With the shadow of fratricide of fratricide on his shoulders, a lone gun runner tangles with his newfound reputation while being hounded by a detective out for his blood.
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Peter 'Pike' O'Malley
Peter 'Pike' O'Malley
⁍ name: Peter 'Pike' O'Malley
⁍ age: 31
⁍ sex: Male
⁍ business
No, I am not fucking with you. I don't mean the butcher on 44th. You know, the fishmonger on North Street. The one with the big signboard and the - How have you schmucks not heard of Mack and Peters before? Didn't Larry give you the deets? Look, you want your M14s, you get them from a guy called Pike. Knock on the door. Say it's a special order for 20 pounds of steelhead and sockeye. He'll handle the rest.
How can you trust them? Buddy, you trust me to hook you up with the job and you don't trust my partners? What do you mean vetted- for fuck's - alright, alright. Let's start at the beginning. Book of Genesis. Mack and Peters is something of a train stop in Mininoona ever since it opened 15 years ago. Place was a former oyster bar before the two of them bought it. Everyone stops by there at least once, both regular people and ,uh, people of your unique persuasion. Owners are two brothers - well, used to be owned. Goes by the name of Peter O'Malley. Regular irish guy. No prison record. Just your average neighborhood fishmonger to the cops and feds.
Now, the guy we're talking about here, Pike, only deals in high quality hardware, no cheap Saturday Night Specials or cheap backalley knockoffs here. Strict procedure, strict rules which is why you really need to ask for the damn special order, get me? He operates by the book for a good reason. Never been caught over 15 years. Not once. You only get to know the guy through connects. No open street deals, nothing. It's a fucking bother but it's the price of doing business.
Any more questions?
Oh, what happened with the other brother?
Eh, Pike killed him.
Nah, I'm not gonna elaborate. He got wasted. Yeah, kind of fucked up. Now, you guys gonna give me my cash?
Mack and Peter's sells cod and mussels to law abiding citizens by day and bullets and rifles to scoundrels and thugs by night. It's a carefully manufactured illusion that Pike and his now deceased brother, Mackenzie 'Muskie' O'Malley, have been maintaining for 15 years, using it to launder the money acquired from their black market arms dealership. Pike primarily uses the store as his primary base of operations and rarely conducts any business outside of it, preferring in-person meetings to using intermediaries or runners. Ever since Muskie died, Pike has had to hire a small trusted crew of staff composed of delivery men, butchers and store assistants to take care of logistical as well as 'assist' with his black market dealings every now and then. With his brother's death, Pike also now carries the responsibility of directly negotiating and philandering with representatives from various criminal organisations in Mininoona.
⁍ savvy
Caution, care and craft are the three underlying principles that Pike operates by. Salesmanship and a encyclopediac knowledge of firearms were both things Muskie and Pike knew but Pike distinguished himself in his ability as an professional gunsmith, thanks to his time handling gun runs for the Irish Mob. Automatic conversions, handloading, rekitting, custom modifications, you name it, Pike probably has done it at a premium price. Pike isn't some expert house painter but he can handle himself confidently in a firefight if push comes to shove.
⁍ ruin
First time I saw a gun? Don't get many clients that ask that question everyday. Normally, I'd say fuck off but well, I guess I don't have the energy for that. Well, since we're closing down now and I'm almost done oiling your Beretta, I think I'll start from the beginning. The relevant beginning. Don't feel as though you'll get every detail. Even I struggle to remember that sometimes.
You probably know my dad and my mom owned that little oyster bar out by Milwaukee. The one where the Chicagoans went to. You wouldn't have remembered it but they called it the - The Little Pearl, that's right, the one by the lake harbor. Noisy. That's how I remembered it but most bars in town were like that, full of piss drunk blue collars, divorcees and anyone who wanted oyster shots. The basement though was a different story altogether. Yeah, that's how the Chicago Outfit was trafficking all their goods, some little quaint northeast oyster bar. Mom and Dad managed to put me and my brother through school with all that 'tax' they were raking in. My mother didn't want no life of crime for me or Muskie but Dad thought it would give us a taste of the real world. My brother took to it like fish to a water but I was the more reluctant one. Still, it didn't help that my brother came back home with a couple of hundreds every week, bragging on the dinner table about stories of the day. Those days were peaceful. Sure, I had to see my dad get beat up every so often by the odd drunk mobster who thought he could have his way but I was young and dumb. My brother gave me toys afterschool that he bought from the cornershop, my dad brought me fishing and my mom made me good chowder. The bar was shit but my family wasn't shit compared to all the other stories you hear of guys with deadbeat drunks for dads.
I gotta confess, I was afraid Muskie would leave me behind, go off on his own, but he wasn't one to leave me behind. It was a Saturday that I saw my first gun. I was twelve, then. Walking home after 5. Detention or late choir practice, I can't remember correctly. All that I was thinking around that time was homework and doing crappy 5 dollar bets on Brewers games. My brother dragged me off to some little crackhouse den to see some open trunk deal going on. Some Italian mafioso was bragging about a couple of new european guns they got in through Long Island. They were Walthers, if I remember correctly. Couple of P-38's, a PPK, hell, I even remember a Luger. Muskie started talking about how this was the next big thing, about how the feds were ostriches in the sand and that this was a business opportunity. The question was whether I would take it or wait for another one to arrive. You can guess which one I took.
