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Spenser Confidential (Movie Tie-In)

Part of Spenser

Author Ace Atkins
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$17.00 US
On sale Feb 25, 2020 | 336 Pages | 9780593190654
Previously Published as Robert B. Parker's Wonderland

NOW A NETFLIX FILM STARRING MARK WAHLBERG AS SPENSER!


Old friends. Small favors. Bitter rivals. Stirred together, it all makes for one explosive cocktail in this New York Times bestselling thriller that has Spenser feeling the heat...


Henry Cimoli and Spenser have been friends for years, yet the old boxing trainer has never asked the private eye for a favor. Until now. A developer is trying to buy up Henry's condo on Revere Beach—with a push from local thugs. Soon Spenser and his apprentice, Zebulon Sixkill, are on the trail of a mysterious woman, a megalomaniacal Las Vegas kingpin, and a shady plan to turn a chunk of land north of Boston into a sprawling casino. As alliances shift and twisted dreams surface, the Boston political machine looks to end Spenser's investigation one way or another—and once and for all.
1

Henry Cimoli didn't mince words.



"Have I ever asked you for a favor?"



"Nope."



"In all the years I've been knowin' you and Hawk," Henry said, "I haven't asked for jack squat."



"Jack or squat has never been stated."



We sat at an outdoor table at Kelly's Roast Beef, facing the ocean at Revere Beach. It was early spring, and people had rediscovered shorts and T-shirts. I was particularly interested in the return of the skirt, bare legs, and high heels with thin straps. Not that Revere was a fashion mecca. Revere was a working-class town and Revere Beach was a working-class beach. But you could live well on the beach, and the seafood and Italian restaurants along the boulevard were very good. I had ordered a bucket of clams from the take-out window.



"I take calls for you guys, keep Pearl when you and Susan want to leave town and moon over each other."



"Pearl loves you, Henry."



"Do I complain?"



"She says you withhold affection."



The wind was sharp and cold, but the sunshine warmed you during the lulls.



I sampled a few fried clams from the bucket. Sadly, I learned Kelly's did not serve Blue Moon ale, or any beer, for that matter. One cannot enjoy fried clams with a Coke Zero. I dipped a few more in tartar sauce, and studied a leggy brunette in a flowy skirt standing outside the beach pavilion. She kept the skirt from blowing away with the flat of her hand while she walked. Maybe Revere was on the verge of becoming fashionable.



A couple paunchy guys in coveralls stained with grease got up from a table and patted their stomachs. One belched. Perhaps not.



"Do I detect a request for a favor?" I said.



"Why?" Henry said. "Because I'm saying I never asked for one?"



"Did I tell anyone about the time you wore lifts to that Hall of Fame banquet?" I said.



Henry stood about five-four and weighed about 134 pounds. But 133 of it was muscle, and in his youth, he'd gone toe to toe with Willie Pep. Some of that still showed in his face. He had a lot of scar tissue around the eyes; his knuckles looked like thick pebbles. He was a hard and tough man despite my claim that he had once been a member of the Lollipop Guild.



"So you owe me?" he said.



"I'd do it anyway."



"What?"



"Whatever you're going to ask."



"I don't like asking for stuff," Henry said. "I wasn't brought up that way. Say no if you want. Don't worry about what I said. I'm just ticked off about all this crap."



"Fried clam?"



"You could lose a little weight, Spenser," Henry said. "Z told me you've been into the donuts again. You know how many calories are in one donut?"



"Next you'll want me to give up sex."



"Women make you stupid."



"Not all," I said, eating more clams. A blonde had taken the brunette's place, wearing wedge heels, tastefully frayed chino shorts, and a light blue button-down shirt with several buttons open. She wore designer sunglasses on top of her head and shifted her hips as she strolled.



"She could." Henry motioned.



"Talk slower," I said. "I can't understand you."



"So you want to hear it or did you drive up to Revere on a Sunday to eat a bucket of clams?"



"I'm motivated equally."



