Headlights slid over the gravel road as the stones could be heard
grinding against one another beneath rubber treads. A weather beaten,
motley sedan pulled into a nebulous spot marked by a rotting wooden
parking stop. It was a sloppy parking job, one the driver had no
intention of fixing, hoping no one would even see the car to begin
with. The driver-side door squealed open, with rusted hinges
dissenting loudly with every degree turned. Despite knowing not a
soul would be found nearby, the driver cringed at the sound
nonetheless. A pair of dark leather hiking boots stepped from the
cabin one after another, crunching the gravel and shifting the stones
beneath. The driver stood from the seat but turned around
immediately, knowing the consequence losing focus.
“Wait,” came a barely spoken command. The 120 pound bullmastiff
was already half way across the center console but stopped at the
word and stood there; waiting for his master’s next words. “Stay
close,” came from her mouth as the driver stepped aside and was
nearly bowled over as the dog flew from the door. The dog bound its
way towards the grass beyond the small lot in six strides and lifted
a leg. The driver pulled a single strap bag from the car and pulled
it over her head. Despite the wool layer between, the metal door
managed to sap a modicum of heat for the short closing duration of
contact. She gave a quick whistle now that the dog’s business was
done and began to walk towards a long abandoned, overgrown path. The
slabs had been slotted between a patch of mature coniferous trees
which blocked what little light the crescent moon provided. The
driver struggled between watching her own step and making sure the
dog was still following and not distracted, which he was, having
found an interesting looking stick. After a short time, the pair
found themselves yet again under the stars, walking a golf cart track
embedded between separate greens. The driver waved her hand and spoke
softly,
“You’re free,” the dog heard the phrase and loped through the
fields, sniffing each spot he stopped at. The woman kept her head
forward and began scanning the track for any movement that would end
the mission. No silhouettes or lights, and Chester hadn’t noticed
anything, all clear. She continued down the path toward a small club
building placed next to a roundabout that acted as the nexus for the
cart paths. Chester followed at a distance as his owner walked along
the path and to the patio of the club. She stopped near the front and
fumbled with gloved hands for the small flip phone inside her pocket.
The hinge of the phone cracked as the driver flipped the screen up,
casting pure white light across her face. She had received a text:
“lmk when ur there – LJ,” the simple pixelated text
disappeared as she began her response on a new blank screen.
“here c u l8r” she labored over the more than two dozen key
presses required to type such a simple message. “How did people put
up with this?” She muttered to air while returning the phone to her
pocket. She passed by the patio furniture and stepped along a stone
laced path down one side of the building. It lead her to a set of
metal stairs, which she stopped at and whistled again for the dogs
attention. Chester proudly ran up to the woman, barely stopping in
time before ramming her into the siding. “Good boy,” she gave him
an affectionate pat on the head before scratching behind his left
ear. She pointed at a group of trees and commanded “lookout.” The
dog gave a brief look back at his master before running to the spot
and laying in the shadows of the nearby trees, nearly motionless.
Confident the dog wouldn’t be spotted by anyone happening to pass
by, the woman started up the steps.
This wasn’t her first time here, but it was finally the time she
would enter. She pulled at the strap of her bag until the pack rested
on her chest and she began fishing through its contents. She didn’t
need the full B&E kit but it never hurt to be prepared for
anything. She pulled the one tool expected for the job, a thin card
with magnets embedded on one end, from the bag and closed it again.
Pulling back the weather strip, she began to work the card between
the door and its frame along the top third. A bit of resistance told
her she had hit her mark and let go of the card, letting it rest less
than half a foot from the top of the door. She pulled a tension
wrench and rake from her back pocket and rested both within the
door’s lock. After a few seconds of sawing, the final pin locked
into place and the mechanism tumbled open. She pressed on the handle
but found that it too was locked, and after a repeat performance, the
door finally opened.
The time spent in the pale moonlight gave Robin’s eyes enough time
adjust, allowing for a working vision in the windowless room. She
stepped in quickly and began to turn the card along its magnets,
taking care not to trip the ancient alarm. With the task completed,
she closed and locked the door again before removing and returning
the card to her bag. The upstairs of the clubhouse had been converted
from excess storage to a simple one bedroom apartment. Robin was
standing in a dark, hardly used kitchen. The table and chairs, which
hugged the same wall as the door Robin entered through, were covered
in a layer of dust that must have been there for a year at the least.
