Book Read Free

Border City Blues 3-Book Bundle

Page 23

by Michael Januska


  Thom and Lapointe were passing a flask back and forth. They were the ones who had stumbled upon this lead in a roadhouse across the way in River Rouge. It was the kind of place where business meets pleasure, and vice versa. A conversation was had over glasses of beer, and by the time their pony keg was empty the two parties were shaking hands. One of the details they agreed on was that sending the carrier vehicle the entire stretch, well over a mile, was far too risky, so Fighting Island would be used as a relay point. After the shipment safely reached the island, it would be then up to the Yanks to manage getting it to their shore. If the operation came off smoothly, this would be the drill whenever Shorty’s gang had supply and the river was an ice road.

  But right now it looked like they were already into some trouble. The car had shrunk in the distance so it took the boys a moment to notice their gas buggy had stopped moving. It found a combination of ruts and jagged ice where the surface had buckled in a recent thaw. The rickety T was spinning its wheels and going nowhere fast. It also looked as if it might even be shifting off course.

  “Son of a bitch,” said Lapointe.

  Mud called back Shorty’s attention and, anticipating a certain response, held up both hands, looked him straight in the eye and said, “Give her a minute.”

  But before anyone could utter another word or make a move, Three Fingers was sprinting across the ice on those long legs. The only sound that could be heard in the stillness was the faint noise of the engine struggling and Three Fingers’ feet slapping down hard — he always preferred to run barefoot.

  He slowed up as he neared the car. When he reached it he dropped onto his tailbone and, propping himself up on his elbows, set his feet against the bumper and started rocking the vehicle. He had to turn his face away from the exhaust shooting out the tailpipe and the granular slush being thrown by the spinning tires.

  Just when it felt the T might free itself, there was a crack and a slosh. Its front wheels fell through the ice and the car was now resting on its front axle. Several crates of whisky shifted forward inside the gutted sedan and slammed into the footwells. One of the crates knocked the cinder block off the clutch, causing the engine to gear up. The T tilted some more and the rear wheels were lifted off the ice surface. She had nowhere to go but down.

  Thom and Lapointe looked again for the signal light on the island, hoping the Rouge gang might step in and meet them halfway. They saw no light, no flash, not a flicker. There was another crack and the front axle broke through the ice, leaving the car teetering on its transmission. Three Fingers could hear the boys calling out.

  “Ease up!”

  “Don’t move!”

  “Roll away!”

  This could be death, he thought. A current of cold and careless water here to take me away, out of the sun and away from my family, from everything. I know I shouldn’t be afraid.

  But he was.

  There was a groaning, like from the joints of a sinking ship. Three Fingers was stretched across a mosaic of fracturing ice. His feet were growing numb as the sheets and shards supporting him sunk below water level. More cases of whisky slid across the floor and slammed into the footwells. And then in one silent, breathless gulp, the Huron went down with the automobile.

  “Chain!” yelled Thom.

  The boys threw off their hats and coats and ran out onto the ice. Thom was the anchor, then Lapointe, Mud, Gorski, and Shorty.

  At first there was no sign of Three Fingers, just the sound of the air gurgling out of the sinking T, which had abruptly halted, nose down, its rear wheels sticking up out of the water. Seconds passed, and then a hand gripping a hunting knife reached up through the floating chunks of ice and stabbed the lip of the hole. Three Fingers pulled himself up. He was yelling at Shorty and pointing at something down below.

  “No,” said Shorty, “forget the booze.”

  But it wasn’t the crates of whisky that Three Fingers was on about. There was a sandbar, and tangled in its weeds was something else entirely.

  Shorty was within a few feet now, crawling on his belly with Gorski gripping his ankles when the Huron went down again, this time intentionally. Shorty was preparing to reach for him when a figure surfaced, a ghastly, half-decayed body nearly frozen stiff. Three Fingers then sprang up, gasping for air and, bracing himself against the sunken T with one hand, reached for the knife still standing in the ice with the other. Shorty grabbed his arm while the Huron held on to the body. The boys slowly dragged them ashore.

