at his feet and the road ahead of him. He had a lot to think
about, but thinking could wait.
Six
Driving down off the
Anatolian plain into the hive of Istanbul and the cool air from the Sea of
Marmara, Mitch’s escape started to feel bizarrely like a holiday. The high rise
apartment in the Atakoy section of Bakirkoy, near the giant glass and steel American
hotels, with its fractured view of the water, made him feel more like a business
man stealing a free weekend, than a spy on the run. He checked the building out
carefully, parked ten blocks away, and completed several SDRs from different
directions before he ventured inside. But the Surveillance Detection Routes had
satisfied him that the place was clean, and the giant bath tub and the king
sized bed were exactly what he needed after the long dusty drive.
He slept for twelve hours,
took his breakfast at Lades, where the menemen, scrambled eggs with tomatoes
and red peppers, served with hot crusty bread and a dose of granular Turkish
coffee, remained as delicious as he remembered. He watched the tankers and
cruise ships, the barges and caiques on the Bosphorous, gulped the cool briny
air, and as always when he found himself in this strange, half modern half
Byzantine city, toyed with the idea of staying. But he knew too many people
here, and too many others might recognize him. The sad fact was, much as he
loved Europe, no city on the continent was safe for him anymore.
And so, the drive to the
border crossing at Hamazbeyli.
The hot dry barren route
north west out of Istanbul, the modern road somehow elevating and separating
him from the scorched land around him, like a causeway over a dry lake bed,
quietly buoyed his decision and his mood. He needed to see the ocean again, his
ocean – the harsh cold steel Atlantic. And after hours of circular arguments
about refugees and gas prices on Acik Radyo and abrasive Turkish pop on Kral
FM, he needed to hear English spoken again, even if it was only the nagging
voice of NPR droning on about politics, death and money, which had been the
primary public radio topics when he left the country seventeen years ago.
So he was ready when Berat
Yavuz slumped back into the interrogation room, wiping his forehead with a
dirty handkerchief. “Sorry for the interruption. A truck supposedly carrying
construction materials was in fact packed tightly Syrian women and children.”
“What did you do?”
The unshaven face split
into an irresistible impish smile. “My friend, I sent them on their way, with
twenty gallons of water and several baskets of somewhat wilted stone fruits.
Not much, but the best I could manage at short notice.”
Mitch stared at him. “You
could go to jail for that.”
“I will be sure to add it
to the list of my offences! But I suspect any God who has earned the right to
be the object of our prayers would approve. We have both served the Devil long
enough. And both of us will be gone soon, retired from the life, yes? I have
only lingered here this long because I suspected there might be some of our
mutual friend’s strays, fleeing the
country. I owed him this small service. But I suspect you are the only one.”
“I don’t know. I hope
not.”
“I will not have the
opportunity to find out. This window is closing. I will take your good American
cash money and be long gone by this evening.” He sighed. “The end of an era.
History will tell us if it was a heroic or a tragic one. Or just a muddle.”
Mitch smiled. “Maybe -- all of the above?”
“A heroic tragic muddle!
You have just defined humanity in three words, my friend. So let us leave it at
that.”
Seven
Driving south through
Macedonia and Albania, heading for Durres and the sixteen hour ferry crossing
to Ancona in central Italy on the reliably shabby and overcrowded Adria ferry,
Mitch found himself speeding on the long stretches of wide empty road between
the small towns, and taking the hairpin turns in the high Dinaric and Rhodope ranges
as if someone was chasing him. But no one was chasing him.
He had no mission, no
time-table, no deadline. There was no one to check in with, no reports to send
– just the rough beautiful mountain landscapes and the cool alpine air. This
was what Walter had been talking about. It was unnerving. The ground where
orders and duty, obedience and obligation, had connected him to the earth fell
away -- and in his mind he stumbled backward, fleeing the sinkhole. Looking
over the edge into the endless possibilities of an untethered life gave him
nothing but vertigo.
But the driving felt good.
The long run down to the Adriatic coast through the towns of cluttered white
houses with terracotta roof tiles set into the green rocky hills set his mind
at ease. The narrow roads and the responsive V6 engine under the hood of the
Manta returned a sense of control and power. He accelerated on the long
straight runs in the valleys, loving the surge of speed that slammed him back
against the seat. But there was no rush. He slowed down, pulled over beside a
waterfall to stretch his legs. There was nothing waiting for him at Durres but
the seedy, derelict Adria ferry to Ancona, with its torn seats and tepid
coffee.
The next afternoon,
standing at the rail, eight hours into a sixteen hour trip, after a night at
the pink sugar candy Kristal hotel, he had finally relaxed. They were out of
sight of land and Mitch thought of all those ferry trips to Hyannis on the
Nantucket and before that the cramped tin-can Uncateena, ridiculed by his
father as “the greyhound of the sound” – and he was talking the grimy bus, not
the graceful racing dog.
Mitch had treasured those few minutes in
the middle of the crossing, when there was only water on the horizon. The view
set his mind free. He could have been anywhere in the world – heading for
Portugal mid-Atlantic, steaming toward Samoa, or even crossing the Adriatic to
Italy, as he was now.
Mitch
had Walter Fleming’s exfiltration route memorized – north through Italy, west
to France, skirting the Mediterranean coast into Spain, a stop at the Barcelona
safe house for fresh papers and cash, then the flight from El Prat airport,
where Longbow subcontractors would expedite the customs and ticketing, nonstop
to Vancouver. Yet the next morning,
after a cramped night’s sleep on a hard bench under a salt-caked window – Mitch
could sleep anywhere – he had driven off the boat and turned south, toward
Rome.
It had occurred to him,
walking the deck in the fresh humid breeze, sipping a tepid bitter espresso
from a Styrofoam cup, that he had spent years crisscrossing Europe without ever
pausing to see the sights. He had always been working, with no time for a walk
around of the Coliseum or the Louvre, and frankly no real interest, with his
mission-ready blinders on. The last time had had been in Paris Notre Dame was
on fire and all it meant to him was a possibly lethal traffic jam, snarling his
escape route. Well, he was done with all that.
It
was time to be a tourist.
Eight
Mitch did tourism right,
strolling the Piazza Navonna, wandering the Coliseum, gaping up at the Sistine
Chapel ceiling, eating a couple of excellent meals, staying one night at a
small pensione where he paid cash for a cramped attic room with a spectacular
view of the Tiber, and then driving on to Florence and Milan, and even farther
out of his way, north through France, to Paris.
It
was in the Louvre, keeping a respectful distance from the curiously
unimpressive Mona Lisa (her little smirk annoyed him) when he saw the woman
with the Lightship basket.
The coincidence amused
him, though he had heard stories throughout his childhood of Nantucketers
meeting up in strange, far flung places -- Petra, the Galapagos islands, a volcano in
Hawaii. The Louvre seemed mundane by comparison, though it was a natural
temptation for someone whose local museums didn’t feature much beyond harpoons
and the very type of basket the woman was holding in the crook of her arm. Yes, Nantucket actually had a basket museum …
just the sort of self-fetishizing yet oddly endearing absurdity that had driven
Mitch away from the island in the first place; and somehow managed to lure him
back.
He took the woman’s
presence as an omen and a beacon.
He was thinking about
approaching her when he saw the thief.
The bald little man was
wearing black Adidas and a blue nylon windbreaker over a UCLA t-shirt, and he
moved like and dancer. He slipped open the scrimshaw lid of the woman’s little
purse, and removed her passport in less than three seconds. He was good. Mitch thought of his boyhood
friend Mike Henderson, whose father – a grizzled, old-school painting
contractor – ever doled out only one compliment: “Looks like you’ve done this
before.”
