one

Forty-five miles south of the Canadian border, Andre Ouellette checked the hip holster underneath his leather coat to make sure it was in place. His driver, Pierre Bisson, maneuvered their black Lexus into the dirt parking lot of the Flight Deck Bar & Grill in Turner, New Hampshire. His piece, a Sig Sauer 9mm P226 with a 15-shot extended magazine, was where it belonged. Good. It had been a long drive from west of Montreal. When they left this crappy joint later tonight, the guy they were meeting was either going to roll over and present his ass up for a good reaming, or was going to get his brains blown out.

The guy’s choice. Andre was just here to deliver the message and get it done, one way or the other.

Pierre put the Lexus in park, switched off the engine. The place looked like somebody’s creaky one-story wood frame house that had two or three additions tacked on, satellite dishes on top, with motorcycles, pickup trucks, and a couple of shitbox cars with rusted out fenders and bumpers parked in two rows. Pierre draped his beefy arms over the steering wheel. “My uncle, he was in the biker wars, ten years back, you remember? When the Hells Angels tried to take over our territory in Quebec? Was ex-Army, expert in demolitions, rolled a couple of homemade bombs into a clubhouse and a motor home, took out a couple of the Hells Angels. Told me he was just helping ’em go to where they belonged, that being hell.”

Andre said, “Were they IEDs?”

“The fuck is an IED?” Pierre asked.

“Improvised explosive device,” Andre patiently explained.

Pierre snorted. “Shit, weren’t nothin’ improvised about them, like I said, he was an expert. Thing is, I’m looking at this shitbox and wish my uncle was here. We could toss a couple of loads into the windows, take care of business without any bullshit talk going back and forth. Be back home before you know it.”

Andre reached for the door handle. “Too much of a bang, Pierre. Don’t want to bring outside attention to what we’re involved with.”

Pierre opened his door first. “Hell, look at the dump. Pretty much could blame anything blowing up on the propane tanks back there.”

Andre stepped out onto the dirt lot, stretched his back, felt the pleasure as muscles popped back there. About the only joy he had experienced in the long dull drive south through the farmlands in Quebec, through the main border crossing in Derby Line, Vermont, and now over here to New Hampshire. Pierre ambled over, a large fellow whose arms were so long he could almost scratch his kneecaps without bending over. But he was also a fast shot when you needed your ass covered. He and Pierre were dressed alike: black sneakers, clean blue jeans, and short black leather coats. But there the resemblance ended. For the past five or six years, Andre kept his head bald—no fag Rogaine or drugs rubbed in his scalp once his hair retreated north—while Pierre had a permanent five o’clock shadow and had a thick unibrow running across his sloping forehead.

Andre went up wide wooden steps and checked his Tag Heuer watch. Five p.m. Windows were on either side of the pub’s front door. A handwritten sign, black marker on cardboard, said: NO COLORS WORN INSIDE. Beside him Pierre said, “We’re an hour late. Think it’s going to make a difference?”

“Going to do something,” Andre said. “You remember the set?”

“Yeah,” Pierre said. “You tug at your right ear, first clear opportunity, I cap the guy.”

“Yeah, but this time make sure I’m far enough away. Last time my sneakers got splattered, had to buy a new pair. You know how hard it is to get sneaks in my size, my feet being so damn wide.”

Once Pierre opened the door and they walked in, Andre gave the place a quick scan. It was another dreary roadhouse joint, like so many he had been in before. It was like there was some central distribution center that dumped places like this up and down rural roads and forgotten intersections throughout this part of the world: bar in the back, short-order cook working to the side, two pool tables with rectangular lampshades hanging over them, three hi-def televisions suspended from the wall showing a Red Sox game, a NASCAR race, and a golf game. The men and women inside gave them a look as he and Pierre walked in. Photos and prints of warplanes and ships hung on the cheap paneled walls.

The guys were all of a type, too. Dirty jeans or green work chinos, sweatshirts, a couple of fellows playing pool and wearing colors despite the warning sign outside: cut-off jean vests with big emblems on the back showing a mountain peak with the letters W.C.M.C. underneath. One squirrelly-looking guy, better dressed than the others, was sitting in the corner, reading a newspaper. The girls had jeans on as well, some of them rough looking, most with tattoos on their arms or tits. Andre remembered when girls with tats got his rocks going. Now he liked going to the pubs outside of McGill University, where sweet tight young things enjoyed being with older guys who knew their way around and didn’t put up with any bullshit. Maybe Andre didn’t know the latest American Idol star but he knew how to spend money and make pretty college girls feel special, especially when they got the extra thrill of being around somebody dangerous.