On her far left, Robin could barely make out the silhouettes of a
fridge, a small oven, and a sink all tucked within a kitchenette no
more than eight feet wide.
“And still, its bigger than mine.” an exhausted sigh escaped her
mouth at the sight before turning her head to check the door
immediately to her right. It took her a second in the dark, but she
realized that the sign on the door had probably never been removed.
It depicted a simple drawing, one of a man and the other a woman with
a line between, nothing but a mixed use bathroom. Robin opened the
door and checked inside regardless. The room was empty aside from
extra toilet paper and other cleaning supplies. She closed the door
gently and turned her attention to the final door and what must be
her goal. She opened the final door to a small bedroom. A dusty queen
sized bed hogged the majority of the space in the room and blocked
the door from opening completely. Pushing past the wedged door,
Robin’s face was washed in moonlight from an uncovered window
overlooking a cheap, self-assembled dresser in the opposite corner of
the room. She closed the door, which had been hiding a bedside table
topped with more dust. Rummaging through the drawers, Robin found
nothing of interest, and walked to the dresser. The first drawer was
laced with documents pertaining to various businesses and holdings of
the owner, some documents being older than Robin herself. Wishing now
that she had brought a disposable camera, She quickly made mental
notes of the juiciest details, hoping her friends would be able to
find something more substantial later. She closed the first drawer
and opened the next one down. More documents, and more memorization.
Getting rather frustrated at still not finding the target, she
slammed the drawer and with equal force, yanked open the third and
last drawer. Despite the rage induce exertion, Robin could tell right
away something was wrong. She peered down only to find a completely
empty drawer. Robin new immediately she was looking at a false
bottom, the weight of the drawer alone told her to keep looking. At
first, Robin tried simply poking at the corners and edges, expecting
an opposing side to rise and allowing her to remove the board. When
this failed, she pulled out the flat tension wrench and began to
squeeze it between the wall of the drawer and its false bottom. While
it did slide between the wood, it hardly dropped an eight of an inch,
giving her no freedom to find purchase on the hook. Growing
frustrated at the impossible task, Robin dropped the tool and sat
back on her heels, having been kneeling there for nearly five
minutes. She was contemplating if she should take the information and
come back another day, when she heard the wrench slide across the
wood a short distance then stop abruptly. A fraction of a second
later, Robin heard a small click emanating from the drawer.
“No fucking way,” The tension wrench waited motionless at the
center of the drawer, sitting no more than half an inch from where
she had dropped it. She gave a gentle tug on the tool and felt
magnetic resistance along with the scraping of wood on wood. Excited,
she raced to remove the board, only for it fall back into place,
wrench firmly in her now raised hand. This time, Robin took care to
give the magnet as much surface area of the tool as she could manage.
She pulled the hook instead of the handle, which in turn lifted the
front side of the panel. She had just managed to stick a finger in
the gap before the tool slipped once again. Although she appreciated
not having to lift the bottom again, her left middle finger did not.
She pried the board from the drawer and was greeted at the sight she
was hoping for from the start. The true bottom of the drawer was
supporting two standard Good Delivery gold bars.
“why does nobody learn?” the rhetorical question hung in the air
as Robin thought back to a certain senator. Like then, these gold
bars had been used to bribe a man with political power to take a
position antithetical to his responsibility. Robin felt it was only
right to return that wealth to some of the congressman’s
constituents. And so, with effort and care, the first bar was hoisted
with both hands from its cotton cloth base and shoved irreverently
into the first and largest pocket of the bag. Robin’s back
instantly felt the nearly thirty pounds of pressure coming in from
the strap. She had tested the pack before with forty pounds but this
would most certainly be the stress test. With the first bar secured,
the process was repeated but with a separate pocket, desperately
trying to distribute the weight as much as she could in such a small
space. Both bars settled, Robin replaced the false bottom and closed
the drawer, nearly slamming it back into place with it newly
established weightlessness. She stood and shuffled the bag so it was
back in proper position. The reinforced stitching near the bottom
looked and felt fine, but something about the tension of the strap
told Robin to hurry back to her car. Satisfied at a virtually
complete mission, she turned back to the door but froze at the sound
of Chester’s halfhearted bark., someone was approaching.
Robin rushed on feather steps to the door and placed her ear to its
cold paneling. Another bark, another person spotted. The world fell
silent for a few seconds before the muffled thuds of rubber soled
boots on metal panels rang through the building.
