The Redeemers
Page 1
ALSO BY ACE ATKINS
Crossroad Blues
Leavin’ Trunk Blues
Dark End of the Street
Dirty South
White Shadow
Wicked City
Devil’s Garden
Infamous
The Ranger
Robert B. Parker’s Lullaby
The Lost Ones
Robert B. Parker’s Wonderland
Robert B. Parker’s Cheap Shot
The Broken Places
The Forsaken
Robert B. Parker’s Kickback
G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS
Publishers Since 1838
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Copyright © 2015 by Ace Atkins
The author gratefully acknowledges Chris Knight for use of a verse from “In the Mean Time” from the album Little Victories.
“In The Mean Time”
Written by Chris Knight
Enough Rope Music (ASCAP)
Find out more about Chris at www.chrisknight.net.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Atkins, Ace.
The redeemers / Ace Atkins.
p. cm.—(A Quinn Colson novel ; 5)
ISBN 978-0-698-19062-7
1. United States. Army—Commando troops—Fiction. 2. Organized crime—Mississippi—Fiction. 3. Murder—Investigation—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3551.T49R43 2015 2015015992
813'.54—dc23
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Version_1
For Tom Freeland
Contents
Also by Ace Atkins
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Map
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Render unto Caesar no more than you got to
Keep the Lord in your heart, and keep your powder dry.
But do you good in mean time
While you’re waiting on a good time, draw the line.
—CHRIS KNIGHT “IN THE MEAN TIME”
If we take prisoners, we keep ’em separate till we have had time to examine them, so they can’t cook up a story between ’em.
—ROGERS’ RANGERS STANDING ORDER NO. 5
1.
Mickey Walls didn’t bring up the subject until after he’d paid the Huddle House check and was walking out to his red Hummer parked on top of a ridge overlooking Highway 45. His buddy Kyle followed, working a toothpick in the side of his mouth, strolling like a man who didn’t have nowhere to be, leaning against his truck, advertising HAZLEWOOD CONTRACTING. It was winter and colder than a witch’s tit, and Mickey slipped his hands into his thick Carhartt jacket. He stood near the truck’s tailgate and said, “I heard you had some problems with Larry Cobb.”
“Shit,” Kyle said, firing up a Marlboro. “To hell with that bastard.”
“You were doing some dozer work for him and he jacked your ass?”
“He says I did a half-ass job,” Kyle said. “That was a goddamn lie. When I come to talk to him, he sent out Debbi to talk. He’s one sorry piece of shit.”
“Why don’t you sue him?”
“Cost more for a lawyer than I’d get.”
“You could whip his ass.”
“Larry’s an old man,” Kyle said. “He ain’t worth it. You can’t just go beating up some ole son of a bitch. That’s like picking on a cripple. What makes me madder than anything is that I thought I was his friend. Me and him used to hunt together. He even took me out to his place in Colorado and introduced me to his high-dollar friends. We’d shoot skeet and drink Coors Light in the Jacuzzi.”
“I thought he was my friend, too,” Mickey said.
“Till you and Tonya split up.”
“I never done a damn thing to that man,” he said. “And he knows his daughter is bat-shit crazy. She takes Xanax like they’re Tic Tacs. Then he sued me for nearly a hundred grand, about bankrupted me just because our divorce didn’t sit well with him and Debbi.”
“Like I said,” Kyle said. “That man’s a genuine piece of shit.”
The Huddle House hadn’t been there long, opening up that summer with all the other places built after the tornado. People in Tibbehah County saying that twister may have been the best thing that happened since the Choctaws sold out. Even though seventeen people died, they now had a Subway, a KFC, and even a Walmart. Mickey leaned over the tailgate of the big truck, watching the traffic speeding by the exit on Highway 45. Kyle flicked away his spent Marlboro, firing up another. His skin was burnt-red, and he wore his graying hair cut long and stylish like some country music singer, along with a thin, wispy beard that was also turning gray. Kyle didn’t know he was old. He still wore a leather puka shell necklace he’d bought down in Panama City Beach.
“Someone needs to put that man in his place,” Mickey said.
Kyle turned from the traffic to look at his old buddy. His face didn’t show nothing, light blue eyes looking right through him. “What are you thinking, man?”
“Shit, I don’t know.”
“Hell you don’t,” Kyle said. “You didn’t call me for the fellowship and biscuits and gravy.”
“I just think it’s wrong, is all,” Mickey said. “The way Larry Cobb has spent his whole life making money by wiping his ass with people in this town.”
“You can either pray on it or shoot his ass.”
Mickey shook his head. “What if there was another way?”
