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Authors: Chuck Hogan

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BOOK: The Town: A Novel
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T
HE FREEDOM TRAIL WAS
a tourist thing, an inlaid-brick sidewalk trail retracing the “birth of America.” It started downtown at the Boston Common training field and snaked north through the city, past the site of the Boston Massacre, past Paul Revere’s House in the North End, all the way across the Charlestown Bridge to end at the 221-foot granite obelisk marking the site of the Battle of Bunker Hill.

The second-to-last stop along the trail was the oldest commissioned floating warship in the world, the USS
Constitution,
also known as
Old Ironsides
for her thick, cannonball-repelling hull. In the warming of early May, the pavilion at the southern edge of the old navy yard saw a surge in attendance from school field trips: teachers in sun visors and knee-length shorts, parent chaperones gripping huge cups of iced coffee, and fifth-graders with lunch bags and foilwrapped cans of soda, all squinting up at the flags tracing the sail outline along the ship’s three tall masts.

Doug, Jem, and Gloansy wandered around the dry dock between the ship and its museum, mixing with the school groups and the knee-socked foreign tourists, Doug hoping to confound any parabolic microphones that might be aimed their way. Jem worked the brim curve of his lucky blue Red Sox cap, which not coincidentally had the added effect of flexing his arms. He wore small, smirking, syrup-tinted sunglasses too expensive and European-looking for his bargain-bin American face. Gloansy wore yellow-tinted sport shades that made his toad eyes bulge, his freckled forearms looking like two logs of Hickory Farms cheese.

Jem spit into the ocean and said, “Fucking cunt.”

Doug turned on him fast, too fast.
“What?”

“What
what
? Fucking branch manager, who else?”

“What are you talking about?”

“It’s fucking gotta be.”

“How? What could she have told them?”

“I dunno. Something.”

“You tell me. What could she have told them?”

Jem flipped his cap back on top of his head, the brim newly horseshoed. “Easy, kid. How would I know?”

Doug should have stopped himself, didn’t. “I don’t want to be throwing stuff around like it doesn’t matter. Because this matters. This is important—fucking critical—and I want to be dealing in certainties. She could tell them what? That there were four of us? What, we drove a
van
?”

“Okay. Then how?”

Doug looked off across the harbor at the Coast Guard piers jutting off the North End. “Could be any number of things. Anything.”

“We took a lot of precautions on that job. Fucking drove me nuts, but we did them, and it all went smooth, until the bell.”

“I’m saying I don’t have any answers yet, and neither do you.”

“We bleached it up. I did the tool count, there was nothing left behind.”

“Could be an accumulation of things. Could be they put someone on us special. We been pulling a lot recently.”

Gloansy said, a one-hand-in-his-pocket shrug, “How do we even know it’s anything? Could’ve been some guy parked on the street.”

“Yeah,” said Jem, pointing at Gloansy, “Banjo Boy is right. Some Peeping Tom. A Somerville hypo, shooting up. How come you’re so sure of yourself here, Duggy?”

“I don’t know anything,” said Doug. “Except what I know.”

A class shuffled past, boys smiling and pointing out Jem’s
Yankees Suck!
T-shirt. When they were gone, Jem said, “Sniffing around the Monsignor, that I don’t like.”

“I talked to him,” said Doug. “He knows how to handle it.”


You
know how to handle it. Gloansy here,
he
knows how to handle it. The Monsignor, I don’t have that kinda faith in.”

“Here’s the thing,” said Doug, facing them. “Boozo’s crew running wild—that was our cover. They took every ounce of heat that was out there because they were so fucking Cagney and greedy all the time. It was a vacation in Tahiti working in their shadow. Couldn’t
buy
that kind of protection. But now they’re good and gone, and the G still sees jobs being pulled. See, that machinery’s all still in place. I think they’re turning it on us now.”

Gloansy said, “The G?”

Doug looked at him,
duh,
and went on, “It’s not like they weren’t
aware
of us before, but not this close. Maybe they’re more focused now, because they can be. What bothers me is—why Dez? The only one of us with no record?”

