his family, you understand that."
"And I got to look out for my daughter," Tony said.
"I got no interest in hurting her," Hawk said.
"She wants something, I do what I gotta do to get it for her," Tony said. "Right now she wants her husband to be a player in Marshport."
"I can work around you on this," Hawk said, "I will."
"I'll do the same," Tony said.
"If I can't…" Hawk said.
"You can't," Tony said.
"So we know," Hawk said.
"We know," Tony said.
28
HAWK AND I walked in the rain up Boylston Street to my office. I broke out the Irish whisky and poured us two generous shots. "So how do you want to do this?" I said.
"Gonna go right at the Ukes," Hawk said. "Leave Rimbaud to do whatever he gonna do."
"Ukes probably don't make fine distinctions," I said. "They have trouble on their end, they'll make trouble at Brock's end."
"Which means maybe we have trouble with Tony," Hawk said.
"I don't think Clauswicz was in favor of fighting a two-front war," I said.
"Got no choice," Hawk said.
The whisky was warm and pleasant in my throat. The rain came steady against the office window.
"You think Brock's going to settle for the little piece of Marshport that Boots will give him?"
"Too stupid," Hawk said.
"You bet," I said.
"So he'll keep taking more from Boots," Hawk said. "And Boots be taking more from Tony."
"Which isn't going to work in the long run."
"No."
"So sooner or later there will be a war," I said. "With us or without us."
"Less we take out the Ukes," Hawk said.
"Then the kid gets Marshport," I said.
"Not for long," Hawk said.
"No," I said. "He's too stupid."
"And he don't know it," Hawk said. "And he ain't tough. And he don't know that, either."
"Deadly combination," I said.
"Tony's only hope would be to take it away from him," Hawk said.
"Or hope the daughter gets over him."
"Be easy to do," Hawk said.
"Maybe not for her," I said.
"Gonna have a lot of people mad at us," Hawk said.
"We'll get over it," I said.
"Ain't really your fight," Hawk said.
We each drank another swallow of whisky. The rain came steady on the black window.
"Yeah," I said. "It is."
Hawk was quiet for a time, then he nodded his head slowly.
"Yeah," he said. "It is."
I got up and looked out my window. Berkeley Street was dark and shiny wet and empty. A few cars went by on Boylston Street. And once in a while there was somebody walking, bent forward, hunched against the rain, hands in pockets. Genderless in the dark weather.
"Can't let it go," Hawk said.
"I know."
"Gonna be a bad mess any way it plays," Hawk said.
"Certainly will," I said.
"So, I guess we may as well do what we gonna do and not think too much 'bout what everybody else gonna do," Hawk said.
"Isn't that what we always do?" I said.
"It is," Hawk said.
29
WE TOOK MY car this time, which no one would recognize, and sat in it, up the street from the Ukrainian fortress on Market Street in Marshport. The rain had gone, and the cold that had come in behind it was formidable. My motor was idling and the heater was on high. The outside temperature registered six on my dashboard thermometer. "Why is it again we live 'round here?" Hawk said.
"We like the seasonal change," I said.
The street was nearly empty. A stumblebum in many layers of cast-off clothing inched his way up Market Street. He stopped to stare down into a trash barrel and then moved on. Several windows in the three-deckers on both sides of the street were boarded over. There were no dogs, no children. Just the solitary bum shuffling numbly along.
"Think it's colder in the poor neighborhoods?" I said.
"Yes," Hawk said.
"Because God favors the rich?"
"Why they rich," Hawk said.
"It is easier," I said, "for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle, than…"
"Here they come," Hawk said.
Two men wearing overcoats and watch caps came out of the stronghold and got into a Chevrolet Suburban. We saw the plume of exhaust from the tailpipe as the car started up. We all sat for a time while the defroster cleared the windows on the Chevy. Then it rolled forward and went toward Marshport Road. We let them get far ahead and cruised out after them. There were some cars on the road, and when we turned onto Route 1A there were more. On open highway, it's easy to stay with the car you're tailing but harder to avoid being seen. In the city it's easy to