Blackjack

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by Andrew Vachss




  Praise for Andrew Vachss

  “Many writers try to cover the same ground as Vachss. A handful are good. None are better.”

  —People

  “Vachss’s stories don’t feature pointless bloodshed. Instead, they burn with righteous rage and transfer a degree of that rage to the reader.”

  —The Washington Post Book World

  “Strong, gritty, gut-bucket stuff, so unsparing and vivid that it makes you wince. Vachss knows the turf and writes with a sneering bravado.”

  —Chicago Tribune

  “Gritty, frightening, compelling and ultimately satisfying.”

  —The Plain Dealer

  “Vachss’s tough guy writing style grabs you by the hair and jerks you to attention.”

  —Detroit Free Press

  “Gripping, unusual, and exciting.”

  —Nashville City Paper

  ANDREW VACHSS

  BLACKJACK

  Andrew Vachss is a lawyer who represents children and youths exclusively. He is the author of many novels, including the Burke series, numerous stand-alones, and three collections of short stories. His work has been translated into twenty languages, and has appeared in Parade, Antaeus, Esquire, Playboy, and The New York Times, among other publications. He divides his time between his native New York City and the Pacific Northwest.

  www.vachss.com

  ALSO BY ANDREW VACHSS

  THE BURKE SERIES

  Flood

  Strega

  Blue Belle

  Hard Candy

  Blossom

  Sacrifice

  Down in the Zero

  Footsteps of the Hawk

  False Allegations

  Safe House

  Choice of Evil

  Dead and Gone

  Pain Management

  Only Child

  Down Here

  Mask Market

  Terminal

  Another Life

  OTHER NOVELS

  Shella

  The Getaway Man

  Two Trains Running

  Haiku

  The Weight

  That’s How I Roll

  A Bomb Built in Hell

  SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS

  Born Bad

  Everybody Pays

  Mortal Lock

  A VINTAGE CRIME/BLACK LIZARD ORIGINAL, JULY 2012

  Copyright © 2012 by Andrew Vachss

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage Crime/Black Lizard and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  Cross™ and all prominent characters featured herein are trademarks of Andrew Vachss.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  The Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress.

  eISBN: 978-0-307-74472-2

  www.weeklylizard.com

  www.vachss.com

  Cover design by Mark Abrams

  v3.1

  for George Schmidt

  husband to the lovely Sibylle, sire of The Mighty Nicolas

  the first (and finest) translator of my books into German

  You went out on your shield

  a warrior to the end

  I expected nothing less

  And I’ll see you soon enough, old friend

  Contents

  Cover

  About the Author

  Other Books by This Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  First Page

  Epilogue

  THE LION’S full-maned magnificence filled the glass of the high-power telescopic sight. Accustomed to domination of all he sees, the beast was unaware that what he does not see was now holding him captive.

  His captor dialed in with great care—only a perfectly placed shot would preserve the trophy he had paid so much to take. The lion was no menacing figure to the human cradling the rifle—he regarded himself as the king of a very different jungle, one much more vicious and far less forgiving.

  To this man, the lion was a mere objet d’art: destined to become still another symbol of his elite standing, its value enhanced by difficulty of acquisition. Any man can buy things; only those of a special breed may grant themselves permission to take things. And what better way to illustrate the difference than to display those trophies they have taken with their own hands?

  The title “King of the Jungle” had been reduced to ultimate irony. The lion’s multi-generational belief that he was master of all he surveyed had become an illusion. In reality, he was nothing but a mere target for an impending hostile takeover.

  The sight’s crosshairs intersected on the lion’s vital organs—a head shot would destroy the trophy. The scope was mounted on a custom-built .458 Weatherby Magnum, the rifle itself bolted onto a tripod with its own click-adjustment capability. A separate range-finder–and–windage-meter combination was mounted within its housing. The rifle’s heavy, non-reflective barrel protruded through a mesh netting covering the open sunroof of a khaki-and-beige Land Rover.

  If the lion knew an enemy was approaching, he would follow the natural sequence of his breed: first warn, then attack. But he had no such knowledge. Instead, he rested comfortably in the restorative sun, waiting for the female members of his pride to make a kill. The beast remained unaware that he had been reduced to a potential trophy from the moment the hunter’s kill-shot had been dialed in.

  The hunter was dressed in couture jungle gear: knee-high black boots and matching cartridge belt topped with a leopard-banded bush hat. He stood frozen behind the scope, visualizing as would any artist picturing in his mind what he would create on the blank canvas before him. As always, this master artist’s preferred medium was blood.

  “Isn’t he perfect?” the artist gloated. “Here, take a look for yourself.”

  A woman’s head slowly emerged through the opening. A pink chiffon scarf covered her long blonde hair; another protected her throat. She was well aware that every asset she possessed was depreciating, so she guarded them all with extreme care, knowing that plastic surgery would, eventually, become self-mockery.