Henry craned his wrinkled neck over his shoulder, watching for anyone within earshot. Satisfied that a young couple with a toddler posed zero threat, he turned back. "We got some problems at my condo," Henry said. "I tried to handle it myself, but the cowards sent three guys the other night. They told me if I didn't shut up, that they were gonna toss me out my window."



"What floor is your unit?"



"Fourth floor."



"You're so light, you could blow away."



"This ain't funny."



"Okay. Tell me about these guys."



Henry shrugged. Several seagulls landed on a table next to us, and started to scrap over half an onion roll.



"The guy talkin' was a thick-necked steroid freak. He had a tattoo on his neck and crazy eyes."



"Lovely."



"Other guy was black, not as juiced-up, but just as thick. Third guy was older, with long hair and a goatee. Didn't look that tough. Maybe he's the shooter. He had that look, trying to show he was a hard guy."



"Names?"



Henry shrugged.



"I didn't ask for references."



The gulls yammered a bit until the victor took his spoils and flew across Beach Boulevard.



"What's it about?"



"Some asshole wants to buy up the condo and buy us all out," Henry said. "It's a decent price. But I like the place and don't want to move. I mean, look at the fuckin' view."



"It's fucking grand."



"And there are memories and all."



Ten years ago, Henry had met a woman. She was ten years younger and she had given him eight good years. Lots of dinners and trips to the Cape. Two years ago she'd died of cancer. He never spoke of it, but in his office I'd seen a prayer candle next to an old photograph. They'd bought the place together, Henry moving out of the gym and fifteen minutes away to the condo.



"So I won't sign the paper," Henry said. "A few more of us feel the same way. There's a nice Jewish couple up on eight who don't want to leave, either. One of these dumb shits made an anti-Semitic remark to the woman when she was bringing in her groceries. Used some bad language about her in front of her fucking husband."



"Who's the guy wants to buy the building?" I asked. "I could pay him a visit and reason with his more enlightened side."



"If I just needed head busting, I would have called Hawk."



"Where is Hawk?"



"Miami," Henry said. "Guarding some rich broad in South Beach."



"You know the company who wants to buy your building?"



"Nope," Henry said. "They sent some lawyer to come speak to the board."



"When was this?"



"Last week."



"And you publicly objected?"



"I ain't alone," Henry said. "Half of us want to stay, others just want a fast buck. They're old and tired and looking for the easy way out."



"Why not just take their money," I said, "if it's a fair deal? Move back into your apartment at the gym. Maybe it's time for Z to find his own place."



"The money is okay but not great," Henry said. "I was considering it until they started to press. I don't like people pressing. Pisses me off. Being told what to do."



"I can relate."



"Figured you would."



"When's the next board meeting?"



"Tuesday night at seven," Henry said.



"Do they serve refreshments?"



"All the bullshit you can eat."



"Wonderful."



"I sure like to know what kind of piece of crap sends some hoods around to harass a bunch of old people."



"I can most certainly find that out."





2



"You told Henry that I was putting on weight?"



"I told him that you ate too many donuts," Zebulon Sixkill said. "He decided you had put on weight."



"Is there no loyalty from my Native American apprentice?"



"Pale Face shouldn't take more than his fair share."



We were running along the Charles River that Tuesday morning. The promise of an early spring had turned to gray skies and spitting rain. But it was warm enough to wear athletic shorts and a blue sweatshirt with the sleeves cut off. Z was pushing me a bit, keeping a faster pace than I preferred. My pace was slow and even, knowing I could outlast him on the five-mile route along both sides of the river. Maybe if I'd been a D-1 running back like Z, I'd have been swifter of foot.



"How long have you known Henry?" Z asked.



"Since I was eighteen."



"You and Hawk?"



"Hawk and I."



"So there isn't much you wouldn't do for the man?" he asked.



"Nope."



"Me either," Z said. "He didn't have to give me a place to stay when you started to train me. I was a mess. All that booze and sloppiness. On the juice. I still don't know why he did it."



"Because he saw some promise," I said. "Henry has always had an eye for talent."



"He's a good man."



"Yep," I said. "How are you with everything?"



