Chapter Two

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Chapter 2

What’s Buried in Benton

Once we get everyone suited up and strapped, we’re ready to roll. I check the Luger in my shoulder holster, enjoying the sound of the metallic click when I turn off the safety. After this I check the matching pistol I’ve got belted tightly inside the waist of my jeans and double-check my extra clips in the side pockets. I’ve probably got enough ammo on me to waste their entire crew, but as the old saying goes, ‘It’s better to be safe than dick-down and dead in the dirt!’

“MadBlack!” I call to him over the opening credits of The Devil’s Rejects DVD he’s just had one of his bitches start up for his viewing pleasure, “I’m snatchin’ a blunt off your stash! We’re going to Benton to take care of shit, aight?”

Mr. Nonchalant doesn’t even bother to turn his head or vocalize. He simply waves the back of his big hand at me in a shooing gesture.

“Yeah, I’ll miss you too, baby!” I yell as I get into my parka. It’s freezing out there with a stiff wind blowing in off the ocean, so my Rocawear parka with sky blue fur lining is my protection from the miserable Seattle winter. Sky blue because that’s our color.

Every gang has its colors and Kingfins are no different. We usually roll in sky blue and dark green when we need to represent. The two rides we’re taking tonight are both Oldsmobiles since that’s the brand most Kingfins favor. An Aurora and an Intrigue, both from 2002 and both of them a shade of hunter green. The Aurora’s been worked on more since it’s Kettle’s ride and he’s a vain dude. He’s got it chromed out and the sound system’s been replaced so he can blast his Wu-Tang CD’s louder than he ought to. Kettle is visiting us from Sunset Point so normally that’s where he’d be, but when something goes down and a Kingfin’s around then we join right in. The Intrigue is stock right now and belongs to Ducky, who’s one of our newer recruits here in Doyle Heights. Even though most of us are smoking as we head to the rides, we wouldn’t need to in order to get the same effect, it’s cold out here and you see your breath with each exhale.

All together we got me, Philly Mako, Kettle, Ducky, Ronnie-K, Junior Maze, Dank, Big Pete and Whistler. Since the smoke starts settling into my lungs, I’m feeling pretty good and not real worried about the situation in Benton Park. Most of these boys are seasoned and with the exception of Ducky, capable of handling a gunfight if need be. Doubt we’re going to run into too much resistance. Kettle takes the lead, with Philly at his side and I slip in next to Ducky since I’m not too fond of arguing with Kettle over which Wu-Tang CD best fits the mood. I can be quite particular in my musical tastes which sits fine with Ducky. He agrees to go ahead and load up some old school Warren G for our trip. In a couple minutes we’ll be at the park, so even if he doesn’t dig the beat, it’s not long to suffer.

“So, Ducky,” I ask between puffs of my blunt, watching Ronnie-K and Dank passing a joint in the backseat, “You ready for this shit, man? May get real violent tonight. Think you can handle it?”

Ducky’s got his favorite Florida Marlins cap socked down low over his eyes, but he nods vigorously, “Hell yeah I am. I grew up right across the street from Benton. In those Squarewood apartments? My mom used to tell me to stay out of the park after dark because of muggers. Me and the homeboys would drink out there. Remember that shit, Ronnie?”

“Uh huh,” Ronnie-K’s freckled face has that relaxed look that tells me he’s getting a lot of good off that joint. “Fucking King Cobra or Mad Dog or whatever the fuck we could get a hold of. Good times.”

“Shit yeah!” Ducky’s head bobs in agreement, a smile pulling at the corners of his mouth. “I remember your old man came and found us out there one night when we didn’t come home. Passed out, drunk as damned bums. About four o’clock in the morning, wasn’t it?”

Ronnie nods, holding the smoke in from his latest drag. Dank takes the joint from him, grinning crazily. Dank’s quite the heavy smoker, nearly always stoned. He says it’s because he comes from a long line of opium-smoking Chinese, but his folks actually came over from Cambodia before he was born.

“My mom was at work so I beat her home from her shift at the restaurant,” Ducky follows Kettle’s Aurora and pulls into the parking lot behind them, looking for an open slot. “You musta got smacked around pretty good for that one because you had a black eye the next day.”

“Yeah,” Ronny doesn’t appear to like this memory, “Scottish temper, man, he always had that Scottish temper. ‘Specially when he’d been drinking all night.”

Our car rolls to a stop and Ducky cuts the engine. Philly Mako and his crew are already getting out of the Intrigue. We aren’t the only cars here this late despite the fact that the park closes after dark. Plenty of business gets conducted in Benton twenty four hours a day. In fact, after surveying the area I’d say there are more cars here than usual. That’s most likely because the Knuckleheads shook the dealers down tonight. Probably caused a few shortages and now the customers have to wait around to score. I exit the vehicle and stroll over to Philly who’s waiting leaned up against Kettle’s car.

“So how you wanna do this?” he asks, lighting himself one of those nasty Newports he smokes. “You’re in charge here.”

