more, worked the action, stuck his thumbnail in the chamber and peered down the muzzle end of the barrel, which was clean as a surgeon’s scalpel. He said, “I don’t have a huge amount of money to spend here, but I do have cash.”
Gentry wagged his head once: “With that scope, I need to get eleven hundred.”
“Bunny thought I could probably get it for under a grand—I mean, it’s used.”
“Used, but perfect,” Gentry said.
“Look, I know that’s a fair price, with the scope, if a little high, but I don’t have that kind of money with me . . .” He was lying, he had almost two thousand dollars in his pocket.
They went back and forth a bit and Gentry finally agreed to take a thousand even, with the scope, and to throw in two boxes of his own hand-loaded 7mm: “If you can’t punch up a target at a thousand yards with this gun and my ammo, then you need to learn how to shoot better,” Gentry said, but with a smile.
Dunn paid cash and Gentry gave him a card and packed up the gun. “Don’t go shooting any DC schoolboys with it,” Gentry said, with a quick barking laugh.
He wasn’t looking at Dunn, which was good, because Dunn flinched.
Got himself together and said, “That’s something else, isn’t it? That whole DC thing?”
“There’s some goofy motherfuckers out there, bro,” Gentry said. He passed the case over the table. “Have a good time with it. Treat it right and it’ll be your best friend.”
* * *
—
ON THE WAY out, Dunn lingered at a table of handguns, the rifle case in his hand. The woman selling the handguns spotted him as a buyer, rather than a looker, and hurried over and asked, “What can I sell you?”
“Maybe nothing,” Dunn said. “But I’m working over in Baltimore on a contractor crew, we’re tearing out some old houses. Not a good neighborhood and it’s getting to be almost dark before quitting time. I got a house gun, but I’m kind of looking around for a decent piece that I could actually carry in my pocket. You know, without people looking at me, knowing what’s in there.”
“Baltimore. Whew,” the woman said, blowing air. She was wearing a bright blue T-shirt that showed a target face with a cluster of bullet holes around the ten-ring, and the words, “Yes, I do shoot like a girl.” She said, “Baltimore’s not a good place for an honest white man. I’ll tell you what, and I’m not just selling here, I got exactly what you need. Exactly.”
She had a bookcase-like rack behind her, pulled a plastic box off one of the shelves, opened it, and took out a hand-sized black pistol. “Sig 938. Shoots nines. I gotta say, it’s not the most pleasant gun to shoot, you wouldn’t want to go around plinking with it, but it’s accurate and it’ll flat kick ass. Magazines will hold six rounds and you get two mags with the gun. But here’s the best part.”
She walked down the table, picked up what looked like a leather triangle, and brought it back. “This here’s a Sticky holster. The outside is sticky fabric, but the inside is super-slick cloth.” She slipped the gun into the thin holster, and said, “Here. Put it in your jeans pocket.”
Dunn did, and the gun disappeared. He took a few steps around the table, and the gun was invisible, even with his tight jeans.
“Now,” she said, “Pull the gun.”
He stuck his hand in his pocket, and the gun slipped out with no felt friction at all. “Man, that’s slick,” he said. He looked at the gun. “How much?”
“This particular model retails for six hundred dollars new . . .”
“But it’s not new . . .”
She took $475 cash. Dunn suspected that what the IRS didn’t know about the transaction, wouldn’t hurt anyone except the IRS.
* * *
—
DUNN WENT OUT TO HIS CAR, put the rifle on the floor of the backseat, out of sight, took the Sig out of its case, thumbed six rounds into one of the mags, slapped