He and Pierre went up to the bar and sat down on round cushioned stools. Before they could order a beer, one of the scraggly guys wearing colors and carrying a pool cue came up to Andre, his beard down mid-chest on his Harley Davidson T-shirt.

“You’re late,” he said, his brown hair long. “Plus, I don’t like your look.”

“Can’t do anything about the time,” Andre said, swiveling around on the stool. “And my look is the way it is. Are you Duncan?”

The biker shook his head, pointed his pool cue to the guy reading the newspaper in the corner. “There’s Duncan,” he said. “Go on over.”

Pierre gave Andre a look, and Andre shrugged. Slid off the stool and went to the corner of the bar, Pierre pacing him. The guy in the corner seemed to be in his late thirties, with a folded-over newspaper in his left hand, his right hand holding a fork. A half-eaten salad was in front of him. He was bulky about his shoulders but he had a funny little smile, like being here was one big joke. He had on a tight-knit blue sweater and his black hair was cut short. Reading glasses were perched at the end of his prominent nose. Andre scoped him out, thought he really didn’t need Pierre to put this little fuck down, but Pierre was a good driver. Andre hated driving long distances, except when he was on his bike, but it was still too damn early in the season for long hauls on his Harley.

Andre sat down without an invite, and so did Pierre. The guy said, “You two gentlemen are from the Iron Steeds. I’m Duncan Crowley. And you are …?”

Andre just stared at Duncan. This was going to be easy. He kept on with the look and said. “I’m Andre. This is Pierre. This is how it’s going to be. We’re gonna come to—”

Duncan speared a little cherry tomato, popped it in his mouth. “Must have been a long drive from Montreal. Need something to drink? Nice selection of drafts on tap, not much of a menu, but before he got hooked on smack, Tony in the kitchen used to—”

Andre scraped his chair closer to the table. “Don’t need a drink, don’t need a fucking cheeseburger. This is how it’s going to be. You got a nice little deal here in these north woods. Some weed. Some loan-sharking. Little cross-border smuggling. But you got something big stirring up in our neck of the woods, coming through our turf. You haven’t shown us the proper consideration. So you’re going to have to pay us a toll.”

“A toll,” Duncan repeated.

“That’s right. A tribute. A levy. Call it what you want.”

Duncan considered that for a moment, put his fork down. “Just to make sure I got this straight: the whole border up here, that’s your turf, anything to do with Quebec. So if I was moving stuff through Ontario, maybe go through upstate New York, you guys would be fine with that?”

“Not going through Ontario, are you? You’re going through Iron Steeds turf.”

“Once it used it to be Hells Angels turf.”

“Long fucking time ago. Had a little war before your time to straighten things out. Wars are like that, you know? Give peace all the fucking chance you want, war tends to settle things permanently.”

Duncan picked up his fork, stirred the lettuce around on his plate. “Funny thing, I thought our meet was going to be at four p.m. My watch is a bit off but it looks like you’re an hour late. What, a long line getting through Customs? Moose get in your way? Lord knows, I’ve seen moose wander on the road some mornings or nights, they’re hard to pass and—”

Andre interrupted, “You not hearing what I’m saying? I’m saying, we don’t give a shit when you’re crossing cigarettes or Labatt Blue over the border, but this is different. We don’t know what you got, but it’s worth something. Even got the Canadian Security Intelligence Service sniffing around.”

“Really?” the man asked, surprise in his voice. “I’m impressed that you found that out.”

“Yeah, well, motorcycles don’t have boundaries, right? So the deal is, you pay a toll—ten percent of your load’s value, once we inspect it and figure out its worth—plus a couple of our guys go along as security. Paid details.”

That seemed to get Duncan’s attention. “Security? Really? Will be they as nicely dressed as you two, or will they be in Iron Steeds colors, riding hogs, long hair streaming out, ‘Born to Lose’ tattoos across their chests? That your idea of security?”

Pierre shifted his weight, causing the chair to creak. Andre said, “Not your worry. Your worry is, we come out of here with an agreement in the next five minutes, or there’s going to be some serious shit trouble.”

Duncan took his glasses off, rubbed at his long nose. “Like Marlon Brando, hunh? Making me an offer I can’t refuse?”

“The fuck you talking about?”

“Marlon Brando. The Godfather. Good book, great movie. Making me an offer I can’t refuse.”

“Yeah, sure, what the fuck ever. I’m making you an offer you can’t refuse. So what’s it going to be?”

Duncan put his glasses back on and said, “Ask you a question first?”

Andre felt his hands tingle. He wanted to throttle the little bastard, all this dancing around. He said, “Sure, yeah, ask me a question.”

“Just how the hell did you fine gentlemen find out about my connection with this particular matter? Was it through the Security Services from your fine country? I find that very concerning.”