"I drink sometimes," he said. "I don't drink because I'm an alcoholic. I drink because I like the taste."



"You can stop?"



"Sure," he said. "Just like you."



"In the past, I struggled with the stopping."



"I can stop."



We jogged for a bit, working to control our breathing, rounding the bend of the river by Harvard Stadium. I had just invested in a new pair of New Balance 1260s, feeling patriotic hitting the ground in American-made running shoes.



"Must have been something to trust me," he said. "When we met."



"I needed someone to pass along my knowledge to," I said. "And also could use a little help from time to time."



"And you will put in a good word with the state," Z said. "As a reputable citizen of the Commonwealth, noting my fine and upstanding character."



"Three years," I said. "The law says you're under my watch for three years."



"And then?"



"You have a private investigator license and trade."



"Not much of a future as a head breaker."



"Unless you're Hawk," I said. "But Hawk is equal parts ass-kicker and philosopher."



"The Thoreau of Thuggery?"



"Susan is right."



"About what?"



"You've been hanging around with me too long."



"So where do we start with Henry?"



"I'll make some calls," I said. "And we observe."



"Wait for those guys to show up?"



"Yep."



"And Henry will push the point?"



"Henry is not a subtle man."



We turned north onto the Harvard Bridge, making our way toward MIT, where we'd follow the bike path below Mass Ave, past the Longfellow Bridge and over to the dam, where we'd cross back over into the city. Z had yet to let up on the faster pace, seemingly still annoyed I'd taken an extra donut last week.



"Would be good to know who hired them," Z said.



"We can ask nicely," I said.



"Does that ever work?"



"Almost never."









The Harbor Health Club had been upscale longer than it had been low-rent. I knew it when it had been low-rent, before the waterfront was rebuilt with luxury hotels, slick office buildings, and million-dollar condos. Henry had changed with the times, adding the latest Cybex machines, treadmills, and stationary bikes. There were a lot of mirrors, a juice bar, and cubicles to meet with personal trainers. Henry had even recently added a glass-walled workout room, where women participated in something called Zumba. Z and I had little interest in Zumba but appreciated the taut young women in sweat-stained spandex who filed out of the room. Some of them even smiled at us as we took turns on the bench press. We decided to add more weight in appreciation.



"Maybe we should take a Zumba class," I said.



"Might hurt our reputation."



"Or maybe we could recruit some of the young ladies to the boxing room?"



"Susan might not like that."



"Who would know?" I said. "She's lecturing at the University of North Carolina this month on the psychology of adolescents."



"Years of research?" Z said, sliding onto the bench and slowly repping out 275 as if the bar were empty. He took his time, pausing the bar on his chest as I'd taught him, not pushing the weight but working on breathing and controlling the weight.



Henry walked up to study us, watching as Z clanged the weights down on the rack and stood up. He wore a white satin tracksuit, right hand in his pocket and a grin on his face. "You turkeys gonna pump some iron or just ogle my clientele?"



"I'm teaching Z the proper way to accomplish both."



"You ever think about investing in some workout clothes?" Henry said. "They've improved in the last century."



"Not everyone benefited as much from Jack LaLanne's death," I said.



Henry snorted. Z smiled as I slid onto the bench and started into a slow rep.



"I'll have you know this workout suit is custom-fitted," Henry said. "Probably cost more than your whole freakin' wardrobe."



I paused the weight on my chest, pushing out a couple more reps. I wanted to say something about shopping in the kids' section but kept it to myself, concentrating on the weight, the pause of the bar on my chest, exhaling as I pushed the weight upward. I finished the twelfth rep and re-racked the weight.



"Any more trouble?" I said.



"Nope."



"Thought we might follow you home tonight."



"I don't need babysitters," Henry said. "I need you to do that detective thing. Find out who these crapheads are."



"Crapheads have muddied the water," I said. "The prospective buyer is a corporation with an address listed as a P.O. box. The corporate contact registered with the state seems to be a phony."



"What about their lawyer?"



"I called him," I said. "He was less than forthcoming."



"Hung up on you?"



"Twice."



"I told you he was a prick."



