Smokeless Powder [Cinnamon Cherrywhip]
Posted: 27 Jun 2014, 20:07
“Seriously, Levi. I really don’t know why you’re doing this yourself.”
The instinct was to shrug his shoulders, but since the man on the other line couldn’t really see that, he had to think up some kind of audible response. “Well, you know what they say: want something done right, do it yourself.”
The man laughed. “Right. Sure. So how much money is in it?”
“It’s like a black hole. Who’s to say.”
“Then withdraw.”
“Can’t.”
“Why not?”
“Too many loose ends.”
The line crackled as the man breathed deeply into the receiver. “Can’t you just—”
“Look. I’m gonna make it real simple for them and then everything’s gonna run smoothly. They can take it or leave it, but it’s gonna happen my way so… don’t worry so much.”
“You know what’s on the line, Levi. You should be as worried as I am. More so in fact.”
“D’you trust me or not?”
“That’s a little difficult to answer right now.”
Levi put the phone at an angle so he could grumble to himself and pinched the bridge of his nose. What he wanted to do was launch the phone out the window of the car, let the guy have an earful of wind and rain before the inevitable crunch and silence, but he kept himself in check. Trust was a valuable commodity in this business; it often made the final say on whether you’re coming home richer or coming up a river some weeks later as a bloated corpse. Hearing he’d lost a part of that trust put him on edge and that wasn’t somewhere he liked to be, especially when it wasn’t his fault.
“Are you still there?”
The voice pounded in his ear with the same kind of pressure as his pulse. Levi casually passed the phone to the other ear and signalled his frustration with a grunt.
“Just do what you think is right for now,” the man said, “but keep me in the loop, okay?”
Levi simply grunted again.
“Call me in about an hour. I’ve got a meeting to sort out.”
“Best make it two.”
“Fine.”
The call disconnected with a series of beeps and Levi returned the phone to his breast pocket. He didn’t appreciate the man’s tone, or being barked at, but he could see the reasons behind it. No doubt Shiro was getting a similar treatment, if not worse. He was the mediator after all, the one liaising between his people in the East with Levi’s people in the West – and both sides were pretty pissed right now. The Taiwanese said they’d sent their package and wanted their money, but their Canadian go-betweens had gone cold. They wouldn’t answer to the Taiwanese to confirm the package’s arrival and they wouldn’t even answer to him to move the package along its agreed trading line so everyone could be paid. The buck had just stopped and no one would say why. Over the past few weeks, Levi had sent a dozen soldiers to investigate the problem, but none of them had come back either. His remaining men had offered the scenario that the Canadians had run off with the package to sell it themselves and had killed his men to cover their tracks. The Canadians had been good before, reliable and efficient, but he couldn’t deny the possibility. Because he wanted to give them the benefit of the doubt, Levi decided that he was going to deal with the matter personally, but because he didn’t trust them all that much, he brought along two of his men.
The drive to the Canadian’s headquarters in this unknown city called Harper Rock, had taken about fifty minutes from the airport. When they pulled up outside, Levi remained in the back seats as his companions got out to form a wall of ugly muscle either side of his door. He looked through the tinted windows of the unmarked, black Toyota Crown, up to the building. It was the run-down sort, a hive of killers and thieves that didn’t bother to pretend to be anything else. The only problem with this picture, as far as Levi was concerned, was how quiet it was. Normally he’d expect someone to come up to the car, ask questions, but in the least he expected to see some kind of activity, some runners and lookers on the streets nearby, maybe even a parked car or two. But there was nothing. The place was deserted. This was not a good sign.
Levi shoved open the car door and stomped past his comrades. As he came within sight and indeed within earshot of the place, Levi finally had all the activity he could have ever wanted. The sound of a loud snap succeeded by a series of bangs caught his attention and he immediately stopped in his tracks. It sounded like gang warfare had exploded just behind those front doors. The blacked-out windows on the left lit up with bright, brief flashes as further gunfire punctured the stillness in concessive bursts. Levi’s men were at his sides again in a hurry, but all three watched the building spark and sputter in the dark like someone had lit a match in a Chinese fireworks factory. When it finally became quiet and the light had retreated, returning the sense of foreboding murk, the three men slowly approached the building.
“Are you sure this is such a good idea, boss?” the man on his right whispered.
“Yeah, how do you know we ain’t just gunna be shot too?” whispered the man on his left.
