me wearing my Coke.
Evelyn waved an apology my way. “I’ve spent the last hour trying to figure out where I know the name Nicky Volkv from. Thinking about Joe’s loose lips just reminded me. Volkv tried to turn pro after he left the Nikolaevs. His first hit, he screwed up big-time. Put a car bomb in the wrong car, killed a young couple.”
“Sounds like Volkv and Kozlov would have hit it off well. Two Mafia incompetents.”
“It’s the mob. Competence is a recessive gene. That’s what keeps us in business.”
I changed lanes, carefully passing a school bus. “You did mob work?”
Evelyn waggled her hand. “Fifty-fifty. For contract killers, mob hits are like office work—steady employment, decent pay…and boring as hell. There’s far more lucrative and interesting work out there.” She glanced my way. “Even for someone with her own rules. Drug cartels, political assassinations…”
I said nothing. To Evelyn, I suppose this made sense. If I didn’t mind killing thugs, why not just kill bigger ones? But that would take me places I didn’t want to go.
Didn’t want to go? Or wasn’t ready to go?
I shook off the thought and concentrated on the road.
Evelyn sipped her coffee. “Do you like working for the Tomassinis, Dee?”
“They treat me well. When they give me a mark, I check it out, and it’s always exactly what they say it is. No tricks.”
Evelyn gave a slow nod. “The Tomassinis are good. A small, old-fashioned family. Not many of them left. They haven’t changed much from back when I worked for them.”
“Ah, so that’s how you know Frank Tomassini.”
Her eyes glinted. “It didn’t seem strange to you that a Mafia don had no problem hiring a woman? You have me to thank for his enlightened employment policy and, believe me, it took some work to bring him around. I spent a year pretending I was a man before I told him. When I did, he fired me…until he had a job no one else could do.”
“And hired you back.”
“Frank always said I was the best damned hitman he had, which I was—and which is why he probably jumped at the chance to hire another woman.”
“I guess I should say thanks.”
She snorted. “You’ll do better than that. You owe me, and I’m collecting.”
“I’d owe you if you got me the job. You made it possible, but you didn’t get it for me. That I did myself.”
“True, which begs the question. How the hell does a New York Mafia don find a Canadian girl living in the middle of the goddamned forest, and recruit her as a contract killer?”
I let out a small smile. “Fate.”
“That better not be all I’m getting. We have an hour left, and I expect to be entertained with a damn good story, especially considering what I’m offering in return.”
“Which is?”
Her gaze still on the windshield, she lifted her coffee cup to her lips, but not before letting an enigmatic smile slip out. “Questions answered, as I said. Specifically, one question for one question. A fair exchange of information, that mightiest of commodities.”
“And what information will I get?”
The smile tweaked the corners of her lips. “That depends on you. On what you want to know. For now, give me your story.”
I hesitated, but could see nothing in the tale that could satisfy more than idle curiosity. She could always find out through the Tomassinis. Better for me to give it, and take something in return, some knowledge or skill I could use.
So I began. “The offer came through Frank’s nephew, Paul…”
* * *
SIXTEEN
As for how Paul wound up at my lodge, that I do chalk up to fate. He’d come up with two of his cousins—also Tomassini wiseguys—for deer hunting season. They’d checked into a lodge 50 kilometers from the Red Oak. But the place hadn’t been up to Paul’s standards, and someone had recommended mine. He came, he liked, he stayed…even if he had to do his actual hunting off the property.
I figured out that they were Mafiosi pretty fast, but Paul and his cousins were quiet, well-mannered guests—better than those with the corporate team-building getaway I was hosting at the time—so I didn’t care. Deer season ended, and Paul booked a week for duck season. Then he reserved the deer season for next year. Paul’s cousins kept their distance from their ex-cop host, but Paul and I hit it off well—not friends, but friendly.
By his fourth visit, I could see foreclosure on the horizon and was scrambling to push it off a little