  There were a few oh my God’s.

  “What the hell?” said Lapointe.

  “You nearly got yourself killed,” said Shorty.

  “Not to mention the rest of us,” said Mud.

  “L-ook,” said Three Fingers, “l-ook at his t-teeth.”

  Most of the flesh was gone from the corpse’s face, but those long, jagged dentals were undeniable.

  “Jesus,” said Shorty, “it’s Jigsaw.”

  Mud kneeled down to take a closer look, turned to Three Fingers and said, “How did you know?”

  “He g-grabbed my l-leg.”

  The others exchanged glances.

  “He didn’t,” said Gorski.

  “But why did you drag him up?” said Shorty.

  “Did you think you could save him?” said Mud.

  “Forget him; he’s miles past dead,” said Thom. “Let’s fix on saving the Indian.” He and Lapointe threw one of the Huron’s arms over each of their shoulders, and that was a good thing because Three Fingers was about to fold like a card table. They helped him into the fishing cabin that stood near the mouth of the creek. Once inside, they stripped him of his wet clothes, wrapped him in his coat and a couple dirty blankets, and sat him in front of the little potbelly stove. Thom got it going with some matches and loose bits of the interior. The cabin was about the size of a cell at county jail, but nowhere near as sturdy. Holes in the walls were stuffed with rags and newspaper. The stench was the only thing holding the place up. It smelled of stale cigar smoke and sour mash.

  Outside, standing over Jigsaw’s frigid remains, the other boys got to putting their hats and coats back on, wrapping themselves up a little tighter, taking extra care to tuck their gloves deep into their coat sleeves and fasten their buttons up to their necks.

  “Why the hell did he have to drag him up?” muttered Shorty, and then he turned away, squinting in the direction of the hole in the ice. It looked like the T hadn’t sunk any deeper. Yeah, he thought, must be a sandbar. And now the whisky was there for the taking — by anyone crazy enough. Goddamn.

  Lapointe came running out of the cabin, stabbing the air behind him with his thumb. “Hey, I think the Indian’s snapped or something. He’s muttering all kinds of stuff that don’t make any sense.”

  Gorski and Mud immediately went over. Shorty followed.

  Three Fingers had his feet resting on top of the stove. He was thawing out. “It w-was like he was w-waiting for me … to c-come for him … t-tangled in the w-weeds.” He was sitting in the only chair in the place, looking up at them, still shaking and shivering but somehow managing a smile. “Always the l-last place you l-look, right?”

  Shorty could feel Gorski’s eyes turn on him but he refused the invitation.

  “What’s he on about?” said Lapointe.

  Shorty ignored Lapointe. “Let’s not start with that,” he said to the Huron.

  “I know what he’s talking about,” said Gorski.

  “What?” said Thom.

  Shorty sighed and Mud shouldered his way over to the window to stare at a pane of glass that was greasy on the inside and frosted on the other. It wasn’t much of a view. He knew what was coming and wasn’t interested in hearing any of it. Gorski took this as his cue and proceeded to tell the tale for the benefit of the new guys.

  There was a long-standing rumour that the late crime boss Richard Davies had brought a fortune in cash and bonds down with him from Montreal, and kept it locked away somewhere in the Border Cities. It was his work
ing capital, the stuff he was going to use to bribe, buy, and build his little empire. Thom and Lapointe had heard about Davies and how he was taken down last summer — gunned down, that is, along with Jigsaw — but they hadn’t heard anything about any lost fortune. Gorski made it sound like something out of a Rider Haggard novel.

  Three Fingers sat up. He was starting to feel his legs again. “He knows something,” he said, pointing at the door. “He knows something.”

  “Who?” scoffed Shorty. “Jigsaw?”

  “Think about it,” said Gorski.

  Mud turned away from the window. “I don’t think you’re gonna get him to talk.”

  “Maybe we should frisk him.”

  “You volunteering?” said Shorty.

  “No,” said Gorski, “I —”

  “I’ll do it,” said Thom, the son of a pig farmer. He went back outside and the others, except for Three Fingers, followed.

