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Authors: Ken Bruen

BOOK: Pimp
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She thought,
Hear that and weep muthahfuckah
. Wondering if the Swedes had such a term, she’d have to download a Swedish dictionary from the app store. Then hello, light-bulb moment, worthy of her being on
Ellen
. She said, “I love tennis.”

He was lost, said, “I don’t know from…”

She nearly said,
Speak fucking American
. Jesus, it was bad enough that the likes of Rankin, Hughes and company refused to write in real English, i.e., USA English, hello, but a Swede who didn’t know about tennis? Seriously, apart from fucking Bjorn, ABBA and suicide, what had they given the world? Okay, okay, not that she was moralizing, she left that to the Lippmans of the world and their ilk, but really, when you’d given the planet little else but shit music and a surly tennis player, could you really afford to be judgmental?

She said, “I’d like to have a discussion about tone. I’d like the book to be a paean to noir, to illustrate the neo-noir deconstruction of post-modernist genres. To demystify the whole concept of the legacy of Goodis, Willeford, Thompson, Guthrie, and Aleas, to bring out all the shades of noir, as a palate of such dark delicacy that Lee Child and his crew throw down their mega-million contracts and gasp, ‘I want me some of that shit, nigger.’ ”

So, okay, they wouldn’t phrase it like that, but she added, “I hope we are on the same page, Mr. Stiegsson.”

Silence.

She was delighted, knew she’d got the great man, that her humble treatise had been received with warmth.

She took a deep breath, figured, that was the first step. She was on her way. Should she leak the story to the blogs, get a buzz going? Or was it too early? Probably be better if she and the Swede wrote something first.

“Why don’t you sleep on it,” she said, “let me know what you think in the morning. But I know you’re going to love it. This could really be an important opportunity for you, a chance to show the world that Lars Stiegsson is a writer to be reckoned with. A writer that, no offense to your departed colleague, can kick Stieg Larsson’s pussy ass. You know you want to.” And then she disconnected before he could say another word.

Switching apps on her phone, she recorded a voice memo for herself:

“Get fucking ABBA greatest hits.”

Jesus, that was punishment, no one could say she wasn’t prepared to suffer for her art.

She added:

“Get Swedish dictionary.”

Later, at a bar in Bushwick, into her third cosmo, she slurred:

“And check out the tennis players. The Swedish ones.”

FOUR

How’s everything in the pimp business?
T
RAVIS
B
ICKLE

Max never, ever, forgot a grudge or a slight. Back in his day, the freaking glory days, when NetWorld was riding high, he’d considered at one point offloading the whole set-up. Like that dude who’d sold off his Internet company and got like billions and went off and set up a publishing company.

Like that.

Max had put out feelers and gotten a nibble from Nick Dunne, who was buying up networking companies around the country. Dunne was a minor Trump, just had a little combover where The Donald had a freaking field. Max, at that time, was covering his bald spot with spray-on hair and sometimes when he got nervous and sweated, the hair would like melt and drip down onto his forehead and ears. Not exactly a great impression at a power lunch; he should’ve just worn a yarmulke.

Dunne had seemed seriously interested and after tense negotiations and all that due diligence, he had summoned Max to his apartment, on fucking Central Park South. Trying the old power move of trying to intimidate a potential business partner with his digs. Max knew this move well, he’d done it often himself throughout his career as a businessman and then later as a drug dealer, but Max could usually intimidate with just a look, the way a wolf looks at you before he attacks.

“A wolf doesn’t need to growl, Mr. Dunne,” Max said.

Dunne seemed confused, went, “Excuse me?”

Max didn’t feel like explaining it to the wannabe. He’d find out soon enough.

Max was steel on the outside, but he was a bit nervous. He knew because, shit, his hair was melting. If this guy bought the company, Max would be richer than fuck, Caymans here he comes. Dressed to impress—a suit from Lagerfeld, shoes by some Italian hairdresser, and an appropriate air of humble submission. Gotta be up front with the bullshit, right?

It had started not bad, ultra-dry Martinis, a zing to the olives, lots of chat about summering in the Hamptons. Precious wasn’t the first to call Max “Maxie” because Mr. Dunne had gone, “So Maxie, may I call you that?”

Max, not above brown-nosing for a deal, said, “Mr. Dunne, you may call me anything your heart desires.”