This
pick-pocket had obviously done it before.
The
woman never felt a thing.
She was engrossed by the
tour guide speaking through her ear buds. Her husband was equally oblivious,
dozing on his feet, scrolling aimlessly through his iPhone. In a second the guy would be gone. He was
already angling for the opening in to the next gallery and the stairs beyond
that led down to the galleries on the first floor. Mitch took off, ang;ling his
fade away from the CCTV camera perched high on the wall, walking just fast
enough to intercept the thief, then bounding the last few feet, grabbing him
and twisting his arm behind his back.
The man’s outrage was
flawless. “Que faites vous? Enlève-moiles mains!”
Mitch spoke softly.
“Donnez moi le passport, et je vous lesserait partir. Vous avez cinq seconds.”
He tightened the arm lock, and started counting down. At three, the guy reached
into his jacket pocket and handed over the precious document. What was such an
item worth on the black market these days? Ten thousand dollars? Twenty?
Easy come, easy go.
So the pick-pocket went,
sprinting into the crowd, dodging between the tourists and disappearing down
the stairs. It didn’t matter -- he must know he’d gotten off easy.
And the day was young.
Nine
Mitch walked back to the
woman, paging through her passport. Olivia Cummings, of 167 East 78th
Street, New York, NY. Visas for Germany, Spain, Italy and Monaco, as well as
France. The full European tour. They’d been traveling for more than six weeks.
He tapped her shoulder and she flinched. He held up the passport, and she
pulled her ear buds out.
Mitch took a calming step backward. “Someone
just took this out of your lightship basket.”
“What? Who did – what are
you talking about?” She snatched the passport out of his hand opened it to
verify that it was hers, and glared at him. “How did you get this?”
Mitch offered a friendly
smile. “I took it. From the man who
stole it.”
The husband looked up from
his phone. “Does this guy look like he needs to steal your passport, Livvy?” He
turned to Mitch. “Thanks, buddy. Quick thinking on your part. Looks like I was
kind of asleep at the switch there. Checking the email. They never let you
alone.” He extended his hand and Mitch shook it. “Bruce Cummings, good to meet
you.”
The woman looked at him
and seemed to see him for the first time. “I’m sorry I got upset. You took me
by surprise. But thank you. Thank you so
much. That was an extraordinary thing to do.” Her, face pinched with thought
for a second, pushing her cheeks up, not quite closing her eyes. “You said
Lightship basket. You must be from Nantucket!”
Mitch nodded. “Born and
bred.”
“That’s incredible.
Halfway around the world!”
Bruce pulled out a
business card and handed it over. “We just bought a house on Cliff Road. Come
and see us. Any time. I owe you a
drink.”
“Thanks. I might just take
you up on that.”
Olivia beamed at him,
still over-compensating. “Do! Please do.”
Mitch slipped away before
they could invite him to lunch, and an hour later he was driving south out of
Paris toward the Spanish border, thinking about Bruce and Olivia Cummings.
The whole incident had
been disturbing and bizarre, totally at odds with the rules that had governed
his life for decades. The first rule was stay invisible. Walter had always said
Mitch had the perfect set of features for foiling facial recognition surveillance
– ordinary and unremarkable. “He looked like, you know, a guy, a regular guy,”
someone had said during the eye-witness interviews after a particularly messy
rendition op in London. The best CCTV coverage in the world had picked up no
trace of Mitch that day, and the other first-hand reports had all sounded the
same: “Seemed like a nice-looking bloke. Don’t exactly recall.”
“It’s your mutant power,
kid,” Walter liked to say. “You’re the invisible man! Just don’t fuck it up by
making yourself memorable.”
Ten
Mitch had always kept his
head down and his face averted, walking past the odd hold-up or traffic
accident, when he knew he could have stopped a crime with one blow or kept a
stranger’s heart beating with CPR. He had watched a Russian pop star choke to
death in a St. Petersburg Israeli restaurant called Bekitzur when a simple
Heimlich maneuver could have saved her. But there were paparazzi loitering
outside and the last thing he wanted was his picture in the newspaper.
None of that had struck
him as wrong. He had a job and his job had its priorities. Should a first
responder rushing to a hostage situation pause to stop a mugging? Anonymity was
one of his weapons, and no soldier willingly gives up such a crucial part of
his arsenal.
That was how it seemed.
That was what he told himself.
And he hadn’t changed his
mind, exactly, or experienced some moral epiphany. But he had chased down the
pickpocket and given back Olivia Cummings’ passport, and he had done it by
reflex, as Mike Henderson’s father had leapt in to help a rival crew when a
full gallon of exterior oil tipped off a ladder. Mitch had helped that day,
too, along with Mike and the other guys, pitching in without being asked
because they had all been there themselves and they knew they would be again.
Later, Mr. Henderson said, “You know it’s funny. That guy underbid me, hired
untrained guys with no insurance. I should have done nothing. It would have
been poetic justice. Well, justice anyway.”
“So why did you help?”
Mike asked.
His dad shrugged. “It was
a paint spill, kid. You gotta clean up a paint spill.”
Mitch had
lost that instinct, or it had been trained out of him.
But now, as he ditched
Walter’s Opel near the Gare Du Nord where it was sure to be stolen, and
purchased a bike for cash, hanging out on the Voie verte along the Canal
l’Ourcq in the Parc de la Villette where he knew he could find dedicated
cyclists, going through the motions of his own habitual tradecraft (A bike sold
for cash would be impossible to trace),he wondered who he had become, or if
some older version of himself had surfaced, one that saw people and places, not
targets and traps.
He had plenty of time to
think about it, riding the basic red Pinarello ten-speed south by the D roads
along the Loire, stopping at leisure in the old towns along the way, Nevers,
Dardilly, LePins to St Gilles, tacking toward the coast at St. Cyprien-Plage,
then up into the mountains, over roads with no cameras, disappearing into the
Pyrnees and finally, more than two weeks later, into the busy crowded streets
of Barcelona.
He spent the night at the attic apartment safe
house above Sortidor Square in the Poble Sec neighborhood, ate his Tapas and
drank the house special vermouth at the little café on the street level. The
next morning, he collected his papers and money, packed his few clothes, spray
painted the Pinarello black and left it at a public bike rack, and rode a taxi
to the airport, no uber, no cyber trail. And all the while, the thought
continued to nag at him: what the hell was going on?
Had he turned into some kind of touchy-feely
do-gooder? He certainly hoped not. Because the sad fact was, that helping hand
Samaritan nice guy was a liability. Every generous impulse was a distraction
and a danger. Mitch might have quit the business, but the business hadn’t quit
him – and in that business, taking your guard down when you thought you were
safe was a classic and time-honored way to get yourself killed.
The Barcelona Airport was
a perfect example.
Eleven
Some loud-mouthed American
tourist was yelling at his wife and slapping his son. A few seconds of behavior
modification, which would have probably just made things worse in the long run
anyway, would have distracted Mitch at a crucial moment and he might have
missed the fact that Walter’s people at the airport had all gone missing.
Oscar, in security; fat, bearded Marcel who had always whisked him through
customs; Jorge, the operations manager – all of them had been replaced by stiff
sharp military personnel who had been trained to look for people like Mitch,
and indeed, given the purge of Longbow undercover assets, very specifically for
Mitch himself. Fortunately, if Walter was right, none of them knew what he
actually looked like. If his papers were solid he could pass for one more ordinary
American trying to get through the line and grab a stiff drink on the other
side.