“Shit, shit, shit! Why is he here?! He’s not supposed to home
for another couple of hours!” the muttered agony did nothing to
quell the growing fear and anxiety. A second set of steps began,
lighter and with two distinct points of contact per step. The sound
of keys jangling in gloved hands came next, followed by those same
keys dropping on the metal landing.
“Let me help you, sir. You’ve had a fair amount to drink
tonight.” The woman’s voice was barely audible through both
doors.
“Leave me alone! I can hold my liquor, and I certainly know how to
open my own damn door!” the rough and slurred words nearly loud
enough to drown out the sound of a short shuffle followed by the set
of heels rapidly dropping two steps. The woman muttered something
short. “You better be. Stay out of my way and remember you’re
only here until the deal is over. After that I don’t want to see
your face again.”Another inaudible response came as the keys were
retrieved. Robin could feel her blood boiling but knew she had to
tamp down on the frustration. She ran back to the window and began
feeling around the frame for a latch. The congressman found the right
key as Robin discovered the latch, both turning in tandem. Robin
tugged at the pane only to get stiff resistance from the rarely
opened glass. Artificial suffused the floor as the pair entered and
pressed the switch near the first door. With the window just barely
open enough for Robin to slip through, She took a peek through. The
ledge she would have to hang from was hardly even three inches,
followed by a ten foot drop onto the concrete patio between two
tables. With no other options presenting themselves, She pulled
herself up and onto the window sill. She swung one leg out after the
other and slowly lowered herself to the point she was holding onto
the metal window frame with her legs dangling helplessly. She nearly
lost her grip trying to closet the window. It was loose compared to
when she had first tried but with one hand, and all her focus on not
dropping, Robin wasn’t able to completely close it. She went for
the second pass when she noticed the doorknob turn, causing her to
lose focus and slip.
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She had been somewhat prepared to drop second but the fall still
surprised her. Robin’s legs bent beneath her and nearly gave out,
unlike the bag whose strap broke at the moment of impact. A hearty
thud came from behind as the gold impacted with the ground. Her legs
still trembled slightly as she straightened up and turned around to
retrieve the bag. She stooped down and wrapped the strap around her
hand before hoisting the load onto her shoulder. A quiet yet piercing
whistle in the style of her namesake bird escaped Robin’s lips as
she began the walk back to her car. Not daring to run, both out of
discomfort from the drop and not wanting her footsteps to be heard,
she ambled across the patio and back to the golf course path. A few
steps later, Chester padded up and continued sniffing the area as if
the last twenty minutes meant nothing.
It wasn’t until the patch of trees before the car park that Robin
finally let herself relax somewhat. She still had to drive home, but
for the most part she had pulled this off. She smiled at the thought
of her biggest heist yet. Around six million dollars worth of gold
weighed down her shoulder. She couldn’t control the laughter that
spilled from her mouth as she left the path and began approaching the
car. Still chuckling, Robin pulled the key from her pocket and
unlocked the trunk. She lifted the spare and its carpeted cover,
revealing a hollow space where she dropped the bag of gold. She let
the spare come to rest and was satisfied enough to close the trunk
and begin her attempts to shepherd the mastiff back into the
passenger seat. After ten minutes and another restroom break, Chester
was finally seated and ready to go.
The ride back had been as boring as the ride there since Robin
refused to bring commercial smart devices on any mission. The car’s
radio had removed long before Robin picked the car from the junkyard,
so she was forced to find peace in the silence of the road. It was
nothing but fields and her own headlights for the first thirty
minutes, but as she approached the metro area, the scenery changed to
dilapidated and abandoned single family homes. Spaces between the
neighborhoods were crammed with sheet metal roofs, tarp walls, and
two by four frames. Although it was extremely early in the morning,
Robin could still spot some faces. They were mostly lit by barrel or
pit fires, though occasionally by a phone or flashlight. She passed
by a man sprawled face down across the sidewalk and it took every bit
of will power not to pull over and check on him, but she knew she
couldn’t stop. The moment she had the gold safe and sound at home,
she could pour all her attention back here. She drove for another
five minutes before she spotted a checkpoint in the distance. Chester
barked twice to indicate he too saw the guards standing around,
waiting for something to happen.
“Good boy, but you don’t need to be on lookout anymore.” she
responded while scratching the back of the dogs neck. She slowed to a
stop and manually rolled the window down to talk with the officer.