  She slid closer to the man, calculating every movement, knowing her role was to be another of his trophies, always on display. Delicately, she peered through the scope, taking care not to let it actually touch her extended eyelashes.

  “Oh, he is a beauty. I’ll bet he has his pick of the whole herd.”

  “Pride.”

  “What?”

  “Pride. That’s what they call a herd of lions, a pride.”

  “Oh.”

  “You have to understand the culture of this area, Celia,” the artist pontificated. “That’s the only way you can truly appreciate the thrill of the hunt.”

  “I see …” she murmured, gently placing her hand on the man’s forearm arm as she gazed adoringly into his eyes. These seemingly spontaneous moves had been practiced and polished since her early teens, and perfected well before her first marriage.

  Two natives squatted on the ground, grateful for the meager shade provided by the faux-camo Land Rover. They exchanged glances but did not speak. Like the woman, they had fully internalized their role many years ago; their every word and gesture honed by constant practice.

  “He’s a man-eater,” the great white hunter said.

  Celia checked her husband’s face for hint of a double-entendre. Detecting none, she quickly ran her tongue over her lips, taking care not to speak.

  “No question about it, he�
�s the one. Killed three of their people so far, and I’ve got the documents to prove it. You know why that lion is so nice and relaxed? This whole area is reserved for photo-safaris. No hunting allowed. The only exception is when the government certifies that a particular animal has become dangerous to man.”

  “Aren’t they all dangerous?”

  “Only if they leave the preserve. And why should they do that? They’ve got everything they need right here: plenty of food, clean water, a goodly supply of game … you name it. If you lived at the Four Seasons, why would you ever check into a Motel 6?”

  “Then how is this one different?”

  “He’s not,” the man said, his voice a life raft bobbing on a perfect ocean of confidence. “I am. The ‘president’ of this so-called country is actually the owner—everything inside the borders belongs to him.

  “You understand?” the man continued, glancing at the woman to make certain she missed none of the implications of his speech. “This country is his property. If you own something, you can sell it. Or rent it. But there’s nothing left for him to sell anymore, not from this country. Half the population’s already dead. Natural causes, like starvation and disease. There’s no infrastructure at all, no way to distribute food or even seed. It could have been a paradise, but President-for-life Qranunto never understood even the simplest business principles. Now it’s impossible for that maniac to get his hands on hard currency.”

  “He must have some—”

  “Money? Sure. He did. But now it’s all gone. Sitting in banks all around the world. Billions. But he can’t get his hands on it.”

  “If it’s in his name, why not just take it out?”

  “Because he has no one he could trust, so he set everything up so that he’d have to show up in person to claim it. And he’s wanted by every country on the planet. The UN, the World Court, even whatever useless organization they have for Africa, they all have him under an arrest-on-sight order. If he wants any money in his hands, he has to have someone come over here and put it there.”

  “Oh.”

  “ ‘Oh’ is right, baby. Cost me one-point-five million. That’s in euros, not dollars. For that, I get the run of the place. That’s why we’re using the Land Rover. What we’re doing isn’t some stupid ‘safari’—in fact, it’s not about hunting at all.”

  “It’s not?”

  “No,” he replied, in the same smug voice he used when a casino employee kowtowed to him—as a well-known “whale,” he was courted and comped by every legal gambling establishment from Vegas to Monte Carlo. “When you hunt for trophies, there’s all kinds of stupid rules about how to do it. But when you’re hunting for food, there’s never any rules.”

  “We’re not going to eat that thing, are we? I mean—”

  “Just listen!” the man abruptly halted whatever foolishness was about to come out of that ripe mouth of hers. Well within his rights, was he not? A man owns what he pays for, and those top-drawer collagen injections hadn’t come cheap.

  “Some trophies are food. Not the kind of food you live on, the kind of food that lets you live any way you choose. When I walk into a boardroom, why do you think the others stand up? I’ll tell you why: because they know what I can do. They know what I’m capable of. And it’s trophies like that incredible creature over there that prove it.”

  CELIA REARRANGED her lips into a fetching pout. This wasn’t the first such lecture she’d endured, and she had known what a trophy wife’s role was years before she’d signed her first pre-nup. Not her fault if this Master of the Universe believed her story about how the “traumatic ectopic pregnancy” she had endured in her early teens had left her permanently scarred, both internally and emotionally. When she had tearfully disclosed her secret, the hunter had feigned some degree of sympathy. But he could hardly keep the self-satisfied smirk off his face when she explained that those endless surgeries had finally resulted in a complete hysterectomy—she could never give him children.

  His lawyers had repeatedly warned that even the most ironclad of pre-nups would not protect him financially were he to father a child. With that possibility removed—“damage capped,” as his lawyers phrased it—the man acquired a new possession. A safe new possession, allowing him to happily discard his supply of condoms.

