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Go Get'um, Old Man. Adult. An African Odyssey. (standard:adventure, 11089 words) | |||
Author: Oscar A Rat | Added: Jul 16 2020 | Views/Reads: 1352/995 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
An unexplained killing in his youth continues to haunt an old retired military man. The answer is found on a trip to Uganda to find abandoned American prostitutes. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story “And pigs can fly on nights with a full moon.” “Fuck it.” I kicked the door, right under the knob. It slammed open against a cabinet, the noise reverberating down nearby corridors. Glancing at each other with fear-filled eyes, we dodged across the hall to hide in a broom closet. That door open a half-inch, we listened. After a few minutes, silence uninterrupted, Tom whispered, “Ain't nobody here but us church mice. Come on.” Hurrying across to the office, we dodged inside. It was empty. “Now, where's that damned money? I hope he doesn't have a safe.” “I never saw one, less it's in a hidden room,” I answered. “I've cleaned or been in every room here. The fool probably expects God to protect him.” “God don't like money-grubbing assholes like Pastorious. I talked to Mr. Gribble, where I work. He says he pays that fucker $40 a week for me. I get $5 in spending money and gotta put fifty-cents of that in the church basket on Sunday?” I laughed. “Someone's gotta pay for that fried baloney we get for Sunday dinner.” “An' the boiled dandelions that come with it.” “Na,” I retorted. “The county pays the girls to pull them up for the cook. They're for free.” Meanwhile, we were searching cabinets, closets, and drawers. No money yet. “Another locked door,” Tom said, automatically kicking at it. I saw his back as he went through. A loud “Blam” sounded, then two more. I swear I could see one bullet coming out of the back of his head, brain matter and blood scattering and spattering as far as my left shoe. Even before Tom hit the ground, I was out that damned door. At a dead run, I hit the still-open backdoor and ran into the parking lot. It wasn't until several blocks away that I paused to breathe. *** I knew better than to fake it by going back to the church dormitory or even showing up for work. Me and Tom were known to hang together. The authorities would be certain to check on me, first thing, and would have found my empty bed. Also, I'd stored a hand-drawn map of the church, with the route outlined, under my mattress. At the tender age of seventeen, I was on the run. I hid out for a week. I had no friends, no relatives. The only place I could sleep was deep in bushes at a town park. Not able to bathe or change clothes, I was a mess. Cops or even groups of people were things to avoid. Trash cans and begging gave me my meals, such as they were. I did make a point of sneaking into the public library to check newspapers and use the restroom to clean up a little, also looking for articles about the robbery. To my surprise, it wasn't mentioned. Nor was Tom's death. For a town our size, that was unheard of. Even an occasional stolen bicycle made the front page of our one local newspaper. Cautiously checking out the church grounds, I found business as usual. There were no unmarked police cars, no strange men in suits loitering around. Finally throwing caution to the winds, I visited Murphy's Greenhouse to talk to another boy from the church group, Jimmy Evans, that worked there. “What you talking about, Sam?” he asked, shoveling some kinda shit onto a long table. “Tom was sent to Africa. Lucky fucker. The only guy among all those girls. Where you been?” I was told that nobody was actively searching for me. “Maybe you're smart to run away, though,” Jimmy said. “I wish I had the nerve.” I was confused to the max. I knew Tom was dead. Nobody can live with half a head. God sure as hell didn't repair him. Where did that leave me? Any which way, I couldn't go back. While thinking in those terms, I passed an army enlistment storefront. At the time, we were getting our asses kicked way over in Korea. They badly needed new cannon fodder. “We'd love to have you join us, Mr. Stone." The recruiting sergeant looked spiffy in a starched uniform, large yellow rank insignia on each sleeve along with a brightly-colored shoulder patch -- though I had no idea what any of them meant. Then there were several rows of ribbons over his heart, signifying adventures in faraway places. He made me comfortable on a soft chair in a businesslike atmosphere, action posters covering the walls, and talked to me man to man. I couldn't remember ever being talked to like that. I was only a kid, seven months shy of eighteen. To have such an icon speaking to me as an equal was impressive. And I was well-aware of his beerbelly, meaning he must have rarely missed a meal. I didn't know where my next was coming from. Probably from a dumpster behind some restaurant. Yeah. You can bet I signed those papers. Needing a parent's permission, I borrowed a pen from the sergeant, who gave me a knowing wink as I left and walked out front to sign a fictitious parent's name. He knew, he must have. It would have taken me more than a couple minutes to go home to get someone to sign. “Why don't you go sit in the back ... Recruit Stone,” he suggested. “There's coffee and sandwiches there. Even beer in the fridge. Go light on that, though. Two more men and we'll get you transportation to the reception station.” He reached across his desk to shake my hand. “Congratulations. You're in the army now.” *** Still confused over my friend's death and knowing the police were after me ... or not, I did feel at least a little safer on a train speeding toward Fort Knox, Kentucky. In a car reserved for we recruits, the miles piled up behind me. I felt even better when arriving without incident; meaning no police had checked with the recruiter and chased me down. If so, they would have been waiting for me to get off the train. Basic and advanced training in driving a Sherman tank wasn't easy, but I made it. After the orphanage and then the Pastor's dormitory, barracks life came easy. It wasn't until July of 1953 that I finally entered the hold of a troop ship bound for far off Korea. *** “You hear, Sammy,” Goofball asked as we stood at a rail of the “General Allen”, watching the waves, “the war's over? The brass is wondering what to do with us. Lieutenant Jones told me. We're halfway there and the scuttlebutt is they need the ship to take guys home from Korea. We're extra baggage or something. Turning around and taking us back first will slow down the evacuation.” “Hope we're not dumped overboard,” I answered. Damn, but that was good news. I wasn't looking forward to a winter driving a drafty tank through snow, ice, and below-zero cold. Whatever was decided was alright with me. We ended up being dropped off on Okinawa, an island south of Japan that was at that time under American military rule. Word was it already contained many thousands of troops -- but no tanks. It was also fine weather, all year round. *** “I hope you people love cops,” our captain addressed his assembled company, “cause that's what we are now.” He continued to tell us that since so many soldiers were coming there from Korea and that we had