Andrew Vachss - Mask Market

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Burke, the relentless urban mercenary, returns in this riveting new thriller by bestselling author Andrew Vachss. Two decades ago, Burke "recovered" a teenage runaway from a pimp. Now she's on the run, again. After seeing the man who hired him to find her gunned down by a professional hunter-killer team, Burke realizes he could be next. The master urban survivalist knows he has to finish the job to learn the truth, only now he's looking for a predator, not a victim. The search will force Burke to walk down the one dark alley that has always terrified him -- his past.
From the Paperback edition. From Publishers Weekly
Hard-boiled crime fans will enjoy the latest entry in Vachss's long-running Burke series (
, etc.). The renegade New York City PI, who operates by an idiosyncratic private moral code, has been lying low since being shot in the face. But a longtime fixer, Charlie, soon sees past Burke's attempt to pose as his own brother and arranges a meeting with a prospective client, who wants to find a missing woman. What should have been a routine setup turns deadly when professional hit men gun down the client as he's attempting to retrieve Burke's retainer from his car. Burke, afraid that the gunmen may come after him and the data-filled CD the dead man gave him, uses his own network of allies and contacts to learn more about the missing woman, Beryl Preston, whom he happens to have saved from a pimp 20 years earlier. Despite a familiar plot, the sharp-edged prose and cutting insights into New York's underbelly elevate this above many similar crime novels.

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“Beryl is a troubled child,” he said, as if the empty phrase explained everything.

I blew smoke at the low ceiling to tell him that it didn’t.

“She’s done it before. Run away, I mean.”

“How’d you find her those other times?”

“She always came back on her own. That’s what’s different now.”

“How long’s she been gone?”

“It will be two weeks tomorrow. If school wasn’t out for the summer, it would be difficult for us—my wife and me—to explain. As it is…”

“You did all the usual stuff, right?”

“I’m not sure what you—”

“Contacted her school friends, checked with any relatives who might be willing to let her hide out at their place, read her diary…”

“Yes. Yes, we did all that. Under normal circumstances, we would never—”

“Does she have a pet?”

“You mean,” he said, glancing involuntarily at Pansy, “like a dog or a cat?”

“Yeah.”

“What difference would that make?”

“A kid that’s going to run away permanently, you’d expect them to take their pet with them.”

“Beryl never had a pet,” he said flatly, his tone making it clear that, if they had deemed one advisable, her devoted parents would have run out and gotten her one. The very best.

“Okay. What about clothes? Did she take enough to last her awhile?”

“It’s…hard to tell, to be honest. She has so many clothes that we couldn’t determine if anything was missing.”

“What makes you think she’s in Manhattan?”

“One of the private detectives we hired was able to trace her movements on the day it…happened. We don’t know how she got to the train station—it’s about twenty minutes from our house, and the local car service hadn’t been called—but there’s no question that she bought a ticket to Penn Station.”

“Penn Station’s a hub. She could have connected with another train to anywhere in the country. Did she have enough money for a ticket?”

“I…don’t know how much money she had. None of the cash we keep in the house was missing, but we’ve always been very generous with her allowance, and she could have been saving up to…do this. But the last detective agency we retained was very thorough, and they are quite certain she didn’t catch a train out…at least, on the day she left.”

“So you hired this ‘agency,’ and…?”

“Agen cies, ” he corrected. “Two of them rather strongly suggested we call in the police. The third place we consulted told us about you.”

“Told you what, exactly?”

“They said you were a man who…who could do things they wouldn’t be comfortable doing.”

“What makes you think your daughter is with a pimp, Mr. Preston?”

“What?!”

“You didn’t want to come here,” I said, calmly. “Now that you showed up, you don’t like being here. You want to waste your money lying to me, that’s up to you. But there isn’t a PI agency in this town that would have recommended me—they don’t even know I exist.”

