Chapter 33
Klempner
A quick trawl of some of the greyer websites I use from time to time quickly produces what I want: contact details for an arms
merchant who isn’t too fussy about inspecting, or even asking for, documentation or licences relating to either his merchandise or
his clientele. Online, it seems ideal, but when I arrive at the address, I’m unimpressed.
I could be in the set of some clichéd hack movie. The side alley is dark and damp. The building is of the would-fall-down-but-is-
held-up-by-the-dry-rot variety. It’s even better as I enter.
The proprietor has, apart from a serious case of halitosis, a gold tooth. Why I have no idea. It glints from among a sundry dental
collection in black, brown and yellow. Apart of course from the three which are missing altogether from the front. Maybe he lost
them in a fight. Or perhaps they ran for cover from their horrible housing.
Having wandered into the area wearing my don’t-mind-me-I’m-a-tourist uniform, I’m beginning to regret the cream linen suit.
Stained jeans and a dark tee-shirt would have been more appropriate.
Or perhaps a wetsuit.
I move carefully, preferring not to brush against the walls or furniture, and wishing it were as easy to close the nostrils as the
mouth.
Toothy snaps fingers at me. “Sua permissão para comprar.”
I allow confusion to cross my face. “I’m sorry, do you speak English? I want to buy a gun. You were recommended to me.”
His features display a running battle between Irritation and avarice.
The opportunity to sap the ignorant but wealthy foreigner...
“I talk English small, yes.” He holds out his hands, fingers wriggling in a Gimme gesture. “Your permit for gun?”
Making a show of taking the paperwork from my wallet, I unfold it, stroking out the creases, It’s part of the ‘toolkit’ Dakho
routinely runs up for me. I’ve no clue whether it is completely fake or a copy of something he hi-jacked from elsewhere. It could
even be the genuine article. But he’s never let me down yet. In any case, it’s good enough to pass Toothy’s cursory examination.
“Okay, you want gun for nice English tourist. To protect, yes?”
“That’s right.” I award him a small smile. “To protect myself.”
Toothy sniffs with a sound like bad plumbing, then heads for a door, jerking his thumb at me to follow.
In the next room...
Ah-ha...
That’s more like it...
... the walls are lined with racks and shelves and mountings displaying a satisfying variety of merchandise. Pistols and revolvers
share one display. Rifles fill another. Grenade launchers rub shoulders with anti-tank weapons. A bazooka nestles in one corner,
shoved close to a rocket launcher. Stacked crates are marked up for the old L2 grenades as well as their smoke and stun
cousins.
My host offers out a hand to the rack of handguns... “Senhor...”
“No, not those...” I aim a finger... “Those...” I head for a display of assault weapons.
His eyes slit, but he grins, giving me a better view of his putrescent teeth than I would like. The gold tooth winks at me. “Perhaps
you not just nice English tourist,” he drawls.
“Perhaps I’m not,” I agree. “You want to make a sale or not?”
He snorts again, produces a key and unlocks the display.
It’s not too impressive. All the goods are new, still with manufacturers’ stamps and tags, but they look like knock-offs, and not
very good ones. The paint is shiny and the metal polished, but it’s cheap civilian junk designed for rich idiots that want to go
hunting on staged 'safaris'.
Not my preferred option when my own neck’s at risk.
Would it still be ‘sport’ if lions could fire back?
Picking one at random, I take a lightweight semi-automatic rifle from the rack. It purports to be an AR-15, but as I eye the
manufacturer’s mark and heft the thing in my hands. The weight’s wrong and the balance is off. “This supposed to be the
genuine article?”
“Is good gun, senhor.” Toothy raises a thumb. “Melhor qualidade. Bestest Quality.”
Hmmm...
“You got a firing range?”
“Senhor?”
“Lugar para praticar? Testar?” I hold up the weapon to my shoulder, mime aiming and firing it with a couple of Bang Bang
noises..
“Ah... Sim, senhor.” He crooks a finger, leading me through the back into what looks to be a bricked-up alleyway: a long narrow
street, perhaps two hundred yards long, contained between the high brick walls of adjacent buildings, and blocked off at the end.
At intervals of several yards apiece, targets invite assassination: paper and cardboard outlines; some fixed to frames, others
dangling from strings, swinging in the slight breeze. Some are human silhouettes, concentric circles marked on the chest. Many
are home-made: printed off, then pinned to boards.