It would be a good test,
though. Escaping the airport if Longbow security protocols failed would be
close to impossible. There was an escape route through the luggage handling
area, but it might be blown if Walter’s whole network had been swept up. People
talked, people gave up their friends and allies, especially if they believed
their friends and allies were dead. They talked for money, to look important or
to get immunity, and they talked to stop the pain. There were dozens of ways to
cause unendurable agony. The human body was nothing but a mass of vulnerable
nerve endings. The idea that torture never really worked was mostly promulgated
by people who had never felt hot metal pressed against a fresh burn.
So Mitch shuffled along
the security line, keeping his face carefully tilted away from the CCTV cameras
as always, and flicking the tip of his thumb with his pinky as he plotted his
mostly futile escape plans. The crowds would be helpful. Hostages might get him
outside, and stealing a car as it idled at the loading zone curb would be
simple. It all depended on how sharp the security people were, and to Mitch
they looked sleepy and bored. Once out of the airport he would have to dump the
vehicle quickly, and make his way back to the safe house. Then what? Lay low
for a few days and try again, driving to Lisbon perhaps, or Madrid, with fresh
papers. A couple of SDRs around the square first, of course, but if the
apartment had been found. tlhey would have –
“Anything to declare,
sir?”
He looked up, shook his
head tiredly. “Nothing.”
“Enjoy your trip.”
“Thank you.”
And it was done. Mr.
Everyman had passed through the gaps in airport security once again, like a
draft of cold air through a crooked window. He was safe. The flight to
Vancouver was long but routine, the Canadian border casual and porous.
He was almost home
already.
He would buy a cheap used
car for cash, pick up some weapons at a gun show, and complete the easy drive
to Massachusetts in less than a week. No more diversions or detours, easy as
pie.
Or, as it turned out,
“Easy as pie crust”.
That was what his mother
always said when he underestimated a problem. “And anyone who’s ever tried to
make a nice flaky pie crust knows exactly what I’m talking about.” As usual, his
mom’s warning was right on the money.
The old touchy-feely Mitch
Stone was back, and there was no getting rid of him now.
Twelve
The
first incident began with a girl selling her father’s rifle at the Coeur
D’Alene gun show.
Mitch had driven down from
the border in the old Jeep Cherokee he’d bought in Vancouver, heading south
east through Winthrop, Grand Coullee and Wilbur, beside deep lakes in the
shadow of high snow-capped mountains, the window open to catch the flood of icy
early autumn air, staying the night in Spokane and crossing into the narrow
northern tab of Idaho that separated Washington from Montana early the next
morning.
With all his guns stowed
in the safe at the Barcelona safe house, Mitch needed weapons. A quick online
search led him to the outdoor quarterly market at the Kootenai fairgrounds,
just over the border. He parked in the dirt lot and wandered the big tables set
out below the steep pine woods that marked the edge of the National forest.
There was a chill in the air and he could see his breath as the morning fog
burned off. He heard the standard griping – the admission fee was too high, the
vendors were scarce, some of the ammo was defective. But it was better than
nothing.
Mitch bought a pair of
comfortingly familiar Medford USMC Raider fixed-blade combat knives from a
grizzled vet who grunted “Semper Fi,” and took four hundred for both of them.
He waved the handful of hundreds back at Mitch and said “Cash, brother. It’s
the only way to stay free.” Mitch nodded
and moved along, hefting and sighting various firearms, finally settling on a
Chiappa triple threat 12 gauge shot gun and ten boxes of ammunition,
factory-sealed. The seller, a massive bearded guy in a MAGA hat, thanked him
for his service (people always seemed to know).
The last item on Mitch’s
shopping list was a beautifully reconditioned Sig Sauer P226, along with a
couple of magazines and a good supply of 9x 19 parabellums, which he bought
from a white-haired grandmother baby-sitting two little boys. “Lovely gun,” she
told him. “The Navy SEALs swear by it.”
He grinned. “Marines, too.
But we know how to shoot it.”
She shook her head, amused
by the inevitable inter-service rivalry. Her family had probably been Navy for
three generations, and she had no desire to exchange more of the old banter.
She just wanted to sell her stock and get home before lunch. Walking away,
Mitch added up his brief shopping spree. It had cost him less than four
thousand dollars, ammo included.
He was thinking about a
late breakfast, heading back to the Cherokee, when he noticed the girl.
She was small and wiry,
moon-faced with a stubby nose and a spray of freckles framed by a mass of curly
red hair. She was dressed in a pea-coat over jeans and a checked shirt, with
work boots that looked like they had seen had seen a lot of work. She was
pulling a Marlin 1893 Winchester special carbine out of the backseat of her
car, a green Subaru Forrester that he recognized from the parking lot of his
motel.
The Marlin was a fine
rifle, with a fold down ladder sight. No doubt it had “Special smokeless steel”
etched into the barrel. Mitch’s shooting mentor, home-town gun nut Jake
Gritzky, had owned one of them for many years. Mitch guessed the girl could get
close to a thousand dollars for it out here this morning.
He paused to watch her
progress and instantly picked up the first two hunters. They must have
recognized her Marlin also, and done the same math. Two big long-haired
bruisers, they looked like brothers, one wearing a ski hat and a heavy wool
turtleneck sweater under a light weight down jacket with Cottonwood Butte STAFF on the back, the other sporting a Seahawks
ballcap and a barn coat. Both of them had plenty of room for concealed carry.
Ballcap twitched his head slightly to the side, and two guys at the next line
of tables caught the gesture. The thin one with the pot belly sticking out from
his down jacket tapped the fireplug with the shaved head and goatee beard, then
all four were in motion, sauntering
along, maybe fifty feet behind the girl, angling toward her from two sides,
hunting in a pack, like grey wolves.
Mitch knew exactly what
they were thinking. This girl was about to render herself disarmed and
cash-heavy. She was out-numbered four to one, out-weighed by a total of least
seven hundred pounds. The Washington State plates on her Subaru broadcast she
wasn’t a local, and she’d obviously driven to the gun show alone.
In other words, the
perfect prey.
Thirteen
The girl found a buyer, a
tall wide-faced Shoshone indian wearing a thick grey hoodie with the Duck
Valley Reservation logo on the chest. Mitch watched as he tried to work a
trade, offering a Mauser sporter 7x57. The girl shook her head – she wanted to
sell. Finally he opened his metal cashbox and pulled out eight hundred-dollar
bills. The girl hesitated, then took the money. Mitch backed away as she headed
toward him. He studied a display of antique flintlock and percussion pistols as
she moved past him.
They would take her at her
car.
He walked quickly and
matched her stride as she cleared the tables and started across the parking
lot.
“Excuse me,” he said.
She turned and scowled up
at him. “What?”
“Those four guys back
there are getting ready to rob you.”
She pulled up the edge of
her pea coat, revealing a police .38 special. So, not quite disarmed. “I can
handle myself.”
“I believe that. But it’s
four to one. Let me walk you to your car. They’ll back off. These guys don’t
want trouble. They’re looking for an easy smash and grab.”
She blew out a breath.
“Fine.”
They walked to her car.
She climbed in, keyed the engine and rolled down her window. “Thanks, Mister.
Sorry if I was rude back there. I guess I’m a little tense lately. What you did
wasn’t necessary, but it was neighborly, and I appreciate that.”