He sat there in silence, not denying anything. Back then, NYPD had a Runaway Squad, and I went back a long ways with the best street cop they had, a nectar-voiced Irishman named McGowan. His partner was a thug with so many CCRB complaints against him that the only thing keeping him on the job was that all the complaints came from certified maggots: baby-rapers a specialty. Guy named Morales. So the Commissioner teamed him with McGowan, and, somehow, they meshed into a high-results unit. Word was, if they had partnered Morales with the devil, it would be Satan who played the good cop in tag-team interrogations.

Years later, when McGowan finally retired, Morales went off by himself. He was an old-school street beast, a badge-carrying brute who’d always pick a blackjack over a warrant. He’d been dinosaured to the sidelines because nobody wanted to partner with a bull who knew every china shop in town.

In his eyes, I was always a suspect—which was nothing special for Morales—but I’d saved his life once, and he hated the debt more than he did me. It was Morales who planted the pistol and the bone hand, calling things square in whatever crazy language he used when he talked to himself.

It wasn’t just his feral honor that guaranteed Morales would never change the story he’d made up. When 9/11 hit, he was one of the first cops into the World Trade Center. When his body was recovered from the wreckage, the papers called him a hero. Down here, we know they got the answer right, but had figured it all wrong. Morales had charged into the flames with a semi-auto in one hand, a lead-weighted flashlight in the other, and a throw-down piece in his pocket, like always. The old street roller hadn’t been on any rescue mission; he’d been looking for the bad guys.

Jeremy Preston wasn’t the first parent McGowan had sent my way. He never came right out and recommended me, exactly—he just wove my name into one of his long, rambling accounts of the shark tank that was the Port Authority Bus Terminal then, each newly arriving bus discharging chum into the water, the pimps circling.

We’re not talking Iceberg Slim here. The Port Authority trollers were the low end of the scale: polyestered punks with CZ rings and 10K gold, not a Cadillac among them. They didn’t turn a girl out with smooth talk and sweet promises. For that breed, “game” was coat-hanger whips and cigarette burns. And gang rape.

I lit another cigarette, watched Preston’s derma-glazed face through the bluish smoke. Said, “Well?”

“Look, I don’t know for a fact that my daughter is with some…pimp.”

“I understand,” I said. “Just tell me what you do know, okay?”

By the time he was done, we’d agreed on a price. And I went hunting.

M y first rescue had been an accident. One thing I had learned from my last stretch Inside: steal from people who can’t go to the Law. And stick to cash. I had lurked for days, watching for what I thought was a good target. When he made his move, I followed him and the teenager he had plucked off a bus from the Midwest. The derelict building he took her to was a couple of notches below slum, the kind of place where the mailboxes were all wrenched open on check day, and the despair stench had penetrated down to the last molecule. There was no lock on the front door. I followed them up a few flights, listening to the pimp saying something about how this was “just for tonight.”

The top floor was all X-flats—cleared of occupants because the building was waiting on the wrecking ball. The pimp had put his own padlock on the door. I figured he had another one on the inside, so I didn’t wait. I came up fast behind them, shouldered them both into the apartment, and let the pimp see my pistol—a short-barreled .357 Mag—before he could make a move.

“What is this, man?”

“I’m collecting for the Red Cross,” I said. “They take money or blood, your choice.”

“Oh,” he said, visibly relaxing as the message that this was a stickup penetrated. “Look, man, I’m not carrying no real coin, you understand?”

“A major mack like you? Come on, let’s see the roll. And move slow —this piece could punch a hole in you the size of a manhole cover.”

The girl stood rooted to the spot, her eyes darting around the vile room, taking in the stained, rotted mattress in one corner, the white hurricane candle in a wide glass jar, the huge boom box, and the word “Prince” spray-painted in red on a nicotine-colored wall.

The pimp reached…slowly…into the side pocket of his slime-green slacks, came out with a fist-sized wad of bills. At a nod from me, he gently tossed it over.

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