Andre said, “The fuck this is, an interview? Look. We’re done talking. All right? We come to an agreement right now or we’ll take it another step further. You, your friends, your family. You think you can go through our turf and not show us the proper respect? Do you?”

It was like an overhead light bulb had just flickered. Something seemed to shadow Duncan’s face. Just for the barest moment, Andre wondered what was going on behind that odd man’s steady gaze. But a smile quickly returned and he said, “I understand. Proper respect. You’ve made your point. Several times, in fact. But I’m afraid I’m going to disappoint you. That shipment is of tremendous value for me. The only people accompanying it are going to be people I trust with my life. Not members of a Quebec biker gang.”

“I didn’t come all the way from Montreal to be disappointed,” Andre said, glancing at his watch. “Looks like your five minutes are up, sport.”

Duncan removed his glasses again. “What do you say we go outside and wrap this up.”

Andre nodded firmly. “Yeah, let’s do that.”

As he got up Pierre looked over, and Andre tugged his right ear. Enough was fucking enough. He was tired of sparring, tired of wasting his time. A waitress came over, dropped a check on the table. She was plump, in a long black skirt and white blouse, black hair, and she spoke strange, like she had a mouth full of marbles. “Here you go, Duncan.”

“Thanks, Tiffany,” Duncan said. “I’ll take care of it when I get back. Do me a favor, wrap my salad up, all right?”

“Yeah, okay,” she said, picking up the plate. She turned and Duncan said, “Sweet kid. She’s deaf. But she can read lips just fine.”

Pierre laughed. “Bet she can do other things with those pretty lips.”

Again, that little flicker across Duncan’s face. He joined Pierre and they went through the bar, out to the main door. Andre made sure that Duncan went first, followed by Pierre and then himself. He couldn’t tell what came next because something slammed into the back of his head.

Cold water was thrown at his face and Andre coughed, choked, and shook his head. The rear of his head ached and his nose burned, like some chemical had been pressed up against him, ether or something. His mouth was stuffed with a rag. His wrists hurt. He flicked his eyes open, looked around. His wrists hurt because they were stretched overhead. He peered up, saw a length of chain going from his wrists to an eyebolt set in a wooden beam. The rest of the room was small, with cement floor, cement walls, a couple of storage lockers and a sink. In front of him was Duncan, who held an empty plastic pail in his hand. He was now dressed in white paper pants, jacket, and little blue booties over his shoes. His hands were also covered with bright yellow rubber gloves.

Andre tried to talk but he couldn’t move his tongue around what was shoved in his mouth. He started breathing hard through his nose. Duncan stepped back. “Take a look to the left, on the floor.”

He did as he was told. His breathing increased. Heart thumping hard. On the floor was Pierre, stretched out in an X-formation, mouth gagged. Chains leading from each wrist and ankle were bolted to walls. Overhead fluorescent lights flickered and hummed. Pierre’s face was bright red, his eyes were wide, and his nostrils were flaring like a horse running for its life.

Andre started grunting against the gag. Duncan said, “Right about now is when you’re going to beg for mercy, or say it’s all a mistake, or that you take it all back. I don’t think that’s happening. So tell me this. You ever see The Godfather movie?”

Andre frantically nodded his head up and down. Duncan said, “You ever read the book? Now don’t lie. I don’t like lying.”

Even with his heavy breathing through his nose, Andre felt like he was suffocating. He shook his head, left to right, left to right. Pierre started moaning.

“Fine, you didn’t lie, glad to hear that,” Duncan said, stepping behind Andre. He closed his eyes, thinking frantically, trying to think of what he could do, what he could say. Duncan came back in front and Andre opened his eyes. “Maybe you should have read the book. A great book. Maybe not particularly well written, but sweet Lord, the sheer force of the story. Mario Puzo really knew how to grab you, right from the start. But only about eighty percent of the book made it into the movie.”

Duncan stepped away and Andre started howling against the gag. Duncan held an axe in his hand, the head shiny and sharp looking. “Remember Luca Brasi? He was that heavy-set fellow, looked like a wrestler who could tear your head off. He was Don Corleone’s enforcer, a loyal soldier who’d do anything for the Godfather. He played a much more prominent role in the book, the twenty percent that didn’t get filmed.”

Duncan tossed the axe from one hand to another. “You see, part of the book described Vito Corleone’s rise to power. As he was expanding his criminal activities in the New York City area, Al Capone in Chicago sent two of his associates east to seize control from Don Corleone. As you might imagine, the Don didn’t appreciate the attention. So Luca Brasi took care of business for him.”

Andre started screaming, tugging at the chain, as Pierre started grunting again, making oomph, oomph, oomph noises. Duncan went over, raised up the axe, and Andre looked away.

