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Mask Market: A Burke Novel (Burke Series Book 16) Kindle Edition
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVintage Crime/Black Lizard
- Publication dateAugust 15, 2006
- File size722 KB
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Review
From the Paperback edition.
About the Author
Andrew Vachss is a lawyer who represents children and youths exclusively. His many novels and two collections of short stories have been translated into twenty languages, and his work has appeared in Parade, Esquire, Playboy, and The New York Times, among other publications. A native New Yorker, he divides his time between the city of his birth and the Pacific Northwest.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
“I don’t know you,” I lied. “You knew—you say you knew—my brother. But if you did—”
“Yeah, I know he’s gone,” the ferret said, meeting my eyes, the way you do when you’ve got nothing to hide. With him, it was an invitation to search an empty room. “But you’ve got the same name, right? He never had any first name that I knew; so what would I call you, I meet you for the first time?”
It’s impossible to actually look into my eyes, because you have to do it one at a time. One eye is a lot lighter than the other, and they don’t track together anymore.
A few years ago, I was tricked into an ambush. The crossfire cost me my looks, and my partner her life. I mourn her every day—the hollow blue heart tattooed between the last two knuckles of my right hand is Pansy’s tombstone—but I don’t miss my face. True, it was a lot more anonymous than the one I’ve got now. Back then, I was a walking John Doe: average height, average weight . . . generic lineup filler. But a lot of different people had seen that face in a lot of different places. And the State had a lot of photographs of it, too—they don’t throw out old mug shots.
I’d come into the ER without a trace of ID, dropped at the door by the Prof and Clarence—they knew I was way past risking the do-it-yourself kit we kept around for gunshot wounds.
Since the government doesn’t pay the freight for cosmetic surgery on derelicts, the hospital went into financial triage, no extras. So the neat, round keloid scar on my right cheek is still there, and the top of my left ear is still as flat as if it had been snipped off. And when the student surgeons repaired the cheekbone on the right side of my face, they pulled the skin so tight that it looked like one of the bullets I took had been loaded with Botox. My once-black hair is steel-gray now—it turned that shade while I was in a coma from the slugs, and never went back.
The night man sitting across from me calls himself Charlie Jones—the kind of motel-register name you hear a lot down where I live. A long time ago, I’d done a few jobs he’d brought to me. The way Charlie works it; he makes his living from finder’s fees. Kind of a felonious matchmaker—you tell him the problem you need solved, he finds you a pro that specializes in it.
Charlie pointedly looked down at my hands. I kept them flat on the chipped blue Formica tabletop, palms down. He placed his own hands in the same position, showing me his ID.
The backs of his frail-looking hands were incongruously cabled with thick veins. The skin around his fingernails was beta-carotene orange. The tip of the little finger on his right hand was missing. I nodded my confirmation. Yeah, he was the man I remembered.
Charlie looked at my own hands for a minute, then up at me. The Burke he knew never had a tattoo, but he nodded, just as I had. Charlie was a tightrope dancer—perfect balance was his survival tool. His nod told me not to worry about whether he believed the story that I was Burke’s brother. By him, it was true enough. Where we live, that’s the same as good enough.
“It’s a nice story,” I said, watching as he lit his third cigarette of the meet. Burke was a heavy smoker. Me, I don’t smoke . . . except when I need to convince someone out of my past that I’m still me.
“It’s not my story,” Charlie reminded me. “Your brother, he was an ace at finding people. Best tracker in the city. I figure he must have taught you some things.”
Charlie never invested himself emotionally in any matches he made. He was way past indifferent, as colorless as the ice storm that grayed the window of the no-name diner where we were meeting. But Charlie had something besides balance going for him. He was a pure specialist, a middleman who never got middled. What that means is, Charlie wouldn’t do anything except make his matches.
Everyone in our world knows this. And for extra insurance, Charlie made sure he never knew the whole story. So, if he got swept up in a net, he wouldn’t have anything to trade, even if he wanted to make a deal. Sure, he could say a man told him about a problem. And he might have given the man a number to call. He had liked the guy, even if he’d only met him that one time. Felt sorry for him. In Charlie’s vast experience, drunks who babbled about hiring a hit man were just blowing off steam. You give them a number to call—any number at all, even one you remembered from a bathroom wall—it helps them play out the fantasy, that’s all. “What!? You mean, his wife’s really dead? Damn! I guess you just never know, huh, officer?”
“This guy, he must not be in a hurry,” I said.
“I wouldn’t know,” Charlie replied. His mantra.
“It’s been three weeks since you reached out.”
“Yeah, it took you a long time to get back to me. I figured, with the phone number being the same and all . . .”