She drove off and he saw
the four men pile into a dusty extended cab Ford F350. These guys weren’t
quitting and there was no way girl could outrace their truck. Maybe they were
interested in more than the rifle.
Mitch eased over to his
Jeep and waited while they pulled out.
Everyone in the convoy
kept their distance and they had traveled about ten miles east on route 90 when
a cop rolled off the shoulder and started following the girl. The line of cars
was following her at exactly 75 miles an hour – against a posted 65 mph speed
limit. Maybe she had seen the guys in her rearview; maybe she wanted to get
pulled over. Fifteen miles later the cop finally hit the flashers. The truck
had no choice but to keep moving and Mitch did the same.
He drove on to his motel
parked out of sight and loaded his new Sig Sauer. He had developed another
theory about her speeding in front of the cop car, and if he was right, the
girl was more oblivious than he’d thought. While he waited for her to arrive he
checked his phone for other motels. He only found two, and this one was the
most convenient to the Kootenai fairgrounds. It wouldn’t take the boys in the
F350 long to track her down. They were locals. They knew the area, they
probably knew the people who ran the motels. On the bright side, maybe the girl
had already checked out and was on her way home.
He climbed out of the car,
jamming the gun behind his back under his coat, and walked to the side of the
main set of rooms, where he had a good view of the parking lot.
It cost him nothing to
wait.
Fourteen
The girl pulled into the
motel parking lot five minutes later, and Mitch caught up with her at the door
to her room. “Did you get new tires recently?”
She was back in defensive
mode. “What are you doing here? Did you follow me?”
“I got here first. I’m in
room 218, upstairs.”
“Oh.”
“So, anyway – did you get
new tires recently?”
She gave him a baffled
squint. “Yes I did, as a matter of fact. But how could you possibly --”
“That’s why the cop
stopped you.”
“Because it’s illegal to
have new tires?”
“Because yours are the
wrong size. You got them cheap from some discount garage, am I right?”
“Well, it didn’t seem that
bad. And they were like half price.”
“Yeah well. They’re giving
a false read to your speedometer. You thought you were going 65, didn’t you?”
She nodded. “I wasn’t,
though.”
“No big deal. Just drive
ten miles an hour slower than the speedometer until you get home and buy some
new tires.”
“That cop must have
thought I was crazy.”
“He’s one ticket closer to
his monthly quota. That’s all he was thinking about. But you weren’t speeding
intentionally to draw his attention, so you probably didn’t notice the big blue
Ford truck behind you.”
“Should I have?”
“It’s the boys from the
gun show.”
“Yeah but – I mean … they
must have driven on.”
“They’ll find you. And
this is the most obvious place to look”
“Now you’re scaring me.”
“Good.”
She glanced around the
parking lot. “So what should I do?”
“What you were going to do
anyway -- pack up, check out and go home. I’ll keep an eye on you. Go – now.
You might actually beat them if you move fast enough.”
The girl, her name was
Melody Biggers, went inside to throw her clothes into a canvas bag and collect
her toothbrush. She had already paid for the night before, so she left her key
on the dresser with a ten dollar tip for the house-keeper. She had done a lot
of that work herself in the last few years, mostly at the Hyatt in Spokane, and
she had always been baffled by the people who stiffed the maids. Did they think
the cleaning people were over-paid? Was there a problem with the hospital
corners? Would they like to check out an actual hospital for comparison? She
laughed at that, touching the gun at her waist, then stepped out of her room
into the late morning chill.
The four men were waiting
for her.
For a second she thought
of dodging back into the room and calling 911, but you needed to dial zero to
get an outside line and by the time she did that, the men would be inside with
her. The lock was flimsy and the door was hollow-core. And the bed would give
them ideas.
“Time to pay up, cutie,”
the big one in the Seahawks cap said.
The one who might have
been his brother added, “We got a tariff on out of state sales.”
The pot-bellied side kick
grinned at her. “Yeah. A hunnerd percent tariff. That how we’s winning the
trade war.”
Goatee took a step toward
her. “And that’s just the start with a hottie like you.”
Melody gritted her teeth.
She should have known they wouldn’t need to see the bed to get that idea. The
horseshoe configuration tightened as the men shuffled toward her, guns out.
Fifteen
Melody pulled the police
special and assumed the Weaver stance, gun braced and feet apart, sideways to
the target. “That’s enough. Back off.”
Seahawks cap took another
step. “So, you’re going to shoot a man in cold blood, in broad daylight? I
don’t think so.”
The big one in the watch
cap nodded. “Plus, you pull the trigger, and one of us shoots you in the knee
cap. You’ll be too busy screaming to fight us off, and you’ll never walk right
again.”
She stared him down. “But
one of you will be dead.”
Seahawks gap took another
step. “I’d call it a Mexican stand-off but I’ve never known a Mexican who could
stand his ground.”
“You’ve never known a
Mexican at all, you dumbass redneck piece of shit.”
“Hey! Watch your mouth or
I’ll --”
But he never got to
explain what he was going to do.
He lurched forward and
pitched face first into the asphalt, his gun skittering away. He lay still as a
corpse, unconscious and concussed, bleeding into the parking lot from his
shattered nose.
Mitch kicked him over onto
his back so he wouldn’t drown in his own blood, then stepped away to cover the
others. “Now it’s three to two. And, FYI – a Mexican taught me that move, and
he could kick all your asses one handed while he was scrolling through La Cronica de Hoy on his cell phone.”
There was a long moment of
baffled silence.
“This aint none of your
business,” Pot Belly said.
“Yours either. The lady
sold a rifle. You want to make some money? Sell your own rifle. Or get a
fucking job.”
Five people, five guns,
seconds away from a bloodbath. Hands shaking, fingers twitching, arms getting
tired. Cars passed on the road. Far above them Mitch could pick out the faint
distant hum of a plane heading east for Billings or Missoula. The chill
windless air smelled of pine sap and car exhaust. Mitch cut his eyes between
the three men, back and forth, waiting for a movement. Finally the tension fell
apart, toppling like a cheerleader pyramid, unable to sustain the pressure of
all those feet on all those shoulders, all those shaky knees.
Watch-cap lowered his gun
first. “This is bullshit.”
Mitch nodded. “Not worth
dying for.”
Goatee was outraged. “The
fuck is going on? We’re just gonna let her go?”
“She’s going,” Mitch
corrected him. “You’ve got nothing to do with it. And I’m going to let you go,
son. Because killing you would be like running down a dog on the highway.
Hitting him shows him he shouldn’t be crossing the road, but it doesn’t do him
much good, you know? Him being dead and all.
Alive, you might learn something. So think about what happened today. And
scoot.”
They picked up their
friend, shambled back to their truck and drove away. Mitch watched until they
were out of sight.
“Thank you,” the girl
said. “I’m Melody Biggers.”
He walked over and shook
her hand. “Mitchell Stone.”
“Nice to meet you.”
They stood quietly in the
dry cold afternoon sunlight. A panel truck rolled passed, and then a Jefferson
Lines bus.
“That was brave just now,
Melody.”
She shook her head. “I was
bluffing. That guy was right. I couldn’t shoot him. I don’t think so anyway.”
“Even braver then.”
“Easy to be brave when you
got no choice.”
“Not really. Most people
panic.”
“Is that why they’re
always being told not to?”
He smiled. “Pretty much.”
“Do think those guys will
really learn anything from what happened?”
“Probably not. Except –
check your six before an ambush. They’ll be more careful next time.”