no tanks, we'd been formed into a new MP company to help control the sudden influx of combat vets. The “222nd MPs” is what he said, attached for training under the “98th MP Battalion.” Recently out of schooling at Fort Knox, we were still used to keeping our uniforms clean and tidy. The combat soldiers weren't. They were mean, lean, and violent. In combat, it seemed, nobody gave a shit about uniforms or haircuts. Shined shoes were a non-issue and they didn't give a damn about anything except having fun. After spending months or years in fear of dying, duty on The Rock appeared to them a form of heaven on Earth. A time to drink, get laid, and impress untried troops like us. We didn't have “arrest” powers, only able to “apprehend.” Actually, it was the same, only not saying “you're under arrest,” but “I'm apprehending you.” They still had to come with us in hand-irons. Of course, they had little or no respect for us non-combat guys, meaning more fights than not. Surprisingly, the job was made to order for me. Fighting had been an almost weekly event at the orphanage. Good food and physical exercise in the army had me growing like Topsy, reaching for the sky at six feet three inches and 210 lbs. Oh! And we always won. We were taught to think twice before engaging in violence but never to back down, never. We were issued clubs and pistols, along with whistles, radios, or telephones to call for all the help needed. Those were huge advantages against one to four unarmed drunks. Having been simply dumped onto the island, we didn't have normal tours and were subject to reassignment at any time. It was, however, damned good duty for single young men like myself. Girls, girls, girls everywhere. Even on privates' pay I had plenty of money if I watched my spending. I discovered the comfort and value of privacy, something I'd never experienced as an orphan. I rented a small thatch-roofed shack in the suburbs. It had no running water or electricity, but did have privacy. For the first time in my life I had control of two small rooms with lockable doors. I could sit in a soft chair, drink in one hand and cigarette in another, knowing no one, but no one, would be interrupting me. It was well-worth the $4 a month cost. It took a few days to become used to sleeping without several radios set to different stations blaring out over a large room. No drunks woke me in the middle of the night, knocking my bed around. The only water was from a hose outside, next to a three-hole privy. Other guys thought me a little strange. Some of them lived downtown with their girlfriends, but never alone and never in such simple surroundings in a native-only section of town. I never figured out why, but GIs out on the town are like girls going to a restroom, always preferring to do it in groups. When you see younger soldiers off duty it's usually in gatherings of at least three. Probably cause of age and experience, sergeants and above don't seem to mind going out alone. I became a singular individual, a trait I carried over into other aspects of life. Such was in learning to keep my mouth shut while listening to others gossip. You learn a lot of secrets that way without giving away many of your own. Other manifestations of that trait were in avoiding useless complaining to my buddies, simply following orders, and not caring what my fellows thought about me. Let them call it ass-kissing if they wanted. I didn't give a damn. When I finished work, I'd go home, just like a civilian, and not become involved in barracks intrigue. Some called it brown-nosing, others dedication to duty. Such an attitude did get me an early advancement to corporal. *** “We know he's in there, Corp. Jones and Tripper are behind the house to watch the other door, and there aren't any windows. Now what?” The decision was up to me. We had an AWOL marine rapist cornered and I carried the only live ammo in the bunch. It was in a rural area without telephones and, the unit being put together hastily, our jeeps didn't yet have radios. There had been a recent spate of careless discharging of firearms. We were used to having five rounds issued along with the weapon when going on duty, then taken back at end of shift. One man shot his foot when loading his .45 with the magazine. Another fired a round into a floor. When a third carelessly shot through two walls, almost clipping Captain Edwards in the shoulder, the shit hit the fan. Now, only us NCOs were issued ammo, though all the MPs still carried pistols. The rapist did have a firearm of some kind. He'd shot at the MP that found him then dodged into a small house. I removed my magazine, ejecting and handing four cartridges to Private Meadows. “Take two of these to Jones and Tripper. Tell them not to shoot unless fired upon. If they miss, to get the hell out of here. You and Thompson back me up with the other two.” That gave each of us one round to play with. “I'm going in. If you hear any gun-play, I want you to fire your bullet through the door and into the ceiling, then standby for backup or to run. Remember to fire at the ceiling. If you shoot my ass I'll never forgive you.” I stood far to the side, reaching way over to knock on the door. Two shots blasted through the thin wood, narrowly missing me. “Heckman! We have you. Where the hell you expect to go? Remember, man. This is an island, half fucking jungle. You ain't going nowhere, nohow.” “Fuck you. You want me, come on in and try.” Shit, I thought. He sounded drunk. “Maybe I won't. Know something, Heckman? The natives are also looking for you. There are already dozens of them milling around these streets with clubs and knives. So far,” I lied, “we're holding them back. The leader, one of the girl's brothers, said he wanted to cut your dick off and make you eat it ... before really getting down to business. And he was in the Jap army during the war. They used to do that to prisoners. “Maybe,” I said, seriously, “we'll go on back to base and let him?” “You're shitting me ... aren't you?” “Your choice. Can I come in? We'll talk.” “You do and you're dead.” “Well. Guess it's goodbye, then. Bye, Heckman. Have fun.” It was silent for a few seconds. “Okay. But just you. I'll shoot the second one in the door.” Forcing myself to go through that doorway was as bad as that time at Pastorious's. The inside was dark, Heckman only a thin shadow sitting on a floor mat in one corner of the room. “Unbuckle your gunbelt and drop it,” he ordered. “No.” “I'll shoot. I ain't got nothing to lose.” “Only your cock. That's all.” “Sob.” I heard sniffling from the dark lump. “Come on, Heckman. Time to go. Cut the bullshit and get up.” As I waited, my asshole feeling ready to burst open any second, I heard a scuffling sound as something heavy hit the floor, metal clicking against a stone. He rose to his feet, hands empty. It was over. That occasion got me buck sergeant stripes and, for Christ sake, a choice position in our new battalion Criminal Investigation Division, CID, where I stayed for almost thirty years. *** I walked through an empty house in a suburb of Chicago. Too damned empty, I thought as I dropped a worn duffel-bag near the entrance. I'd visited it a few months before, when first thinking of buying the place. The other family was still there and it was furnished. I