Episode Three - podcast episode cover

Episode Three

Oct 24, 202223 minSeason 1Ep. 3
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

An interrogation of the shooter takes an unexpected turn, Stevie confides in Tony about Lisa’s past, and Tony and Reggie tangle with the cartel. Tony finally puts all the pieces together, but he might be too late.

The novel this series is based on has been published and is available on Amazon, here: https://www.amazon.com/Red-Meat-Village-Crime-Thriller/dp/B0DYP2DRJ5/ref=sr_1_1?crid=XXR35BASP3U7&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Uj7dmdgVs7md8Qt3597vMQ.1KGFa38PJMCP5InjoiKJ0D9YJ086g80ajz6Sfh_fGyU&dib_tag=se&keywords=tris+power+red+meat+village&qid=1742329315&s=books&sprefix=tris+power+red+meat+village+%2Cstripbooks%2C83&sr=1-1

Red Meat Village is a production of Voyage Media. The series is produced by Nat Mundel, Robert Mitas, and Dan Benamor. Directed, produced and adapted by Dan Benamor, based on Andrew Bernstein’s upcoming novel of the same name. 

Starring Ryan Heppe as Tony, Catherine Bell as Lisa, Malik Yoba as Reggie, Rachel Pate as Monjurrie, Abel Soto as Cortez, Kareem Ferguson as Chill, Luca Malacrino as Stevie, and Tracey Leigh as Destiny. Edited, sound designed, and mixed by Nick Messitte. Original music by Derlis Gonzalez.

If you’re enjoying the show, please leave us a five star review in Apple Podcasts or anywhere you’re listening and subscribe now for future episodes.

Transcript

Voyage, meet village, feet villageet village. Lisa roared down the street, putting distance between us and Brownsville. Sirens could be heard in the distance. Reggie gazed with interest at the unconscious murderer. Every visit to Brownsville is exciting. We took the shoot at the Lisa's house. She had a soundproofed basement where she'd see clients. His name was Curtis. We asked him why he shot the dealer Blaze, who supposedly knew something about where we could find Destiny.

He wouldn't say. Reggie threatened to break his twenty four ribs one punch at a time and watch him choke on his blood from internal injuries. Curtis talked, he didn't know where Destiny was, but he identified Monjerie as a courier working for the cartel. She worked for the cartel's local distributor, Cortez, who operated out of an auto garage. Before we could figure out what to do with Curtis, there was a knock at Lisa's door. Our visitor

was James Robinson aka Chill. Reggie and I had previously encountered him at Betsy Head Park in Brownsville. He was a swagger and drug dealer, habitually dressed in a perfectly groomed camel's hair coat. He clearly followed us to Lisa's home. It was the coat that told me immediately who James Robinson was. A tall, whiplash lean young man. I could see lean cheeks, dark flashing eyes, a firm jaw. He could have hit a movie star. He smiled genuine as hell, and it lit the room. You were a long

way from Betsy had what you were to speak privately with tone. Hey, anything you say to me, you can say to them. What do you want to talk about? A tray? What for? What? Curtis deal for? Destiny Hunter? What the hell do you know about Destiny Hunter? We reluctantly led James inside. He was outnumbered and outgunned. He wasn't going to harm any of us if he wanted to survive the night. What are you gonna tell me about her? Destiny? She occur her for the cartel

man. What she's a student at Brooklyn University. I know that, but I also work with her. She ad go between for the distributors in street Deal. How the hell did that happen? Monjerie? Where is she Now, nobody's seen her for weeks. Man, Tony, she bounced, you're telling me she worked for Cortez. Year y'all hear about that heist right two point four million of blow three, maybe four weeks ago, right about the time Destiny disappeared. It is, it's being sold off in Hell's kitchen Muldoon's

territory. How's Destiny tightened? All that? Your problem? So where's raditat? Who's that Curtis? I patted James down and we all escorted him downstairs to Curtis. Reggie stripped the duct tape off Curtis's mouth, but before he could say anything, James casually reached down and came up with a small Boar twenty two handgun from a concealed mini holster on his ankle. I'd missed it. He lined the rod up on Curtis's chest and pumped two shells into his

heart. Curtis's chest let out an audible sigh, His head slumped sideways onto his shoulder, and he never moved again. I stared at his corpse, shocked into motionlessness as I stood there in Lisa's basement, the now dead body of Curtis Dell slumped on the chair in front of me. His killer chill a KAA. James Robinson, true to his nickname, acted as if he delivered me the wrong lunch order. It needed to be done, but I take no pleasure in it. He still had his twenty two, but I

knew he wasn't a threat to me. I didn't have my nine millimeter Molly ready at hand, but I wouldn't shoot this kid anyway. He just walked out. We let him go. I mean, what were we gonna do arrest him for shooting our hostage. Stevie had a friend whose boat could be used for situations like this. The ancient skiff puttered slowly down the river, marking Curtis Tell's forlorn funeral procession. It was a cold mid March night,