Thump!

Through his gag, Pierre let out a muffled scream. Andre started yelling himself against his own gag, so he couldn’t hear what was going on next to him.

Time passed.

Pierre mercifully fell silent. A rubber-clad hand was on his face. Andre opened his eyes. Duncan stood there. “Well. You’re still alive. That’s impressive. You see, in the book, when it came time for the second Chicago hood to be attacked, he was already dead. Poor son of a gun had swallowed his gag and had choked to death when his pal fell under the axe.”

Andre slumped down, legs fluttering, chains cutting into his wrists. Duncan shook his head. “Mistakes, my Lord, the mistakes you made, right from the beginning. First, thinking I owed you and your fellow bikers a single dime. Or a loonie, depending on your point of view. Second, to think I’d invite two of you fellows to be on in my next major shipment, serving as bodyguards. Please. A nonstarter. Why not send up flares as the delivery’s moving south, announcing to any law enforcement officials what was going on? Then, to wrap it all up, you insulted me by coming an hour late. Plus, you were stupid. Oh, so stupid.”

Andre suddenly realized his crotch was wet, started sobbing. He had just pissed himself. “You see, Tiffany, my sweet waitress that your recently deceased companion insulted, reads lips quite well. So when you and your friend came up to my place, she saw what you said through one of the windows. About clipping me after you tugged your ear. So here we are.”

Andre lifted his head, tried to put some sort of emotion, pleading, anything in his eyes. Duncan said, “To quote someone you know quite well, this is how it’s going to be. I’m going to take your gag out. You answer a few questions from me, the axe stays in the corner. Deal?”

He nodded, up and down, up and down. Duncan stood the bloody axe in the corner and poked his rubber-gloved fingers into Andre’s mouth, pulled and tugged. Andre nearly vomited and then spat, as the rag was taken out. He moved his swollen tongue and whispered, “Please, for the love of God …”

“Shhh,” Duncan said. “First question. How did you find out about my shipment?”

Tears came from his eyes. Andre quickly said, “A contact in the Quebec provincial police. I swear to God, I don’t know his name. All I know is that our president or his deputy, they’ve got him by the balls. So he came to them with the tip about the shipping container. Then we found out the Security Services were sniffing around so we knew it had to be worth a lot.”

“You know what’s in the shipment?”

“Only that it’s coming from one of the docks on the St. Lawrence Seaway. That’s it. And that it’s worth a fuckload of money.”

“Your president’s name?”

“Francois Ouellette.”

“You related?”

“He’s my uncle.”

“What was the plan for the shipment?”

Andre coughed. “We find out what’s in it and where it’s going, and then we’d hijack it, kill your crew.”

“Tsk, tsk,” Duncan said. “Not a very friendly business arrangement on your part. So where do we go from here?”

“Please … let me go … I swear to God … I’ll leave here, I won’t go back to Canada, I won’t bother you or—”

Duncan said, “Shhh, you keep on insulting me like this, and the axe comes back. You know and I know, I can’t let you go. Oh, maybe if your little visit had gone a bit more politely, I would have considered it. But no, Andre, that didn’t happen. You threatened my family. That’s the beginning and the end. The alpha and omega. I’m sure you understand. My family comes first, last, and forever. After you made threats like that, I can’t risk having you out there, no matter how many promises you make.”

Andre closed his eyes, knew with ice-cold certainty that it was over. Duncan said, “No more agony for you. Questions answered.”

There was a click-clack as a pistol’s action was worked, chambering a round. Andre opened his eyes. Duncan held up a familiar object: his own 9mm Sig Sauer pistol with extended magazine. Duncan said, “Your deceased friend over there was carrying the same piece. Good thinking. You both get in a firefight, you can pass each other magazines without worrying about the caliber of the other fellow’s rounds. But your last mistake?”

Andre said, “Please …”

Duncan stepped forward. “You underestimated us. From the start. Thought we were backwoods idiots, making moonshine and humping each other’s cousins. Far from it. So now your mistake bites you back. Hard.”

“Witnesses … lots of people saw me and Pierre back there.”

Duncan shrugged. “Man, you just don’t get it, do you. We knew when you were going to show up. Everybody back in the Flight Deck either works for me or is related to me. People around here, they take loyalty real seriously. So I’m not going to stay up late tonight, worrying that some cop from away is going to ask questions about whether or not the two of you came to my pub.”

Andre coughed. “My Uncle Francois … I don’t come back, he’s coming down on you like a fucking load of bricks.”

Duncan said, “Thanks for the warning. But I sort of figured that out on my own.”

Andre’s last sensation was feeling the cold barrel press up against his forehead.