you have to cross to get there. And they feature plenty of those licensed-to-steal “title loan” shops.
South of Portland, the coastline is an ever-shifting blend of retirees from other states and tourists rolling through in waves of RVs.
Eastern Oregon has a lot of mountains, a lot of small towns. A lot of pots brewing, from Christian Identity to crank.
Disappearing is easy. Connecting is what’s hard.
She walked across the wood-planking floor of the loft, tossing her purse onto the futon, unbuttoning her blouse.
“I thought you were going shopping,” I said, looking at her empty hands.
“I did. For many hours.”
“They were—what—all out or something?”
“Ah,” she said, doing something to the waist of her skirt. It fell to the floor. She stepped out of it, came closer to me. “The word is different for men and women.”
“What word?”
“Shopping. When you say ‘shopping,’ you mean to go out to buy something. A specific thing, yes?”
“Sure.”
“When
“You mean for bargains and stuff?”
“No. I like the looking. I like to know I
“Oh.”
“Yes, you are so
“What difference?”
“I do not understand,” she said, kneeling next to where I was sitting.
I ran my hand through her thick black hair. “What would it matter if I faked like I was interested?”
“You asked me the question.”
“I did. I was just . . . I don’t know . . . maybe being polite. You’re right. That’s not me. I won’t do it again.”
“Huh!” she said, bending forward and nipping at the web of flesh between my thumb and forefinger. Harder than she usually does.
But it turned out to be like most convict’s dreams. Right there . . . but out of reach. I’d been hearing that “It’s not for you” song my whole life.
I didn’t have Max the Silent at my back. I didn’t have the Prof and Clarence by my side. I didn’t have the Mole mixing his potions in his underground bunker. I didn’t have Michelle, didn’t have Mama.
But even if I risked it and went back to them, I wouldn’t have Wolfe.
And I wouldn’t have Pansy, ever again.
When you’re away—Inside, I mean—your people don’t visit you. Not if they all have priors. That’s not how it’s done. I took a fall for Max and the Mole a long time ago. Well, not in place of them—I was going down anyway. But I held off the other side until they could get gone.
It had been a perfect hijacking. A big fat stash of dope, quick and clean. We didn’t want the dope; we wanted to sell it back to the same mob family we stole it from. Everybody wins. Nobody gets hurt.
I set up the meet in an abandoned subway tunnel. Only, instead of silk suits, the men who showed up were all dressed in blue.
No, the cops hadn’t cracked the case. The mob had sold me to a few of their friends, that was all. Maybe they thought they could get their heroin back from the police evidence locker. Wouldn’t have been the first time.
A bouncing grenade with the pin still in it was enough to convince the law that a frontal assault was out of the question. They knew they had a heavily armed lunatic on their hands, so they decided to do the smart thing and negotiate.
But they only had one end of the tunnel blocked, and the longer we talked, the safer my people got. Everybody made it out. Everybody but me.
I did the time without visitors. But never without backup. Between people on the street who would do anything—
Besides, I was young then. Going back to prison was like an alumni reunion. If it was some college, I guess they’d be checking the parking lot, see what kind of car you drove up in. Inside, you got your status from the crime that brought you there. That, and from coming back by yourself.
That was me, back then. I wanted to be a con’s con. High-status. Good crime, good time.
I remembered some of those good times. The manic rush of high-risk scheming for a little more territory, the gambling coups, making home-brew, handball, story-swapping, boxing, lie-telling, concocting elaborate escape plots that you were never going to try . . .
When you start getting nostalgic for prison, you’re never far from going back.
“I know.”
“Then why didn’t you—?”
She gave me one of her eloquent shrugs.
I expected her to say she’d follow me anywhere, like she had before. Tried to beat her to the punch by telling her I’d send for her when I found a place that was safe.
“No,” she said, soft but flat. “There is no place for me where you are going.”
“Not yet, maybe. But when I’m—”
“Ah, you will never be at peace, Burke. You’re not just restless and bored, you are depressed.”
“Sad. Not depressed. Sad.”
“As you say.”
“Gem . . . I just can’t . . . work here.”
“You did those . . . jobs I found for you.”
“There isn’t enough of it. I need a score. A big one. And I couldn’t even put a string together here. I don’t know anyone.”
She opened her mouth to say something, but I put two fingers across her lips, said: “No, I couldn’t bring my own people out here. They’d be as lost as I am.”
“A bank is a bank,” she said, a deep vein of stubbornness inside her precise voice.
“A bank? Little girl, bank jobs are for dope fiends and morons. There’s no money in them anymore. Not in the tellers’ drawers, anyway. Anything else takes an inside man. And out here, I could never—”
“You went down to the casino . . .”
“And crapped out. There is no way you could hit a place like that. It’s way out in the sticks. It’d have to be a goddamn commando raid—helicopter on the roof, a dozen men, all that. Cost a fortune just to put it together, and the take wouldn’t be worth it. It’s a nice little operation, but it’s not carrying the kind of action worth that investment.”