hadn't considered that they'd take everything with them. Guess I was too damned used to renting furnished apartments. I wandered through empty rooms, greeted only by musty smells. One bedroom still stunk of perfume, a woman's odor, another of unwashed kids. Speaking of smells, the basement really stank, of petroleum. Was there a leak in a gas furnace, or simply from being shut up tight for over a month? I'd hoped for at least an old mattress being left behind, but was disappointed. They took everything but the stink with them. At least it was fairly clean, as the real estate woman had promised me. Through a window, I could see the sun was already going down. My tired old bones needed something other than a bare floor to sleep on. And my back? Shit. My back had been fucked up by an exploding car in Saigon during that fucking war. Normally, if no one was around to see me I still walked with a slight slouch. Three pieces of shrapnel had barely missed my spine -- one of them still in there. Now in my fifties, the doctor said it was trying to force itself out and I had to wait. One of these days, he said, I'd probably find it in the bed beside me. Fuck. I gotta do something, I thought, even considering renting a hotel room for the night. The hell with that. With all the money I paid for that place, I'd be damned it I wouldn't use it. Instead, I returned to a rental car, sans baggage, and drove around looking for a store. Eventually, I found a furniture store, a discount place, open for business. I spent a half-hour and considerable amount of money picking out a shit-load of furniture. “Yes, sir,” the clerk told me, “we'll deliver it tomorrow ... 'bout one.” “Tomorrow afternoon? What the fuck'll I do tonight?” He sold me a large heavy air-mattress that, even packaged, filled the back seat. Somewhat angry but very tired, I stopped at a Mom-and-Pop store for bread and baloney -- along with a case of beer -- before returning to my new home. Only then did I find there was no electricity. Water, but no electric. Christ! That fucking mattress depended on an electric pump. Knocking on a few nearby doors got it inflated and a sore tired back brought it back home for a well-deserved rest. Being an old army man, I persevered. In a couple of days, I was comfortable. In a week, everything was coming together. A month later, I was bored. *** “You can fill out an application, sir,” the local police department clerk told me, “but at your age I doubt you'll be hired.” “Why's that? I've got one hell'a a lot of experience.” “Too much, actually. I don't think you could take the patrol regimen, and wouldn't fit in anyway with the young people you'd be working with. You don't know the city. And some'a the bosses don't ... I hate to say it ... think military detectives are the real thing.” That was that. Least I filled out the forms. When interviewed by a female lieutenant, although not being as abrupt, I could see the same reaction as the clerk's. Hell, I didn't really need the money. Retirement pay as a master sergeant filled my needs. I simply wanted something to do with myself, so I tried a nationwide security firm. “We'd be glad to have you, Mr. Stone,” I was told. Right away, that night, I found myself in uniform and walking around an empty factory -- at minimum wage. I'd thought sitting at home was boring. I was wrong. At least, at home I could go out for a drink or something, walk around WalMart's. At that factory, it was nothing but empty rooms and hallways, watching for fires to start and grass to grow outside a small guard shack. I even wished for intruders. If I'd found any, I'd have invited them into my hootch for a cup of java. On my first night, I sat a bundle of pocket novels, thermos of coffee, and a six-pack of beer on a desk inside the shack, ready for a long 12hr shift. “On, no, Stone,” a teenager, the site security manager or something, told me. “You can't drink on duty. That's a no-no.” “Why the hell not? I'm not an alcoholic.” “Against the rules. The sergeant might show up and catch you.” “No shit.” After an hour of “training” he was ready to leave. Seeing me with a cigarette, I was also told there was no smoking on the fucking property. I lasted a month before quitting. As the police clerk had told me, I didn't fit in. At first, I spent a lot of my free time, meaning about 24/7 minus sleeping, at puttering around the house. I've never really gotten into hobbies and couldn't saw a straight line to save my life. Growing gardens is for old ladies, not old men. The local bars always seemed to feature noisy modern shit for music, not my style at all. I prefer soft instrumentals to relax by, not screaming and acoustic trickery. They never heard of freakin' Sinatra. I was chomping at the proverbial bit, that house as a fucking harness threatening to choke me. Thinking of having at least a modicum of companionship, I took to visiting whores on the strip, finding even that no solution. There were more fucking cops in both uniform and skirts than there were hookers. Since, for all I knew, there still might be that ancient robbery warrant out on me, I didn't want to take chances. With that in mind and knowing they only chose the prettiest cops for their stings, I was restricted to the old and ugly -- them being safer bets. Crap. When I was with them I wanted to complain about MY old-age problems, not hear them bitch about theirs. When first in a supervisory position in the army, I'd checked with the FBI, but didn't find any warrants awaiting me. For all I knew, one still might exist, lying dormant for thirty fucking years. They couldn't get me for the robbery, statute of limitations, but there was a death ... Tom's. I didn't know the laws for that state but might in some way be held responsible. Not being very good at cleaning the house, meaning pushing a vacuum cleaner around on a regular basis, I decided to hire a cheap housekeeper for a few days a week. Besides, it would give me someone to talk to. Mrs. Edmond was a single mother with no skills. She didn't like kid stuff or rock & roll, which fit in well with my own attitude on those subjects. When she began bitching about her teenage girl, Janice, running wild I hired her on the spot. Simpatico. For a couple of years I led a lazy life. One morning I found four other old guys sitting at a McDonalds. They were talking about Vietnam. Hearing them, I moved my chair over and joined in. Since then, we met for a few hours every day over a cup of coffee. Ex-soldiers all, especially those with compatible memories, get along well together. One day, Jimmy brought in a Chicom pistol he'd stolen and brought back, almost getting us all evicted from McDs. “This guy was, see, banging away with this here toy, ya know? I stood still, aiming the fifty on my tank, tiny 9mm bullets whizzing toward me.” “Yeah!” Joe asked, seriously, “Did he kill you?” “Course not,” Jimmy missed the irony, waving the weapon in a circle encompassing several dozen yuppie customers. Ignoring them, he raised it toward the ceiling, clicking it a couple times. By that time, customers and staff were ducking for cover, those not near the doors, that is. They were already gone. When the cops came, he had to show his carry license and it was glossed over. The kid that managed the place, though, gave us