"He's a lawyer," I said, shrugging.



Z had moved on to triceps presses with a fifty-pound dumbbell. He made it look easy. And for me, it wasn't as easy as it used to be. Of course, I wasn't in my twenties and just a few years away from college football. I had lasted only two years at Holy Cross before joining the Army, never being a fan of the rah-rah coaches or taking orders.



I switched places with Z. He'd pulled his long black hair into a ponytail, his wide face covered in sweat. The front of his gray T-shirt read Rocky Boy Rez, Box Elder, Montana.



"Is there a lot to do in Box Elder?" I asked.



"Why do you think I stayed in Boston?"



"Numerous liberal coeds wanting to right their ancestors' wrongs?"



"Nope."



"Or because you worked for a bloated, self-absorbed, immoral creep and sought spiritual guidance from a Zen master?"



"There was that," Z said.



We met Henry in the parking garage thirty minutes later. I was driving a dark blue Ford Explorer that year, decent legroom for men of a certain size. Henry pulled out in a white Camry, and we followed him up Atlantic and down into the Callahan Tunnel and intermittent flashes of fluorescent light, taking 1A up past Logan, through Chelsea, and on into Revere Beach. I had the radio tuned low to a jazz program on WICE, Art Pepper on horn. The tired triple-deckers and sagging brick storefronts whizzed past.



"A good friend of mine used to vacation in Chelsea," I said.



"You're kidding," Z said.



"Have to know the guy," I said. "Grew up in Lowell."
© Joe Worthem
Ace Atkins is the New York Times bestselling author of the Quinn Colson novels, the first two of which, The Ranger and The Lost Ones, were nominated for the Edgar Award for Best Novel (he also has a third Edgar nomination for his short story, “Last Fair Deal Gone Down”). In addition, he is the author of several New York Times bestselling novels in the continuation of Robert B. Parker’s Spenser series. Before turning to fiction, he was a correspondent for the St. Petersburg Times, a crime reporter for the Tampa Tribune, and, in college, played defensive end for the undefeated Auburn University football team (for which he was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated). He lives in Oxford, Mississippi. View titles by Ace Atkins

About

Previously Published as Robert B. Parker's Wonderland

NOW A NETFLIX FILM STARRING MARK WAHLBERG AS SPENSER!


Old friends. Small favors. Bitter rivals. Stirred together, it all makes for one explosive cocktail in this New York Times bestselling thriller that has Spenser feeling the heat...


Henry Cimoli and Spenser have been friends for years, yet the old boxing trainer has never asked the private eye for a favor. Until now. A developer is trying to buy up Henry's condo on Revere Beach—with a push from local thugs. Soon Spenser and his apprentice, Zebulon Sixkill, are on the trail of a mysterious woman, a megalomaniacal Las Vegas kingpin, and a shady plan to turn a chunk of land north of Boston into a sprawling casino. As alliances shift and twisted dreams surface, the Boston political machine looks to end Spenser's investigation one way or another—and once and for all.

Excerpt

1

Henry Cimoli didn't mince words.



"Have I ever asked you for a favor?"



"Nope."



"In all the years I've been knowin' you and Hawk," Henry said, "I haven't asked for jack squat."



"Jack or squat has never been stated."



We sat at an outdoor table at Kelly's Roast Beef, facing the ocean at Revere Beach. It was early spring, and people had rediscovered shorts and T-shirts. I was particularly interested in the return of the skirt, bare legs, and high heels with thin straps. Not that Revere was a fashion mecca. Revere was a working-class town and Revere Beach was a working-class beach. But you could live well on the beach, and the seafood and Italian restaurants along the boulevard were very good. I had ordered a bucket of clams from the take-out window.



"I take calls for you guys, keep Pearl when you and Susan want to leave town and moon over each other."



"Pearl loves you, Henry."



"Do I complain?"



"She says you withhold affection."



The wind was sharp and cold, but the sunshine warmed you during the lulls.