“Most of those calls are people looking for my brother. I can’t do a lot of the things he used to do.”
“Yeah,” he said, an unspoken I don’t want to know woven through his voice like the anchor thread in a tapestry.
“But, still, three weeks,” I reminded him. “I mean, how do you know the guy still wants . . . whatever he wants?”
Charlie shrugged.
“You get paid whether I ever call him or not?”
Charlie lit another cigarette. “He knows these things take time. You don’t call, someone else will.”
I waited a few seconds. Then said, “You want to write down his number for me?”
“I’ll say the number,” the ferret told me. “You want it on paper, you do the writing.”
City people call winter the Hawk. Not because of the way it swoops down, but because it hunts. Gets cold enough in this town, people die. Some freeze to death waiting for the landlord to get heat back into their building. Some use their ovens for warmth, and wake up in flames. Some don’t have buildings to die in.
I pulled out a prepaid cell phone, bought in a South Bronx bodega from a guy who had a dozen of them in a gym bag, and punched in the number Charlie had given me. A 718 area code—could be anywhere in the city except Manhattan, but a landline, for sure.
“Hello?” White male, somewhere in his forties.
“You were expecting my call,” I said.
“Who are—? Oh, okay, yeah.”
“I might be able to help you. But I can’t know unless we talk.”
“Just tell me—”
“You know the city?”
“If you mean Manhattan, sure.”
“You got transportation?”
“A car?”
“That’ll do,” I said. I gave him the information I wanted him to have, walked to the end of the alley I’d been using as an office, and put the cell phone on top of a garbage can. Whoever found it would see there were plenty of minutes left. Probably use it to call his parole officer.
I pulled the glove off my left hand, fished a Metrocard out of my side pocket, and dropped below the sidewalk.
Charlie,” said the little black man with the ageless, aristocratic face. “That boy’s one diesel of a weasel. He might slouch, but he’d never vouch.”
“I know, Prof. But no matter who this guys turns out to be, there’s no way that it’s me he’s looking for. If anyone asked Charlie to put him in touch with a specific guy, it would have spooked him right out of the play.”
The only father I’d ever known closed his eyes, looking into the past. The ambush that had almost taken me off the count years ago had been set up by a middleman, too. Only, that time, I was told the client wanted me for the job. Me and only me.
“How much green just to make the scene?” he asked.
“Two to meet. For me to listen. That’s as far as it’s gone.”
“It’s a good number,” the little man mused. “That’s serious money, not crazy money.”
“The job is finding someone, Prof.”
“Charlie don’t find people,” the little man said. “He finds even one, he’s all done.”
“I did meet him, though.”
“Charlie?”
“Yeah. And I called the spot.”
“So, if he was fingering you . . .”
“Right. That diner, it’s down by the waterfront. All kinds of bums hanging around. And, in this weather, you could put a dozen men on the street in body armor, and nobody’d even look twice.”
“There’s something else about Charlie,” the Prof said, nodding to himself.
“What?”
“Maybe he’s going along with you being your own brother, maybe he’s not.” The little man’s voice dropped and hardened at the same time. “But he knows what number he called to get you to show up. You be Burke, you be his brother, don’t make no difference. Because Charlie, he knows you not by y...
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Product details
- ASIN : B000JMKNRO
- Publisher : Vintage Crime/Black Lizard (August 15, 2006)
- Publication date : August 15, 2006
- Language : English
- File size : 722 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 336 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 0307454819
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,117,108 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #4,117 in Hard-Boiled Mysteries (Kindle Store)
- #6,130 in Hard-Boiled Mystery
- #7,442 in Private Investigator Mysteries (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Andrew Vachss has been a federal investigator in sexually transmitted diseases, a social-services caseworker, a labor organizer, and has directed a maximum-security prison for "aggressive-violent" youth. Now a lawyer in private practice, he represents children and youth exclusively, and is a founding member of the Legislative Drafting Institute for Child Protection. He is the author of numerous novels, including the Burke series, three collections of short stories, and a wide variety of other material including song lyrics, graphic novels, essays, and a "children's book for adults." He is most currently engaged in the work of the Legislative Drafting Institute for Child Protection (ldicp.org). His books have been translated into twenty languages, and his work has appeared in Parade, Antaeus, Esquire, Playboy, The New York Times, and many other forums. His books have been awarded the Grand Prix de Littérature Policiére, the Falcon Award, Deutschen Krimi Preis, Die Jury des Bochumer Krimi Archivs and the Raymond Chandler Award (per Giurìa a Noir in Festival, Courmayeur, Italy). Andrew Vachss' latest books are Mortal Lock (Vintage, May 2013), SignWave (Pantheon, June 2015), and Carbon (Haverhill House, 2019). The dedicated Web site for Vachss and his work is vachss.com.