Jem set one unlaced high-top sneaker on top of a piling, facing the harbor as though he owned it. “So we’re the top dogs now.”

Doug threw him a
duh
look too. “That’s not a vacancy I’m looking to fill. We don’t want to be out there in front, attracting attention. I like us running second, riding the wake of the high-stepping idiot in first place.”

“Second place?” snarled Jem, as though Doug had insulted him.

“There is no finish line, kid. The trophy is this, right here, us walking around, money in our pockets, free as the breeze. This is breaking news to you?”

“I’m saying, number one is number one.” Big shrug. “Sucks being the best—but there it is.”

A foreign tourist with a crazy accent and his safari-hat-wearing wife approached them with a guidebook, looking for Faneuil Hall, and Jem played his favorite game, kindly directing them to Chelsea Street, up toward the projects.

Gloansy turned to Doug in private. “How bad do you think they have us?”

“Maybe not at all. Maybe they just have Dez right now. Or maybe they have all our houses and our cars, I don’t know. Maybe they’re up on one of these rooftops right now, watching.”

“That means court orders and everything?”

“They don’t need anything to start snooping on their own. No probable cause or subpoenas, they can just start tapping into us first, figuring out who’s who and what’s what, then once they know where to look and what to look for—then they go legal, get their papers in order, come marching into Town.”

Gloansy was lost in thought a moment, a scary thing to see. He leaned closer to Doug. “What about, like, cameras in the bedroom, shit like that?”

Doug was forced to entertain a split-second image of Gloansy and Joanie grinding. “I would say, kid, these guys’ jobs are tough enough.”

Jem came back to them still muttering about Dez. “Fuckin’ nearsighted Pope. Walking around out there with all our fates in his pockets. Makes me fucking nuts.”

“I told you I talked to him,” said Doug. “He’s the one who made this guy in the first place.”

Jem said, “This is why the movie thing is good. Changing our whole MO, if they’re onto that.”

Doug shrugged. “Good, maybe.”

“Whoa,” said Jem, protesting. “Douglas. C’mon, kid. Don’t let these fuckers get you down.”

“I think we gotta pull back a while.”

“Fuckin’—no way.”

“We gotta coast a bit.”

“Why? We’ll work around the Monsignor. Hijacking a can means no blackbox phone shit, no tech. We’ll go in the original Three Musketeers.”

Gloansy said to Duggy, “For how long?”

“Listen,” said Doug, “if you two’ve got nothing tucked away in the back of your sock drawers, I got this much sympathy for you.”

“It ain’t greed,” said Jem. “It’s knowing a good thing when I see one.”

What do you see except what I show you?
“Why you always in such a rush?”

A tour guide dressed as Paul Revere nodded to them as he passed.

“Why? Because I been on the losing end of things, and the one thing I promised myself when I was there was to make hay while the sun shines. Sun’s shining bright here, Duggy.”

“Too bright. That’s not sunlight you’re feeling, that’s heat, that’s the G, and I gotta know what we have here first.”

“How you gonna do that? How you ever gonna know?”


And
we gotta keep our distance, starting now. Gotta stay separate, case they haven’t made all of us yet. Even if they do. Avoid any criminal-conspiracy rap.”

Jem shook his head like he was going to have to punch somebody.
“It was a fucking guy in a car!”

Gloansy said, “My wedding, Duggy. Joanie will go apeshit.”

Doug said, “Wedding’s fine. Big group thing. So long as we skip the photos, it’s fine. I’m talking about the four of us getting together for some ice cream, going out gallivanting. No.”

“Fucking
cunt,
” sang Jem under his breath.

Doug turned on him again. “You’re making me fucking crazy with this.”

“Why? What’s it to you?”

Doug didn’t know if what he said next was meant to put them at ease, or just to cover his own ass. “I’m going to do some looking into that.”

“Looking into what? How? Tail her again?”

