This is a copyrighted original work of fiction. All rights reserved.
All characters featured herein in adult situations are at least eighteen years of age, even if not expressly stated. Any resemblance between actual persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental.
Many thanks to BlackRandl1958, Jim K and Michael B for the superb editing work.
This work may not be copied or distributed without the exclusive written permission of this author.
*****
I was in deep shit. The whole business was collapsing around me. I owed two and a half million dollars to some very nasty people, money that neither I nor my family had. I had only one fleeting hope of survival. I called my father for sage advice.
I flew down to St. Kitts to meet Pops and my Ma; both are getting on in years. After totally freaking out on me, Pops strongly suggested I meet with the family lawyer, Christo, back in Toronto.
I caught the next flight back and managed to catch him. I went straight to his downtown Bay St. office.
After a short wait, I was ushered into his big corner office. He sat at his fancy polished wood desk, with a background of standard lawyerly prop reference books behind him. His jacket was off and his blue silk tie contrasted sharply with the crisp white shirt, his slicked back white hair and his big white fake toothy smile.
He stood to shake my hand, "So nice to see you again, Ben. I think the last time I saw you was at Frankie's funeral. How long has it been?"
"Seven years, I guess."
My older brother's car blew up when he turned the key. The New Yorkers made a graphic statement out of him.
"How can I help you?" Christo asked, "Please have a seat," he guestured towards one of the two leather chairs facing his desk.
"So, here's the situation, Christo," I started as we both settled into our seats. He watched me intently with his lawyerly 'trust me' smile. "Our main distribution guy, Mallory, he's Irish... or more correctly, was Irish, is dead."
"Oh?"
"He was in Turkey trying to set up a viable distribution line or two for Afghani product, now that Damascus is ruined."
"Rough part of the world these days."
"No kidding."
"Who got him?"
"A fucking bee! He went into anaphalactic shock and they couldn't revive him."
"Okay, so what does that have to do with why you're here?"
"He owed me two point seven million dollars!"
"So, you had a business loss."
"Yeah, I get that, Christo; the problem is I in turn owe basically the same amount to a bunch of Colombian thugs who really, really want to be paid for their coke."
"And you can't cover it?"
"No!" I had to take a deep breath. "If you recall, me and my dad took a 4.36 million dollar hit last year when an airline was diverted to Athens. I'm close to being broke at this point. I had to put a mortgage on the house; we're not made of fucking money."
"So, what do you want from me?"
"Advice, Christo, I need advice. My father insisted I don't do anything until I talk to you, first."
"And how are they? Healthy and happy, I hope."
"Yeah, they're fine, but they're getting on. They're taking off for Naples next week."
"That's great. Okay, how can I help you?"
"Before Mallory died, he handed me an IOU of sorts, he did it before when he was short, and I could cover it. It's a painting. A Vermeer, worth a lot."
"So, sell the painting and pay the Colombians."
"Not so simple. The painting is hot. And I can't cover it."
"Hot as in stolen?"
"Yeah."
He leaned back in his chair, lifted his hands up almost in prayer and tapped his fingertips together. "And what exactly do you mean by 'he did it before'?"
"The middle east is fucked up. Mallory was my guy, in and out. Colombian coke into Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other gulf states, Afghani heroin out. We had a great thing happening. He was hit hard a couple of times, himself, because of the Syrian troubles, and was basically getting along by the skin of his teeth. He had to rely on his two sons as couriers."
"How old was he?"
"Maybe fifty. Nevertheless, to answer your question. Mallory transfered a painting from his Isle of Man safety deposit box to my Isle of Man safety deposit box, at the same bank."
"And?"
"He then paid off the debt a couple of weeks later, it was just cash flow shit, and I transfered the painting back to him. It didn't really matter then, I had the funds to cover him."
Christo gazed at me. "But not this time?"
"No. And that's the problem. I'm stuck with a Vermeer. And a debt."
"What do you think it's worth?"
"Five mil."
"What makes you think that?"
"That's the reward money."
"Huh?"
"The Vermeer was stolen from a gallery in Boston, twenty or thirty years ago. It's called
The Concert
. The gallery wants it back. The reward money is five mil. My understanding is that's it's not reward money, per se, but money for infomation leading to the recovery..."
"One and the same," he said while tapping his fingertips.
"I just need to get in touch with the gallery and make a deal."
Christo's eyes were wide open. He wasn't smiling anymore.
"Five mil according to Mallory at least..." Fuuuck!" I really only had his word.
Christo leaned further back as he sighed. That lawyerly look was definately gone. He clasped his hands together and with deliberate precision asked, "And what deal do you propose to do with that painting?"
I looked him straight in the eyes, "Sell it back to the gallery. Collect the money and then save my life... basically by paying back the Colombians, who have this thing for stuffing the body into the victim's trunk. It can't help with the resale value of the vehicle."