Little Criminals (5 page)

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Authors: Gene Kerrigan

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Hard-Boiled, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Contemporary Fiction, #Literary, #Crime Fiction

BOOK: Little Criminals
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‘We’ll be there two days, maybe three, should be no more than that.’

‘No bother.’

‘Good man. The cars?’

‘The easy part.’

‘Good man. We’re on, then?’

They were on. Milky mightn’t be fancy, but he was reliable. Crowe sipped his coffee and looked again at his list of things to do. He added a note:
JJ?
, and drew a circle around it. Once that was done, everything would be in place. Just shows. You do the work, you get the results. Within hours of the Harte’s Cross fuck-up, he’d convinced Martin to go ahead with the kidnap. Couple of months later, the target was sussed, he’d recruited Brendan Sweetman and Dolly Finn, Milky was on board to supply cars and a hideout and they’d pretty much settled on a ballpark price for that. He’d fronted the money for Tommy Sholtis and today he’d made a visit to Tommy to collect the gear. All that was left to do was finesse Jo-Jo, pick a date,
do it
. Enough fucking about. Step up to the life.

Crowe opened the door of the closet in his bedroom. He didn’t have many clothes. When he tired of a garment, he disposed of it and bought something new, usually dark in colour and conservative in cut. Most of his clothes came from River Island, and once a year he bought a suit at Brown Thomas, almost always Armani.

He knelt and took his spare pair of shoes and his Nike trainers from the floor of the closet and moved aside two cardboard boxes in which he kept personal documents and family photographs. He got a fork from the kitchen and used it to prise loose a section of the floorboard. He fetched the heavy holdall he’d collected from Tommy Sholtis and took from it four revolvers, three automatics and a sawn-off double-barrelled shotgun. He got eight Tesco plastic shopping bags from a drawer in the kitchen and used them to wrap each weapon individually, before storing them under the floorboards.

Pistols were the basic tools, if there had to be shooting on a job, up close and final, but there was nothing like a sawn-off to scare the shit out of would-be heroes. Someone waving a shotgun around, if he looked the part – and Brendan Sweetman looked the part – wiped out any heroic thoughts that might simmer in the head of any dumbo civilian. Which, when you think of it, reduced the odds that there’d be any shooting at all, which was in the civilian’s interest.

When he replaced the floorboard, Crowe poured another coffee and sat down at the kitchen table again. On a fresh page of his notebook, he made a list of the weapons, using
Ct
for Colt,
R
for Ruger,
H&K
for Heckler & Koch, and
Gk
for Glock. He thought about it for a moment, then he assigned a piece to each crew member, writing their initials alongside the weapons. He flicked back through the pages until he found the list of initials and put a final tick beside
Mky
. A busy day, a lot done. Do the work, get the result. No big deal.

He tapped out another number on the phone.

Martin Paxton put down the phone and put on his sheepish face.

Deborah said, ‘Ah, no.’

‘Look, I’m sorry.’

‘Martin, for Christ’s sake—’

‘I won’t be long. He just needs to—’

Deborah walked out of the room, shrugging off her denim jacket as she went. She dropped it in the hall and slammed the door of their bedroom.

Paxton waited a few minutes, let her get rid of the first wave of anger. He and Deborah had been at the door of the flat, on their way out, when the phone rang. It was the second time in the past couple of weeks that Frankie had blown an evening out by ringing at the last minute.

‘Deb?’

Standing outside the bedroom door. From inside, a blast of music. Fuck it. When she started throwing George Michael at him, there was no answer to that. He picked up Deborah’s jacket, hung it on a hook near the front door and pulled on his pale blue Hugo Boss jacket. When he left he pulled the door gently shut behind him.

When Martin Paxton arrived at the pub, Frankie Crowe was sitting at the bar, working on a beer mat. He folded it in two, broke it apart along the fold, then folded the two pieces again. He did it once more, and he now had eight small, rough-edged pieces of cardboard. He placed each carefully on top of the other, forming a little tower, beside two similar cardboard constructions.