Puke, right?

Dunne had smiled, the smile of a Great White, all teeth and ice. He went, “The thing is Maxie, your company is actually quite a good fit for my portfolio.”

Who except Patrick Bateman can say
portfolio
with a straight face? Max smiled in what the self-improvement tape swore was a winning way, humor tinged with gratitude.

“But see the problem is…”

And the muthah made Max wait, asking, “Wanna hazard a guess as to what the problem is?”

Max had no idea, said, “I have no idea.”

And Dunne was on his feet, near yelling, “See, that’s the problem right there, you have no idea, about anything. The problem, Maxie, is you. I wouldn’t take your company for a stale bagel if you were the lox, if you get my drift.”

Max had excused himself to take a leak, on the verge of apoplexy. The bathroom was gigantic and that made Max even crazier. He did some five or so fast lines, well, ok, maybe a tad more. The voice in his head, the one true voice, going,
The fuck you saying to me? Yah fink
. Brit tones slipped in when Max was overwrought. He continued,
You think you can talk to me like I’m some kinda
… He was lost for a term, then thought:
minion…
?

But this was before Max’s ultraviolent drug-dealing days, when he let the bullets do the talking, so to get his revenge on Mr. Dunne he took a more subtle approach.

The day after the lunch powwow he sent the secret video he’d shot of Dunne on one of their nights on the town a few weeks earlier. Max always knew that to get ahead in the business world you needed the ammo for extortion ready in hand, and he always prepared in advance. The footage had been taken mostly in the fantasy room at Stringfellows and showed an increasingly wasted, bare-assed Mr. Dunne getting spanked by various strippers. From a contact/mole Max knew at Dunne’s company, he obtained—for a price, and what a price, but it was worth it—the email addresses of Dunne’s entire client list. He then anonymously sent the video off to them in a group email with the subject heading: NICK DUNNE TAKES A BEATING. A few months later, Max was adding Mr. Dunne’s clients to his own portfolio.

Moral of the story: Nobody fucks with The Max and escapes unscathed, and he’d ruined enough lives to prove it.

Now, with a gun halfway down his throat, the same Fuck-With-The-Max-The-Max-Will-Fuck-You-Back-Harder attitude boiling up in him, Max knew he was going to give Precious and her friends some payback—it was just a matter of when and how. First, he had to get out of this mess. Unfortunately there was a how to be figured out here too.

Then it came to him.

Max had had a heart condition for, like, ever. His cardiologist had told him to lose twenty pounds or else about eighty pounds ago, and yet Max was still alive and ticking. Maybe coke and PIMP was like Drano for the arteries? Anyway, he always carried heart pills with him, just in case, and he’d had so many episodes by now that he knew more than enough to fake one.

He held his breath to make his face go red, started convulsing, let some saliva dribble down his chin like Leo in
Gilbert Grape
, and then let his head go limp. Silently cursing the cut to his palate he’d given himself while fake-convulsing with a gun in his mouth. Fuck, that shit
hurt
. That
better
have been convincing. Fuck.

One of the dudes holding an Uzi off to the side went, “Yo, you better chill with that shit, I think you killin’ the mothafucka.”

The thin white dude removed the gun from Max’s mouth said, “You gonna play ball and tell us how to cook up the PIMP, yo?”

Max let his knees buckle, his tongue sagging from his mouth.

Another of the Uzi guys shouted, “Nigga’s dying, K.”

Believing it, the thin guy said to Max, “Shit, you okay, man? Can you hear me?”

Perfect—he knew if he let The Max die he’d never crack the PIMP code.

Max was gasping, barely said the word, “Water.”

“Get the man some water,” an Uzi dude said. “The fuck you standin’ there?”

One of the thugs arrived with a glass of water. Max managed to get a pill into his mouth, making the struggle look good—where was his Oscar?—and then clutched the glass of water.

He’d seen enough attacks at Attica to know exactly what to do next. Gulped a sip of water then smashed the glass against the wall, holding onto the bottom of the glass, and then rammed the shard into the thin guy’s neck.

Blood splurted—bingo.

During the shock, Max kneed one of the thugs in the balls, grabbed the guy’s Uzi, and went
Pulp Fiction
on him and the rest of the room. He fired like
Mad Max 2
—or was it
Rambo III
?—Still the clip ran out. He was firing on empty for a minute before he realized it was done. Standing in the carnage, with smoke, cordite, and the copper scent of blood all round, and not even a sound, not even a siren…yet.