Beneath reflective vests, their attire was entirely black with white
text plastered across their chests and backs with a single commanding
word: POLICE. One man wore a pin denoting his time serving as a
customs enforcement agent. The pair split and approached the car on
either side, the man with the pin luckily taking the passenger side.
“Morning, officer.” Robin pulled the most polite and tempered
voice she could muster while screaming internally at her anxiety
there wasn’t a checkpoint when she left. It wasn’t impossible
they had already discovered the theft but it seemed unlikely.
“Good morning, ma’am. Your ID please.” He was young and she
heard no malice in his voice, although she did hear the other officer
scoff.
“Of course, one moment while I grab it from the glove box.” she
wanted nothing more than to avoid escalating the situation.
“There wasn’t a checkpoint up when I left this morning, did
something happen?” She wanted to keep the officer talking in a calm
tone, momentum would be her best friend.
“Domestic terrorism over night. We know they haven’t left the
city.” Domestic terrorism, a term that was used to encompass acts
as vile as bombs and poison, all the way down to spray painting
public property.
“Oh no,” trying to muster proper fear and concern a regular
citizen would show “how dangerous is it? Which neighborhoods should
I avoid?”
“I wouldn’t worry about it, ma’am. We’ve already cleaned
most of it up.” meaning it probably wasn’t large enough to
warrant checkpoints, but that wouldn’t stop the state from cracking
down. Robin pulled the handle and the compartment swung open. The
space was hollow aside from two pieces of paper folded in thirds,
registration and insurance, a business card, and Robin’s actual
drivers license. She pulled the ID and business card and handed both
over to the officer. He glanced at the ID with little care then
examined the business card.
“What is this?” He looked back at her quizzically.
“Your boss owes me a couple favors and I’m too tired to be
searched. I just want to go home and crash.” Nothing could be
further from the truth, at the moment her body was coursing with so
much adrenaline she could lift the car, but she wouldn’t have made
it this far in life if she couldn’t keep a poker face.
“Fucking rich people,” the officer spoke under his breath and
reached for the radio on his shoulder.
“Don’t call it in you fucking moron, just pull her out and lets
get this over with. She’s lying, look at this piece of shit.” The
other officer was getting red in the face now. The man standing next
to Robin’s window ignored the ridicule and continued with his call.
“Control, This is officer Moore at the south west checkpoint six.”
He released the talk button and waited a moment for the response.
“Go ahead, officer Moore.” A woman’s voice sounded through the
radio
“I’ve got a 10-37 asking me to repeat the phrase ‘the robin
answered the call of the blue-footed booby’ Is there anything I
need to know before searching the vehicle?” Again, the button
released, and again silence. The silence was longer than before, so
much so that even the officer looked confused.
“I told you, you mor–” the radio came to life with the words
of an exhausted man.
“Let her through officer. no search” the response ended with a
sigh.
“Uh, well, I guess you’re free to –” His eyes were wide with
confusion and shifting back in forth as if doing mental calculus. He
was snapped into attention when the other officer spoke up.
“You’ve got to be kidding me! This is bullshit!” He was
shouting into the radio. Apparently this wasn’t the first time as
the response came back fast and hard.
“If you question my authority one more time, Jenkins, I’ll have
you riding a desk so fast your head will spin! If you touch that
woman, I’ll drive down there myself just to strip you of your
copper and lead! Do I make myself clear, officer?!” All the color
drained from his face in an instant as he stammered to blurt out a
faint yes-sir. Robin looked up at the officer at her door. He shook
his head, waved her on and walked away.
“have a nice day,” She pressed lightly on the gas pedal and
waving out the window. She chuckled when she noticed the one officer
still watching her drive away dumbstruck.
Robin pulled up to the keypad of her gated apartment complex. With
the adrenaline gone and the stress of the night wearing her down,
Robin typed in the code and waited for the slow mechanism to move the
gate out of her way. She waved at the few other tenants awake at this
time of morning, first shift going out and third shift coming in. She
pulled the car into an empty uncovered space opposite her building.
“Ok, were home, boy. Time for the leash.” The dog whimpered at
the sight of the five feet of red nylon. “I know,” she clipped
the leash onto the dog’s collar and opened her own door. Not
realizing just how much she was relying on the seat to stay upright,
Robin nearly fell over as her knees almost gave out again. Bracing
against the car for the first few steps, Robin walked with Chester to
the trunk, from which she retrieved her prize. She was practically
dragging across the asphalt until she ran into one of the tenants.