“Oh great.”
“Maybe the next girl will
pull the trigger.”
“Let’s hope.”
She took a step and hugged
him. He put his arms around her gently. She was trembling. That always happened
after a firefight – even when not a single shot was fired.
She spoke into his
shoulder. “Listen would you like to maybe have lunch with me or dinner, or a
drink or something or just come to bed with me and make love for two days and
drive home and meet my parents and get married and have ten kids and die in
each other’s arms when we’re a hundred and two? Or go get some coffee? Or
something?”
He kissed her forehead.
“That all sounds great. But you’re not in the right state of mind to jump into
bed with anyone right now -- much less pick out fiftieth anniversary presents.”
“They’re gold. You get
gold on your fiftieth. I was thinking about some 24-karat champagne flutes.”
He took her hands and
stepped back so they could really see each other. “You need to be more picky,
Melody Biggers. And I’m taken.”
Seventeen
The hitch-hiker’s opening
salvo: “Thanks, buddy, you’re a life-saver a real life saver. You can’t believe
what happened to me today, it was just, it was crazy, what a fucked-up crazy
morning, Jesus.”
“Well, that part’s over.
Now you can set things right. Where you headed?”
“North, just north for
now. Away from this fucking bullshit town.”
Mitch shrugged. “It helps
to have a destination.”
“Okay, Wilkes-Barre, okay?
You get on 80 to 82 north.”
“That’s on my way. But you
could have just taken an uber.”
“Yeah right. That would
work if I had a non-maxed out credit card or enough money in my bank account to
cover the trip. Then I’d really be rolling in style. Get myself a limo.”
The guy subsided into a
mute, self-pitying sulk, and that was fine with Mitch. He preferred the silence
anyway. They drove along. A few minutes after they got onto interstate 80, he
saw the second hitch-hiker -- a skinny red-headed sixteen-year-old with a back
pack. The boy was wearing a grey Steelers hoodie, blue jeans and muddy hiking
boots. He looked miserable and exhausted. Mitch started to slow down.
“Keep going,” the
passenger barked. “Fuck that kid. Drive on.”
He was giving orders now,
suddenly in charge. Mitch didn’t have to look to know he had the gun in his
hand.
“What’s going on, buddy?”
“What’s going on? I’m
stealing this car and leaving you by the side of the road and taking it to a
chop shop and getting some money. That’s what’s happening.”
Mitch nodded. “How much do
you think you’ll get for it?”
“Enough. Get off the
highway as soon as you can. Take the next exit.”
They passed a sign
advertising various fast food outlets off the highway. Food and lodging two
miles. “You look like you could use a meal. Sonic? Chick-fil-A? Five Guys? I’ve
been away for a while. What’s good?”
“Just keep driving.”
“Okay, okay. But let me
tell you something about guns. They distort your perceptions. You think you’re
safe, so you take stupid risks. You think you’re dangerous, so you punch above
your weight. The most likely outcome with a gun is that it gets taken away from
you. Or you shoot yourself by accident.”
“Or you control the
situation.”
“True.”
“Here’s the exit, get
over.”
Mitch swerved hard into
the exit-only lane and the motion tilted the hitchhiker toward the steering
wheel. Before the guy could correct, Mitch had snapped an arm across his chest,
taken the wrist, bent it backward and yanked the gun loose. He slowed down
coming off the highway, flipped the gun into the back seat. “Sorry, but I did
warn you. Five Guys or Chick-Fil-A?”
The guy seemed to assess
his chances of climbing over to retrieve his gun and slumped back, giving up.
He crossed his arms over his chest and leaned his head against the car window.
“Five guys?”
“Sure. I like the idea of
five guys starting a restaurant and coming up with that name.”
“How did you do that? Take
the gun away like that?”
“Talent and practice.
Gotta have both.”
“You gonna call the cops
on me?”
“Nope. I’m gonna buy you
lunch.”
Eighteen
Half an hour later,
sitting at a table in the big airy restaurant with a paper cup of wide French
fries between them, Mitch let the guy wolf down his burger and gulp down his
coke, then said, “So what’s the story?”
“What do you mean?”
“Guy in a decent suit,
obviously hasn’t missed any meals, trying to jack cars on interstate 80.
There’s gotta be a story.”
“It’s stupid.”
“Maybe. Maybe not.”
“Okay … it started with
parking tickets. That’s the stupid part.”
“You didn’t pay them.”
“I meant to pay them. I
was planning to. I just never got around to it.”
“How many tickets?”
“Ten I guess. Maybe
twelve. I had to park on the street for my job. I work at this coffee place in
Morningside, The Daily Grind. Funny, huh? Doesn’t sound very appealing.”
“Hey, we had a show store
in my home town called ‘The Athlete’s Foot, so.”
“Anyway, all they have
there is on-street parking, and you have to move the car every two hours.
Sometimes it gets busy and I can’t get out, or I just forget.”
“And tickets get more
expensive when you don’t pay them.”
He nodded. “When I applied
to renew my license they told me I had to pay all the tickets and penalties
first, and by that time it was up to like twelve hundred dollars. I couldn’t
pay that! So I was driving without a license, which meant I couldn’t get the
car registered and without the registration I couldn’t get it inspected.”
“Dominoes.”
“Yeah.” He took one of the
last French fries.
“You want more?”
“Thanks, I’m good.”
“So anyway, let me guess –
every time you got in the car you were playing highway roulette and freaking
out whenever you saw a cop.”
He sighed. “I got pretty
good at evasive action. But I didn’t realize I had a broken tail-light.”
“That’s the stupid part –
sorry, what’s your name?”
“Clayton. Clayton
Richards”
“Well that was the stupid
part, Clayton. You got careless there.”
“Yeah and I got caught.
They took me to the station in handcuffs and impounded my car. My ex-wife had
to get the fifty dollars bail from one of those pay day loan sharks. I owe them
about a grand now. There’s no end to it.”
“An old friend of mine
used to say you get punished for being poor in this country.”
“Tell me about it.”
“Like … you need what?
Around two grand? So you steal somebody’s shitty jeep and he calls the cops and
they put out an APB and pretty soon you’ve got those flashers behind you and
you take off. Now it’s a high speed chase and maybe resisting arrest and you’re
look at five to ten at Albion.”
“All because there’s no
parking at work.”
Mitch finished his iced
tea. “It’s not fair.”
Clayton rested his
forehead on one palm, and jammed his eyes shut for a second as if he was
fighting a headache. “Yeah, well. What ya gonna do?”
Mitch pushed back from the
table a little. “I’ll tell you what I’m going to do. I’m going to give you
twenty five hundred dollars cash. And you’re going to take care of business and
get back to your life.”
“What?”
“Pay those fines, get your
car registered. Then get it out of impound and inspected. Pay back your wife
and the loan sharks. Then you’re back at square one. Which aint great – but
it’s the only numbered square for a reason.”
“Why?
Why would you do that?”
“Why
not?”
“I don’t get it. I mean --
who has twenty five hundred bucks in cash lying around?”
Mitch smiled. “Bad
people.”
“So you’re bad?”
“People can change,
Clayton. That’s the whole point. For both of us. It requires a little effort,
that’s all.” Mitch pulled out his phone and googled late parking fines in
Pittsburgh. “Looks like you have to go to the parking court. 240 Fourth avenue,
downtown Pittsburgh. Can you find that?”
“Sure.”
“Then let’s go.”
When they shook hands
outside the court house, the guy unexpectedly pulled Mitch into a hug.