  A vasectomy had been out of the question. His seed was too valuable to destroy. It would continue the line of superior beings long after his death—arrangements had already been made, and paid in full.

  The possibility that Celia would cheat on him—thus exposing him to a sexually transmitted disease—was nonexistent. He did not overtly restrict her movements, but those who were paid to shadow her around the clock had never reported misconduct of any kind, much less a sexual encounter.

  And they were well aware of the penalty for touching what did not belong to them.

  So the hunter knew everything about Celia—what she did, who she did it with, where she did it. The mansion was fully wired for audio and video, all phone lines were set to record both incoming and outgoing, and she shopped only with credit cards, so all purchases could be monitored. And even if Celia somehow managed to build a secret supply of cash, she could not have bought a throw-away cell phone without his shadow employees noticing.

  Of course, some activities could not be completely monitored. Her monthly visit to the gynecologist to check the internal scarring never took long—and keeping the wife of this man waiting was out of the question.

  Her physician understood her state of mind, and always had a pre-filled prescription on hand. Celia’s fear of uterine cancer from what she always called “that butchering” required moderate daily doses of Somaso, a mild anti-anxiety drug.

  The contents of those prescription bottles did not match their labels. Celia’s only actual anxiety was that she might forget her daily dose of Implan, the most powerful fertility drug on the market.

  Celia’s owner was blissfully unaware of this monumental bait-and-switch. But if Celia’s plan worked out, he’d know soon enough.

  The doctor had warned her about the dangers of the new drug. Hypocritical little twit, glad enough to take the stack of hundred-dollar bills Celia handed over each time, but still wanting to protect himself from malpractice lawsuits in case the child was born defective in any way. As if! Celia sneered internally. The fool apparently didn’t know that providing care for a congenitally defective child not only was extremely expensive, but, properly handled, could turn into a lifelong and very substantial annuity.

  The high-priced lawyer Celia had consulted before the marriage had not charged her for the advice, or for providing the name of a physician willing to risk anything for money to feed his own addiction. No record of her visit to either man existed.

  The man with the rifle was no different from so many others Celia had known, but there was a core-deep meanness about him that set her perfect teeth on edge. That cruelty surfaced when he affectionately called her “Cee” in front of company. Only in front of company, making sure they all knew that “Cee” was really “C.” And what that single letter stood for. As if she needed still another reminder that she was a possession, and where her only value resided.

  Despite her best efforts at disguising it, Celia had the feral intelligence of any successful predator. Hardly a genius on any IQ scale perhaps, but crafty enough to understand that a narrow mind could also be a focused one. So she was careful not to overdo her interest every time the man she had married explained how the world really works.

  Again.

  “And the biggest trophy of all is a killer,” he droned on. “When you kill a killer, all his kills belong to you. That’s what makes the world go around, Celia. Numbers. Big numbers.”

  Celia felt the man’s words throbbing between her legs. She always had an instantly intimate response to big numbers. Not to the concept, to the reality.

  Numbers can turn into money, and money can forge a sword that can cut with either edge. After all, aren’t those of her tribe m
easured? Aren’t their numbers constantly monitored and compared? And, when acquired, do not such measurements enhance those of the man who owns them?

  Anyone can learn to shoot relatively well. Anyone can learn to recognize targets. But only the most skillful hunters come to truly know their prey.

  A PRESENCE darker than the shadow between the two natives moved, a tiny dot writhing with life. But although raised from birth to know every sight, sound, and smell of the savannah, the natives sensed no change in their immediate environment.

  Over a mile away, a lone acacia tree stood, its roots reaching deep into the parched soil. It might be a trick of the blazing sun, but an indistinct blur seemed to move within the acacia’s trunk, as though the tree itself were widening. A pair of tiny crossbows poked carefully out of the blur, as if mocking the hunter’s camouflaged rifle barrel.

  If the natives had been able to tune in to the blob of shadow between them, they would have heard the words “big numbers,” repeated in an ancient version of their own language. Translated, those words would form a single command:

  “Hit.”

  Instantly, the eye of the hunter and the sternum of his purchased yet predatory wife were simultaneously and soundlessly penetrated by trident-shaped arrows.

  The kills were soundless and without impact. Man and wife never changed position, as if frozen in place by death.

  The natives understood patience to be a vital part of their jobs. But after more than three hours of uncharacteristic silence from the sniper’s perch above them, they dared to sneak a look at where the hunter had been perched.

  What they saw was enough for them to exchange a single glance, drop lightly to the ground, untie their sacks of provisions, strap on their rifles, and start walking.

  It would take weeks for them to reach their home, and surviving such a trek was anything but guaranteed. But driving the Land Rover back themselves would create too great a mystery, and they knew exactly how such mysteries are always solved.

 

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