Standing at Frankie’s shoulder, Martin noticed that his whiskey hadn’t been touched. He said, ‘They did a survey of barmen once, and you know what their number-one pet hate is?’

‘What’ll you have?’

‘That,’ Martin pointed at the torn cardboard, ‘they hate that. A pint.’

Frankie pointed at a free table near the back. ‘I’ll bring it over to you.’

The pub was having a quiz night, conducted by a DJ who read each question in a country-and-western accent. ‘To what section of the orchestra does the timpani, the
timpani
, belong?’ In between the questions, the DJ played what he referred to as funky music.

After they’d been sitting at the table five minutes, Martin knew that Frankie’d been out to Walkinstown to get the hardware from Tommy Sholtis. ‘And Milky’s got a couple of places picked out. He’ll source the cars.’

‘Fair enough.’

Mostly Frankie spoke, mostly Martin listened, and they were happy with that arrangement. The only thing Frankie had to say that mattered was that he’d decided they were asking for too little. They’d always intended to go for a million. Frankie had been mulling it over.

‘Break that down between the four of us, and take out what we have to shell out to Milky and Tommy Sholtis, we’re talking not a lot more than two hundred grand a head.’ Frankie shook his head. ‘That kind of money, fuck sake, what’s that worth these days? Wouldn’t even buy a decent house in this town, even on the Northside.’

You have to think ahead, Frankie said. The kind of money you get from a score like this could take you up to the premiership. He knew people, came across them all the time, who were crying out for investors. Bankroll a shipment, the white stuff flows in from Amsterdam, you take a margin, sell it on, leave the distribution to the people who want to take that risk. A slice of the profit goes back into the next deal, and the next and the one after that.

‘It’s like planting a money tree.’

The million ransom, after the split, was too skinny for what Frankie had in mind. ‘Guy got himself a bank, the job must be worth two million. We double the ransom.’

Martin Paxton didn’t think it mattered. If it worked, it was a big piece of money, either way. If it didn’t work,
sin scéal eile
. He just nodded.

There wasn’t much else to discuss about the job. Nothing that couldn’t have waited until next day. It was just the way Frankie needed to go over things again and again.

Frankie took a long drink. ‘Two million. That’s real money. A long way from napkin rings.’

Martin raised an eyebrow.

‘First thing I ever stroked,’ Frankie said. ‘From Lenehan’s in Talbot Street.’ He shook his head. ‘Napkin rings. Me and a couple of the lads went into town. Barely out of short trousers. Security guy was giving us the evil eye. Maybe if he hadn’t been such a pushy fucker I wouldn’t have bothered. They were just there, the napkin rings. Customer asked him something, whatever, he looked away, the napkin rings went up my sweater and we were out of there.’

‘Johnny Dillinger’ll never be dead, what?’

‘I didn’t even own any napkins.’

The pub DJ was reading out the answers to a section of the quiz. He punctuated the questions with bursts of throbbing music. Martin was about to suggest they get the hell out of here when Frankie held up a finger to the Asian lounge girl and then pointed to their almost empty glasses.

‘OK,’ Martin said, ‘but I have to go after this one.’

‘She’s got you rightly domesticated.’

Martin grinned. ‘Fuck off.’

‘Can’t say I blame you. This the big one?’

Martin never felt comfortable talking about that kind of thing. ‘You know, it’s fine.’

Frankie nodded. He seldom asked about personal shit and he’d met Deborah only twice. ‘Nice’, was all he said to Martin after the first time he met her. After Frankie’s trouble with Joan, he and Martin had only once talked about what happened. It was a drink-sodden evening that ended with Frankie curled up on the floor of Martin’s flat, sobbing.

‘I could have ended up down the juvenile, and off to the happy house for stealing fucking napkin rings.’

‘Kind of hard to shift on the black market.’

‘I once tried to add it all up, what it comes to, a dozen years of stroking. It’s more than I’d get stacking shelves at Tesco, right enough. But not enough to make it worth the time you spend slopping out your potty in Mountjoy. You know what I mean?’

Martin shrugged. ‘I make a decent enough living. We both do.’