a stiff warning. At least according to the bullshit, we all missed those “good old days” spent in physical danger around the world. One time, we compared numbers of dangerous events we'd gone through, such as gunfights, and I came out on top with twenty -- five in combat and fifteen as a police officer. Most of the latter were in Vietnam, where every drunk I tried to apprehend was -- by the rules -- required to be carrying a loaded weapon at all times. Even in bars and military clubs. “Listen, guys,” Jimmy said one sunny morning, “I've been reading this series of novels about a guy working as a private detective. No license, no taxes, like under the table thing. Maybe we can do that instead of sitting around shooting the shit? What you guys think? Sam here's a detective. He can be the boss and train us? On-the-Job Training shit.” Jimmy and Ted tried to talk me into it but I, at first, laughed them off. “We'd need money, for a start,” I reminded them. “I've got some built up, a few thou',” Jimmy said, “And Sam and Teddy, here, have houses we can mortgage.” “Bullshit,” Ted replied. “I've already got a second mortgage to fix my roof. The interest on both of them are killing me now.” “Think it over, guys,” Jimmy said. “We can do it.” *** I did think it over. The idea ate at me for a couple of weeks. I even bought a handful of pocket novels featuring that offbeat detective guy, and it did seem like a more exciting life. Not the parts about being beat up in every issue, but how he helped out people who didn't have the skills to protect themselves. Such as housewives who's ex's split on them to avoid alimony and child support. Killers and con-men cases where the police were baffled by restrictive laws or lack of manpower. The kicker was when a recently-retired police sergeant joined our table. As a Vietnam and Iraq vet, he fit right in with us. His name was Jeff Peters and he was our only black member. Also, he still had contacts with the local department. Mornings when I woke up without a hangover, the idea looked better and better. *** “I think it's workable,” Jeff told us when the subject came up again at McDs, “but we'd have to keep a low profile. No official office, name, business papers, or even logo. No written records or canceled checks that can come back later to bite us in the ass. Cash all the way.” “What about email or texting?” Ted asked. “Absolutely not! No cellphones in our own names, period. I still have status as a reserve officer to direct traffic and that shit during emergencies, so I have a badge, uniform, and access to the station,” Jeff told us. “We have dozens of computers at the station, one in almost every car. I can't risk my old sign-in code, but remember a few others. I can sneak access to some files and databases. I can't do anything sensitive, of course. Nothing out of the ordinary that might be flagged down.” “IF we do it,” I said, “we'll start slow. Jeff and I are the only trained people. You others will learn but have to start out simple, like with stakeouts and extra muscle.” “What muscle?” Ted asked. “Jerry's got plenty of fat but no muscle left, and Joe's blood pressure won't let him do one hell of a lot of ‘muscle' work.” “What about money? How much we need to start?” Jerry, a retired accountant, asked. “Probably, I'd say ... ten or twenty thousand?” I said. “What the hell for, if we don't even have an office or keep records?” Jerry replied. “There are both initial expenses and long term ones,” I said. “I don't know, off hand, what the initial ones will be, but we'll need money for travel, hotel rooms for out of town, maybe bribes, and fuel for our vehicles.” Jeff chimed in with, “Cheap disposable cellphones for all of us. CB radios, maybe? Weapons and carry permits. In this state, to get a carry permit you have to take a recognized training course and pass a test. Those cost a few hundred each.” “What the hell for?” Jerry asked. “We've all had firearms training in the military.” “That don't count,” Jeff told us. We argued for a week over gallons of coffee but finally worked out our differences. By the end of the third day we knew we'd passed the point-of-no-return and were committed. I'd be the leader and most active, both in working any cases and in training the others. Jeff, recognized by the police, would stay low-key, aiding at the station when needed and helping in training. The other three would concentrate on manual labor and odd jobs. Contacts would be mainly by disposable cellphones with at least two individual visits a week at my place, through the back door. We wanted to avoid team contact except at the fast-food place, even that changing occasionally. *** From the very beginning, we had a lot of fun. There were, however, a million bugs to be worked out. Outside our daily meetings at McD's, we adopted numbers as nicknames. I was, of course, number one. Citizen band radios were installed in our homes and automobiles. Codes were developed and memorized, only to be changed often. What we ended up doing was start a month with one set. Every week we'd move the code numbers up by the number of the week. The next month, it would be in reverse. For instance, on the first week of the month “Two Fifteen One,” would mean Jeff (Two) meet with (fifteen) Sam (One). The next week the same message would be “Three Sixteen Two.” During the third week of the month, it would be “Two Fifteen One.” The voice codes weren't all inclusive and not too complex to keep in memory. Hell, I figured, nobody was listening in anyway but it made the others feel more professional. *** “Look, guys. I been a thinking about this,” Jeff told us over our sixth cup of coffee that day. He looked around the dining room, seeing only a sprinkling of teenagers. “Look. Sam says we're ready. Why don't we take on one of these coke dealers in the newspapers?” “Fine, man, but we should try to make a profit. Someone to hire us,” Jerry, the retired accountant, said. “We haven't got much in our treasury.” “Their rivals would. Hire us, I mean,” Ted said, laughing into his foam cup. “Good idea, Ted,” I said, sitting up straight. “Plenty of money there. I see nothing wrong with financing ourselves with their cash. We destroy the drugs and keep the money.” “That's illegal,” from Joe, ever the pragmatic one. “Who gives a shit? Our group is supposed to work outside the law.” “Sure,” Jeff said. “Even beating up bullies is called assault and battery. Taking the drugs to destroy is also illegal. Who cares? I don't.” “I suppose you have inside information on local dealers?” I asked. “Sure do.” “Okay guys,” I said, “lets make us some plans.” *** Blinky Evens left his home through a back door. Dressed in a black chauffeur uniform, complete with saucer cap, he headed for a black Caddy parked in an alley behind the house. To Blinky, a longtime gang member semi-retired due to a bullet in his spine, it was a normal day. He worked nights, picking up and delivering packages such as drugs for his boss, Jamal Johnson. The Caddy had built-in hiding places. The only time he saw Jamal was when picking him up and taking him home after Jamal finished selling for the day. Even then, all drugs must be out of the vehicle. Mr. Evens was surprised when two men, one black and the other white, surrounded him before he could enter the