“Thanks man. I mean it.
Thank you.”
Mitch pushed him gently
out to arms’ length. “Get that money into the bank, Clayton. It’s crazy,
walking around with so much cash in your pocket.”
“Oh yeah? How much cash
are you driving around with?
Mitch just smiled.
Helping Clayton turned out
to be a minor detour – he was cruising east on route 80 again by two in the
afternoon, looking forward to an uneventful run across Pennsylvania and New
York, up into Massachusetts and home.
Three hours later, he met
the kid.
Nineteen
He had stopped for an
early dinner at a truck stop Subway, near Lake Ariel. The restaurant was
uncrowded at five o’clock – the only other patrons were two long-haul
eighteen-wheelers, a frazzled looking mother with a pair of twelve year old
boys, and the kid he had seen hitch-hiking outside Pittsburgh. The boy was
alone, nursing a glass of water and a bag of Doritos. He looked even worse than
he had that morning, the dark circles under his eyes painfully obvious under
the glare of the fast food fluorescents. He finished his little bag of chips
and then sat staring at the crumpled plastic, supporting his temple on his
fist. He closed his eyes, and then jerked his head up; he had nodded off there
for a second.
The owner came around from
behind the counter and walked over to the boy’s booth. “You okay, kid?”
The boy stared at the
Formica table top. “I’m fine.”
“You don’t look so hot.”
“I told you, I’m fine.”
“You gonna order some
food? I mean, you can’t just sit here all night with a bag of chips.”
“Maybe later.”
“You can’t just loiter
here, son. We have vagrancy laws in Pennsylvania.”
“I’m not loitering. I’m trying to decide what to eat.”
“I’m not loitering. I’m trying to decide what to eat.”
“For two hours?”
The kid looked up and
offered a disarming smile. “Everything looks so good.”
Mitch sat forward. He was
starting to like this kid.
“You should try the sweet
onion chicken teriyaki. That’s today’s special.”
The kid shook his head.
“That sounds a little too complicated for me.”
“Maybe I should talk to
your parents. Where’s your Mom and Dad?”
“Good question.”
“How old are you? I’m
betting sixteen years old. That’s underage. You can’t travel alone.”
“I’m eighteen.”
“The hell you are. You’re
a runaway. One of those teen age runaways.”
Another laser smile. “I
prefer to think of myself as a hobo.”
“I’m calling the cops.
Your folks are probably worried sick.”
“Well, you got the ‘sick’
part right.”
“They’ll be glad to get
you back .”
“They haven’t even noticed
I’m gone.”
“We’ll see about that.”
He pulled out a cell
phone, poked in a number.
Mitch was up and moving
before anyone answered the call, before he could even make sense of his own
impulse.
He stood toe to toe with
the owner. “The boy’s with me.”
“Bullshit. What’s his
name?”
“Ricky,” the kid said.
Mitch nodded. “Ricky.”
“Ricky Muller,” the kid
added.
“Ricky Muller.”
He stared down at the
owner. He had about three inches on the guy. The man worked a truck stop
restaurant. He knew how to scope out a situation, and this one was tipping out
of his control. And what was wrong with that? The last thing he wanted was a
bunch of cops barging into the place, making everybody nervous. The truck stop
had a Burger King, too. And there were no cops in there.
“I don’t want any
trouble,” he said, finally.
Mitch gave him a
tight-lipped half smile. “Good. The boy will have the meatball marinara sub,
and a large coke. Sound good, Ricky?”
“Sure.”
“And a large coffee for
me.” The owner just stared at him, “Today,” Mitch prodded gently.
“Yeah, okay. Coming right
up.”
They sat quietly for a
minute or two. Then Mitch said, “So what’s your plan?”
“I’m supposed to spill my
guts now, tell you everything?”
Mitch shrugged. “Well, not
everything.”
“For the price of a
meatball sub?”
“Hey -- I got you a coke,
too. I may even throw in a cookie.”
Ricky tilted his head
toward the counter. “You gotta pick the stuff up. They don’t bring it.”
“Right.”
Mitch stood walked to the
register. He paid for the food and came back to the table with a tray. “So –
Boston or New York?”
Ricky took a bite of the
sandwich and grimaced. “No wonder that sex freak on the commercials lost weight
here. No one can eat this shit. I mean, what is this cheese?”
Mitch sipped the weak
coffee. “My guess -- you’re heading for Boston.”
Twenty
Mitch studied the kid. “If
you were going to New York you’d have been hitching on route 70. That’s a
straight shot from Pittsburgh.”
“My uncle Bob lives in
Medford.”
“There you go – Bob’s your
uncle.”
“Yeah – what?”
“It’s an old English
expression. Around a hundred and thirty five years ago, an idiot got a big job
in Ireland because his uncle, a guy named Robert Gascoin-Cecil, happened to be
Prime Minister of England. Uncle Bob.”
“So – nepotism.”
“Hey, it’s good to have a
hot-shot uncle.”
“I don’t. But he said I
could visit, so …”
“Better than nothing.”
“Yeah.”
“Where’s your dad, again?”
“I never said. But he’s in
jail.”
“Selling drugs?”
“Getting caught selling
drugs.”
“Right.”
“Three times.”
“Uh oh.”
“Yeah.”
They sat quietly for a
minute. The kid finished his sub.
“Does Uncle Bob know
you’ll be staying?”
Ricky lifted his coke cup
and put it down again. “No.”
“Does he even know you’re
coming?”
“I thought it should be a
surprise.”
Mitch shook his head.
“This is starting to look a little sketchy, kid.”
“I guess. I don’t know. I
don’t know what to do.”
It looked like he was
about to cry. Mitch took a gulp of his cooling coffee. Black water. But it was
something to do. “Look here’s the problem. I let you go now, they can charge me
with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. I take you with me, it’s
kidnapping.”
The kid shot him that
disarming crooked smile again. “I won’t tell.”
Mitch decided. “Here’s
what’s going to happen. I’m taking you home to your mother.”
“Shit.”
“Well, Dad is out of the
picture.”
“Pretty much.”
“So where are we going?
Where do you live?”
The kid slumped. “Locust
Grove Trailer Park. Just outside Etna, route 8, north of the city. Real beauty
spot, you’re gonna love it.”
Mitch started to stand but
the boy grabbed his arm. “Wait – mister --? ”
“Stone. Sorry. Mitchell
Stone.”
“Good to meet you. Listen,
Mr. Stone, Mitchell … You really helped me out here. You stepped in and you
didn’t have to. I appreciate that. You made a judgment call. That was cool. So
what I’m saying … if you see my mom and Carl, her boyfriend Carl, and you see
how fucked up they are, and you get it why I ran away, will you help me? I
mean, just take me to my Uncle’s place? That’s all. You said it’s on the way.
But I mean, if everything looks good to you at Locust Grove, we’re good, you’re
off the hook. It’s totally your call. That sounds fair, doesn’t it? Just see
for yourself.”
Mitch nodded. “Let’s go.”
Twenty one
The trip back to the
trailer park required driving the length of the state. It had been a long day
for both of them, so Mitch found a motel around the halfway mark, outside of
Bellefonte, and got them a pair of rooms. He let Ricky into his first.
“I’ll be right next door.”
The kid looked around the
little room. “Wow, privacy.”
“I won’t be standing
guard. You can take off if you want. I won’t chase you down.”
Ricky flashed his
weaponized smile. “You need to have more faith in people.”
