Whomp… Whomp… Whomp…
“498…”
Whomp…
Whomp… Whomp…
“499…”
Whomp…
Whomp…. Whomp…
“500!”
I put the 500th Ecstasy pill into a
plastic freezer bag and let all the air out before sealing it up. The pristine
white party pills look like pearls, each one emblazoned with the Family crest,
a capital “F” in cursive. In the corner of the poorly lit basement, an old printer
is hard at work spitting out a shipping label for a very big package.
“You sure you counted it right?” Connor asks me.
“Yeah. Twice. They’re all there.” I reply.
“Alright. Watch this…”
Connor ties his long red hair back into a ponytail
and picks up a large, shiny, silver plastic bag. He slides the opening of the
bag towards a vacuum sealer and turns it on. He repeats the process until the
package has been vacuum sealed three times over.
“This way the dogs can’t smell it. Nine times outta
ten you never have to worry about dogs unless you’re shippin weed, but it’s
better to be safe than sorry…”
I sip a glass of whiskey as Connor explains the
whole process. A single hanging lightbulb illuminates the room. A “burner
laptop” sits next to the printer on a small desk, running Linux off a USB drive
that contains The Family’s darknet vendor page information. I’ve been buying
drugs from these guys through the darknet for a year, and it’s cool as Hell to
see the process from the other end.
“OK. Now that it’s all sealed, we’re gonna box it
up…” Connor says. I hand Connor a first generation Playstation 3 that’s been
gutted from the inside. Connor unscrews the shell and the vacuum-sealed bag of
drugs fits snugly inside. He screws it back together and shakes it gently,
pressing his ear to the console. “This part’s important.” He says. “If you hear
‘em rolling around in there, you could break the pills.” The console is a
perfect fit for the shipment, and Connor lays it inside a cardboard box between
two thin layers of packing peanuts. After taping it up, he grabs the shipping
label from the printer. The return address reads: Kyle’s Retro Game Spot, 224 Main Street, Norridgewock, ME.
I put the package and ten other priority mail
envelopes full of various amounts of LSD and MDMA into a duffel bag and get in
the car. The car rumbles along a thin dirt road that seems to go on forever. I
have to drive ten minutes before I even see another house, and another five
before I reach pavement. I could never live out here, but it is a great place to put a stash house…
I pull over to the mailbox and make the drop. I rush
to the town’s only pizza joint before it closes at six and grab our dinner. Thankfully
it’s next to the liquor store, which also closes at six. I grab two handles of
Jack Daniels and a carton of Marlboros and head back to home base.
“Let’s eat outside. It’s fucking beautiful out.”
Connor says to me when I return. I put a card table between two folding chairs
while Connor sets up a wireless Bluetooth speaker. I get right into my pizza,
as it dawns on me that I haven’t eaten all day. It’s just been water, cocaine,
and whiskey since I woke up at noon.
Connor chugs from the handle of Jack and lets out a
satisfied “Ahhhh…” as he pours himself a stiff drink. Connor is the biggest
drunk I’ve ever met, but also one of the most high-functioning. He starts every
morning with a whiskey and coffee, and maintains throughout the day. I don’t
get how he never passes out.
After dinner Connor and I indulge in a few lines of
Family coke. This shit is like a different drug compared to the shit I used to
get back home. Raw, straight from the Mexicans. Easy on the nose, clean, and
euphoric. Derek won’t let us cut it, even though we’d triple our money that
way.
“The one thing I’ll give this place… That fucking
sky, man. It’s so clear. You don’t see that shit at home. Too much fuckin’
light pollution and shit.” Connor says.
“Yeah…” I reply, playing with the small pile of
cocaine in front of me.
“How you been sleepin?”
“As good as that fuckin’ couch lets me…”
“Fuck the couch, brother. You know what I mean. Is
it fuckin you up?”
“Nah, man. I mean… It is what it is…”
“You don’t have to play hard ass. You dream about
it? You feel… Anything?”
I sigh and take a few long hauls off the Jack
bottle. I light a cigarette, kick back and look at the setting sun.