vehicle. They'd come out of the side door of a blue van parked behind the Cadillac. “Not there ... in the van,” the black man ordered, showing a police shield. “Move it.” Once inside, he was ordered to, “Undress. Down to your undies, Blinky.” “What's this about, officer? I ain't done nothing.” “Move it.” After stripping, Blinky was cuffed to an eyebolt in one corner of the vehicle while the policeman dressed in the chauffeur uniform. “I want my lawyer. You can't arrest me for no reason at all.” The two laughed. “We're not cops,” the white man answered. “Christ.” Blinky stared back and forth at them, only then becoming frightened. The police might, just might, beat him, but rival gangs would.... “Don't. Please. Don't kill me. I have six kids.” “To start with, Blinky, we want to talk for a few minutes,” the white man said while opening a large plastic box, then donning a rain coat and face mask. “This might get messy,” he told his partner. Smiling wickedly, he brought out a battery-operated electric drill, fitting the battery into place with a click. “Bzzzzzzz,” it went. “Let's talk.” Blinky decided, immediately, to talk. *** “Mother fuck,” Jamal Johnson muttered. “Where's that fucking Blinky?” Blinky was nothing else if not dependable. Every working night, he'd pull up at exactly ten-oh-seven, without fail. In case of police interference, Jamal didn't have any weapons or drugs on him. He never allowed drugs within a city block of himself, never carried and never used. He did bring along a briefcase containing his weekly receipts, though. In a doorway nearby, two armed gang members stood-by to protect Jamal until Blinky picked him up. The entire scene, from the time he left the building, usually took around two minutes. In the darkness, his Caddy turned the corner, coming to a shuddering stop beside Jamal. The drug dealer angrily jerked a back door open and jumped in, ready to read the riot act to his driver. As the car pulled away, Jamal noticed he wasn't alone on that seat. A white man sat at the other side, a pistol aimed at him. *** Ted, Joe and Jerry drove the van, Blinky still cuffed in the back, to Jamal's stash house. Blinky, afraid of the spinning drill bit as it hovered around his privates, had spilled his guts about the operation, which was damned near everything. The place was a decrepit farmhouse outside town, long abandoned. Typically, according to Blinky, there was only one guard, an old man too useless for other duties. He lived at the house and carried a cellphone in case he needed help. Most of his time, though, was spent sleeping or watching television. The main stash was hidden behind an upstairs wall, the guard not knowing the location. Jamal was smart enough to keep that knowledge from the old man. The only drugs the guard knew about were a relatively small amount in a cupboard downstairs. That bundle was cut way down and poisoned, left to placate any searchers. Both that small stash and the guard were considered expendable. *** Sam, sitting in back of the Caddy with a pistol on Jamal, heard a ringing. “Gimme,” he ordered the drug dealer. It was a cellphone. Holding it to the captive's ear, he opened the phone. “Boss,” came an excited voice. “Boss, some men are here in a van. I see Blinky with them. What should I do?” “Tell him you sent them, to let them in,” Sam ordered, jamming the pistol into Jamal's skinny chest. “And don't get brave.” “Let'um in, Mikey. No problem.” Sam closed the phone. “Where we going?” Jamal asked. Sam ignored him. Let the fucker worry, he thought. When the car pulled up behind the house, the three went in to find Sam's men already in control. They were sitting around a mostly-bare living room. Blinky and old Mikey sat on the floor in a corner. “Four and Five. Take those two with you. Blinky will show you where the drugs are hidden. Have them help you carry everything down to the kitchen,” Sam ordered. While Jeff, the ex-cop, searched the residence for anything incriminating or useful, Sam escorted the dealer to the kitchen. While waiting, Sam tried the taps in a large kitchen sink. They worked, though there wasn't any hot water. Jerry stood quietly, a revolver aimed at Jamal. “I haven't been here for years,” Jamal stated. “Too close to that shit for me.” “Don't worry, you won't have to suffer for long,” Sam replied, standing where he could see out a back window. “Not long at all.” Jamal shut up, visibly quaking. About that time Joe, Ted, and the two prisoners came back in, loaded down with kilo-sized bags of powder. Ted held a small suitcase over his head, waving for attention. “A bonus. Cash in small bills,” he said. “Dump the powder over by the sink,” Sam ordered. “That all?” “Yeah,” Blinky said. “You two sit down with your boss,” Jeff ordered them. “Four. Come out to the van with me. We have something else to bring in here.” “Jamal, get over to the sink,” Sam ordered. As the drug dealer rose, Sam was already slicing a bag of powder. He poured it into the large sink. Wide-eyed and shivering, Jamal standing beside him, Sam turned on both water taps. “Hands in the sink. Swirl it around until it goes down the drain,” he ordered. “My God. Don't make me do this, please. I haven't even paid for this shit. It's on spec. Over a million dollars worth.” Sam and his men laughed. “It's a tough life, isn't it?” While Jamal and Sam worked, Jeff and Joe came in with a case of dynamite and blasting caps. They wired the downstairs of the house. When finished, the three gangsters were taken down a rural road and let out to hitch rides back to civilization. Jamal didn't stay in town long, though, thinking it prudent to look for greener pastures. *** That job didn't exactly make us wealthy, but the drug money was welcome and let us modernize our equipment. We rented a large storage locker in another county and worked out of there. For several years, we did a job or two a year, helping out the community and adding excitement to dull lives. I admit, chances for enumeration colored our decisions. Not that we split up the money or anything. Most of it went into a working fund that Jerry kept track of. A bit went to pay for a prostate operation on Joe, and a family emergency for Jeff. On a personal level, I asked Jeff to use his police sources to check out my childhood transgression. Oddly enough, nothing ever came of it. Neither Tom's death nor the attempted robbery had ever been reported to the police. “I think I'll go back to Rotherham, Ohio and check that matter out,” I told the group at McD's. “It's been bothering me forever. Why didn't Pastorious ever report the break-in or my buddy's getting killed?” “From what you say, it might have interfered with his own scams,” Jeff replied. “Something an investigation might have revealed.” “That's what I've been thinking,” I replied, grinning. *** Rotherham, Ohio. Mid-sized city. Chief industry Acme Inc., makes diapers, cloth bandages and tampons for the military. Farming under Highlands, Inc., a conglomerate employing few people and much huge machinery. Cumahoggie River runs through the downtown area, named after an obscure Indian chief with only a slight paragraph in the school history books. Even then, town officials had to pay by the word for its insertion. I cruised by the old homestead, finding it still there though the buildings appeared worse from wear. There were still teens wandering around the church grounds. A new concrete-and-wooden sign out front said, “Have-A-Heart, Inc.”