on the walls, burning up my plans to be free of this nickel-and-dime hustling once and for all. I wasn't going into the dope business, and I wasn't giving this up without another try.
'Prof, your cousin still work for the post office?'
'Melvin's a lifer, brother-he's hooked on that regular paycheck.'
'Would he hold out a package for us if we paid him?'
'Have to pay him a good piece, Burke-he
'The idea is, we
'Forty kilos-twenty bags in each case. Plastic bags. Heat-sealed.'
'Prof, that's worth what on the street?'
'Depends-how pure is it now, how many times you step on it
'Mole…?'
'It's ninety, ninety-five percent pure.'
'Prof?'
'They could hit it at least ten times. Figure twenty grand a key, at the least.'
'So they'd pay five?'
'They'd pay the five just to stay alive.
'That's two hundred thousand, okay? How about we mail them four keys, okay? No questions asked. Just to show good faith? And we give them a post-office box number, and tell them to mail us the money for the
'No good,' said the Prof. 'They'd trace the box, or have some men waiting. You know.'
'Not if Melvin intercepts the shipment. He still works in the back, right? All he has to do is pull their package of money off the line when it shows up.'
'Melvin don't work twenty-four hours a day, man. He's bound to miss some of them.'
'So what? We don't need
'It's shaky, man. I don't like it.'
I turned to Max. He hadn't moved from his place against the wall, standing with his corded forearms folded, no expression on his face. He shook his head again. No point asking the Mole. We were back to Square One. The Prof was looking at me like I was a bigger load of dope than the one we'd hijacked.
I lit a cigarette, drawing into myself, trying to think through the mess. Keeping the dope wasn't a problem-the Mole's junkyard was as safe as Mother Teresa's reputation, and heroin doesn't get stale from sitting around-but we took all this risk and now we had nothing to show for it. Waiting didn't bother Max, and the Prof had done too much time behind the walls to care. I watched the candle flame, looking deep into it, breathing slowly, waiting for an answer.
Then the Mole said, 'I know a tunnel.' He didn't say anything else.
'So what, Mole?' I asked him.
'A subway tunnel,' he explained, like he was talking to a child, 'a subway tunnel from an abandoned station back out to the street.'
'Mole,
'Not a way in-a way out,' said the Mole, and it slowly dawned on me that we could still pull it off.
'Show me,' I asked him. And the Mole pulled out a mess of faded blueprints from his satchel, laid one flat on the basement floor, and shone his pocket flash for us all to see.
'See here, just past Canal Street? You come in any of these entrances. But there's a
When he saw I still wasn't with him, the Mole's tiny eyes blinked hard behind his thick lenses. He hadn't done this much talking in the last six months and it was wearing him out. 'We meet them in the tunnel near Canal. We get there first. They block all the exits. We give them the product and we take the money. We go out heading west…see, here?…they go out heading east. But we don't go out the exit. We take this little tunnel all the way through here'-tracing the lines-'and we come out on Spring Street.'
'And if they follow us?'
The Mole gave me a look of total disgust. He was done talking. He took his satchel, pushed it away from him with his boot, so it was standing between us. 'Tick, tick,' said the Mole. They wouldn't follow us.
Now I got it. 'How long would it take us to get to the Spring Street stop?'
The Mole shrugged. 'Ten minutes, fifteen. It's a narrow tunnel. One at a time. No lights.'
Yeah, it could work. By the time the wiseguys figured we weren't coming out any of the Canal Street exits, they'd have to go back inside to look for us, and we should be long gone by then. They'd figure we'd be hiding out, waiting for darkness to fall, or that we'd try to slip away in the rush-hour crowd. And even if they did tip to the plan, we'd have too much of a head start.
'It's great, Mole!' I told him.
The Prof extended his hand, palm up, to offer his congratulations. The Mole figured the Prof wanted to see his blueprints, and tossed the whole bundle into the Prof's lap. Some guys are just culturally deficient.
I looked at Max. He was watching the whole thing, but his face never changed. 'What's wrong
Max walked over to us, squatted down until his face was just a few inches from mine. He rolled up his sleeve, pulled off an imaginary tie, and looped it around his biceps he put one end in his teeth and pulled it tight. Then he drove two fingers into the crook of his arm, where the vein would be bulging, used his thumb to push the plunger home, and rolled his eyes up. A junkie getting high. Max watched my face carefully. He folded his arms in the universal gesture of rocking a baby, then opened his arms to let the baby fall to the floor. And he shook his head again. Max the Silent wasn't selling any dope.
I pointed to my watch, spread my hands again. 'Why
Max tapped his heart twice with a balled fist, nodding his head 'yes.' Then he rubbed his fingers together to make the sign for 'money,' moving his hands back and forth with blinding speed. He was a warrior, not a merchant.
Fuck! I threw up my hands in total disgust. Max watched my face, his own immobile as stone. I used my hands to shape the one-kilo packages of dope in the air, laid them end to end until Max got the idea. We had a whole pile of heroin between us. Then I rubbed my first two fingers and thumb together the way he had before. Money, right? Then I separated my hands, and crossed them in front of my chest, opening them as I did so. Exchanging one for the other. 'How?' I wanted to know.
Max smiled his smile: just a thin line of white between his flat lips. He bowed to the Mole and the Prof, then to me. He made the same signs for the dope as I had, and followed it with a gesture that meant throwing something away. Okay, we disposed of the dope-maybe threw it in the river. And then?
Max pointed to the blueprints, nodding his head 'yes.' We'd make the meet in the tunnel like the Mole wanted, only we wouldn't have any dope with us. I spread my hands wide for him again-how would we get out of there with the money? Max bowed, stepped back out of the circle of light cast by the candle, and vanished. It was dead silent in Mama's basement. I watched the candle burn down, along with my hopes of