“I guess I
was just… surprised. I mean, I done my share of dirt. But I had never even held
a gun before I did it. I knew I’d have to do cut my teeth, pay my dues,
whatever. But I didn’t expect to have to do something like that, y’know?”
“You never held a gun before?” Connor asks,
surprised.
“Nope. Had a few pulled on me, but I never bothered
with ‘em. That mandatory minimum shit is no joke.” I reply, shaking my head.
“Huh… Well, I can promise you this: you won’t have
to do that very often. What happened the other night was… an exception. Most
people have the common sense not to try and rip off the brand like that. ‘Cause
they know what happens when ya do….” Connor points his burning cigarette to the
woods.
“Truth is, I
don’t feel a whole lot. Just kinda like… numb. And I wonder what that means,
y’know? I should fuckin’ feel something, right?”
“It means ya got balls. That’s all. Listen to me,
brother. They knew what the fuck they were doing. They knew what would happen
if we caught ‘em. If anything you did ‘em a fuckin favor by getting it done
quick like that. I dunno what they put on those pills and tabs, but it sure as
shit wasn’t the real deal. You definitely saved some lives. Focus on that.”
Connor says.
“You got a point there. I just thought, y’know, with
all the brother and sister coombayah shit…”
“Hehe, don’t let the tie dye fool ya. We’re still
drug dealers. I gotta piss…”
As Connor gets up and staggers over to the bushes to
relieve himself, his burner phone slips out of his pocket. I wouldn’t have even
noticed it if the screen wasn’t flashing and ringing. I pick it up and read the
screen: 4 Missed Calls: Derek, Derek,
Derek, Derek.
“Derek’s been blowing you up, dude.” I say to Connor
as he walks back over. “Fuck does he want?” Connor asks, irritated. Connor
stumbles around in circles as he calls Derek back. “Cocksucker calls me four
times and now he doesn’t wanna answer his god damn… Hey! What’s up? I don’t
know. I mean, I don’t fucking know. We’re out in east bumfuck Maine, asshole,
we’re working off burners, we can’t just turn on the fuckin’ news… What do you
mean? Just tell me what happened, Derek, enough of this vague horseshit…. Oh.
Yeah, yeah, I think I know what you’re talking about. Shit. Alright. Alright,
brother. See you soon.” Connor looks worried as he hangs up the phone. “We
should head inside for the night.” He tells me, suddenly growing serious. “And…?”
I ask. “Pack up, we’ll talk inside.” He replies.
We have a seat in the dining room as Connor thinks
to himself. He downs a glass of whiskey and quickly pours another. After a
smoke and a line, he finally opens up.
“Alright. Derek couldn’t get into too much detail
over the phone, but it sounds like things are heating up out here. He’s gonna
be here tomorrow morning to plan our next move. Do me a favor, go and pull the
car around the back of the house. Make sure it’s outta sight. You got your real
phone with ya right? Not the burner, ya smart phone.” Connor asks. “Yeah, yeah,
I should still have it. Long as I didn’t lose it over the weekend. It’s just
gotta charge up.” I reply.
I bring the car behind the house as my anxiety begins
to sober me up. Connor peers through the blinds and paces around as my phone
slowly boots up. “What do I put in?” I ask him. “I dunno, how bout, ‘Maine kids
disappear’…” He replies. Naturally, our remote location makes our service
agonizingly slow. As the little blue bar on the top of the screen finally
reaches the top, my jaw drops…
STATEWIDE
SEARCH BEGINS FOR MISSING U-MAINE STUDENTS
“Jesus Christ…” Connor says as he reads the article.
I shake my head and pull at my hair as I drink, smoke, and sniff. “The fuck are
we gonna do, man!?” I ask nervously. “We gotta keep it together. We knew this
was gonna happen. Long as we play it straight we’ll be fine. Let’s pack up
everything. We’re obviously gonna be hitting the road once Derek gets here.
Let’s just pray we don’t get a knock at the door before then. Pack up all ya
shit you’re not gonna need tonight and leave it by the door. Then meet me
downstairs.” Connor replies.