“Faith is a trap, kid. I
trust the people who earn it. Get some sleep. I’ll see you in the morning.”
The kid was still there at
eight in the morning, and they got back on the road by eight thirty. They
stopped for breakfast at an iHop. Ricky wolfed down two smokehouse combos and
an order of brioche French toast; Mitch ate two poached eggs on rye, looking on
with awe as the boy tore into his meal, privately dismissive of a pancake place
without maple syrup and always suspicious of restaurants that featured pictures
of the food on the menu. Fuck it. He knew he was a snob. His own breakfast was
fine --an egg was an egg. And it was good to see the boy eat.
Ricky dozed off after a few minutes on the highway. Mitch let
him sleep. By early afternoon they were cruising through Etna, and the kid was
wide awake.
Locust Grove turned out to
be all right – a self-proclaimed “mobile home park” offering water and sewer
hook-ups and trash collection service, all for around two-twenty a month. Not
exactly the high-rent district, but the place looked reasonably clean and
well-maintained, with white trailer homes dotting a big grassy field cut with
dirt driveways and set off by a ragged forest of what looked like swamp ash and
maple. Not a locust tree in sight.
Ricky
directed Mitch to the far end of the lot, where a rusty double-wide stood among
broken lawn furniture, a battered Weber kettle grill and an old Chevy Malibu on
cinderblocks, surrounded by a scatter of parts and tools.
“Home
sweet home,” the kid said. “Carl’s been working on that car since before he
bought it.”
Mitch
laughed. “Quite a trick.”
“Come
on, let’s get this over with. Meet the family.”
Mitch
parked at the far side of the dirt clearing. “It’s like two in the afternoon.
Aren’t they working?”
“Yeah,
right.”
They
climbed out of the car into the hot, dead-still afternoon. Someone had started
a barbecue fire, and the sweet toxic smell of charcoal took Mitch back to the
lazy beach cookouts of his own childhood. They approached the trailer, walking
the packed dirt side by side, but Mitch went up the two steps first.
The
trailer door was flimsy, and Mitch pulled it too hard. It slapped into the
chipped aluminum side of the “mobile” home – an odd term, since the giant vehicle
looked half sunk in the ground and unlikely to ever move again.
Immediately
he heard the sounds of a soap opera, a “daytime drama” as his mother had
insisted on calling them – the lulling rhythm of exposition and first names,
the odd pauses and ominous inflections. Someone’s secret twin brother was on
trial for murder, no doubt. And the lawyer was having an affair with the other
twin’s wife. Mitch had always been amazed at the number of murders they could
stuff into in one little soap opera town. The whole population must be on
continuous jury duty. Nothing had really changed since his childhood. It seemed
so quaintly antique. Somehow, in the world of streaming video and on-demand
everything, soap operas had survived. What could you say? People needed
stories.
Ricky’s mom wore a dirty
flannel robe and bunny slippers. Carl, in food-stained “Wife beater” t-shirt,
because, of course, what else?, sat at the narrow kitchen counter farther on,
with a bottle of peppermint schnapps, scrolling down the internet on his cell
phone. The place smelled of old socks, rancid bacon and cigarettes. A full
ash-tray overflowed onto the little table where Mom had set up the TV – an
absurdly perfect cliché still-life.
Ricky eased around him and
inside. Carl looked up from his news feed with undisguised annoyance and
contempt. “Fuck are you doing here?”
Mom picked up the remote
and lowered the volume on her show. “Aren’t you supposed to be summer school?”
“I dropped out of summer school
and ran away from here. Aren’t you supposed to notice shit like that?”
“Don’t talk to your mother
that way.”
“Right, Carl. That’s your
job.”
Mom seemed to wake up.
“Who’s that man?”
“My new social worker.
From CPS. He’s investigating my home environment. Making sure my Mom gets
dressed before noon and my step dad doesn’t call in sick for day-drinking.” He
glanced over at Mitch with a theatrical presentation of alarm, eyes wide.
“Ooops.”
Carl pushed his chair back
and stood. Mitch calculated the man’s physical threat level – six foot one, 230,
most of it fat. Probably a high school linebacker once upon a time. Soft hands,
clumsy movements, reflexes fuzzed by anger and booze. Not armed; not a problem.
Carl stumbled around the table. “I’m gonna kick your ass, you fucking punk.”
“In front of the social
worker?”
“I’ll kick his ass too,
how about that?”
Mitch said, “No.”
Everything happened fast
after that.
Twenty two
Carl lunged at Ricky.
Mitch deflected the big man and sent him crashing into the wall of the trailer.
The place rocked as Mom launched herself at Mitch, screaming “Don’t you touch
him!” He caught her wrists, and Carl jumped him from behind. Ricky grabbed the
half-full bottle of schnapps off the table and clubbed Carl with it, the crack
like a homerun hit with a metal bat. Carl dropped to his knees and then to his
hands and knees. Ricky was hauling back for another blow. Mitch pushed Mom back
into her chair and took the kid’s bottle away, mid-swing.
Mom screamed, Carl slurred
something like “Tearing ya fucking head off piss down ya throat.”
Mitch pushed Carl flat
onto the floor with his foot and pressed a restraining palm to Ricky’s chest.
“That’s enough. No one’s killing anyone today.”
The kid was in shock, near
tears. He must have felt that blow all the way to his shoulder. His mother was
crying in front of him. The soap opera droned softly in the background. The
reek of spilled Jägermeister stained the air.
The kid stared at Mitch.
“See?”
“Yeah, kid.” He turned to
the door. “Let’s get you out of here.”
Mom got to her feet.
“Don’t you dare take my son away from me! I’llthe cops on you!”
“No you won’t.”
Mitch helped the kid down
the two stairs to the dirt, walked him back to the Jeep and helped him in to
the passenger side. He climbed in himself, keyed the ignition and drove out of
the trailer park slowly. They were half way back to route 80 before they spoke
again.
“Sorry,” Ricky said. “I’m
really sorry. That sucked so hard. I didn’t think – I mean, I knew what they --
but – it …”
“I saw what I needed to.
Don’t worry about it, kid. I’ve seen worse.”
They were headed east on
80 when the kid said “Now what?”
“Now I take you to Uncle
Bob.” He rocked on the seat to pull out his cell phone, and handed it over. “No
more surprises, though. Call him first. Before your mother does.”
“Yeah, right, sure. Okay.
Good idea. Thanks.”
He held the phone for a
second, then seemed to gather his will. He touched the numbers and waited while
it rang on the other end.
“Hey Bob, it’s Ricky.
Good, I’m doing good. No – it’s … that’s what I’m calling about. Well, I came
back. No, no. No. I split again. They – look, Bob, it never changes, they –
I’ve tried. And anyway, since when are you – That is such bullshit! She’s your
sister! You were the one who – okay. Right, yeah. I get that, but, how am I –
that’s the point. That’s what I’m trying to tell you! You said give it a chance
and I did. I gave it a million chances! You said I could live with you if –
what? How do you – there’s no point if I -- Mom says – I know that! That’s what
I’m trying to tell you. I’m sixteen now and I get to choose who I live with. And
I choose you. It doesn’t matter. You’re
sill family. . Wait, what? How do you mean? Hold on … I don’t – you’re like
fifty years old! How can you even – I know you are. I know that. But --- so …
what’s the NROTC? Okay … and you got your papers? When did this happen? Wow.