I sampled a few fried clams from the bucket. Sadly, I learned Kelly's did not serve Blue Moon ale, or any beer, for that matter. One cannot enjoy fried clams with a Coke Zero. I dipped a few more in tartar sauce, and studied a leggy brunette in a flowy skirt standing outside the beach pavilion. She kept the skirt from blowing away with the flat of her hand while she walked. Maybe Revere was on the verge of becoming fashionable.



A couple paunchy guys in coveralls stained with grease got up from a table and patted their stomachs. One belched. Perhaps not.



"Do I detect a request for a favor?" I said.



"Why?" Henry said. "Because I'm saying I never asked for one?"



"Did I tell anyone about the time you wore lifts to that Hall of Fame banquet?" I said.



Henry stood about five-four and weighed about 134 pounds. But 133 of it was muscle, and in his youth, he'd gone toe to toe with Willie Pep. Some of that still showed in his face. He had a lot of scar tissue around the eyes; his knuckles looked like thick pebbles. He was a hard and tough man despite my claim that he had once been a member of the Lollipop Guild.



"So you owe me?" he said.



"I'd do it anyway."



"What?"



"Whatever you're going to ask."



"I don't like asking for stuff," Henry said. "I wasn't brought up that way. Say no if you want. Don't worry about what I said. I'm just ticked off about all this crap."



"Fried clam?"



"You could lose a little weight, Spenser," Henry said. "Z told me you've been into the donuts again. You know how many calories are in one donut?"



"Next you'll want me to give up sex."



"Women make you stupid."



"Not all," I said, eating more clams. A blonde had taken the brunette's place, wearing wedge heels, tastefully frayed chino shorts, and a light blue button-down shirt with several buttons open. She wore designer sunglasses on top of her head and shifted her hips as she strolled.



"She could." Henry motioned.



"Talk slower," I said. "I can't understand you."



"So you want to hear it or did you drive up to Revere on a Sunday to eat a bucket of clams?"



"I'm motivated equally."



Henry craned his wrinkled neck over his shoulder, watching for anyone within earshot. Satisfied that a young couple with a toddler posed zero threat, he turned back. "We got some problems at my condo," Henry said. "I tried to handle it myself, but the cowards sent three guys the other night. They told me if I didn't shut up, that they were gonna toss me out my window."



"What floor is your unit?"



"Fourth floor."



"You're so light, you could blow away."



"This ain't funny."



"Okay. Tell me about these guys."



Henry shrugged. Several seagulls landed on a table next to us, and started to scrap over half an onion roll.



"The guy talkin' was a thick-necked steroid freak. He had a tattoo on his neck and crazy eyes."



"Lovely."



"Other guy was black, not as juiced-up, but just as thick. Third guy was older, with long hair and a goatee. Didn't look that tough. Maybe he's the shooter. He had that look, trying to show he was a hard guy."



"Names?"



Henry shrugged.



"I didn't ask for references."



The gulls yammered a bit until the victor took his spoils and flew across Beach Boulevard.



"What's it about?"



"Some asshole wants to buy up the condo and buy us all out," Henry said. "It's a decent price. But I like the place and don't want to move. I mean, look at the fuckin' view."



"It's fucking grand."



"And there are memories and all."



Ten years ago, Henry had met a woman. She was ten years younger and she had given him eight good years. Lots of dinners and trips to the Cape. Two years ago she'd died of cancer. He never spoke of it, but in his office I'd seen a prayer candle next to an old photograph. They'd bought the place together, Henry moving out of the gym and fifteen minutes away to the condo.



"So I won't sign the paper," Henry said. "A few more of us feel the same way. There's a nice Jewish couple up on eight who don't want to leave, either. One of these dumb shits made an anti-Semitic remark to the woman when she was bringing in her groceries. Used some bad language about her in front of her fucking husband."



"Who's the guy wants to buy the building?" I asked. "I could pay him a visit and reason with his more enlightened side."



"If I just needed head busting, I would have called Hawk."



"Where is Hawk?"



"Miami," Henry said. "Guarding some rich broad in South Beach."



"You know the company who wants to buy your building?"



"Nope," Henry said. "They sent some lawyer to come speak to the board."



"When was this?"