“Let me worry about it. I’ll do my thing, you two go off and do yours. And quietlike. Be citizens. Assume they got eyes on you whenever you step out the door. Don’t cross against the light and don’t litter. Use the streets, use the neighborhood—they can’t hide there. None of us sees anything more in a week or two, we’ll get back together, think about moving ahead again.”

“A week or two?” said Jem. “Jesus
fuck
.”

“It’s a vacation, kid. Enjoy it.”

“Vacation? I’m fucking
always
on vacation.”

“Duggy’s right,” said Gloansy, probably still worried about cameras in his bedroom. “Maybe we should cool it a whi—”

Jem flat-handed Gloansy in the chest. “That’s for thinking, dumb shit. Fuck you, ‘cool it.’
I
decide when to cool it.”

“Fine, whatever,” said Gloansy, rubbing his pec. “Jesus.”

“Two fucking weeks, Duggy,” pronounced Jem. “Then we’ll see.”

16
THE GIRL WHO GOT ROBBED
 

 

H
E SAW HER WAITING
for him in the lamplight of the five-street junction, wearing a shimmering black top that was either velvet or silk, a slim turquoise skirt ending in a ruffle at the knee—her legs were as blond as her hair—and low black heels, a black sweater in one hand, a small black handbag dangling on a string in the other. The taxi ahead of him slowed, trawling for an early evening fare, and she smiled and shook her head no, waving it along—and already Doug felt his reserve melting away.

He eased the Corvette’s prow in along the stone curb at her knees. He was wearing Girbaud jeans, the same toe-pinching black shoes, and a white shirt under a black jacket. He stood out of the car—he always felt good rising out of the Vette—and walked around to get her door.

Her eyes broadened at the sight of the emerald green machine. “Wa-
how,
” she said, her hand going to her chest. At first he thought she had expected a dusty pickup with tools rattling around in back and a pissing-Calvin sticker on the window. But as she sank into the low passenger seat, he recognized the look on her face as one of amusement. He felt a sting of foolishness then, that he wasn’t prepared for. She swung her legs inside and he closed the wide door on a whiff of butterscotch, rounding the flat rear of the car, seeing himself and the city block reflected and elongated in the glassy green finish, not liking his hurtlittle-boy feelings.

“So,” he said, closing his door, trying to stay positive. “What do you think? Too much muscle?”

She turned to look in back. “I can’t believe how clean it is.”

“It’s a collector’s car, but not a fetish with me. Some guys, forget it. Working under the hood, that’s what I like. Taking it apart and putting it back together again. I don’t even drive it that much.” She was exploring the upholstery with a light hand, the instrument panel with curious eyes. His plans for being so tough and crafty and inscrutable—like a magic trick, one glance from her had turned all his face cards blank. “I had it painted custom. Most collectors, stripping down and painting the exterior an off-stock color, that’s ruining
a collector’s item like this. Me, I kind of liked making it mine. A one-of-a-kind.” She touched the soft trim, and he couldn’t take her silence any longer. “So, what? Is it ridiculous?”

“Yes,”
she said—but with a smile, not catching his meaning. “Do you race this?”

“I’ve taken it around a speedway in New Hampshire once or twice on my own, just to open her up.”

“How fast?”

“One-sixty, sustained. I topped out at one-eighty.”

“Gulp,” she said. He shifted into first and pulled away from the curb, clutching into second, the engine lifting them toward City Square like a speedboat over calm water. “I feel like I’m lying down.”

Doug eyed her legs extended into the deep foot well. “I think it looks good on you.”

She rubbed the leather seat hips with her palms and shook out her hair a little, getting comfortable. “I think my car’s going to be jealous.”

“Yeah, well. Corvettes and Saturns, that’s like dogs and cats.”

He slowed into the traffic light onto Rutherford, feeling a little better. “Hey,” she said, turning to him curiously after the stop, “how did you know I drove a Saturn?”

Doug kept his eyes hard on the red light. “Didn’t you mention it? You must have mentioned it.”

“Did I?” Green light, Doug gripped the wheel and gunned it out toward the bridge, and she looked ahead again. “I guess I probably did.”

BOOK: The Town: A Novel
8.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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