. “Reverend Johnathon Peters, in charge,” below it in smaller letters. The change surprised me until I, belatedly, realized that almost forty years had gone by since I left. Pastorious had probably retired long ago, or died. If I had any sense, I realized, I'd go back home and forget it. One premise I try to live by is that if something can't help you and might harm you, leave it the hell alone. In combat, you don't stoop down to pick up that nifty souvenir lying beside the road. You know? The one that might be booby-trapped. Stirring up these old ashes could end with me being tried for murder. I had to know. I just had to understand in order to put it behind me. I sat across the street for at least an hour, debating with myself as to what was next. During that time, a dozen cars stopped, people going in or out. I noticed some drivers were teenagers. Although most of the compound was in tatters, the kids seemed clean and well-dressed, which was more than we had been. “Fuck it,” I told myself, getting up to stop a boy from there that happened to be walking in my direction. “Hey, kid! Hold up a minute, will you?” “What you want, mister?” He stood still, picking his nose while watching me. “You in that Have-A-Heart place?” “Yeah. So what?” “What's the place like?” “What's it to you? Hey! I gotta get to work, over at Huffmeyer's green house.” “I was there as a kid. Wondered if it changed much.” “Like how? That place never changes. You still work your ass off and don't get paid shit.” “How's the food, and do they still beat you?” “I been there two years now and haven't seen anyone get their ass kicked yet. Food's pretty good now.” “Now?” “Yeah. When I got here, this old man called Pastorious done run it. The state got rid of that bastard.” “He was there when I was. Still cheap with the pay, uh?” “Not all that bad, really. I'm saving up for a computer. And we do get schooling.” “Yeah! We didn't get much. Maybe an hour a day was all.” “Too damned much now, if you ask me. Four years of high school in three years.” “What happened to Pastorious? I hated that creep.” “We all did. The state prosecuted him but he got off. They fired him, though. I really gotta go. Take it easy, ya hear?” The kid, already antsy, turned and took off. I returned to the car to think. Eventually, I started up and cruised the business district. It didn't seem to have changed much. Same buildings, same parks, though with a sprinkling of shopping centers and chain discount stores. Seeing a sign saying, “Damper and Damper Law firm”, on a whim I turned in and parked. “Can I help you, sir?” a pretty blond woman in her fifties asked. God, I am growing old, I realized. Where the hell had sweet sixteen gone? “I need information,” I told her, “and can pay for it.” “Both Dampers are busy at the moment. Would you like an appointment?” “Na. I don't expect to be here long. You know anyone else I could talk to ... today?” “It have to be a lawyer?” “Not really. It's about an old case I heard about. I'd like to know some of the particulars. To satisfy my curiosity is all.” “I've lived here all my life. I take lunch in an hour. Give me a few bucks and I might be able to help you?” “Sounds good. Where can we find a decent meal, cheap?” “.... so you see, that woman was the only one we found that actually returned from Uganda to tell about his operation there. Congressman Adams even went down to the farm to investigate. He closed the place and brought the few women they found back home,” Sheila, the receptionist, told me. “Most, though, were either dead, missing, or scattered around brothels in several countries. Ugandan officials said Pastorious had been supplying half the white hookers in their territories.” The gist of her explanation was that a girl had escaped and, somehow, made her way back to the US. Pastor Pastorious had been investigated at state and federal levels. He'd been cooking the books. His supposedly non-profit church and work programs had made him a millionaire several times over. The boys had, like me and Tom, been forced to work with the lion's share of our pay going to Pastorious, himself. Good-looking girls were shunted to Uganda to work on a farm his church and organization owned over there. Living and working conditions were purposely lousy, eventually forcing most of them into the arms of local pimps. The girls would work from sunup to sundown, with the pimps free to visit them at night. It didn't usually take long for them to run away to work as prostitutes. Why kill themselves with farm work when they were constantly promised the easy life ... lying on their backs? Naturally, the preacher made money off each pimp. They couldn't get in to the girls without his permission. Time and money constraints forced Congressman Adams back to his district, leaving any further investigation to Ugandan officials who weren't all that interested. The CIA, busy with fictional terrorists, wasn't any help at all. In the end, Pastorius was fired and excommunicated from his church. He hadn't been found to break any US laws. It was never proven that he made a profit from prostitution, for instance. He'd only made it damned tempting and easy for the girls to choose that life. His official job project records were complete. So what if he charged us kids for our meals and beds? The money had been shunted between job projects, Uganda, and church, bouncing between countries until no government auditor could hope to keep track. All they could do, in the end, was fire him and make damned sure his replacement had more oversight. The former preacher was now, according to Sheila, living somewhere in New York State. I did get the address, though not really certain of why. It wasn't worth a visit and what would I do if I did find him? I couldn't turn him in and get myself prosecuted and couldn't see myself kicking his ass for my screwed up robbery. Me, I was in a quandary. Tom's death was never mentioned. If I were to make an official inquiry, it might pop up. I'd like to see the bastard in jail, but what could I do without incriminating myself? On the way back home, I had an idea. *** “I don't know, Sam.” Jimmy shook his head. “I got a wife and four kids. I can't take off like that. My one kid's graduating college in another couple months and I should be there for him.” Joe also had prior commitments. That and a bad case of arthritis. He didn't want to spend time traipsing around in the humid heat of an African summer. Jeff and Jerry, though, didn't offer excuses and were fairly excited at the prospect. We geared up to fly to Uganda to try to track down some of the ex-farm employees, now probably hookers. Thanks to ripping off assorted drug dealers, we had enough in our treasury for a nice long vacation there. Assuming, of course, that we watched our finances. No flying first-class or living in five-star hotels. As our treasurer and accountant, it was up to Jerry to explain spending so much money for hookers. Hee-hee. Just kidding. We didn't pay taxes on our illegal income. Hell, our organization didn't even have a name or stated mission. *** “What the fucking hell,” Jeff complained, looking