"Last week."



"And you publicly objected?"



"I ain't alone," Henry said. "Half of us want to stay, others just want a fast buck. They're old and tired and looking for the easy way out."



"Why not just take their money," I said, "if it's a fair deal? Move back into your apartment at the gym. Maybe it's time for Z to find his own place."



"The money is okay but not great," Henry said. "I was considering it until they started to press. I don't like people pressing. Pisses me off. Being told what to do."



"I can relate."



"Figured you would."



"When's the next board meeting?"



"Tuesday night at seven," Henry said.



"Do they serve refreshments?"



"All the bullshit you can eat."



"Wonderful."



"I sure like to know what kind of piece of crap sends some hoods around to harass a bunch of old people."



"I can most certainly find that out."





2



"You told Henry that I was putting on weight?"



"I told him that you ate too many donuts," Zebulon Sixkill said. "He decided you had put on weight."



"Is there no loyalty from my Native American apprentice?"



"Pale Face shouldn't take more than his fair share."



We were running along the Charles River that Tuesday morning. The promise of an early spring had turned to gray skies and spitting rain. But it was warm enough to wear athletic shorts and a blue sweatshirt with the sleeves cut off. Z was pushing me a bit, keeping a faster pace than I preferred. My pace was slow and even, knowing I could outlast him on the five-mile route along both sides of the river. Maybe if I'd been a D-1 running back like Z, I'd have been swifter of foot.



"How long have you known Henry?" Z asked.



"Since I was eighteen."



"You and Hawk?"



"Hawk and I."



"So there isn't much you wouldn't do for the man?" he asked.



"Nope."



"Me either," Z said. "He didn't have to give me a place to stay when you started to train me. I was a mess. All that booze and sloppiness. On the juice. I still don't know why he did it."



"Because he saw some promise," I said. "Henry has always had an eye for talent."



"He's a good man."



"Yep," I said. "How are you with everything?"



"I drink sometimes," he said. "I don't drink because I'm an alcoholic. I drink because I like the taste."



"You can stop?"



"Sure," he said. "Just like you."



"In the past, I struggled with the stopping."



"I can stop."



We jogged for a bit, working to control our breathing, rounding the bend of the river by Harvard Stadium. I had just invested in a new pair of New Balance 1260s, feeling patriotic hitting the ground in American-made running shoes.



"Must have been something to trust me," he said. "When we met."



"I needed someone to pass along my knowledge to," I said. "And also could use a little help from time to time."



"And you will put in a good word with the state," Z said. "As a reputable citizen of the Commonwealth, noting my fine and upstanding character."



"Three years," I said. "The law says you're under my watch for three years."



"And then?"



"You have a private investigator license and trade."



"Not much of a future as a head breaker."



"Unless you're Hawk," I said. "But Hawk is equal parts ass-kicker and philosopher."



"The Thoreau of Thuggery?"



"Susan is right."



"About what?"



"You've been hanging around with me too long."



"So where do we start with Henry?"



"I'll make some calls," I said. "And we observe."



"Wait for those guys to show up?"



"Yep."



"And Henry will push the point?"



"Henry is not a subtle man."



We turned north onto the Harvard Bridge, making our way toward MIT, where we'd follow the bike path below Mass Ave, past the Longfellow Bridge and over to the dam, where we'd cross back over into the city. Z had yet to let up on the faster pace, seemingly still annoyed I'd taken an extra donut last week.



"Would be good to know who hired them," Z said.



"We can ask nicely," I said.



"Does that ever work?"



"Almost never."









The Harbor Health Club had been upscale longer than it had been low-rent. I knew it when it had been low-rent, before the waterfront was rebuilt with luxury hotels, slick office buildings, and million-dollar condos. Henry had changed with the times, adding the latest Cybex machines, treadmills, and stationary bikes. There were a lot of mirrors, a juice bar, and cubicles to meet with personal trainers. Henry had even recently added a glass-walled workout room, where women participated in something called Zumba. Z and I had little interest in Zumba but appreciated the taut young women in sweat-stained spandex who filed out of the room. Some of them even smiled at us as we took turns on the bench press. We decided to add more weight in appreciation.