Kyle squinted through the smoke as he studied Mickey’s face. Mickey knew he was interested, that he had him, even just a little. He’d been about half and half whether he was going to even mention the thing. But he knew he needed help, and Kyle Hazlewood was one of the few people he trusted in Tibbehah County, this busted-ass place ninety miles from Memphis and too damn close to Tupelo. He needed
a friend right now, a man he could rely on to get the job done.
“He ever tell you about his special room?” Mickey said.
“You talking about that room off his closet?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Where he keeps his found money.”
“Is that what he called it?”
“I seen it,” Kyle said, rubbing his nose. “Larry’d get drunk on Wild Turkey and he’d wander back there just to show you what he got. Man can’t help himself. He got stacks and stacks of money. He told me it was because his daddy told him to never trust no banks.”
“His daddy also told him don’t pay no taxes, neither,” Mickey said. “You know how much shit that man has done off the books with that logging operation?”
“How much?”
“Last time I seen it, it was more than a million.”
“Holy shit,” Kyle said. His cell phone ringing. He took it off his hip, saw the number, and turned it off. “Just what you thinking, man?”
Mickey turned back to the Huddle House, watching the waitress behind the glass refilling cups and talking with a couple old men in the back booth. A raggedy minivan pulled into the parking lot and a fat woman with a fat baby waddled on in to get their morning feed. Kyle hadn’t moved. He was shivering a little, wearing that imitation-leather red-and-black motorcycle jacket he’d had for years. Mickey remembered when Kyle was the king of Tibbehah High, rolling around the town Square in his bad-ass El Camino. That same El Camino now sitting outside his work shed on blocks.
“I got a court-ordered judgment against me for a hundred grand,” Mickey said. “I’m just saying it’d be funny to pay back Larry with his own goddamn money.”
“You talking about robbing him?”
“No, sir,” he said. “I’m talking about taking what’s ours. I got a plan, but need you to be a part of it.”
“I don’t know, man,” Kyle said. “That’s a high-tech safe. He paid a couple thousand for it at the Costco in Memphis. It ain’t opening with no crowbar.”
Mickey pushed himself away from the big truck. “You don’t need a crowbar if you got the combination.”
“How the hell you know that?”
“I used to be his favorite son-in-law.”
“You were his only son-in-law.”
“I’m just talking,” Mickey said. “I just wanted to see if you’re interested first. Me and you been pals a long time. And when I heard Larry had cornholed you, too . . . Well, I just started thinking on the situation and how to make things right.”
“What if the combo don’t work?”
“I got a backup plan,” Mickey said. “But one step at a time. I just need to know, are you in?”
The wind kicked up Kyle’s long graying hair, the pinpoint of the Marlboro glowing in the morning cold. Trucks and cars sped up and down Highway 45, passing Tibbehah like it wasn’t no more than a speck on a map. Mickey had wanted to buy him a new jacket for Christmas, but then he’d forgot. If this here deal worked out, Kyle could buy something made of real leather this time. Maybe he could help Kyle pull himself out of the shit. That was the least he could do.
“How ’bout I let you know?” Kyle said.
“Think on it.”
“I will.”
“We deserve better,” Mickey said.
“I done some things I ain’t proud of,” Kyle said. “Drugs, drinking, and shit. But nothing like this. I ain’t no criminal.”
“Shit, you know stealing from a thief ain’t stealing at all.”
“What is it, then?”
Mickey rubbed his face and spit on the eroding ridge. “Justice.”
• • •
Quinn Colson sat behind the wheel of his official sheriff’s truck, a big F-250 diesel nicknamed the Big Green Machine, looking out at a tired old apartment complex in South Memphis. There were signs advertising move-in specials and monthly rentals, with an entire wing of the apartments gutted, no doors or windows, a big dumpster below toppling with trash. The complex was on Winchester, a half mile from the FedEx facility, and every few minutes a big jet would take off, rattling the truck, the apartments, and anything under its path. Lillie Virgil had come up with him, as she was the one who’d helped him track down what he needed, since she had once worked as a cop in Memphis. They talked a little while they waited. Quinn saying that all the planes reminded him of his last deployment, a tent city outside an airfield in Afghanistan.
“You were telling me something?” she said. “About some kids you met there?”
“I talk too much.”
“You make goddamn Gary Cooper seem like a Chatty Cathy,” she said. “Talk to me, Quinn. What else do we have to do but wait and watch?”
“You mind if I fire up a cigar?”
“Yes, sir, I do,” Lillie said. “They smell like shit. Besides, you want those folks to see the smoke coming from the cracked windows?”
“Hell,” Quinn said. “You really think they’d notice?”