over one of our two rooms in Gulu, the Republic of Uganda. It was supposed to be furnished. It was, with two stained mattresses, no beds. Also a lamp with no bulb and a ten-cubic-inch refrigerator making as much noise as the truck traffic ten feet from an outside wall. There was half a bottle of stale beer or something growing algae in the fridge. My guess was that was to make up for the missing light bulb. “At least we have a stove,” Jerry said, fiddling with what looked like a large hotplate standing next to an inverted gallon bottle of liquid. “What's in the bottle, he asked, lighting a match to try it out. “Gasoline, probably,” I said, having run into the setup in Japan. “My god,” he hurriedly snuffed out the match on a hardwood floor. “Won't it explode?” “Never has yet,” I assured him. “I used one for six months.” “You said no five-star hotels, but this is fucking ridiculous,” Jeff said. “Don't worry about it,” I said, dropping to one of the filthy mattresses. “At local prices, we spend a couple hundred on furniture and we'll be set. A good hotel would charge at least that per day.” “First. First, we get a good air-conditioner,” Jerry said. “It's hotter'n hell in here.” I shook my head. “First, we buy us some security. Otherwise, the first time all of us leave for any reason the place, including our new furniture, will be stripped. By now, locals will know there are three rich Americans living here. I hear the police don't like to even enter this part of town.” “Who can fucking blame them?” from Jeff. “Tell me again, Sam. Why the hell are even WE living in this dump?” “Figure it out. You were a cop. To talk to hookers, it's best to live among them. You get a better rapport.” I stayed in while the other two went out for groceries. When they returned, Jeff was armed with an AK-47. He dropped three pistols onto a mattress, along with a cloth bag heavy with ammunition. “The grocery store offered a large cardboard box of assorted weapons. These seemed the cleanest,” he said. “Half the men we saw were armed with firearms or large knives,” Jerry told me. “We sort'a stood out without them.” It was my time to go out. I walked dreary dirty streets, a pistol conspicuous in my belt, until I came to what I thought was a police box. It was a concrete block building set back from the road with uniformed men sitting around in the shade of a few stunted trees. They looked reasonably clean. After introducing myself, all I got in return were strange looks. Finally, a young woman in uniform came over. “You American?” “Yes. American. You police?” “Security. Most of us speak English,” she told me, a broad smile on her face, “but don't care much for Americans.” “Even better. Me and my friends moved here for a few months, maybe. We need security.” She nodded. “We furnish domestic security on several levels.” “We need it 24/7. How much does that cost?” “Being Americans, you'll need an armored car and maybe three guards at all times, spotted around outside your residence. Also, a couple to accompany you on trips, plus a driver. That would be, let me see.” She consulted a list written in a foreign language, at least to me. “Are you paying in Ugandan Shillings or American?” “What's the difference?” “Officially, the Shillings are about two for an American dollar. Unofficially, American money can be sold on the black market for at least three times that. Many of us don't trust our own currency. It's changed after every coup.” She looked around, steering me to a corner of a desk. “Tell you what. You pay me, personally, in American dollars and I'll give you a good rate. Anyone asks, though, it's in Shillings?” When I gave her a slight nod, her smile became even wider. “We only rent two rooms.” I gave her the address. At that, the smile turned to shock. “You can't live there! Americans never live there.” I nodded again, a smile on my own face. “If you do investigative work, I can pay for it.” “You a reporter? A famous American television reporter doing a story?” “No. We're only here looking for prostitutes.” “Bullsh--! Excuse me. Wait until the sun goes down. They come out from everywhere. You don't need help.” “Only the white ones, the Americans.” “Mostly black ones here. The best whites work in Kampala.” “We're only looking for the old white ones.” “I ... uh ... don't ... understand? You come all the way here to look for old white hookers?” “You got it.” “There aren't any in America?” Anyway, the young security expert, named Anita Besigye, was intrigued by the assignment, agreeing -- for a stiff fee by her standards -- to help us in our investigation. Being a high-ranking member of her firm, she rated a car, saving us the expense of renting one. We were also graced with three home guards a shift. Mostly they stayed out of our way, only coming in from the almost daily rain to look out of windows and play a noisy local card game at one of our new tables. Luckily, I saved the old mattresses, since the night shift needed them for naps. Security-wise, it wasn't much, but seemed to work. At least nobody tried a home invasion of a two-room apartment containing three to six armed men. At first, we had a shitload of problems. Hookers saw us with security guys and refused to talk. We were afraid to walk the streets alone after dark to talk to them. As Anita had told me, there were damned few white ones. See, Pastorious's farm failed eight years before and the average life expectancy there was only in the early-fifties. Most of the white hookers in that area were in their thirties and forties, and after a hard life. There wasn't any sense talking to blacks or young whites. The girls we were looking for had been from sixteen to nineteen ... at least eight years before. Also, the ones still young enough to have retained their looks would be in the big cities. It was hopeless. Things became easier the second week. Word had gotten out and they came to us. Most of the time, we turned the pretty ones away. Most of the time, hee-hee. Hey! We were single men pent-up in a small area, you know? That's how we met Alice. She wasn't from Wonderland, but from the US and in her late teens. “I was kidnapped,” she sobbed. “Please take me home with you. My parents will be worried.” Ignoring Anita shaking her head in the background, we allowed Alice to move in with us. The two didn't get along and her presence brought our first bit of trouble. Two nights later, Alice's pimp decided to get her back. While we played cards with two of the security guards, there was a long spate of gunfire up the street. The guards jumped to attention, grabbing for AKs. A few minutes later, Anita, uniform torn and with a dirty face, appeared at the entrance. “You owe me another fifty, American,” she said. Apparently, she was aware of Alice's pimp and had augmented our security without telling me. They killed the pimp. “You're also responsible for three girls being out of work,” Anita said. “All of them have children.” We paid to tide the ladies over until they found a new Daddy. Alice was a huge help, though. Although not herself from the farm, she knew of girls who were and could ask around for others. American hookers in that country tried to keep in touch. She even told us of one of the girls who had made it, and big. That one was now the widow of a Ugandan