"Maybe we should take a Zumba class," I said.



"Might hurt our reputation."



"Or maybe we could recruit some of the young ladies to the boxing room?"



"Susan might not like that."



"Who would know?" I said. "She's lecturing at the University of North Carolina this month on the psychology of adolescents."



"Years of research?" Z said, sliding onto the bench and slowly repping out 275 as if the bar were empty. He took his time, pausing the bar on his chest as I'd taught him, not pushing the weight but working on breathing and controlling the weight.



Henry walked up to study us, watching as Z clanged the weights down on the rack and stood up. He wore a white satin tracksuit, right hand in his pocket and a grin on his face. "You turkeys gonna pump some iron or just ogle my clientele?"



"I'm teaching Z the proper way to accomplish both."



"You ever think about investing in some workout clothes?" Henry said. "They've improved in the last century."



"Not everyone benefited as much from Jack LaLanne's death," I said.



Henry snorted. Z smiled as I slid onto the bench and started into a slow rep.



"I'll have you know this workout suit is custom-fitted," Henry said. "Probably cost more than your whole freakin' wardrobe."



I paused the weight on my chest, pushing out a couple more reps. I wanted to say something about shopping in the kids' section but kept it to myself, concentrating on the weight, the pause of the bar on my chest, exhaling as I pushed the weight upward. I finished the twelfth rep and re-racked the weight.



"Any more trouble?" I said.



"Nope."



"Thought we might follow you home tonight."



"I don't need babysitters," Henry said. "I need you to do that detective thing. Find out who these crapheads are."



"Crapheads have muddied the water," I said. "The prospective buyer is a corporation with an address listed as a P.O. box. The corporate contact registered with the state seems to be a phony."



"What about their lawyer?"



"I called him," I said. "He was less than forthcoming."



"Hung up on you?"



"Twice."



"I told you he was a prick."



"He's a lawyer," I said, shrugging.



Z had moved on to triceps presses with a fifty-pound dumbbell. He made it look easy. And for me, it wasn't as easy as it used to be. Of course, I wasn't in my twenties and just a few years away from college football. I had lasted only two years at Holy Cross before joining the Army, never being a fan of the rah-rah coaches or taking orders.



I switched places with Z. He'd pulled his long black hair into a ponytail, his wide face covered in sweat. The front of his gray T-shirt read Rocky Boy Rez, Box Elder, Montana.



"Is there a lot to do in Box Elder?" I asked.



"Why do you think I stayed in Boston?"



"Numerous liberal coeds wanting to right their ancestors' wrongs?"



"Nope."



"Or because you worked for a bloated, self-absorbed, immoral creep and sought spiritual guidance from a Zen master?"



"There was that," Z said.



We met Henry in the parking garage thirty minutes later. I was driving a dark blue Ford Explorer that year, decent legroom for men of a certain size. Henry pulled out in a white Camry, and we followed him up Atlantic and down into the Callahan Tunnel and intermittent flashes of fluorescent light, taking 1A up past Logan, through Chelsea, and on into Revere Beach. I had the radio tuned low to a jazz program on WICE, Art Pepper on horn. The tired triple-deckers and sagging brick storefronts whizzed past.



"A good friend of mine used to vacation in Chelsea," I said.



"You're kidding," Z said.



"Have to know the guy," I said. "Grew up in Lowell."

Author

© Joe Worthem
Ace Atkins is the New York Times bestselling author of the Quinn Colson novels, the first two of which, The Ranger and The Lost Ones, were nominated for the Edgar Award for Best Novel (he also has a third Edgar nomination for his short story, “Last Fair Deal Gone Down”). In addition, he is the author of several New York Times bestselling novels in the continuation of Robert B. Parker’s Spenser series. Before turning to fiction, he was a correspondent for the St. Petersburg Times, a crime reporter for the Tampa Tribune, and, in college, played defensive end for the undefeated Auburn University football team (for which he was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated). He lives in Oxford, Mississippi. View titles by Ace Atkins

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