Death Echo
up.â
âDid. Ran out of money. Did some deals.â Tommy shrugged his thin shoulders. âBut now Iâm goinâ for the gold. Just like a fuckinâ athlete.â
Laughter that wasnât quite sane filled the small trailer.
Mac snagged the bottle and took what looked like a drink. It wasnât. He planned on driving home. Soon. Obviously Tommy was riding the ragged edge of the shakes.
Coming off crank was a bitch.
Tommy grabbed the bottle again and flopped into an overstuffed chair that was held together by duct tape. A lamp with a bare bulb sat on the small table nearby. It cast his grinning features in stark angles, dark hollows, too many lines and not enough teeth for a man who hadnât seen the other side of forty yet.
âRemember when we ran that load of cigarettes to Vancouver?â Tommy asked, swiping hair out of his face with a dirty hand.
âLong time ago. We were young and stupid.â
âSweet money.â Tommy drank and swallowed, drank and swallowed, his Adamâs apple working like a piston. âThatâs smart.â
âKarl died.â
âLucky Karl. He didnât have to live rat-turd poor on the rez.â Neither do you. But Mac kept that truth to himself. A man in Tommyâs shape could teeter from normal to enraged in a heartbeat.
âBut Iâm getting out,â Tommy said after another long drink. âGonna take my money from my next job and head for white manâs land. Live like a fuckinâ sheik.â
âSounds good.â As always.
Too bad it never came through.
The half bottle of booze that Tommy had bolted hit him suddenly. He shook his head and slumped back into the chair.
âJust the beginning,â Tommy mumbled. âAnd here I thought old Granny was just a mamaâs boy. Turns out heâs a big swinging dick. Got rich friends.â Tommy frowned. âMean bastard.â A shiver shook his wiry frame. âGoddam, heâs one mean son of a bitch.â
Mac frowned. Tommy wasnât making any sense. He looked close to panic, eyes wide, sweating although the room was cold.
âYou okay?â Mac asked.
Tommy took another long gulp. âNothinâ wrong that a bottle of good bourbon wonât cure.â
Mac kept his mouth shut and wished heâd gone straight home from the marina.
Like the old sayingâno good deed goes unpunished.
Before Tommy could swig again, Mac retrieved the bottle. âCareful, buddy,â Mac said. âThatâs a load of alcohol hitting your system all at once.â
âAinât no pussy.â
âSomebody say you were?â Mac asked.
âA pussy wouldnât take Blackbird out. Bad shit going down. Really bad. Gonna be rich. Gimme the bottle.â
Mac pretended to drink. Anything to keep the bourbon out of Tommyâs reach. He always had loved booze, but at the rate he was drinking, he was going to kill himself tonight.
âSo when does your job begin?â Mac asked, trying to keep Tommy out of the bottle.
âWhat job?â
âThe one thatâs going to make you rich.â
âNeed a drink.â
âWait your turn.â Mac pretended to drink. The good news was that Tommy was going down fast, floating facedown in a bourbon sea.
âThey been smuggling forever. Even before they got here.â
âWho?â Mac asked.
âGrannyâs kind.â
Lovich, Mac realized, understanding.
Grant Robert Lovich, known as Bobby to his cousins and Granny to the kids who hated him in school. Like his father and grandfather and great-grandfather. Outsiders to the whites and Indians alike. Determined outsiders.
âThought we agreed a long time ago that what our parents believed was bullshit,â Mac said.
âThen how come they own Blue Water and I donât have nothing? Only crooks make out in Rosario.â
The sullen cast to Tommyâs face was more warning than Mac needed.
Time to go. âGimme the bottle,â Tommy snarled. âFuckinâ foreigners. We was here first, now we got dirt.â
And casinos.
And smuggling.
The kind of hopeless existence that destroys souls.
Mac went to the sink and poured out all but a taste of the bourbon. He gave the bottle to Tommy and walked out into the night.
Mac hoped whoever was following him caught up again. He felt like hitting something.
12
DAY TWO
ROSARIO
11:30 A.M .
E mma hated parking in the open for a
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