diplomat, the former ambassador to Turkey. Finally, we were getting someplace. *** “We gotta stop, before long,” Jerry told Jeff and myself. “Our money's getting tight. Not to mention room in the apartment.” By that time, we had Alice and three of the former farm-girls living with us and the guards in those two small rooms. Two of them had kids with them. We could hardly walk in there. “Shit. How can we get these women to the states?” I asked. “None of them have passports anymore. They all have local police records.” “I'll see what I can do,” Jeff said. “I also want to see this ambassador's widow.” “Don't we have enough to prove our case?” Jerry asked. “They'll all swear Pastorius sold them for a cut.” “Sure. But would a court believe them? Hookers from here with long police records?” Jeff reminded us. “Now, an ambassador's highly-respected widow would be something else. Add her to the mix and we'll have a real case.” We rented a used bus, hired security for it, gave up the apartment, and headed for Kampala. Somehow, Jeff fixed that matter up with the American Embassy In Kampala. They listened to the girls, including Alice, checked Pastorious's records and agreed to take the women off our hands. Not to prosecute, only to take them back for immigration authorities in the States to deal with. *** Elizabeth Kavuma looked more like British royalty than American. She even spoke with a British accent. When I dropped Pastorious's name to her secretary she agreed to receive us. Her residence in Kampala was a virtual palace. I wondered what the King, Emperor, or fucking President's abode looked like. And with all those starving people visible around the outside of thick stone walls. “I haven't heard that name in ages, Mr. Stone,” she told me, nose lifting as though smelling a bad odor. “That son of a bitch. Excuse my English. I have to watch cursing in public but can't resist when thinking of that bastard. He stole my youth, you know? Worked us half to death then encouraged us to escape into prostitution. Some escape. I was damned lucky to meet Peter, my ex.” We sat in silence until a servant came in with a teapot and two cups. He poured for us, then swiftly backed out of the room. “Sorry, Mrs. Kavuma. I don't drink much tea.” “It's not really tea, Mr. Stone. When you mention that bastard I need something more powerful. It's fine Scotch, mixed with a little perfumed water.” She giggled. “I don't want rumors getting around that I'm hitting the bottle, hence the cups and teapot.” Taking a large gulp, she sighed and said, “What was it we called that fucker? Pastor Pastorius pees something or other.” “Pastor Peter Pastorious Pees Pasteurized Purple Piss,” I reminded her, getting a low laugh in return. “I appreciate the update, Mr. Stone. I've sent word a couple of times to find the bastard. I think my husband countermanded the request, though. I'd like to kill the fucker, get him off this fucking earth.” She emphasized the last by slamming her cup back into the saucer. “I've been lax.” She reached over to pull on an orange cord hanging from the ceiling to alongside her chair. Almost immediately, a liveried servant appeared in a doorway, a questioning look on her face. “Jannel. Please tell Mr. Mao I'd like to see him.” We spoke a little more about our time at Have-A-Heart until an extremely-tall very-black man came in. He walked with a pronounced limp. “He got that in one of those nasty little wars we have over here,” she half-whispered. “It was in our country, ma'am, when I fought alongside Idi Amin,” the man answered. “Sorry, Adam. I forget. For someone not born here or involved in them, these altercations tend to merge together.” “You wanted me, Elizabeth? Someone been bothering you that you need my services?” “Not this time, loyal Adam.” She grinned, raising her hand for him to kiss. “I only wanted to introduce you to Mr. Stone, here.” “Mr. Stone? Are you the one been stirring up the citizens in Gulu?” He smiled as we shook hands. It was a smile like a cobra would make before striking, cold and emotionless. The only way I could tell it was a smile was by a loosening of his lips. “If you mean with the prostitutes, Mr. Mao? That would be me and my friends. You might have heard of our problems, and our mission here?” “I wish you luck Mr. Stone, and please call me Adam.” “And you can call me Sam, Adam.” He went into another room for a spare cup, then poured himself a drink of scotch before continuing. “For Elizabeth's benefit and upon her request, I've been in contact with our legal department. It's slightly different in some respects from yours, but the same in others. Frankly, Sam, I don't fancy your chances of any meaningful conviction. “Foreign hookers testifying against a rich preacher? His lawyers would knock you for a loop and the prosecutors would realize it. They tried to get him once and wouldn't want to lose face twice. “I even traced down one of those pimps from his era. Unfortunately, the man died while being interrogated, as sometimes happens. You were an investigator in the second Iraq war, so you should know.” He'd hit a sore spot in my past, one I'm not proud of and generally left to associates. I looked over at Mrs. Kavuma. Her face had reddened a little, as though Adam had said too much. I recognized the signs of embarrassment. “I was sort of hoping you would agree to come to America to testify,” I said. “Out of the question, Mr. Stone,” she said, shaking her head. “My reputation would be ruined. Right now, I'm living this lifestyle on sufferance, on my and my ex-husband's reputation. If I become a political embarrassment, that can end. Drastically.” She smiled and slashed a finger across her throat. I was down in the dumps. I'd been depending on her hatred of Pastorious to gain her aid. “What I will do for you and your friends, Mr. Stone, is give you a better image of our country. I'll call the best hotel in Kampala and tell them to expect you as my honored guests. Live it up for a week at my expense. Then there will be first-class tickets back to the US.” “The lady wants to get rid of us, Adam,” I joked, giving him a smile that was definitely NOT returned. Instead, his dark eyes had hardened to dead black pools seeming to say I had overstepped my limits. *** With nothing else to do, the three of us stayed for a week at the Kampala Serena Hotel. After a month in those other rooms, it was luxury beyond compare. Our money was worthless, Mrs. Kavuma paying for everything, even the ladies we didn't interview. On the eighth morning, first-class tickets were delivered. That afternoon, we were on our way back to the US. *** After a few days back home, I thought to call my friend at the lawyer's office to inquire if anything was being done about Pastorius. Whatever happened, unless called on by authorities, we were out of the loop. “You haven't heard?” Sheila asked. “Pastorious was assassinated a couple of weeks ago.” “They catch the killer?” I asked, not really shocked. “Na. All the police have to go on is the brief sighting of a very tall black man with a bad limp. He might or might not be a suspect.” Elizabeth, Elizabeth, I mentally chided her. That's why she wanted us to stay for a week, out of the way while Adam did his work. The End. Tweet
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