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The familiar cast of characters appear throughout the book, but this novel is more Burke's dialog with himself than much interaction with and the growth of others.
The ending is neatly wrapped up, but felt a little rushed. Everything at the end comes together quickly and neatly. I would have preferred a bit more conflict in getting to the end.
Overall, though, and enjoyable read. I'm sure I'll get more out of it when I read it again.
The plot is *very* twisty and completely unpredictable, which contrasted very well with the warm familiar feeling I have when reading about Burke and his family-of-choice. Of course, the most interesting thing about Vachss' characters is that time doesn't stand still between books. By now, Max the Silent's daughter, Flower, (a baby during Blue Belle) has started college at Barnard!
But although they all age, none stops growing. Burke's thoughts and reactions throughout this book point to an entirely surprising kind of self-awareness I never thought would happen.
Mask Market will make a good starting point for new readers into the Burke series, as well -- the story stands by itself, and anyone who starts here will be all the more interested in where Burke started.
All the family is back for this new adventure: Max the Silent, Mama, Michelle, the Mole, the Professor, Clarence and Terry. When Burke meets a man about a potential job to find a missing person, the guy is swiftly murdered while going to his car to get Burke's money. Burke doesn't know whether or not he's in danger, too, so he sets out to find out who the killers are. It also turns out that the person the guy wanted Burke to find is a woman that our tarnished hero once saved when she was a teenager. Apparently, the murdered man had been funneling money from hedge accounts into her personal account because he was in love with her. Then, she up and took off, leaving him holding the empty bag. Burke wants to find her to see if he can keep her from being killed by the same people who murdered her boyfriend. It's a complex puzzle, but Burke and his family are smart enough to eventually put the pieces together.
Until about the last third of the novel, what Burke basically does is sit in Mama's Chinese restaurant and go over the problems with his cohorts, drive around the city looking for people with information that might solve the problems, talk to each of his family members individually about the problems, think about Wesley, think about his own childhood, go to his new girlfriend's apartment and listen to her story, and slowly work himself up to solving the blasted puzzle. There's only two short action sequences in the entire book and they are the murder at the beginning and then Burke having to defend himself against a couple of Jewish Russian mobsters. I didn't completely understand the ending and had to scratch my head in confusion as I attempted to digest the information that was given to the reader. Oh, and Burke has a girlfriend named Loyal, and he wants to try and help her with problems. The best scene in the book is when Burke talks to Charlie, the middleman who'd set up the initial meeting between our hero and the murdered man. That scene really comes alive as Charlie talks about his tour in Vietnam as a Tunnel Rat and how every place since then has been nothing but another tunnel to get through alive. That was great writing. Plus, there's a new character that sound pretty interesting--Toni, a sassy redhead with gorgeous legs, who just happens to be a man! One thing that Mr. Vachss does which is down right irritating, however, has to do with the dialogue. He has a habit of breaking off sentences as if someone is being interrupted while speaking. A few times would be okay, but he does this two-or-three times on every single page that has dialogue. It starts to be extremely irritating. At least it does to me. Burke starts sounding like the TV host, Charlie Rose, and I want to tell him to just shut up and let the other people finish what they're saying. Last, since the author apparently isn't going to bring back Wesley back (it probably has to do with the violence), I wish he'd stop bringing him up throughout the story. It's like he's teasing his old-time readers with a promise he has no intention of keeping.
I keep saying with each new novel I read by Andrew Vachss that it's going to be the last one, yet I keep buying them like an addict with a crack cocaine habit. I'll say it again, the first five novels in the "Burke" series is some of the best writing I've ever encountered. No one could come close to Mr. Vachss during those years in the late eighties and early nineties. Since then, my feeling is that he's primarily writing the books for the paycheck. I don't know. Maybe he donates the royalties to a fund for abused children. If he's going to continue writing the series, however, he should let Burke be himself. The character, after all, is a killer with his own unique code of honor. How many years has it been since Burke killed anybody? Quite a few! I bet there's a lot of people in New York City he could do that no one would even miss!
The thing with Vachss is that he tells a story apart from the "mystery". The story is usually about child abuse and he does this extremely well, allows the reader to feel the issues and to help understand where Vachss is coming from - he is without a doubt an extremely important writer.
As for the mystery, well Vachss is not really here to tell a mystery story, it is more of an instructional tale that he weaves. The mystery is secondary and for me, I don't mind if it is a bit messy and unclear, Vachss has already grabbed me with his writings in the first two-thirds of the book.
Recommended.



