‘I’m not knocking it. All I’m saying, it’s time to step up, Martin.’

The quiz DJ was into the next round of questions, asking the name of the current US Secretary of State for Defense.

Martin said, ‘Still planning on running this past Jo-Jo?’

‘It’s the wise thing to do. Once we’re OK with Jo-Jo,’ Frankie said, ‘anyone tries to take advantage, they know they’ve got him to worry about, too.’

After the kidnap, word would get around. It usually did after a big job. Nothing solid enough to give the police a handle, but enough to point scavengers in the right direction.

‘And what if Jo-Jo says no?’

‘One thing clear. Whatever Jo-Jo says, this is going ahead, even if we have to take whatever shit he hands out afterwards. It’s not like we need permission. Talking to him, we’re just doing what’s the right thing to do.’

Martin didn’t say anything. What he was thinking was that if Jo-Jo put a damper on the job and they went ahead, things could get very uncomfortable, very quickly.

Deborah had two glasses of red wine ready when Martin got back to the flat. They kissed. After a while, he said he was sorry, she said something similar and they left the wine alone for a while. Later, she brought him his glass in bed. Martin could have done without the wine, after three pints of Guinness down the pub, but he reckoned it wouldn’t be terribly sensible to mention that.

‘Cheers,’ he said.

‘This thing, it’s definitely on, then?’

‘Don’t worry about it.’

Deborah looked like she was deciding not to say something, then she said it. ‘He’s a strange man, Frankie Crowe. I know you don’t—’

‘Please,’ Martin said.

‘Is he lonely or what?’

‘Look, Deb, in the first place, if it wasn’t for Frankie, I wouldn’t be around to fuck up your evening.’

‘That’s not true.’

‘You were there, were you, on the next landing?’

‘I know you, you’d have survived. You’ve got strength, Martin. You’re strong enough to have done it without Frankie.’

She had no idea.

Martin had once tried to explain to her about how men relate to each other in prison. The best way to protect yourself is to come across like you’re a guy that others need protection from. Back down, even on something that doesn’t matter, you mark yourself as a fall guy. They’ll be queuing up to use you as a demonstration of how tough they are.

‘It wasn’t so much that Bomber Harris had it in for me. It was more like, when he wanted to show people he was hot shit, the easiest way to do that was give someone a walloping, and I was the chosen one.’

Martin closed his eyes. ‘Someone beats you down like that, you lose your nerve, they own you.’ He was quiet for a moment. Deborah watched him. Then he said, ‘Bomber Harris owned me. Frankie came along, he was Abraham Lincoln, you know what I mean?’

Debbie said she did. Then she said, That doesn’t mean that Frankie has to own you, either.’

He looked at her. ‘You’ve no idea,’ he said. ‘You really don’t.’

Martin’s wine glass was empty. He fetched the rest of the bottle from the kitchen and filled his glass, leaned across Deborah and saw that her glass was still almost full.

‘It’s not Lent, is it?’

Deborah picked up her glass, took a small sip and put it down again. She waited a moment and then she said, ‘That’ll have to do me for a few months.’

Martin said, ‘Oh,’ and sat on the side of the bed. He said nothing for a while, then he said, ‘You sure?’

She nodded.

‘How long have you known?’

‘Just today.’

They hugged and talked in whispers for a while and Deborah told him she’d already worked out dates. They talked about that, about the things they’d have to do. In the middle of this, Martin shook his head and softly said, ‘Jesus Christ.’

‘Scary, isn’t it?’ Deborah said.

They agreed not to tell anyone for a while. Deborah’s parents had immediately taken a liking to Martin, a polite chap with a job in software being an appropriate match for their librarian daughter. Then Martin was pulled in for questioning about a job he didn’t do. The police let him out next day, but Deborah’s mother had been there during the raid, mouth open, face pale. After that, her parents made no effort to disguise their loathing.

Martin took a slug of wine. He put the glass down and said, ‘That’s it for me, too. For the duration.’ He leaned over and kissed her. ‘You’re a genius, that’s what you are.’

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