Jesus, Bob. I know you missed the Navy, but I mean … Well, sure, I guess. That
makes sense. I mean, if – No, that’s great. That’s really great. When do you
leave? Oh, so … yeah. Okay. Well … send me a postcard or something. Yeah … love
you too. Bye.”
They drove in silence for
a few miles.
Finally Mitch said,
“Sounds like your Uncle Bob just signed up with the Merchant Marine.”
Twenty Three
Ricky studied the seat
between his legs. “He’s a steam engineer. He was a bilge rat and an A-ganger in
the Navy, that’s all he ever talks about. The Pacific fleet! Anyway, he was
mustered out in the big drawdowns after 9/11 and he always said he was going
into the Merchant Marine. I thought it was bullshit but I guess he really did
it. He ships out tomorrow morning.”
“Shitty timing.”
“Yeah.”
“You won’t even get to see
him before he goes.”
The kid said nothing and
Mitch saw he was crying. He had his eyes jammed shut, trying not to make a
sound. The sobs came out like hiccups.
“Ricky --”
“I’m not going back there.
I can’t go back there. You can’t make me.”
“I wouldn’t try.”
“They’ll put me into the
system. I’ll wind up in some group home, they’re like prisons, Mitch. Or some
creepy foster family. I’ve read all about these foster families. It’s so fucked
up. Kids are just a business to them. And
that’s the good ones. Tons of them are in jail for child abuse. I’m serious.”
Mitch said nothing. He got
off the highway at Lewisburg and slowed down drove through the Amish country.
They passed old farms and old farmers with horse and buggy teams. He pulled in
at a lake just off the road and turned off the engine. The big elm trees shaded
the parking area and the masses of leaves shifted in the wind. They were just
starting to turn. Far out on the lake, a pair of motor boats skimmed the water.
It looked like they were racing.
Mitch and the boy sat
quietly in the car. They listened to the faint growl of the outboard motors, a
dog barking from somewhere behind them, raucous birds in the trees. Somewhere out of sight some kids were playing
and the high-pitched screams set Mitch’s nerves on edge. He steadied himself.
The kids were fine. They were having fun.
“What are we doing here?”
Ricky asked finally. “Why did we stop?”
“We need to talk.”
“Oh boy. That’s never
good.”
“No, no, I didn’t mean to
…Sorry. That came out wrong. I’m kind of new at this.”
“Talking to kids?”
“Among other things.”
Ricky swiveled on the seat
to face him. “So what’s up?”
“I have proposal for you.”
Mitch had made his
decision but it didn’t feel that way. It was more like something he had known
from the moment he stood up for the boy in the restaurant, or before that, when
he saw the boy hitching, or even before that, before he knew the boy existed.
It was like joining the Marines, when he wasn’t much older than Ricky was now.
He’d been a jarhead before he knew the word, a grunt in boot camp before he
ever left home, a soldier chasing a war.
“What?” Ricky said. “What
proposal?”
Mitch turned. “Stay with
me.”
“What?”
“My sister just got
divorced, mostly because her husband didn’t want to have kids. I’m the only
family she has left. We own a big house on a little pond with plenty of room.
Come to Nantucket and stay with us.”
“So you’d like … adopt
me?”
“Something like that.
Susie knows all the rules. She did the research when she found out she couldn’t
have kids of her own. It’s called ‘Guardianship’, which is good. I like the
sound of that.”
The kid smiled. “Of course
you do.”
Mitch smiled back. “You’re
getting to know me.”
“Yeah.”
They sat, watching the
boats.
“Well?”
“Are you serious?”
“As a negative biopsy
report. Which is a good thing, FYI.”
They stared at each other.
In the distance, the boats cut out their engines, settling in to drift. Even
the birds seemed to quiet down.
“What if your – what if
Susie doesn’t want me?”
“She’ll want you.”
“What if she doesn’t like
me?”
“She’ll love you.”
“How do you know?”
“Don’t take it personally,
kid. It’s just who she is. She can’t help herself. It’s her nature.”
“Loving random strangers?”
“Taking in strays. Stray
humans especially.”
“Well, that’s me.”
“So is it a deal?”
The kid squinted at him.
“It’s a crazy deal. What do you get out of it?
“That’s what we’re going
to find out. You in?”
The kid nodded. Mitch
stuck out his hand and the kid shook it. “I’m not calling you Dad.”
“That’s a relief.”
“I like it when you call
me kid, though.”
“Okay, buckle up. We’re back on the road.”
Twenty Four
They were just south of
Scranton on route 80 when the kid said, “That stuff you did at Locust Grove –
that fighting stuff. Can you teach me that?”
Mitch shifted lanes to
pass a truck. “Sure I can. You’d be a good student. No, seriously, you did okay
back there, yourself. Good reflexes, good instincts, taking advantage of the
circumstances. My old boss used to call it SOS – sense of the situation. You’ve
got that, which is lucky for you, because there’s no way to teach it.”
The kid grinned. “Oh. The
schnapps bottle.”
“That was quick thinking.”
“Thanks.”
“And you had zero
hesitation, that’s the main thing. That’s huge. It was like a pick six. For me,
that’s the most exciting play in football, because you can never prepare for
it. The ball just bounced off the tight end’s helmet A great player physically
re-sets in an instant, grabs it, sees an opening and breaks for the end zone.
Touchdown.”
“Like James Harrison in the
Superbowl.”
“I was thinking more of
Jamie Collins in the playoffs.”
The kid snorted. “Patriots
fan.”
“You’re heading for
Patriots country kid. Watch out.”
The cruised for a while,
comfortably back in the middle lane, then the kid said. “I took Carl down with
a bottle of Jagermeister. That’s some kind of serious Karma happening there,
Chief.”
“Instant karma –
drive-thru Karma.”
The kid laughed. “Drive-by
Karma.”
“Whoa. Take it down a
notch. The worst that happens to Carl is a mild concussion, maybe some headaches.”
“I nailed him good,
though.”
“You did. He was about to
blindside me and you saved my ass. So thanks for that.”
“Any time.”
Mitch decided he wanted to
relax and spend some money, so they stayed that night at the Blake Hotel in New
Haven, in a big airy room with two queen sized beds. It was a handsome old
building near the Yale campus and they strolled the city, enjoyed a couple of
classic cheeseburgers on toast at Louis’ Lunch, wandered around the University
eavesdropping on conversations and wound up at the Yale art gallery to check
out the Picassos, Mondrians and Rothkos. The kid had never seen any of it, and
knew nothing about twentieth century painters, or any painters. He seemed most
impressed by the fact that gallery was free, though there was a Frederick
Remington bronze that caught his eye, and he was briefly captivated by a
Winslow Homer watercolor of a deer drinking from a stream.
The kid might not know
much, but he had good taste.
That night, after dinner
at Hamilton Park (celery root and leek soup followed by grilled trout for
Mitch, a double order of shrimp cocktail and a crab melt for the kid, finished
off with a slab of the five-layer chocolate cake with whipped cream), they went
up to their huge room, showered, watched the most recent James Bond movie on
the flat screen TV, and then crawled into the gratuitously, gloriously
comfortable beds and slept like a pair of sled dogs.
Sometime before dawn,
Mitch heard Ricky get up. At first he thought the kid had to go to the
bathroom, but it soon became clear that he was on a mission. He rummaged
through Mitch’s old Marine duffel bag and backpack, removed some files and
Mitch’s pocket flashlight. When he took the luggage into the bathroom, he
brought Mitch’s wallet also.
Mitch
smiled into his pillow and rolled over. Smart kid.
Tomorrow
was going to be interesting.
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