Canary Page 5
Did I mention he lifted? Because his shoulders were defined. He wore baggier clothes that didn’t show the definition, but I knew it was there. I saw it when he was lifting a body one time. He was a bit bulkier than Raize, but both were defined. Cut.
I didn’t know much about Jake. He came in and he was quiet.
He never said anything to me, and now he was asking questions like that?
People didn’t ask questions. Nosy snitches and all that.
He turned around as we waited outside yet another house. Raize had gone inside, and he’d been in there for a good long time.
I was getting restless. Also, I needed to piss.
“Shouldn’t you be in there?” I motioned with my head toward the house. “Since you’re security.”
Jake snorted, hiding a smile. “Raize doesn’t need my help. I’m more the take-out-the-body guy and the driver. But between you and me, I’m hoping he gets a new guy that’ll do the driving. I get antsy, want my hands free in case we need to shoot, you know?”
I’d have liked to say I didn’t know because needing to shoot a gun at a second’s notice wasn’t normal. But it was for us.
So I nodded, settling back in the seat. “What’s he doing in there, anyway?”
I wasn’t looking at him, but I could feel Jake’s look sharpen. “You never ask questions. This because I asked about your family?”
I met his eyes, and no words were needed. It was the reason, or most of the reason. I might have had a small trace of worry about Raize, since I now knew he was the reason I wasn’t with Bronski again. It would suck if I had to go back to him. I’d probably have to kill him, and then who the fuck knew what would happen.
I had an agenda. There was a reason I was sitting on my ass in the cold car, or at least I hoped there still was. I wanted in with the Russians—just not through Bronski—and if we went to Texas, there were no Russians down there.
“You got family up here?” There might’ve been some attitude with that question.
He grinned. “Nah. My parents divorced. Mom’s gone—left our asses long ago. She’s got a new family out in Oregon or somewhere.” He turned back to looking out the front, his head bobbing. “And good for her, you know? My old man and me...we ain’t close.”
I narrowed my eyes. “Why are you telling me this?”
“You asked.”
I shifted again. It was getting hot in this damn car. “You know what I mean.”
He didn’t answer right away.
I started to think he wouldn’t.
Then, still facing forward, he spoke. “I’ve been here a bit. You more. And I don’t know… We’re going to Texas, and it’s obvious we’ve all hitched our wagons to Raize, and he’s hitched his to you, so I figure what’s the harm in getting to know each other a bit? It’s not like any of us are leaving any time soon, you know?”
Yeah… I knew.
Still, I didn’t like talking about family. My mouth was tight, my answer even tighter. “No family.”
“Yeah.” He sounded tired and sad at the same time, but then he glanced at the house. “Raize got a new man.”
I looked.
Raize was headed our way, a big guy right behind him. The new guy looked uncomfortable in an oversized suit. But his face was bland—no tattoos, no scars. He was white, with some redness on his face like he’d been out in the sun too long. He had dark-blond hair that was flapping all over the place in the wind. He was a good five inches taller than Raize, who was over six feet, so the dude was big. He had a slight stomach on him, but that could’ve been muscle. The big clothes might’ve been picked on purpose, to trick anyone assessing into thinking he was chunky and not big and muscular. You couldn’t tell from his face, though his neck was just huge.
We were in Philly, so it was effing cold—a smattering of snow on the ground, chilly air. But as Raize walked toward us, it was like nothing touched him. His dead eyes met mine, lingered, and then he motioned to the guy. His words were muffled through the glass, but I heard him say “front seat” as he walked around the car and got in behind Jake.
Raize glanced my way once, then sat back. “Airport, Jake. We’re flying.”
Jake looked in the rearview mirror. “Papers?”
“I got ’em.” Then, “This is Cavers.”
Jake nodded to him.
Cavers nodded back.
“Jake, you’ll continue to be driver,” Raize added.
Jake’s eyes flicked to mine, but I looked away.
Cavers turned to look at me.
“She’s none of your business,” Raize said.
Cavers’ face closed up, and he faced forward like he’d been slapped.
He’d just been expecting the same introduction he got for Jake. Raize must’ve sensed this, because he didn’t say or do anything the whole way to the airport.
“Park in the long-term lot. We’ll be leaving the vehicle here. And, Jake, wipe it down.”
That meant we’d never be coming back to this car, ever.
I felt a whole new foreboding feeling, an itch down my spine, but what else was new in this world? I needed to get used to it.
No. That wasn’t true.
I never needed to get used to it. When I did, that’s when I’d be dead. I suppressed the tension that created, stuffing it to the back of my mind.
Could not go there.
Would not go there.
Jake pulled in, and we all got out.
Raize went to the back of the vehicle as Jake started wiping the inside of it.
We’d been told to pack light. I had a small backpack with a book and a change of clothes. Some toiletries. Raize was just as light. Cavers had nothing, and I assumed he hadn’t known we’d be traveling, because he was looking around, shifting on his feet.
At least I hoped that was the reason he was doing the nervous dance. The other reason meant a bullet in his forehead, and I did not want that to happen—not because of him, but because I lost my appetite every time a body dropped dead in front of me.
Raize handed me my bag, and I put it on my back. He did the same with his bag. Jake’s bag went on the ground, and then Raize rifled through another smaller bag.
He pulled out packets, handing one to each of us. “These are your traveling papers. These were taken care of by Carloni, so don’t get a big head thinking you have fake papers and you can head out from us.”
The warning there? These papers could be traced. Got it. Also, Carloni would be pissed about the lost investment.
I was also going out on a limb and guessing that Carloni was also Carl. It made sense.
“You sit by me,” Raize said, looking at me.
I nodded, taking my new driver’s license out.
My name was Carrie Smith. I was from Kentucky, and I was now twenty-three.
“You can call her Carrie,” Raize told Cavers.
Cavers frowned, but didn’t reply.
He also gave us new phones and took our old ones, which he put in a baggie and stuffed into his coat pocket.
It took Jake about an hour to finish with the car.
We waited to the side.
Raize was on his phone, standing away from us with his head down. Cavers was a smoker. I could smell the cigarettes on him, and wondered if he was itching to light up. Probably. Maybe that was why he was shifting on his feet. He stuffed his hands in his pockets, and I caught the bulge from his gun…which made me wonder what Raize was going to do about their guns. Unless we were checking a bag?