Most of my shit is already packed from being away at
Jam Camp all weekend. All I really gotta get together is my money, leftover
shit, and some clothes. I take a moment to have an impromptu accounting
session. One thousand, two thousand,
three thousand, four… Five thousand, six thousand, seven, eight, nine, ten… ten
and a half. It’s only been two weeks. Ten g’s in two weeks ain’t bad, but it’s
hardly a down payment for the kinda lawyer I’m gonna need for a double murder
charge…
I bag everything up and stash it in the car. Connor
waits for me downstairs, cleaning the fingerprints off of a .38 revolver and a
12 gauge shotgun. “We’ll have to toss this in the water somewhere tomorrow… You
all packed?” He asks me. I nod. Connor puts on a pair of gloves and loads the
shotgun. “I’m not saying that you should be worried…” He says, as he pumps it.
“But you never know…” He takes the shotgun upstairs to his bedroom and I lay
down on the couch.
I stare at the ceiling as my stomach churns. There’s
no way in Hell I’m gonna sleep tonight. I eye the bottle of Jack on the table
beside me, but what if they come? I won’t stand a chance against them
shitfaced. But would I even stand a chance sober? Fuck it, this could be the
last drink I take for a very long time…
Connor shakes me awake a few hours later. “Come
upstairs, Derek should be here any minute.” I follow him up to the dining room,
have a glass of water, and sit down at the table. Meeting the boss is always
nerve-wracking for me, even if I’m not in trouble. My anxiety and hangover
meet, forging an alliance against anything that might potentially settle my
stomach. Connor makes himself a whiskey coffee and sits down next to me. “I’m
gonna need a stiff one today, I can feel it…” He mumbles.
Five minutes later Derek’s
black Tesla Model X pulls into the driveway. “Good morning brother.” He says,
shaking my hand and giving me and Connor each an awkward hug. Derek sniffs the
air as he pulls away from Connor. “You’re drunk?! It’s 8:30 AM! How the Hell
could you be drinking at a time like this!?” He barks at Connor. “Chill the
fuck out, alright? I’m just maintaining. I’m not shitfaced. I think we got
bigger things to worry about right now than my god damn drinking.” Connor quips
back. Derek sighs and has a seat at the table with us. With his well-groomed
beard and shoulder length brown hair tied back into a ponytail, he looks more
like a business casual hippie than a kingpin. He wears a collared blue and
white striped shirt, tucked into black pants with black dress shoes. Though
he’s somewhat soft spoken, there’s a firmness in his voice that speaks to his
power. He turns to me and strokes his chin. “Alright, Adam. I just want you to
tell me exactly what happened. Step by step. Don’t leave anything out.”
“Molly, Acid, K, Bud, Coke! We got what you need!”
“Molly, Acid, K, Bud, Coke! Right here!”
Connor and I shouted our pitch from our campsite as
wooks and custies walked past us on their way to the main stage. “This shit
better pick up soon, brother. I’m trying to catch Government Mule later…”
Connor said. “If we still haven’t moved it all by then you can go, I’ll hold
down the fort. I don’t give a shit about any of these bands.” I replied. Connor
shrugged. “Suit yourself. You really don’t know what the fuck you’re missing.” A
customer approached us as we fucked around. “You guys got L? Let me get a strip…”
He said, clearly paranoid as he looked over either shoulder.
I went into our tent to retrieve the strip when
Jimmy, the curator of the festival, pulled up to our campsite in a golf cart.
“Oh fuck!” My customer yelped before darting off into tent city. “What the fuck
Jimmy?!” Connor shouted angrily. “Do we not have a fucking arrangement!? You
can’t be scaring away my fucking customers like that you asshole!” “I’m sorry,
but I got something I think you’re gonna wanna see…” Jimmy said. Something
about Jimmy’s expression told Connor it was urgent. “Alright, where at?” Connor
replied. “Staff lodge. I’ll meet you there.” The golf cart drove off, leaving a
trail of dust behind it. Connor stroked his beard, took a final haul from his
cigarette, and stomped it out. “Let’s go.” He said.
