Authors: John Donohue
“I have a message from your brother,” Art told me. The
dojo
was closed that morning, but he had banged on the metal door
like it was a drum. The sound let you know the person on the
other side wasn’t going away.
I cracked open the door, half expecting Martín to put a slug
in my head. Art stood there instead, big and sandy-haired and
quietly serious. Usually you could count on him to lighten the
mood. He was the calm counterpart to Micky. If my brother
gave you the eerie feeling of a human rocket poised for a ran-
dom launch, Art was the guy placidly monitoring the buttons
on the control panel. You always got the feeling that he was
going to get things under control. But, as I looked at him in the
doorway, I saw trouble.
“What gives?” I asked, moving aside to let him in. I took a
quick, furtive glance up and down the street before closing the
door. “Where’s Micky?”
Art let out a sigh. “Your brother, my partner of lo these
many years, is feverishly attempting to douse the many fires he
has recently set.”
I grunted. The acrimony between Micky and Art and their
past NYPD supervisors was legendary. Their move to lives as
independent consultants had been a godsend.
“What,” I said, “someone new has learned to hate him?”
Art waved the thought away. “We should be so lucky. Last
count, your brother had complaints lodged against him by the
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ACLU, ASPIRA, the Brooklyn Borough President, and the
Brooklyn Borough Commander. But the day is young.”
My eyebrows shot up in silent inquiry. I waited.
“There are rumblings from the counter-terrorism unit that
our contract may be cancelled. I think Mick’s pissed off too
many people this time.”
“Oh boy.”
“Yeah,” he nodded. “I told him,” Art said, clearly repeating
a familiar litany. “Things have changed. You go shaking the
trees, you gotta use a little restraint.”
“Restraint—not Micky’s strong suit,” I commented.
Art shook his head wearily. “He was like a wild man, Con-
nor. You were still out of it when we came to the hospital the
first time. So we drove over to the crime scene. I could see the
fuse start to burn. He wasn’t gonna let up ‘til he found the guys
behind this.”
I got a sinking feeling in my gut, a spasm of guilt. “I’m
sorry, Art.”
He looked at me and his eyes seemed hard. “We all got
things to be sorry about, Connor. I’m not sure that having a
brother who cares is what you should be apologizing for.”
The tone in his voice made me jerk my head back a little.
“What do you mean?” I got another guilty twinge.
Art didn’t answer me. He looked around the
dojo
. It was
silent, deserted. Yamashita was nowhere to be seen. It was a
cavernous, dim space of diffuse light and hard surfaces. There
was nowhere to hide.
“I’ve got a question from your brother,” Art repeated, as
if parts of our conversation hadn’t taken place. “He wants to
know what the hell you’re up to.”
I gave him what I think of as my flat face. I’ve developed it
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in imitation of the truly scary Japanese
sensei
I’ve crossed swords
with over the years. Narrowed eyes. Skin frozen in immobility.
It’s an expression erected with great care to prevent others from
seeing what you’re thinking—part mask, part shield.
Art had been a cop too long not to see through it. It wasn’t
that he could tell what I was actually up to, but he knew some-
thing was going on. So finally I shrugged and let out a slow,
hissing breath.
“I’m trying to put the pieces together,” I admitted. “I never
saw those guys before in my life.” Art cocked his head as if
weighing that last statement. “No, really,” I assured him.
He wandered across the
dojo
floor to the weapons rack.
Wooden swords and staffs of various lengths rested there. Art
touched the shaft of one lightly.
“You get brained by one of these things, I’ll bet it hurts,”
he mused. I nodded in agreement. “You think it makes much
difference which one gets used?” he asked me.
It might have been a rhetorical question, but I shrugged
and answered him anyway. “Choice of weapon conditions the
attack, but the results are gonna be about the same.”
Art grunted, and then turned to look directly at me. “So
what do I care about the weapon? The real question is who
wants to use it.”
I saw where he was going. “So the identity of the attackers
is beside the point?” I queried.
He held out a hand, palm down, and wiggled it. “Sort of
yes. Sort of no. The three guys who came after you are impor-
tant, but mostly because we can jump up the chain of asso-
ciation and maybe find out who hired them and who’s behind
this. And, of course, you’ve got a real issue if that freak Martín
decides to come back at you…”
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“Yeah,” I admitted.
It was Art’s turn to sigh. “You keep thrashing around, Con-
nor, and all you do is get yourself in deeper and deeper.”
Art waited for me to say something, but I didn’t respond.
“What were you doing with Osorio?” he asked in
exasperation.
“We went to see if he’d do us a favor,” I said evasively, trying
not to ask how he found out.
“The best favor he could do would be to drop dead,” Art
said. “The guy’s a cancer.”
“He’s also a businessman of sorts,” I said. “We all agreed that
it would be best if the trouble with Martín could be wrapped
up quickly.”
Art cocked his head. “You making deals with a guy like
Osorio? You’re in way over your head, Connor. Lots of ways
this could end to Osorio’s satisfaction. Martín gets you, he goes
away, and Osorio’s happy. You get Martín, trouble also goes
away, and Osorio’s happy. ”
“That’s my preferred plan,” I suggested.
Art snorted in a way that reminded me of my brother.
These two men spent so much time together they were starting
to share mannerisms. “Huh. There’s a third possibility I’ll bet
you hadn’t considered.”
“Like what?”
Art smiled bitterly. “Here’s Osorio merrily running his little
crime empire. Someone not local sends some hired muscle who
botch a hit and create trouble for him. So Osorio just wants
things to quiet down, right?”