Time to get his Rambo ass in gear. Checked his watch, allowed two minutes to raid the dead. These Bloods were carrying serious weight, in Rolexes, bulging wallets, diamonds and, sweet Mary and Joseph—his Irish persona still kicking in—and lots of dope.

* * *

Max went outside, squinting against the sunlight. The Boyz n the Hood were still doing the corners gig, Jesus, how passé was that? Max, flying on PIMP and some margaritas earlier, marched up to a brother, shouted, “Where Demarcusmon at?”

The guy stared at him, showing gold teeth—was he smiling?

“Demarcus? Over there by the Caddy.”

Max blew the smiling asshole’s head off, scattering his friends.

Then he strode toward the big man. He was marching to a whole other deadly drumbeat, in his own movie that laid waste to the disbelievers who dissed The Max.

Precious wasn’t kidding when she said Demarcus was big. Jesus, the guy had to be six-eight, three hundred and fifty pounds.

Max went to him, “What up, Black?”

The enormous dreadlocked man turned to face Max, not in a hurry, gunfire notwithstanding. This wasn’t a man who got bothered by a little thing like gunfire. A smile already creasing his scarred handsome face, he was going, “The fuck you…?” when The Max shot him in the balls, then moved over, shot him in the face, turned, shot the lieutenant, who was going for his piece, in the side, then turned in whiplash movement—Jeez, that PIMP gave you some moves—and shot the guy on the corner. Then bent down, frisked Demarcus, found stash of cash, dope, and turned with the U, mowed down any brother who moved.

As the smell of cordite and utter disbelief spread over the street, The Max began to stroll down among the fallen bodies, putting a
coup de grace
in any mother who moaned, then turned, shouted, “That all you got? Spread the word you corn pickers, I own this fucking town.”

He piled everything into the white Caddy. Now a siren was blaring. He put the white in gear, cruised outa there like the King of New York.

* * *

His mowing down of the hood kept replaying in his demented head. He reached down as he put distance between him and the cops, unwrapped a shitload of PIMP. Pulled over, snorted four or five lines, punched the wheel as the PIMP hit, shouted like the anorexic pirate in that Hanks movie, “I’m duh captain now!”

Yeah.

In my fresh ride, blasting de hood, wasting dem there muthafuckas.

Yeah, he was down. Then up. But mainly he was rich.

He needed a pad, many women. As he pushed the pickup, he thought, gotta get me some Hank Williams, a coon dog, a Winchester instead of the two fluffy dice hanging in the back window. Pulled over at a convenience store, he was suddenly ravenous. Man, wasting dudes was like, exhausting. Needed some serious death-rate carbs. He was getting out, the Uzi still slung on his shoulder, and he thought,
Uh-oh. Not smart
.

He reached in among the litter of guns, jewels, and dope, left the Uzi on the pile, and selected a fat wallet brimming with Franklins. Shoved that in his back pocket, grabbed a Heckler, put that in his waistband, tight fit but he got it in there, then strutted towards the convenience store, thinking, fook, he might take it down, depended on whether they had Grey Goose or not.

Later, he sold the Caddy to a shady lot in Bed Stuy, piled his loot in a beat-up pickup he’d taken in part-exchange. The dealer, a wiry one-eyed huckster, looked at The Max, handed over the cash, said, “Got some freight there buddy.”

Once Max would have been intimidated by this but now, he whipped out the Uzi, got right in the loser’s face, asked, “You ever see me?”

“N-n-no…n-never.”

Max was on fire with power, pushed, “You want I come back, pop a cap in yer sorry ass?”

No, he’d prefer not.

Max went Clint, said, “Don’t have me come back here, punk.”

Riding back to Manhattan in his pickup, Max was crashing fast. He pulled over, snorted a couple lines to pump himself back up, then continued back to the city.

He parked on the street in Harlem near Precious’s, got into the building when someone was leaving. Went up to her apartment, busted down the door, knowing no one gave a shit in this tenement, doors got busted down here all the time. He heard the shower running. He approached like Norman Bates.

“Maxie, mon, you’re alive!”

“Yeah, but you’re not,” he went, and blew her away with the Heckler.

FIVE

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