In a back room marked in the back of the staff lodge
marked “security”, Jimmy was waiting for us. Two guys in their mid-20’s sat in
folding chairs, staring at the floor. A young, college-aged staff member stood
in the corner, watching us. “My friend William here caught these two hustling
in the campgrounds.” Jimmy began, pointing to the other staff member, and then
to the two guys in the chairs. “We went about it like we would anyone else,
until we got a good look at what they were pushing…” Jimmy dropped two ziplock
freezer bags onto a small table and pushed them towards Connor and I. The bags
contained Ecstasy pills and Acid tabs that shared the Family crest. Only
problem was, these two guys weren’t Family.
“Look bro, we’re not Family, ok!? Those are fakes,
made with research chemicals that are unscheduled in the state of Maine! That
means they’re completely legal! You don’t have shit on us! So unless I see a
fucking lawyer in the next hour you’re all looking at kidnapping charges!” One
of the seated guys shouted.
“I know you’re not Family. These pills are too big,
and these tabs are too small…” Connor said. The other bootlegger stood up
suddenly. “Are you guys cops or what?! Let’s see some badges. If not, let us
go, we’re done here.” He barked in Connor’s face. Connor stared back at him,
his pale blue eyes looked into the bootlegger’s soul as the latter tried to
keep up the tough guy routine. He sat back down and Connor looked towards
Jimmy. “You and your boy wanna take a walk?” He asked Jimmy. Jimmy and William
headed for the door. Just before they left, Jimmy leaned into Connor’s ear. “Don’t
do it here.” He said before he left.
Connor locked the door to the security room before
proceeding. “We’re not cops. We’re the guys you’re trying to rip off…” He
snarled, pulling a .38 revolver from the back of his waistband and smacking one
of the bootleggers with it. His friend got up but I pushed him back down into
the chair. I had no idea he’d brought a gun with him. “Take this, make sure
these two don’t get any ideas. I gotta call Derek.” Connor said, handing me the
revolver. He put the burner to his ear and waited for Derek to answer.
“Hey. Listen. Me and the kid are alright, but Jimmy
brought an issue to our attention. There’s someone here selling fake t-shirts.
You want me to do something about it? Ok. Got it.” Connor hung up, took the gun
from me, and aimed it back at them. “We gotta move quick. Go back to the tent
and grab my main bag, the black duffel bag. Grab all your essentials. We’re
ditching the rest. Then go get the car and bring it around here.” He instructed
me.
“You guys are Family, aren’t you!? Oh fuck, oh fuck…”
One of the bootleggers cried.
“Hey! There ya go! I knew you’d put it together
eventually…” Connor said as I shut the door. I ran back to the campsite,
wheezing as years of cigarettes and pot smoke caught up with me. I hastily
stuffed my cash, drugs, and clothes into my backpack and Connor’s cash, drugs,
and cash into his bag and slung them both on my shoulders. The table, tent,
EZ-Up tent, and other camping gear would be abandoned for the first wook bold
enough to claim them.
“No cars in the campgrounds, bud. Sorry.” The lot
attendant told me as I pulled up. “I’m a friend of Derek Ashton.” I replied. “So?”
The attendant sho back, confused. “Call Jimmy, he’ll know what I mean. It’s an
emergency.” I pleaded with him. The attendant rolled his eyes but decided to
humor me. “Yeah, kid here says he’s friends with Derek Ashton? I told him
there’s no cars on the campgrounds… Oh, oh, alright. Sorry… Yeah, go right
ahead man…” The attendant waved me through the parking lot and into the main
campgrounds. I pulled in front of the staff lodge and called Connor.
Bootlegger number one walked in front of Connor, who
had his arm slung around the shoulder of bootlegger number two. The three of
them stuffed themselves into the back seat. Connor pulled the gun back out and
pointed it at one of their crotches. “Gimme your phones, both of you. Burners
too.” He ordered them. One of them turned over a smart phone and a burner. The
other ran his pockets but found nothing. “I don’t have mine, I swear! It’s back
at my campsite. We got money there too, man! It’s all yours if you let us go!
Please!” Connor turned off both phones and tossed them onto the empty passenger
seat next to me. “I’m glad we’re on the same page. Why don’t you tell my friend
here where your campsite is. Maybe we can work something out after all...”