  There was a dusting of snow on the body now, like confectioner’s sugar on death’s dessert. He carefully picked up Jigsaw’s remains, cradled them in his arms, and set him down on the fish-cleaning table that stood between the cabin and the creek.

  “You sure he’s dead?” said Mud.

  Jigsaw got cut, blown apart, and sewn back together again so many times in France, he looked like a living rag doll. He had seemed indestructible.

  “Yeah, he’s dead,” said Shorty. “It’s been almost half an hour and he hasn’t said a word. Remember how he liked to talk?” What Shorty was remembering was how Jigsaw used to take pleasure in mocking and berating him.

  Thom found a knife in one of the drawers and started cutting into Jigsaw’s stiff, tattered clothes, first his mackintosh and then his suit jacket. Thom handed the sections with pockets in them over to the boys to thaw and inspect.

  “What are we looking for?” asked Lapointe.

  “We’ll know when we find it,” said Gorski.

  The process would have brought tears to the eyes of Jigsaw’s tailor.

  “Nothing,” said Thom. “No surprise, I mean look at the rips and tears in his clothes. The fish, the reeds, the rock have been picking and scraping away at him for … how many months?”

  “Keep working,” said Gorski.

  Thom looked at Shorty, who silently nodded his okay, and then Thom forced the blade into the pockets of Jigsaw’s trousers. There were areas where the fabric was fixed to his body. He poked any gaps he could find and sliced them open wider, like he was filleting a pickerel. More of the same nothing.

  The cabin door creaked open again, slapping the clapboard.

  “Look at this.” Lapointe was running toward them, holding one of the lapels from Jigsaw’s overcoat. He and Three Fingers had been holding some of the larger pieces of the coat over the wood stove. “Feel it … there’s something in there.” He handed it to Shorty and Shorty massaged the fabric between his fingers.

  “Gimme that knife.”

  Thom gave it to him and Shorty started sawing the folds open.

  “What is it?” said Lapointe.

  “Well, well, well.” It was a key, an old fashioned-looking one, slightly longer than Shorty’s palm, with a couple big teeth on one end and a few loop-dee-loops filled with coloured glass on the other. He rubbed some of the grit off it. It looked like a dull brass.

  “See,” said Gorski, “this proves it.”

  “It proves nothing,” said Mud.

  “But it must be important,” said Shorty, “otherwise why go to the trouble of hiding it like that?” The reality of the thing suddenly opened up possibilities. The sun was rising over the trees now. Shorty turned and studied the object closely in the morning light. “It’s an answer,” he said. “What we’re looking for now is the question.”

  Mud couldn’t believe how easily Shorty could sometimes get sold.

  “What’s that supposed to mean?” said Lapointe.

  “It seems obvious to me; all we need to do now is find the lock that fits the key.”

  “Obvious, maybe,” said Gorski, “but not easy.”

  “So we’re going on a treasure hunt?” said Mud. “Don’t forget, we just lost half a grand worth of rye. I don’t imagine those boys in Rouge are too happy with us right now. We made them pay us half up front, remember? They’ll be looking for some sort of compensation, some gesture to put us back in good faith.”

  “And if we find this fortune, or whatever it is, we won’t need them,” said Shorty.

  “Waste of time,” said Mud. “We should be pulling jobs.”

  It was like watching your parents fighting. No one wanted to risk losing Mud. He had a level head, and when he set his mind to something, it got done. But he was always testing Shorty’s leadership. Shorty knew that. He knew he would always have to prove himself. He felt they might have a real chance here. If they found the money, it would not only prove something about his instincts and leadership, it would also set everyone up real nice, maybe even for good. And they’d remember him well for that.

  “Tell you what,” said Shorty, looking for a compromise, “why don’t we give ourselves until the end of the week? Five days. If we don’t find anything, we drop it and move on, get back to regular business, reach out to the group in Rouge again.”