Those years, man. Those damn three years. We rolled with the Irish from Chicago first given we knew most of them back from Mom and Dad's joint. The Italians came after and we learnt the finer points of subtlety from them and I picked up a few tricks of the trade from this underground gunsmith, Old Smitty. Rumour had it he worked for Remington during WW2 before he joined the Sicilian Mafia. Times were good, we were rolling in the cash and then, the music stopped. The fucking ATF, I forgot whether it was some dumbass dealer mouthing off or a fink, but the IRS and the ATF busted down the doors to my Mom and Dad's operation. I was 15 and Muskie just turned 18. He took custody of me while my parents got 30 years in jail each. I still visit them from time to time. Mom managed to get out for a brief period for Muskie's service. Dad died of prostate cancer in jail.
There was nothing in Milwaukee for us anymore so we packed all our belongings and took a trip down to Mininoona. Bought us a place up in cash at the northwest, little abandoned lot that used to be a department store. It was a tough couple of months, wading through all the scalpers who gave us crates full of ice instead of fish and learning our way around the neighborhood but we settled our feet in around '65. Muskie did most of the legwork. He had contacts I didn't know of from Milwaukee all the way to Atlanta, guys who gun runned heat all the way from Mexico, Europe and China. I did the repairs, the assembly, the sales when Muskie couldn't do them. Pretty soon, we felt fucking invincible. We had guys coming to us, the cops never suspected a thing and everything ran like clockwork.
Until Muskie started gambling and playing the lots. Yeah, that dumbfuck started buying sweepstakes and taking bets that no one else would. Yeah, the same Muskie, I know. He hid it well but eventually, he couldn't hide it from me. He started getting into these debts, big ones, and then, I had to.....
Goddammit, I've said too much.
You know what happens next. There's nothing else. Would you even believe anything I said?
Here's the facts. Muskie's six feet under right now. And I'm still here.
Ah, almost forgot to give this back to you. It'll be eighty. Have a good evening.
⁍ cred
" Dude, that business with Muskie. Horrible. Horrible. Even I - and you know who I am - wouldn't do that. "
" Please, I get better hardware from my grandma next door! One of the pieces he sold to me, a friggin' Colt, jammed in the middle of a robbery!
" Hah, what a friggin' pushover! I don't trust this guy to push my product. He's a wimp, a loser, he drove my friggin cousin's ford for nickles and pennies!"
" Used to be a better sweet-talker when he was doing runs back up north. We had a fun night together that Halloween but I don't kiss and tell."
" I don't care what anyone says. That fucker killed Muskie and I'm gonna prove it one way or the other, mark my words. "
" Drove with him once when we were making a gun run to Michigan. Wasn't much of a talker but did always went on and on about going down south, where it's warmer. Guess we all had dreams at one point. "
" Something's off about Muskie's murder, man. The two of them always got along. Guess it goes to show that even family can rat on you."
⁍ ilk
THOUGHT I WAS OUT
Someone from your criminal past—a former crime boss, a parole officer, an old associate—still has you on the books. They say you owe them big, and you're in no position to dissent. (Work with the GM to determine who this person is and your exact relationship therewith: do you help grudgingly or eagerly? Because they're levering rock-solid blackmail or because they once pulled your ass off the fire big-time? Is this—on paper, at least—a mutually beneficial business arrangement, a debt not yet conciliated, or more akin to good old-fashioned coercion?) This person has a habit of asking for a costly favor at the most inconvenient possible time. You always tell them this is the last time. But you already know they'll keep calling. And god damn you, you'll keep picking up.
" Hey, Pike. Just a regular reminder that you still owe me for what happened that night, you know, the night with Muskie. You're on the straight and level with that last payment but just so we're clear: don't even think of going near her house, understand?
AIN'T NOTHING LIKE A HOUND DOG
You always gotta be watching over your back in this line of work. Sometimes, a certain someone stares back at you, someone with an itch or a vendetta. It could be the widow of the husband you murdered in a wind-swept alleyway, a Pinkerton who suspects your innocent looking facade to be a front for criminal activity or a rival gang member looking to off you. They won't act against you out in the open but they'll take the opportunity to surprise you in any moment of calm.
" Good morning. I'm Agent Fisher of the ATF Bureau. Ma'am, I'd just like to ask you a few questions if you have the time. Oh, no worries, if you were in any real trouble, I doubt a small cig shop like this could hide much. Now, do you happen to know any one by the name of Mackenzie O'Malley? Died recently, you say? When? Mhm. Does he have any relatives? A brother....Peter O'Malley. Wife and children, you say? No, that'll be all. I have more than enough. You have a good day too."