“Ammunition?”
He passes me a box, the card soft with age, speckled with mould. Even as I snap off the magazine, feeding in the rounds, it
doesn’t feel right. The spring is spongy and soft.
Fucking fake...
Go through the motions...
I’ll make my point in a minute.
The mag should take 20 rounds. As a precaution, I only load 18...
Probably jam anyway...
Setting the ‘AR-15’ into my shoulder, the action on the trigger isn’t as smooth as it should be. As I squeeze back, something
clicks that shouldn’t...
Burred?
Unfinished surface?
I pick a target at the far end of the alley, a paper cut-out of a six-foot human figure, aiming for the heart, firing three rounds in
quick succession. At this range, were it a genuine AR-15, Paper-Boy should have three neat holes puncturing his chest. As it is,
if he were a real enemy, he’d have a nasty limp and would have dropped his coffee.
Adjusting the sight a touch, I give it another go. One round veers off to the left. One drops low. On the third shot, the weapon
jams.
Fucking waste of time...
I shove the useless heap of junk back at Toothy, hard enough to stagger him backwards as I propel the barrel at his chest. “You
going to show me the real thing now? Or do I have to get annoyed? I’m not here to be ripped off by some cheap grifter who
thinks I’m an easy mark.”
“No, senhor. I see now. You not tourist. Perhaps...” He sets the ‘AR-15’ to one side. Perhaps you want this?” He gestures.
“Come. Come see.”
Back indoors, from his bunch of keys, he unlocks a second cabinet. And it’s a completely different collection. The weapons inside
are old and clearly second-hand. Pretty they’re not. But this time, it’s the real McCoy: AK-47s and AKMs. Soviet-made rifles, built
for fighting wars. Not sophisticated, and lacking most of the bells and whistles of many of the modern ‘improved’ designs, but
rugged, reliable and easily maintained.
Toothy has quite a range on offer. Given the number of similar weapons I saw on my visit to Juliana’s apartment, they’re common
in the area, so I suppose it’s no surprise.
Scanning the choice, I mutter to myself. “That’s more like it.”
I finger a AK-47, the famed Kalashnikov. God alone knows how many were made, but whoever owned this one, went through a
lot with it. The wooden stock is worn smooth. The paint is polished clear down to bare metal in places.
It’s a classic weapon, and with good reason, designed by a soldier-cum-engineer who had a clear understanding of what is
needed when your life depends on the weapon you’re using. The only real problem with the model is blowback and recoil, which
can make the accuracy doubtful. Still...
I hover over the display. I could choose the Kalashnikov’s more modern cousin, the AKM. Toothy has several on display. But the
main advantage of the model is simply the longer-range sights. But the parts are cheaply made and I don’t care for them.
Besides, I’ll be working up close for this operation, so there’s not much to be gained.
Then I spot...
Ahhh...
... the AK-74...
... Another child of the AK-47, but adapted to a smaller round and a higher muzzle velocity.
I pluck it from the rack. Turning it over and around, giving it the once over.
The magazine snaps cleanly off, and after a cursory check of the chamber, the bolt slides smoothly back, then forward again,
with the small snapping sound of perfectly meshing components.
I snap my fingers at Toothy. “Ammo?”
“Sim, senhor.” He bobs his head fishing out another cardboard carton or rounds, this one clean, freshly-labelled and with a
manufacturer’s batch stamp I recognize.
Stepping outside, targeting Paper-Boy again, I aim, fire and this time, three holes appear within an inch of each other, low-centre
in his ribs.
The aim’s a touch off for me, but the sights are easily adjusted later. Meanwhile...
Sucking my teeth, I aim a trifle higher and a tad to the left, and fire again. This time the shot makes a neat puncture upper-left in
the chest. And the next. And the next.
I look the rifle over again, hefting it in my hands, getting to know it. But it’s only a cursory inspection, more for Toothy’s benefit
than mine.
It’s a weapon of course. It’s only function is the taking of life. But this weapon has saved its owner’s life, and I’ll not guess how
many times. It’s well-cared for and God knows how much service it’s seen.
Second-hand be damned
Pre-loved...
“I’ll take it. Now, what else do you have in that display?”
*****