Quinn glanced down at the ashtray and a half-smoked La Gloria Cubana Black. Seemed like a damn shame to leave it, but he’d rather leave it than listen to Lillie complain. Lillie was what you’d call a strong personality, nearly as tall as him, twice as mean, and perhaps the best shot in north Mississippi. Probably all of Mississippi. Before she’d became a cop, she’d been a star shooter for the Ole Miss Rifle Team. Her unruly brown hair was twisted up into a bun, and any hint of her femininity covered up with a bulky hunting jacket and ball cap.
They’d left their uniforms and badges back in Tibbehah County. He didn’t want anyone to confuse why he was working in another state as a Mississippi sheriff.
“My last two deployments were at Camp Eggers,” Quinn said. “I just got an email from a kid in my platoon. He was talking about things that happened there and those kids. I shouldn’t have brought it up.”
“God damn it, Quinn,” Lillie said. “Just tell me the fucking story.”
“The Afghan kids sold trinkets outside the gates. You know, necklaces, teapots, sometimes old weapons they’d found. They didn’t go to school. They made money for their families, shuffling between two forward operating bases at Eggers and Camp ISAF.”
“How old were they?” Lillie asked.
“There were two brothers,” Quinn said. “Abraham and Abdullah. I think they were ten and twelve. And their friends Noah, who was about their age, and Miriam. Miriam was a cute little girl. Precocious. She couldn’t have been more than seven or eight. Not much older than Jason.”
“Was this part of winning hearts and minds?”
“U.S. Army Rangers don’t do a lot of that,” Quinn said. “Mainly, we just shoot bad guys and blow shit up. When we’d return from a mission, I’d buy stuff from those kids and send it home. I got to know them. That’s all.”
Quinn turned on the big truck’s motor to get the heat going again. He caught a glance of his face in the rearview mirror, all hard planes and angles from his distant Choctaw roots, and his hair buzzed on the sides with a half inch on top. He was a wiry and lean man, still hard from ten years in the service. The expression on his face wasn’t pleasant. Next to him, Lillie rested her shoulder against the passenger door and its fogged-up window. In profile, Lillie had a very pretty face, although to tell her she was pretty might be construed as an insult. Wearing makeup, letting down her hair, or wearing girly clothes wasn’t a big part of her life. She never gave a damn about what people whispered about her.
“You send that shit home to your sister?” Lillie asked.
“Mainly, to my mom,” Quinn said. “And Anna Lee, when I got drunk. The deployment was the longest I’d been on. I got to know those kids pretty well. I’d give them a few bucks on Thursdays before Jumu’ah. That’s the Muslims’ holy day of prayer.”
“No shit, Quinn,” Lillie said. “I read.”
In the darkness, Quin
n sat behind the wheel, watching that door on the second-floor unit. Watching people come and go, making mental notes of how many, how long, and what each one of them looked like in great detail. He knew Lillie was doing the same, waiting for the right moment. If it hadn’t been for Lillie’s contacts in Memphis, they’d have never found this place. Never found her. A true shithole in a neighborhood called Holiday City.
“What happened to the kids?” Lillie said. “There’s got to be a damn reason you brought it up. You don’t bring up shit unless it’s got a goddamn point.”
“When I went back to the base a second time,” Quinn said, “the kids were still there. They remembered me. I brought them food from the mess hall, even though it was against regulations. My mother knew about them from letters. She took up a donation at the church and sent some clothes. On Christmas Eve, they presented me with an old threadbare scarf. They said it was from their families for my mother’s Christmas present.”
“I didn’t think Muslims gave a flying fuck about Christmas.”
“I didn’t, either,” Quinn said. “Maybe that’s why it meant so much to me.”
“And now?”
“Maybe more.”
“What happened to them?” Lillie said.
Quinn and Lillie watched two Hispanic males walk up an outside stairwell to the second floor. They knocked on the apartment door and were let inside. Quinn was silent for a long time. He felt his breath tighten, muscles tense across his upper back and arms. Lillie had leaned forward, her eyes flicking across the scene in front of her. He’d asked her not to bring her service weapon but knew she had it on her anyway. Lillie didn’t go to Walmart without her gun.
“I want to go with you.”
“That could get you in a shitload of trouble,” Quinn said. “A Mississippi deputy has no business in Memphis.”
“And what about the sheriff?”
“Considering I got all of two days left in my position?” Quinn said. “To hell with it.”
“So,” Lillie said. “The kids. Abraham, Abdullah. Noah and Miriam. What happened to them?”
“Last time I saw them was on my final deployment,” Quinn said. “That wasn’t long before I came back to Tibbehah and that mess with my uncle. They were all pretty sad I was going home. But I promised I’d go back. I worried about Abraham. He was particularly upset. He hugged me around my waist, not wanting to let me go. I promised I’d bring him back something really special.”