  “We should be reaching out to them right now,” said Mud, “before they decide to reach out to us, if you know what I mean.” Three Fingers had just joined them. He smelled of smoke and was still naked except for his boots and blanket. Mud considered the rest of the crew: Lapointe in his dungarees and heavy plaid coat, looking every bit the corn and radish farmer; Irish Thom in his threadbare hunting gear; Gorski and Shorty, the city boys in their suits and long overcoats tailored to conceal a variety of weapons and contraband substances. Mud himself was from the city too, but with one foot still in the factory. His hand, arm, and leg were throbbing. He knew it was his own fault for trying to make a repair on the assembly line while it was still moving. Hit by a car. Stupid.

  “All right,” said Mud, “until midnight Friday.”

  The others smiled while Shorty kept a straight face. He knew they hadn’t really won Mud over or convinced him of anything. This was all against his better judgment. It was a compromise that, unless Shorty played it well, might not even last the week.

  “Agreed, Friday at midnight.”

  “And what about the Guard?” said Gorski.

  Ah, shit, thought Shorty.

  The regulars stayed quiet while the boys from the county started again with the questions. It was going to be like discussing religion or politics, or a little bit of both.

  Thom seemed agitated. “Are we talking about the provincial cops? Because if we are —”

  “Did you have to go there?” said Shorty. He glanced over at Mud, who he could tell was trying to hold his tongue. “There was no Guard, remember?”

  “The Guard is real,” said Gorski. “Just ask the folks who ran into them.”

  “Bogeymen,” said Mud.

  “Drop it about the Guard,” said Shorty, trying to regain control of the group. “All the same, we’ll be keeping our mouths shut about our activities, right?”

  “Okay,” said Thom, “but who the hell is the Guard?”

  Shorty looked over his shoulder. The sun was becoming lost in the cloud cover that was rolling in. He was imagining that farmhouse again, with the big table in the kitchen and all the warm food smells. He did this while he listened to Gorski and felt Mud’s annoyance with the man he referred to as the Polack.

  “After the boss — Davies — got killed,” said Gorski, “there were these guys who come down from Montreal looking for his money.”

  Mud was absent-mindedly kicking a small rut in the packed snow. Some of it loosened and hit Gorski. He ignored it.

  “I’m telling you it’s true,” said Gorski. “People I know seen them.”

  “Your people are either drunks or idiots or both,” said Mud.

  Gorski decided to take the hit and continued. “They’d corner guys in
stairwells, in alleyways; they’d appear in guy’s bedrooms at night and ask them questions about Davies, Jigsaw, and Jack McCloskey. They were deadly.”

  “Maybe we should toss the key,” said Lapointe. “We don’t need trouble like that.” Suddenly, for Lapointe at least, the key had the potential to unlock the bad as well as the good.

  “What do you think it could be for?” asked Thom. Shorty was holding it out again in the palm of his hand, for all to see. “It doesn’t look like it’s for a storage box.”

  “Looks like a trunk key,” said Gorski.

  “Na,” said Lapointe, “it’s a door key. You can tell.”

  “Where would we even begin to look?” wondered Thom.

  “Riverside.”

  “The Prince Edward.”

  “The pool hall.”

  “We might need help,” said Thom.

  “You feel like splitting it a few more ways?” said Shorty, incredulous.

  “People are bound to find out,” said Thom.

  “Are you saying you got a big mouth?” said Mud.

  “We’re all of us going to keep our mouths shut,” Shorty repeated. “Got it? If we don’t, this could bring a whole heap of trouble on us. All kinds of trouble.”

  “Or a fortune,” muttered Gorski.

  As far as Mud was concerned, he had already spoken his piece. At the same time, he told himself he would have to do a little bit better than just go along for the ride. This was going to be an all-or-nothing affair. While the other boys speculated, he took Shorty aside.

  “Are you going to tell him?”

  They were standing close.

  “Yeah,” said Shorty, looking around again for that farmhouse. “I’ll tell him. I’m supposed to meet with him anyway.”

  “What do you think he’s going to say?”

  “I don’t know. Maybe he’ll say we got lucky.”

 

‹ Prev