Levi drew the Beretta from the inside of his jacket. “I don’t,” he said and continued toward the door. “Just be a quicker shot than they are. It’s that simple.”
With the advice ringing in their ears with the same quality as the gunshots, the men entered the building. Levi had gone in first. He pushed the door open quietly and made light footsteps into the corridor. Up ahead were three doors; one on both sides of them and one more at the end of the corridor. Since all the commotion had come from the left-hand side of the building, it seemed obvious where to go to investigate, but Levi’s men weren’t quite as keen to sniff out the source of the gunfire as he was. As he approached the door, he noticed his companions were a clean three feet behind him. He glared, dark eyes as cold as umbra.
“What the ****, fellas? Stand in some glue or something?”
The men looked to each other, fear as obvious as their brown suits were ugly. Levi just rolled his eyes.
“Fine. Stay here. Keep the exit covered I guess.”
Caution, or maybe it was fear, made him inspect the door handle for signs of force, but its fairly unspoiled condition made the bile rising in his throat and the iron belt of his diaphragm relax a little. He pushed on the door handle and walked in, gun ready. Sure, this wasn’t one of his better ideas – to walk into the scene of a fresh massacre – but he couldn’t really talk himself out of it. Levi had made the decision to go in, case the joint and check-out. That was that, really. He never was afraid of death so much as he was specific about the way he wanted to meet it. He was the arrogant type and knew that if he didn’t get this situation between the Taiwanese and Canadians sorted then he was a dead man walking anyway. Levi preferred the idea of going out with a bang, to die in a shower of bullets. Being chased down and cornered like a rat wasn’t the way he wanted people to remember him. If he didn’t go in there, see what was what and sort **** out, he was going on the run. It was as simple as that.
Levi walked into the large room. Boxes – both large and small – made the walls of a labyrinth within. Nonetheless, Levi could see far enough into the room to make him swallow his tongue; the walls were paneled with sheet-metal and striations of blood. A massacre was obviously the correct word here, but Levi continued into the room. The sound of heavy shoes stepping across quiet, bloodied tiles stopped when his shadow loomed over a shaking man. He was strapped to a metal chair just past the first corner Levi had taken around the boxes. Weirdly enough, the man was blind-folded and gagged too. Levi was about the remove the bindings when he heard a crunch of footsteps behind him in the centre of the room. He didn’t think, just turned and fired a shot into the darkness…
The instinct was to shrug his shoulders, but since the man on the other line couldn’t really see that, he had to think up some kind of audible response. “Well, you know what they say: want something done right, do it yourself.”
The man laughed. “Right. Sure. So how much money is in it?”
“It’s like a black hole. Who’s to say.”
“Then withdraw.”
“Can’t.”
“Why not?”
“Too many loose ends.”
The line crackled as the man breathed deeply into the receiver. “Can’t you just—”
“Look. I’m gonna make it real simple for them and then everything’s gonna run smoothly. They can take it or leave it, but it’s gonna happen my way so… don’t worry so much.”
“You know what’s on the line, Levi. You should be as worried as I am. More so in fact.”
“D’you trust me or not?”
“That’s a little difficult to answer right now.”
Levi put the phone at an angle so he could grumble to himself and pinched the bridge of his nose. What he wanted to do was launch the phone out the window of the car, let the guy have an earful of wind and rain before the inevitable crunch and silence, but he kept himself in check. Trust was a valuable commodity in this business; it often made the final say on whether you’re coming home richer or coming up a river some weeks later as a bloated corpse. Hearing he’d lost a part of that trust put him on edge and that wasn’t somewhere he liked to be, especially when it wasn’t his fault.
“Are you still there?”
The voice pounded in his ear with the same kind of pressure as his pulse. Levi casually passed the phone to the other ear and signalled his frustration with a grunt.
“Just do what you think is right for now,” the man said, “but keep me in the loop, okay?”
Levi simply grunted again.
“Call me in about an hour. I’ve got a meeting to sort out.”
“Best make it two.”
“Fine.”