“Bet your ass I am,” I tell him with a grin. “I’m thinking Dank and Junior Maze should re-tag our shit since that’s what they’re good at. You guys got your spray ready?”

Junior Maze speaks up first, “Hell yeah,” he shakes the backpack he’s brought along for the job, causing the cans to jangle. “I can cover that shit real quick. ‘Specially with a partner.”

“Long as he’s got the paint,” Dank adds, “I’m up for some art, man.”

“Right on,” I tell the group, “Ronnie-K and Big Pete, I want you boys to keep our rides on lockdown and ring my cell if you see the cops moving in. Got it?”

“Nobody gonna touch ‘em,” Big Pete assures me with a toss of his head.

“Good. Now let’s go find Ramos. Where’d he say he’d be at?” I ask Philly.

“He usually hangs out in the dark part and has his girls do the transactions,” Philly responds, thumbing the direction he believes Ramos to be in. “Surprised he ain’t come walking this way, but he’s probably sweating over the lost cash.”

“How much did he lose?” I ask.

“I think around two grand.”

“Shit!” I’m surprised the moron would keep that much on him after dark. “Must be a good night for slangin’ then. Whatever. Let’s find him and figure out what the story is on these Knuckleheads. Then we’ll hit up the other dealers and see if they got shook.”

The four of us head towards the dark part of the park, looking larger than life in our big parkas. The park would have lights all over it, but for years it’s been the same story: the city installs new lighting on the north side and the next night it gets shot out again. Dealers like their cover, you see. So do the dope fiends that frequent Benton. If one side doesn’t darken the place, the other will. All in the name of capitalism.

Ramos looks pretty nervous. Took us a while to find him since he decided to hide out in case the Knuckleheads came back for him. He’s by no means the only dealer out here tonight, probably five of them all together, but he’s the most established and definitely has his regular clientele. As far as slangers go, Ramos is a decent dude. Of course, that’s not saying much because he’s still the kind of guy who’d cheat his own mother if he saw the chance to make a buck. Unlike some of the crackheads out here trying to hustle, Ramos spends his wad on his appearance so he always looks sharp. Some people think he’s a pimp and others swear he’s a gigolo. He may be both. I couldn’t care less either way.

No matter which way you slice it, even in the orange haze from the streetlights, Ramos clearly identifies as a metrosexual. That or a homosexual, take your pick. He’s got on his usual wintertime coat, some expensive designer label duster. His stocking cap looks normal enough to me, but he probably spent a fortune on that, too. Standing in the shadow of an ancient redwood, he watches our approach. He’s definitely feeling skittish tonight, I can tell by the way he’s shifting his weight from foot to foot as he scans the park.

“Finally!” his voice is high, grating against my buzz. “Took you guys long enough. What the fuck? I pay you good money to protect me and you can’t even send me soldiers in under half an hour?”

“Chill out, Ramos,” Philly barks, “We got more to do around here than wiping your ass. Now tell Perce what happened.”

“Fucking Knuckleheads, man,” Ramos’ anger boils, he’s rubbing his nose with his gloved hand every few words. “Came through here and started saying they want payment. I say payment for what? For not curbstomping us tonight they tell me. Four great big dudes, all biker’d out in chains and leather and shit.”

“Shook you down?” I ask as I exhale some smoke in his direction. “How much they take?”

“Off me?” his twitchiness irritates me, must’ve dipped into his own stash to handle the stress. “Shit, like two grand, easy. Searched my pockets for it. No way I was gonna take them on. Big ex-cons, looks like. Beards and all that Hell’s Angels bullshit. You guys know how they are.”

“Shoulda popped ‘em one!” Ducky says, demonstrating by whipping out the piece I gave him back at the house. “You can’t take that kinda treatment, man! Cap one and I bet they all run, too.”

“Ducky?” I’m glaring at him. He can tell even in this poor lighting. “Shut the fuck up. And put that damned gat away. Ramos doesn’t need to be shooting people. Only draws the cops in here, any ways. Smart thing is to let us handle it. Right, Ramos?”

“Definitely,” he nods emphatically, “Besides, I don’t strap when I’m selling. I got a Maglite and that’s risk enough. I see trouble, I usually run, but these guys came in from different directions and running from a Knucklehead is only gonna earn you a blanket party. Even if you get away, they’re gonna put a price on your ass after that.”

“That’s right,” Philly lights himself another cigarette. “So what they want with Benton Park? Did they tell you?”

A woman comes striding up from Ramos’ left. She pauses and her eyes flit towards us, trying to determine if we’re friends or foes. When she reaches Ramos, they reach toward one another like they’re about to shake hands. She’s passing him cash and he’s giving her dope. It all happens extremely fast and if you aren’t aware of what you’re looking at, it’d simply look like they just gave each other five. Since she greeted him with, “Hey Daddy,” I know she’s telling him she needs a few grams of cocaine. Expensive stuff. She’ll walk that back to the customer who just paid her. Most likely some middle manager in a Lexus or similarly half-luxurious ride. The girls who work for Ramos give him an extra buffer by doing the transactions for him. He’s very methodical in the way he sells. The girls handle the customers, he bags everything himself with gloves on to eliminate prints on the bags, and he’s got pockets with escape hatches for the dope should he be approached by the police. He’s methodical about personal hygiene, too. His teeth practically glow white whenever he grimaces or smiles.