“Morning, Miss Robin. I don’t mean to pry but you seem to be
struggle with that, would you like some help?” He was a jovial man
with a wife and three kids, two older boys and a girl. He worked as a
maintenance technician at a factory nearby and usually began his walk
to work at this time.
“I’ve told you before, Michael, please drop the miss, it makes
me feel old. And I’m fine, thank you. I’m already half way
there,” the last part was an obvious joke, she had made it less
than thirty feet and still had more than a hundred to go, not to
mention two flights of stairs. She had meant to chuckle at the joke
but it came out so pathetically she couldn’t even force herself to
keep it up. Michael burst out into the hearty laugh that his wife
absolutely swooned over, and pulled the bag from her hand and
shouldered it himself.
“Nonsense, you’ve done so much for us, I’d feel so much shame
if I just let you walk away like this. Not to mention what Carla
would think of me.” And with that, he strode off in the direction
of Robin’s apartment. She couldn’t help but smile and followed
slowly after him.
“Let me know if your boss gives you shit for being late again.”
Michael slowed slightly to let Chester catch up. The dog plodded
along next to the man, enjoying the scratches on the head he always
received when Michael stopped by.
“I don’t think that’ll be a problem again. Mr Lee apologized
to me himself after you worked your magic.” They walked to the
steps and began in front of them and began to climb.
“Good, good. I know how hard you work, and I’d hate to lose one
of my favorite neighbors,” they reached the top and Robin held her
hand out for the bag, “I can take it from here. Thank you so much,
it would have taken me an hour to climb those steps without you.”
He chuckled again and lowered the strap gently into her hand. She let
the bag sink nearly to ground and smiled as Michael wished her a good
rest and left the way they came. She didn’t bother grabbing her
keys and just swung the bag at her door letting the thud alert her
roommate she had returned. A stout man opened the door, towering over
her and taking up a majority of the door way. The smile on his face
spread from ear to ear as he pet Chester and pulled the bag from her
hand and walked silently into the apartment. Robin let the leash go
from Chester’s collar as he followed the man in as she followed
suit.
“Domestic terrorism?” She asked into the room as she closed the
door behind her.
“Couple of broken windows at the capital
building.” He brushed spare electronics and other material aside as
he placed the bag on the kitchen table. “We got the gold obviously,
but how’d it go otherwise?” He pulled the first bar with a single
hand and examined the LBMA marks. “PAMP SA, I love Swiss gold in
the morning.” He laughed at his own joke and set the bar down to
retrieve its partner. Robin walked over and opened the sliding glass
door that led to their cramped deck, letting fresh air into the room
and allowing Chester to relieve himself of the turf they kept
outside. She slumped into the couch and started pulling off her
gloves, followed by her shoes and socks, only then did she process
the question.
“Bring me a pen and paper, I found some interesting documents
while looking for the gold. It went mostly to plan until Senator
douche-nuts came home early; I had to jump out his damn window.” He
handed her the pad they had stuck to the fridge, along with a glass
of water.
“Thank you, John.” She downed the glass as he searched for one
of they many pens they had scattered through the room.
“Found one,” she had spotted one beneath a food wrapper from the
night before, two nights ago Robin reminded herself. She pulled it
out and scratched the page until ink spilled out. She wrote the
important details she could still remember after the morning’s
events. “Take anything you can learn to Tommy, I’d rather not
target the same person twice through illegal means.” She passed the
note to John who read it twice and slipped it into his pocket.
“More businesses to add to family fortune.” He didn’t always
approve of Tommy’s work, but he understood there was nothing and no
one better for the work ahead.
“Remind him he owes me, try to get as many of them in my name as
you can if I’m not awake when you talk.” She let a yawn escape
and pulled a pillow beneath her head as her eyelids slipped down.
“No way in hell am I talking to him alone again. I may have passed
the bar but that man is truly a snake.” She could hear him drop
into the chair next to her, and chuckled at the statement.
“Why do you think dad kept him around?”
“Because they grew up together and share the same sick desire for
limitless wealth?” They both laughed. John opened his laptop and
started typing away, searching for any trace of the documents or
their contents. She fell asleep to the erratic typing, and slept a
dreamless sleep.

