good.”
“I like the cut of your jib, mister.”
“Aw shucks,” Michael said. “I’m just helping you have a productive day.”
“It is a good idea to stay busy at my age,” Mr. T. said.
“Yeah? I figured a guy your age would rather be home praying for a peaceful death.”
Mr. T. barked two sharp sounds to indicate mirth. “Ha! Ha! I like that.”
“So don’t I,” Michael said.
“That sounds like a Boston thing.” Mr. T. turned and looked at his three people. “Wait in the car.” He gestured for Michael to come closer. “I feel bad about your father. I’m glad he’s off the booze. I’ll give you fifty thousand when Junior gets back. Give some to your pop.”
When they got back to North Quincy, Larry dropped the brothers at their parents’ house. Paul was going to clean up and they were going to borrow the old man’s car to get back to the Triple-T parking lot to pick up Michael’s GTO.
Michael started up the front stairs with the bag of money for his father under his left arm.
“Hey,” Paul said, “my back is sore. Give me a hand going up the stairs.”
Michael went back down, and Paul draped his arm over his shoulders. After a moment’s thought, Michael handed Paul the bag of cash, reached up and took his brother’s left hand in his, then slipped his right arm around Paul’s waist and helped him up the stairs.
Their father came out of the house and held open the screen door. “What happened?” he asked.
The brothers made it up to the porch and the door clapped shut behind them.
“It got a little rough,” Paul said, “but I got you some money from Tortello.” Paul handed the bag to his father and smiled at his brother. “Mikey helped too.”
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS
RUSS ABORN was born in Boston and lived in Dorchester before the family moved to North Quincy, which he was told was in “the country.” He has spent his youth, adulthood, and, most likely, will spend his declining years in the logistics profession. He is married to his high school sweetheart, Susan.
DANA CAMERON is the author of the Emma Fielding mysteries, including the Anthony Award-winning
BRENDAN DUBOIS is the award-winning, New Hampshire- based author of eleven novels and more than one hundred short stories. His short fiction has earned him two Shamus Awards, three Edgar Award nominations, and inclusion in The Best American Mystery Stories of the Century, edited by Tony Hillerman and Otto Penzler. For more information, visit www. BrendanDuBois.com.
JOHN DUFRESNE is the author of two story collections and four novels, the most recent of which is
JIM FUSILLI is the author of five novels. In 2008, he was editor of, and contributed a chapter to, The Chopin Manuscript, Audible’s best-selling “serial thriller,” and is editing and contributing a chapter to its sequel,
LYNNE HEITMAN worked for fourteen years in the airline industry. She drew on that rich and colorful experience to create the Alex Shanahan thriller series, including
DON LEE is the author of two novels, Wrack & Ruin and Country of Origin, as well as a story collection,
DENNIS LEHANE is the author of eight novels, including The Given Day, Shutter Island, Mystic River, and Gone, Baby, Gone. Three of his novels have been adapted into major motion pictures, including
ITABARI NJERI, winner of an American Book Award and Pulitzer Prize finalist, is author of the memoirs Every Goodbye Ain’t Gone and The Last Plantation. A former reporter for the
STEWART O’NAN’S story collection In the Walled City received the 1993 Drue Heinz Prize. His many novels include Snow Angels, The Speed Queen, A Prayer for the Dying, Last Night at the Lobster, and
PATRICIA POWELL was born in Jamaica and emigrated to Boston with her family in 1982. She is the author of Me Dying Trial, A Small Gathering of Bones, The Pagoda, and The Fullness of Everything. Powell currently lives in California, after spending twenty-five years in Boston. She is a professor of creative writing at Mills College.