“Said some dude named Darkhorse told them to take Benton,” he sounds apprehensive about revealing this next bit, “Said Kingfins got twenty four hours to give up the turf or there’s gonna be a war over it. Called you squids, though, not Kingfins.”

The boys all look to me for my reaction, which is a chuckle, “Twenty-four hours, huh? That’s all official of them. I don’t know who this Darkhorse fucker is, but he’s in for quite a re-adjustment to his ballsy way of doing things. Kingfin territory doesn’t get given up. They want blood, they get blood. Theirs, not ours.”

“I know, Perce,” Ramos sounds whiny at this point. “You know I’m down with Kingfins. You know that! Thing is, I can’t protect myself down here and I’m losing a lot of money. Money you guys get a cut of, every time,” he’s lying but I let it slide. “And I ain’t got nobody here to look out for me. If they come back, what do I tell them? I’m gonna call my friends?”

“You don’t say anything,” I step forward, taking some smoke from the blunt, holding it while I talk. “What you do this time is run. Fast as you can. Then you call us and we ride down here and make these overzealous shit buckets wish they’d never heard of Benton Park. You clear on that, Ramos?”

“Oh yeah,” his grin is wide but scared. “Okay. Okay. But I mean, I lost money and…”

“They take any your supplies?” Philly asks him.

“Couple sacks of primo Columbian, yeah.”

Now I’m suspicious, “They snort the shit in front of you, too?”

“Yeah man, sucked it right up their noses. Must be dedicated baseheads.”

“Uh huh,” my eyes narrow. I smell a rat. “And you didn’t pass them a trick sack?”

Trick sacks are what Ramos carries to sell to people he hates. Or narcs. Looks like your normal dope, but it’s poison. Sometimes arsenic or something equally lethal. In this case he should’ve employed that and it would have put a stop to this.

“Man, I can’t do that!” Ramos’ eyes double in size. “First one to drop into convulsions would’ve got the others on me like a pack of dogs!”

He’s got a point.

“Aight, well, look,” I tell him, gesturing with my blunt, “We got our tags going back up right now. We’re gonna talk to the other dealers and figure out what all went down. They come back, you call us that very second.”

“Hell yeah I will,” Ramos seems relieved. “And sorry I can’t pay you guys for tonight.”

“It’s cool,” I reassure him. “You can owe us later.”

He starts to protest, then thinks the better of it.

We walk off towards another of the dealers. First we hit up Duster, a tall and scrawny dude who got his name from the long black coat he wears through every season. He’s walking back from the parking lot, just having completed a sale. I immediately notice the cut above his right eye. Though he hasn’t got any useful information for us, he does confirm that he got that cut from the Knuckleheads. Apparently he felt they weren’t entitled to five free hits of his best acid. Smart mouthing them turned out to be a mistake. Duster whipped out his knife and they didn’t appreciate the resistance. Jumped him quick and held him down so they could slice him with his own blade. A lesson, they told him, of what happens when you don’t know your place in the Saxon pecking order. Took a whole bunch of his blotter supply, too. They didn’t bother with his shrooms.

Oxy, the pharmaceuticals specialist of Benton, tell us he played along. A kiss-ass routine seems to do a little better with Knuckleheads. None of his cash or pills got taken because they liked his attitude. Knowing Oxy, I’m sure he seemed harmless with his poofy afro and down home demeanor. Of course, the fact that he happened to be the last dealer they approached gave him a definite edge. After watching what they did to the others, he knew getting bitchy was liable to cost him. Two of them he remembered names for. The biggest one, who wore an eye patch, was named Uncle Fritz. The one with streaks of red dye in his beard they called Skully.

Last, but certainly not least, we found Josiah sitting at one of the picnic tables. Josiah isn’t a big guy, but he’s strong as a pitbull and has the temperament of a starving wolverine. I’ve seen him fight before. I still remember the time some dude yanked a bag of weed from him and tried running off. Josiah caught him somewhere around the basketball courts. Tackled the thief with such finesse it’d have made any good coach tear up. He claims he wrestled in high school a few years ago, but since he spent more time studying bongs than his homework, he lost his scholarship. Mouthy by nature and one of those guys who hasn’t got the slightest idea when to shut up, his strategy involved trying to debate the Knuckleheads. It got him a few punches. Those gave him one hell of pair of black eyes. Lost a tooth, too, the poor fool. Despite this, he managed to find out why those bastards want Benton.

They’re dowsing for something buried in this park.

Author’s note: You can find Chapter Three here on November 13, 2009!