Connor said.
The bootleggers led us to their campsite. We drew
stares from everyone as we slowly drove through the tight rows of tent city,
taking care not to mow down any passing spunions. “I’ll go get it!” One of the
bootleggers said as we pulled up. He went for the door handle, but I mashed the
lock button down a second earlier. Connor pulled the other bootlegger in
towards him, pistol whipped him, and put the revolver in his mouth. “Stay in
the fucking car, asshole! My boy will get it. Tell him where it is.” Tears
rolled down the second bootlegger’s face. He mumbled something, but it’s hard
to talk when the barrel’s in your mouth. “Alright, alright! Fuck! The blue
backpack has the cash in it. The phones are in the front pocket. Is this really
fucking necessary!?” Connor pulled the gun out of the other bootlegger’s mouth
and re-positioned it at his crotch. “Adam, go get that shit. Be fuckin’ quick,
we’re causing a scene here.”
I ran into the tent and grabbed the blue backpack.
Sure enough, there were the phones and cash. I threw the bag over my shoulder
and tossed the rest of the tent for more. A fat wad of cash in a rubber band
tumbled out of the pillow case and onto the tent floor. I knew these assholes were holding out on us…
“It was all there. I found more cash in a pillow
case.” I told Connor as I got back into the car. “Good thinking. Let’s head
back to the house. I wanna interview these two copycats.” Connor said. “What?!?
No, no! You said we were gonna work something out! We gave you the fucking
money!” One of the bootleggers cried. “Ah, ah, ah! We just need you two to
answer some questions. You tell us whatever you know and we’ll let you go. And
you better not fucking lie to me again. You grabbed the booze, right Adam?”
Connor asked me. I nodded at him in the rearview and began to drive.
Connor brought the two bootleggers down to the basement.
I was tasked with preparing their drinks. I figured we could all use a stiff
one, given the circumstances. I poured four glasses of JD, gave ‘em each a
splash of coke, and walked down to the basement where Connor had our guests at
gunpoint on the couch. I dropped the drinks on the table and took a big sip
from mine. “You guys must be fucking parched…” Connor said before chugging his
drink. Both of the bootleggers shook their heads and stared at the floor.
Connor sighed. “Suit yourselves.” Connor pounded both of their drinks and began
the interrogation.
“Alright. You
guys answer these questions for me truthfully and you got my word I’ll let you
go…” Connor said. Bootlegger one sniffled and cried to himself as he stared at
the basement floor. The other was gritting his teeth trying to keep himself together.
“Who you workin’ for?” Connor asked them.
“Nobody.” The more composed bootlegger replied.
“If you’re gonna keep lying to me I’m not gonna help
ya…”
“You’re gonna kill us either way…” The crying one
moaned.
“Hehe, nooo!
I’m not gonna kill ya. Not unless I absolutely have to. You know how much work
it is to hide a body these days? With DNA testing, all that CSI shit? I don’t
wanna work tonight. You wanna work tonight, Adam?” Connor turned to me.
“Nope.” I replied as I sipped my whiskey.
“That’s what I thought. So tell me what I wanna know
and I’ll let you go.”
“We’re just college kids, man. I fucking swear.
We-we… We read about you guys, online. The stories. People on campus, they go
crazy for the Family shit. We couldn’t get the precursors to make real MDMA,
real LSD, but we could make other shit... We didn’t think we’d actually run
into you guys…” The composed bootlegger explained.
“Just outta curiosity. What’d you put on the tabs
and the rolls?” Connor asked.
“Analogue chemicals. Obscure shit that’s easy to
make…” He replied.
“Is that true?” Connor asked the crying one.
“Yes… Please don’t fucking kill us!” He screamed.
“So these counterfeit tabs and rolls start and end
with you? When we let you go, it stops?” Connor asked them.
Both bootleggers nodded their heads quickly. “Yes!”
They said in unison.
“Alright. That’s good to hear. You boys don’t seem
the type to pull something like this again. We in the Family view violence as a
last resort. Thing is, by being here, we’ve technically broken one of our own
rules. We brought two outsiders into one of our stash spots…” Connor told them.