The call disconnected with a series of beeps and Levi returned the phone to his breast pocket. He didn’t appreciate the man’s tone, or being barked at, but he could see the reasons behind it. No doubt Shiro was getting a similar treatment, if not worse. He was the mediator after all, the one liaising between his people in the East with Levi’s people in the West – and both sides were pretty pissed right now. The Taiwanese said they’d sent their package and wanted their money, but their Canadian go-betweens had gone cold. They wouldn’t answer to the Taiwanese to confirm the package’s arrival and they wouldn’t even answer to him to move the package along its agreed trading line so everyone could be paid. The buck had just stopped and no one would say why. Over the past few weeks, Levi had sent a dozen soldiers to investigate the problem, but none of them had come back either. His remaining men had offered the scenario that the Canadians had run off with the package to sell it themselves and had killed his men to cover their tracks. The Canadians had been good before, reliable and efficient, but he couldn’t deny the possibility. Because he wanted to give them the benefit of the doubt, Levi decided that he was going to deal with the matter personally, but because he didn’t trust them all that much, he brought along two of his men.
The drive to the Canadian’s headquarters in this unknown city called Harper Rock, had taken about fifty minutes from the airport. When they pulled up outside, Levi remained in the back seats as his companions got out to form a wall of ugly muscle either side of his door. He looked through the tinted windows of the unmarked, black Toyota Crown, up to the building. It was the run-down sort, a hive of killers and thieves that didn’t bother to pretend to be anything else. The only problem with this picture, as far as Levi was concerned, was how quiet it was. Normally he’d expect someone to come up to the car, ask questions, but in the least he expected to see some kind of activity, some runners and lookers on the streets nearby, maybe even a parked car or two. But there was nothing. The place was deserted. This was not a good sign.
Levi shoved open the car door and stomped past his comrades. As he came within sight and indeed within earshot of the place, Levi finally had all the activity he could have ever wanted. The sound of a loud snap succeeded by a series of bangs caught his attention and he immediately stopped in his tracks. It sounded like gang warfare had exploded just behind those front doors. The blacked-out windows on the left lit up with bright, brief flashes as further gunfire punctured the stillness in concessive bursts. Levi’s men were at his sides again in a hurry, but all three watched the building spark and sputter in the dark like someone had lit a match in a Chinese fireworks factory. When it finally became quiet and the light had retreated, returning the sense of foreboding murk, the three men slowly approached the building.
“Are you sure this is such a good idea, boss?” the man on his right whispered.
“Yeah, how do you know we ain’t just gunna be shot too?” whispered the man on his left.
Levi drew the Beretta from the inside of his jacket. “I don’t,” he said and continued toward the door. “Just be a quicker shot than they are. It’s that simple.”
With the advice ringing in their ears with the same quality as the gunshots, the men entered the building. Levi had gone in first. He pushed the door open quietly and made light footsteps into the corridor. Up ahead were three doors; one on both sides of them and one more at the end of the corridor. Since all the commotion had come from the left-hand side of the building, it seemed obvious where to go to investigate, but Levi’s men weren’t quite as keen to sniff out the source of the gunfire as he was. As he approached the door, he noticed his companions were a clean three feet behind him. He glared, dark eyes as cold as umbra.
“What the ****, fellas? Stand in some glue or something?”
The men looked to each other, fear as obvious as their brown suits were ugly. Levi just rolled his eyes.
“Fine. Stay here. Keep the exit covered I guess.”
Caution, or maybe it was fear, made him inspect the door handle for signs of force, but its fairly unspoiled condition made the bile rising in his throat and the iron belt of his diaphragm relax a little. He pushed on the door handle and walked in, gun ready. Sure, this wasn’t one of his better ideas – to walk into the scene of a fresh massacre – but he couldn’t really talk himself out of it. Levi had made the decision to go in, case the joint and check-out. That was that, really. He never was afraid of death so much as he was specific about the way he wanted to meet it. He was the arrogant type and knew that if he didn’t get this situation between the Taiwanese and Canadians sorted then he was a dead man walking anyway. Levi preferred the idea of going out with a bang, to die in a shower of bullets. Being chased down and cornered like a rat wasn’t the way he wanted people to remember him. If he didn’t go in there, see what was what and sort **** out, he was going on the run. It was as simple as that.
Levi walked into the large room. Boxes – both large and small – made the walls of a labyrinth within. Nonetheless, Levi could see far enough into the room to make him swallow his tongue; the walls were paneled with sheet-metal and striations of blood. A massacre was obviously the correct word here, but Levi continued into the room. The sound of heavy shoes stepping across quiet, bloodied tiles stopped when his shadow loomed over a shaking man. He was strapped to a metal chair just past the first corner Levi had taken around the boxes. Weirdly enough, the man was blind-folded and gagged too. Levi was about the remove the bindings when he heard a crunch of footsteps behind him in the centre of the room. He didn’t think, just turned and fired a shot into the darkness…