Killing Them Softly (Cogan's Trade Movie Tie-in Edition) (27 page)

“You going to
count
it?” the driver said.

“I gotta take a leak,” Cogan said. “Just lemme alone, all right? You make me nervous. I get nervous, I always gotta take a leak. Have some more ginger ale, for Christ sake.”

Cogan went to the Men's Room. Cogan returned.

“You feel better?” the driver said.

“No,” Cogan said, “there's only fifteen in there.”

“Three guys,” the driver said. “I'm not sure, I had to ask him whether I should pay you for the kid or not. He said I should.”

“He was right, too,” Cogan said. “That's five apiece.”

“Correct,” the driver said. “That's what he told me to pay Mitch.”

“Yeah,” Cogan said, “but the way I got it, Mitch got inna fight with a whore, the dumb shit, and now they got him in the can. Mitch couldn't do it. I come through for everybody on short notice. From now on, the price's ten.”

“Dillon only charges five,” the driver said. “He told me that, too.”

“Not any more,” Cogan said.

“Look,” the driver said, “you're filling in for Dillon. You get what Dillon gets. No more. Take it up with Dillon. I can't do anything about it.”

“You can't do anything about anything,” Cogan said. “None of you guys can. Everything just goes haywire and everything, that's fine, you need somebody, get things straightened out. I'm just telling you, is all, it's gonna cost more, now on.”

“Tell Dillon,” the driver said. “Take it up with him.”

“Dillon's dead,” Cogan said. “Dillon died this morning.”

The driver was silent for a while. Then he said: “He's going to be sorry to hear that.”

“No sorrier'n I am,” Cogan said.

The driver sipped his ginger ale. “I assume,” he said, “I assume.… What killed him?”

“I know the name of it,” Cogan said. “I got home this morning, my wife left me a note, they took Dillon the hospital about midnight or so. They told me what it was. That's all I know.”

“He died in the hospital, then,” the driver said.

“Like I say,” Cogan said, “I dunno what it is. All I know's what they told me. ‘Myocardial infarct.' You know what that is? I guess it's the same thing, the heart trouble.”

“That's what he had,” the driver said. “Well, how about that? Dillon's dead. Son of a bitch.”

“He wasn't a bad guy, actually,” Cogan said.

“No,” the driver said, “no, I guess he wasn't. He wasn't a bad guy.”

“He always,” Cogan said, “he never, well, I knew Dillon a long time, right? It was Dillon, really, got me started, said I oughta get something besides the booking, something that'd be around and like that, you know? He was the guy that really plugged me in. I knew Dillon a long time.”

“He knew him a long time too,” the driver said. “He had a lot of respect for him.”

“Sure,” Cogan said, “so'd I. You know why?”

“You were afraid of him?” the driver said.

“Nah,” Cogan said. He finished his beer. “Nah, it wasn't that. It was, he knew the way things oughta be done, right?”

“So I'm told,” the driver said.

“And when they weren't,” Cogan said, “he knew what to do.”

“And so do you,” the driver said.

“And so do I,” Cogan said.

George V. Higgins
KILLING THEM
SOFTLY

George V. Higgins was the author of more than twenty novels, including the bestsellers
The Friends of Eddie Coyle, The Rat on Fire
, and
The Digger's Game
. He was a reporter for the
Providence Journal
and the Associated Press before obtaining a law degree from Boston College Law School in 1967. He was an Assistant Attorney General and then an Assistant United States Attorney in Boston from 1969 to 1973. He later taught Creative Writing at Boston University. He died in 1999.

A
LSO BY
G
EORGE
V. H
IGGINS

The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1972)
The Digger's Game (1973)

THESE ARE BORZOI BOOKS
PUBLISHED IN NEW YORK
BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

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