“We won’t say shit!” The crying one shouted.
“Calm the fuck down, I know you won’t. But, just to
make sure, we’re gonna take the back road out. There’s a path through the woods
out back that leads to the campgrounds of Jam Camp. It’s one of our smuggling
routes. Makes it so we can’t get pulled over with weight on us.” Connor told
them.
The two bootleggers nodded. Connor turned to me. “Go
upstairs to my room, go into the black bag, and grab me the two bandanas.
There’s a red and a purple one.” He instructed me. I went upstairs and
retrieved the two bandanas.
Connor used the bandanas to blindfold our guests. “My
boss wanted me to kill you guys. Like I said, I don’t wanna do that. But in
order to let you guys go, I gotta make sure this whole thing won’t bite me in
the ass. I just shook you down for all your cash and drugs. If I was you, I’d
be pretty fucking angry. When I get angry, I do stupid shit. I don’t need you
coming back here, or sending the cops up here. Just relax, and walk. Single
file. My guy here will be walking in front to make sure you don’t trip. Adam,
take the lead.” Connor said. I walked to the bulkhead door and opened it,
carefully leading the two bootleggers up the steps and out into the backyard.
Connor followed them at gunpoint. “Stop, we gotta lock the doors.” Connor said.
I went to lock the doors, but Connor pulled me stopped me. He pointed to a shovel
leaning against the back of the house. I picked it up and we kept walking.
We walked aimlessly
through the woods for twenty minutes or so. The two bootleggers tripped
constantly. Eventually we hit a clearing. “Stop.” Connor said. The crying
bootlegger had started up again. “Derek wants you to do it.” Connor said to me,
handing me the revolver. “Oh god, oh god, oh god, fuck!” The crying one
stammered, pulling his blindfold off. Without thinking I pulled the trigger,
and his body fell forward. The other bootlegger’s hands shook as he pulled his
blindfold off slowly, and stared at his dead friend in disbelief. “We had a
fucking deal, man!” He shouted before I shot him in the chest. I put another in
his head when he hit the ground. My hands shook and I felt dizzy as I realized
what I’d done. Connor patted me on the back. “Phew! I thought for sure you were
gonna freeze up and we’d have to chase ‘em. Good job, brother! Now dig the
hole, quick.”
“So you still have the phones, their wallets, ID’s?”
Derek asks. “Yeah.” Connor replies. Derek sits and thinks for a few agonizing
seconds. “The cops were questioning Jimmy.” He says. Our eyes widen at the
news. “You don’t think he’d say anything…” I say nervously. “Fuck no. He knows
better than that. Cops are the least of his fuckin’ worries…” Connor interjects.
“I suppose we can kiss our contract with Jam Camp goodbye…” Derek laments,
pausing before continuing. “I know this looks bad, but as long as we take the
necessary steps to insulate ourselves, this will blow over eventually. Adam, I
wanna say how proud of you I am for handling this the way you did. If it wasn’t
implied already, you’re in. You can consider this your…. Initiation.
Welcome, brother.” “Welcome brother!” Connor says, raising his glass and
downing it.
“We don’t know who saw the car. I say we find a spot
and torch it with the phones and shit.” Connor suggests as we prepare to leave.
“Good thinking. I’m gonna put you two up at the farm with Elliot for now.”
Derek tells us. “Fuck that. Elliot’s a nice guy and all but I’m not wasting my
time sitting on that fucking farm. We got a festival to work this weekend,
we’re out of state either way, what difference does it make?” Connor starts,
visibly grating on Derek’s nerves. “I’ll make sure there’s plenty of booze.
It’s just until the weekend. On Thursday I’ll come over and see where we’re at.
You don’t know who saw you, whether they have a sketch of your faces or not.
It’s too dangerous to have you out working right now.” Derek explains. Connor
rolls his eyes like a child as we continue to load our things into the car.
On a long stretch of empty road in New Hampshire, we
come across an abandoned lot. The pavement is hardly visible and mostly overcome
by tall grass and weeds. The rusted frame of an old car sits in the corner next
to an old tire. Connor calls Derek as we pull over. “Yeah, here looks perfect.”
