If he yelled, would that make a difference? He thought about it and decided no. It would just provoke the knife. One of the men got in the back of the car next to him, and the other must have gotten into the front, because the car began to move.
“To the plant?” the driver said.
“Yeah,” said the man next to him.
“Goddamned underpowered sardine can,” the driver said.
The man next to him muttered something inaudible in reply.
“The man’s gonna meet us there?” said the driver.
“Yeah.”
Both had Irish accents.
He tried to listen to the traffic patterns to determine which way they were heading, but it wasn’t as easy as he’d hoped. They were in traffic; that was all he knew. The Prius was quiet. They were going someplace where someone else, the man, would meet them.
The man would ask the questions. That was why they didn’t want him to talk. Their job, maybe, was just to bring him to the man who asked the questions.
So what did they want? Information, it seemed-not necessarily the cash. Maybe not the cash at all. Last time they’d wanted to know who he’d talked to-who had told him about the money.
He wondered where they were going.
A plant, the man had said. He wondered if it were a meat-packing plant. Maybe that was where they’d taken him the last time. There was an area in the city-in Roxbury, actually, on Newmarket Square-where a number of wholesale meat processing plants were located. They butchered and packed meat for food service accounts, schools and institutions and restaurants. Maybe it was one of those plants.
When the car finally stopped moving, he heard the front door open. Someone got out. Then he heard the clatter of a steel overhead door rolling up on its tracks, the whine of a motor. A roll-up warehouse or loading dock door. Thirty seconds later the car door slammed and the car was driven forward a bit. Into a loading bay, he supposed.
Then the backseat car door was opened and he was grabbed by the shoulder and pulled into the night air. At once he smelled that slightly rancid, rotting smell he remembered from last time. The smell of decomposition. The smell of meat. He heard footsteps echoing in a cavernous, high-ceilinged space.
He heard cars whizzing by, the wheezing brakes of an old van or truck, the screech of a gull. “Walk straight ahead.”
He walked but didn’t know what direction he was going and he found it hard to keep his balance. He gestured toward the hood. “Is this really necessary?”
“Shut your bake, you fecking eejit.” He was yanked even harder and almost stumbled. He resumed walking, his hands stretched in front of him.
“He’s not here,” one of the men said.
“Tie him up,” the other said. “The pole over there.”
The other one said something inaudible ending in “Get me something.”
The steel overhead door rattled closed and the outside sounds grew muted. More echoing footsteps, the sound of metal scraping against metal. The blat of a motorcycle racing past outside far away.
He was grabbed and jerked a few feet to his left. Did they keep him hooded so he wouldn’t know where he was, or how he got here? Both, maybe.
A mobile phone rang, a burst of tinny music.
“Yes, sir?… Okay, right, then.”
“Where is he?”
“Awwright, this one’s gonna have to wait here while we go get the man.”
“You go, I’ll watch this bowsie.”
“Man wants both of us there.”
“We just leave him here? This gobshite? He’ll do a legger.”
“Tie him up to that and tie him up good. Check his pockets for knives or anything.”
“Stick your hands out,” said the voice nearest him, punching him on the shoulder.
He stuck out his hands, then felt something being wound around his wrists, something coarse and prickly, maybe rope. Then something was wound around his ankles and around his legs and he realized he’d been bound to a stout steel pole.
He wondered what the hell they were doing to him now. All he could tell was that he was being tied up in order to wait for someone, presumably someone senior. Their boss. Whoever it was they called Sir.
Neither of his abductors spoke to him. They spoke to each other quietly, at the far end of the cavernous space they were in. After a few minutes he didn’t hear their voices anymore. He heard footsteps in the distance. A door opening and closing.
He waited.
Another few minutes went by. He heard the distant buzz of traffic.
“Hello?” he called out.
The rope was uncomfortable at his wrists and ankles. He was restrained in a position that forced him to remain standing. If he tried to sit, the ropes on his legs tightened painfully. He tried to untie the ropes that wound around his wrists, but gave up after a few agonizing moments. His legs began to cramp.
“What the hell’s going on?” he said, louder.
No reply.
He had no idea how much time had passed since he’d been carjacked. An hour, maybe? Two? He knew he was somewhere within the city limits, or just outside. In a meat-packing plant or food-processing place of some kind, near a busy road.
And he waited.
And the notion occurred to him suddenly that he was not powerless, not as helpless as he felt. “Hey,” he said. “If you get me out of here, I can make you rich.”
There was silence.
“Hey!” he said louder. “You know I have a lot of money, it’s why I’m here, and if you cut me loose, I’ll make you rich.”
Silence.
Louder still, he said, “Hello? You hear me? Let’s make a deal.”
Silence.
“Hello?” He waited five, ten seconds more. “You hear me?”
But no reply. Either they were gone or they were untemptable.
He heard the squeal of brakes close by. Voices. Then the motorized whir and the metallic rattle of the overhead door opening. A rush of cold air.
“That’s the car, man.” A voice, no Irish accent.
Another voice: “Jesús Cristo!Mira! Look at the guy!”
“Shit!”
These weren’t the guys with the Irish accents, not the ones who’d brought him here. Then who were they? The voices were vaguely familiar.
“Can somebody help me?” Rick said. “Get this hood off me?”
“The hell’s going on here?” the first voice said, getting closer. “Look at this!”
“All tied up and shit. Jesús Cristo.”
Then, abruptly, the hood came off and Rick was momentarily disoriented, but a few seconds later he realized he was looking at two familiar faces. It took him another second to remember who they were.
The guys from Jeff’s construction crew. Santiago and Marlon.
“Thank you,” Rick said, gulping fresh air. “What-what’re you guys doing here?”
“What happened to him?” said Marlon. “You’re bleeding.” He touched his own neck. “On your throat, like.”
“Can you guys untie me?”
“You got a knife on you?” Marlon said. “Maybe a box cutter?”
“What happened to you, man? Who did this to you?”
“Hurry, could you?” Rick said. “They could be back here at any minute.”
Marlon produced a utility knife and slashed at the ropes around Rick’s wrists while Santiago untied the knots at his ankles, and within five minutes the three of them were crowded into the front seat of the Demo King Trash-a-Way pickup truck and on their way from South Boston to Cambridge.