I nodded.
“So he’s got a few options,” Art explained. He held up a thick
finger. “One, he can just hunker down and hope everything
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blows over. But it’s not in his nature—he’s a take-charge kind
of guy. And whatever is drawing all this trouble is gotta be a
concern to him.” He paused. “That’s you.”
Up came a second finger. “He could try to eliminate Martín
as the disruptive element. But he knows that it’s going to be
tricky and expensive. And besides, it’s going to piss off whoever
hired Martín in the first place. What you haven’t considered is,
Martín isn’t the issue here. It’s you.”
The third finger came up. “Osorio could decide that the
most efficient thing to do is to make Martín go away, end the
disruption, and not annoy whoever hired the hit squad in the
first place.”
Art looked at me and saw the realization make its way to my
eyes. So much for my vaunted flat face.
“You’re right about Osorio being a businessman, Connor,”
Art concluded. “He didn’t get where he is by not figuring all
the angles. So the third option is probably going to be the one
he’ll take. He’s gonna take the one action that will address all
his concerns.” Art was still holding up three fingers. He jabbed
my chest with them. “He’s gonna take you out, Connor. It’s the
best solution to his problem.”
I said nothing. Art’s idea hadn’t really occurred to me before,
but it didn’t change much as far as I could tell. I knew I was in
way over my head. I had been from the moment Martín and
his two companions burst through my front door. But I also
knew that there were rules Art had to follow that I didn’t. If
Micky were in trouble, it was because he had let his concern
for me push him into actions that crossed a legal line. I wasn’t
going to drag these two men any deeper into this. There had
to be a solution, but it was going to be one that I generated,
not Micky and Art. At the end of the day, I could make deals
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and do things that they couldn’t. I think Art knew that, but he
didn’t want to have to admit it out loud. If he acknowledged
even to himself the sort of thing I was planning, he was going
to have to have someone arrest me. And that would be hard to
explain to my mom at the next family picnic.
We stood looking at each other in silence for a time. A slight
noise from the loft made Art look up to see Yamashita watch-
ing us silently. My brother’s partner gave my teacher one quick
glance, then he focused on me again.
“The PD has a line on the third guy. Gangbanger from the
West Coast. Explains the tattoos.”
“I don’t see how it connects with me,” I commented.
“His record is pretty spotty, mostly run-ins with Immigra-
tion. He’s an illegal and been back and forth across the bor-
der any number of times. Word is that he’d left California for
new opportunities. Been working out of Phoenix.” He put on
a mock-thoughtful expression. “We know anyone been in Ari-
zona lately, Connor?”
I just looked at him.
“You get yourself down to Berger’s office at the 68th and tell
them about your trip.” He said tightly. “You obviously have
pissed someone off somewhere. Don’t try to figure this out
yourself, Connor. Let the pros do it.”
I let the advice marinate for moment. “Think about this,
too,” Art said. “Maybe if we can provide some assistance to the
authorities, they might look a bit more favorably on us. Be the
least that you could do, Connor.”
I was in a bind. Art was right: maybe if I came forward with
what I suspected, some good feelings might be generated and
Micky would get out of the doghouse. But this wasn’t some-
thing that was going to be solved with words. I felt the deep,
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intuitive tug that the Japanese call
haragei.
Blood was going to
be spilled. If I could, I was going to shield Art and Micky from
the repercussions.
So I just nodded in a non-committal way and walked Art to
the door. But he wasn’t finished.
“I been watching the Burke brothers at work for years, Con-
nor,” Art told me. “And I see a lot of similarities: the stub-
bornness…” Art stopped there, but you got the sense that his
mental catalogue of similarities was more extensive than he was
letting on. “But you know who you really remind me of?” he
finally asked.
I shook my head no.
Art jerked with his chin toward the loft, where Yamashita
stood, still as stone.
“Him.”
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14
Wolves
The briefings were always scheduled for 1:00 am, to leave
Jackson and his men some final time to digest the informa-
tion, formulate some plans, and check their gear. Of late, their
Border Patrol supervisor looked more grim than usual. The
small desk lamp that lit his notes threw shadows on his face
and showed it drawn and remote, a specter practicing augury
in a darkened temple.
“We’ve had reports of ambushes here, here, and here,” he
continued. There was a map projected on the far wall and
the cherry light of a laser pointer touched in sequence at the
ambush sites. “Units have also been sniped at with increasing
frequency. It’s been endemic down along the Texas border, now
it’s working its way along the line to us.”
“Nuisance fire?” Jackson said.
“No. Precision sniping. Nobody’s been killed yet, but who-
ever’s doing the shooting is using it to slow pursuit. In some
cases, they’re taking out vehicles with their fire.”
“Big rounds,” someone commented.
“Fifties,” the supervisor said, consulting his notes. Jackson
and his men knew that a fifty-caliber sniper rifle was the mark
of a professional. They had heard the intel about rogue elements
from the Mexican special forces getting into the drug trade. They
were pros. It changed the equation out in the field dramatical y.
“That group we tracked that was ambushed,” Jackson said,
“the scene… it didn’t strike me as the work of professionals.”
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“How so?”
Jackson remembered the sprawled bodies, the knife marks.
He shrugged. “It seemed like too much… gratuitous. Know
what I mean?”
“Someone sending a message?” one of his team suggested.
The supervisor looked up; the movement flashed light on
his glasses, momentarily turning his eyes into flat, bright disks.
“It’s a mess. We’ve got local gangs in the mix as well. As both