He says before hanging up. We pull into the lot and hop out. Connor takes a gas
can from the trunk and begins to drench the sedan with it. “You wanna do some?”
He asks me, handing me the can. I dump the rest of the gas onto my side of the
vehicle while Connor rolls up a newspaper. “Alright, stand back.” He says as he
lights the newspaper up and throws it at the car. “Whoo!” He shouts, as the flames
consume the vehicle. We stand around and watch the show until Derek beeps for
us to get the fuck out of here.
“This thing’s got balls, huh?” Connor says to Derek
mockingly as we speed away from the scene. “Zero to sixty in three and a half
seconds.” Derek replies. “Beats a fuckin’ Prius, I guess…” Connor says, taking
a swig from his flask. Every mile we put between us and the crime scene puts me
at ease. With a few hours left until we hit the farm, I get comfortable and
fall asleep.
“Hey, fucker, wake up! We’re here!” Connor slurs at
me, his whiskey and cigarette breath stinging my eyes, nose, and lungs, jarring
me awake. I stretch and get out of Derek’s car, taking in my surroundings.
“Where are we?” I ask Derek. “Tunbridge, Vermont.” He replies. “AKA, east
bumfuck.” Connor shouts over his shoulder as he takes a piss on the lawn.
“Connor, you know Elliot. Elliot, this is the newest
member of our family, Adam O’Leary.” Derek says, introducing me to a thin,
elderly man with long, gray hair in a ponytail. “Adam, nice to meet you
brother.” Elliot says to me, shaking my hand and giving me a hug. Elliot looks
at Connor and back at Derek. “Guess I’d better lock up the liquor cabinets,
huh?” He says, laughing. “Haha, gimme a hug ya old bastard!” Connor says,
grabbing Elliot. “You guys make yourselves at home, you’re gonna have to share
a room, though. It’s upstairs, first door on the left.” Elliot says. “I call
top bunk.” Connor says snidely as we head upstairs.
The window in our bedroom gives a gorgeous view of
growing corn, tomatoes, and other vegetables. A massive greenhouse sits behind
it. “Is that what I think it is?” I ask Connor, pointing to it. “Yup. And
that’s just the indoor crop. You can smell it all the way over here. Tomorrow
I’ll show you the outdoor one. It’s fucking huge.” He replies. Derek enters the
bedroom as we get settled in. “You guys all good? You need anything?” He asks
us. “Nope.” We reply. “Ok. Consider this a paid vacation. Just kick back,
relax, wait for things to cool off. I’ll give you a call if anything big comes
up. I live out in Burlington anyway, so I’m not far off. Oh, and one more
thing…” Derek pulls an envelope from his back pocket and hands it to me.
“That’s for you. A token of my appreciation. Light and love, brothers.” Derek
says, waving goodbye. “Light and love.” Connor replies.
“Holy shit…” I whisper to myself as I count the
money.
“How much he give ya?” Connor asks excitedly.
“There’s twenty G’s here… Is that… Is that what you
get? For doing that?”
Connor nods. “Yeah. Ten a pop sounds about right.
Unless you think you shoulda got more…”
I shake my head. “No, no! I’m just… surprised. I
guess.”
“Well, you earned it. You took out some competition,
which saved Derek a lot of money in the long
run, it’s only right some of it
trickles down to you.”
“Yeah… Yeah, I guess so.”
“Well, I dunno about you, but I need a fuckin’
drink.”
“Yeah. Yeah, me too.” I reply.
----
So, what did you think? Some of you might recognize this story/premise/some of the characters from an older story I did on Reddit that I deleted out of shame months ago. I thought I might re-work the premise to its current form to gauge interest on whether people would like to see it expanded on or not. So if you could tell me in the comments what you thought of it I'd really appreciate it. I have a lot of ideas of where it could go but if it's a shitty idea I'll move on to something else. Also, expect a NN&N update this week. I know I've been slacking big time this month but I've been super busy lately and haven't had much time to write. Thanks for baring with me, and as always, for reading.
-Harry
I enjoyed it
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