The Racketeer Page 0,88
headed southwest, listening to Kenny Chesney. Nathan clears his throat and says, "To tell you the truth, I'm trying to get away from my family. My mom, my cousins, a bunch of deadbeat nephews. Word's out that I own a nice bar and I'm doing okay, so it won't be long before these clowns start begging for money. I need to get farther away."
"Where would you go?" I ask with great sympathy.
"Not far. I love the mountains, the hiking and fishing. I'm a hillbilly, Reed, and that'll never change. Boone, North Carolina, is a nice place. Somewhere like that. Someplace where there are no Cooleys in the phone book." He laughs at this, a sad little chuckle.
A few minutes later he rocks us with: "You know, I had a buddy in prison kinda reminds me of you. Malcolm Bannister was his name, great guy, black dude from Winchester, Virginia. A lawyer who always said the Feds got him for no reason."
I listen and nod along as if this is of no consequence whatsoever. I can almost feel Gwen seize up in the rear seat. "What happened to him?" I manage to ask. My mouth has never been drier.
"I think Mal's still in prison. Couple more years, maybe. I've lost track. It's something, something in the voice, maybe the mannerisms, something, can't quite put my finger on it, but you remind me of Mal."
"It's a big world, Nathan," I say, in a deeper voice, thoroughly unconcerned. "And remember, to white folks we all look the same."
He laughs and Gwen manages an awkward laugh too.
While I was mending at Fort Carson, I worked with an expert who videoed me for hours and made a list of habits and mannerisms I had to change. I practiced for hours, but once I landed in Florida, I stopped practicing. Natural moves and habits are hard to break. My mind is frozen and I can't think of anything to say.
Gwen comes through with: "Nathan, you mentioned some nephews a few minutes ago. How long will this go on, do you think? I mean, it looks like the meth business is becoming generational for a lot of families."
Nathan frowns and considers this. "I'd say it's pretty hopeless. There are no jobs except for coal, and so many young men just don't want to work in the mines anymore. Plus, they start getting high when they're fifteen, hooked at sixteen. The girls are pregnant at sixteen, kids having kids, babies nobody wants. Once you start screwing, you don't stop. I don't see much future around here, not for people like me."
I'm listening but not hearing; my head is spinning as I wonder how much Nathan knows. How suspicious is he? What have I done to tip him off? I'm still undercover - I'm sure of it - but what's he thinking?
Bluefield, West Virginia, is a town of eleven thousand located on the extreme southern tip of the state, not far from the Virginia line. We skirt around it on Highway 52 and are soon on winding roads that fall and rise dramatically. Nathan knows the area well, though it's been years since he was here. We turn onto a county road and fall deeper into a valley. The asphalt ends and we zigzag along gravel and dirt roads until we stop at the edge of a creek. Old willow oaks hang overhead and block the sun. The weeds are knee-high. "Here we are," he says as he turns off the ignition.
We get out and I tell Slade and Cody to get their gear. We will not be using lighting and I want the smaller, handheld camera. They scramble around, grabbing equipment.
Nathan walks to the edge of the creek and smiles at the bubbling water. "How often did you come here?" I ask.
"Not much. We had several drop points around Bluefield, but this was the main one. Gene had been making runs here for ten years, but not me. The truth was I didn't work in the business as much as he wanted me to. I could see trouble. I tried to find other jobs, you know. I wanted out. Gene wanted me to get more involved."
"Where were you parked?"
He turns and points, and I decide to move his truck and Slade's van to keep them out of the frame. Relying on my vast directorial skills, I want to shoot an action piece with Nathan approaching the scene on foot and the camera right behind him. We practice this