especially on the water on which it seemed spring would never come. The night was moonless, dark, and stars glittered like distant jewels on a black satin background. The wind whipped us like it held a personal grudge. It was late. We sat above decks. Curtis's cold corpse was stuffed in a trunk, waited with umbells and stashed in a secret compartment of a whole reeking of dead fish, a stencil overpowering it, confounded the best efforts of DA dogs

seeking drugs that Stevie's former associates had long smuggled. We sat, bundled in down coats and knit caps. I had a metal flask of brandy. Stevie at the con drank only sparingly Reggie, who worshiped his body like a holy vessel, not at all more for us. I passed the flask to Stevie again. You've got a thing for Lisa. It's that obvious. Let me tell you something about it, because fore worn is forearmed. Okay, she

gave me a shiner once. It took me damn near ten minutes, the subdure, the pennant of the floor, and a loft or rileder like that. You cheat on it? Hell no, you got Lisa via girl. Why would you look at someone else? Then? Why? An old friend from my parents building? Swore I stiffed around a deal and Lisa wouldn't hear different. Eventually we can in front of the chick up down a riverside, and she confessed. I kept my arm Lisa the whole time. As soon

as she heard the truth, she swung. I grabbed her arm and let the force of a blow swinger around. By the time she was straight, the lion bitch was gone. She looked at me, those dark eyes flashing hard. I said, let it go. We have each other. And her eyes changed and she came into my arms. She loved you, black eye and all. He laughed, running his right hand across his left eye. It was all a shine to Tony. It was black, blue orange, and it stunned. And she may be only five four, but she

can hit. Don't think she can't. The school teacher said, she got a devil inside her teachers and lie, she make it up to you. He nodded his head and smiling, Yeah she did. She's a wild Tony, but loving like nobody else you'll ever know. There was silence, and I felt its presence, this heavy internal weight. Me and Reggie and Stevie, the three of us on a windswept boat, on a dark mission, on a dark night, the heist destiny Muldoon. Now many people can connect

all those dots, you know, Muldoon. His eyes couldn't have flashmore astonishment. Yeah, Muldoon treated me almost like the family. But Lisa was the one he really loved the daughter we never had. What do you think it was me? The heist in the cartel? Was it you trem into the bulls? I did it? We don't give a rat's ass about the cartel. He stand from one of us to the other in as good an act

of incredulity if it wasn't real as I had ever seen. His eyes couldn't have flashmore astonishment if I'd accused him of being an alien invader from the crab Nebula. I was buy an end, desperate to retain my grasp of certainty. I said, there's a huge upsurge of trafficking and Hell's Kitchen in the Upper West Side. You have the brains and the testicles to hijack and cartel shipment and traffic in Hell's Kitchen. People like you could be counted on one

hand. Stevie nodded. Then he threw back his head and he laughed. His laugh filled the air with a pure sound of delight, a simple sound of surprise, of joyousness at the twisted turns and absurd accusations that might creep unexpected into one's life. It was a sound capable of being uttered only by a soul that swashbuckled in the daylight and slept peacefully in the night. He

punched his chest with his right hand, trying to stifle his laughter. Dude, due, I appreciate the respect I do, and I got no problem with some smart boy hard rocks. Heighten these bastards the lives they wipe out. But do you realize the kind of inside information and the degree of planning it would take the hijack the stone call killers, the type of precision operation they run and live to fight another day. I'm flattered, I am truly

flattered. But it wasn't me. Looked me in the eyes and swear you didn't do it, and I'll believe you. Tony Reggie. I sweate you on Lisa's life, on my own life, that I am not involved, nor have I been, in any heist of the cartown. His eyes were alight with deviltry. I could see him mocking us, telling us both to go screw ourselves, then swatted up off the boat and swimming home. He was capable of him, but he didn't do it. He looked from one

of us into the other. Tony Reggie, I swear to you, on Lisa's life, on my own life that I am not involved, nor have I been in any heights of the cartown. I believe him. Shit, I thought, I have no clue who pulled this job. I've been on this case for weeks and I haven't a clue. A great smart ass detective, I am. We'd hit the cartel location we'd gotten from Blaze sometime tomorrow. I was too tired to think about it. The faint glow of lights

on Long Island shimmered in the distance. Brandier No, I was benumbed, and nothing sounded so good as a hot meal, a hot shower, and a warm bed. The wind still blew hard in our face. We had Curtisdell's body on deck. Reggie and Stevie hefted the weighted trunk. They dropped his cold body in the cold sea, and he was instantly swallowed up in its cold depths. We observed a moment of silence, not for a stone killer, but for wasted human potential. Then Stevie again took the Khan and

turned the boat around. He pushed forward the throttle leven higher the old engines power in his home school announced the subject oh Nietzsche's influence in Jack London's the seawall you knew, Humphrey van Waden. There's a master plan afoot. It'll makes sense to you when you read my essay. Okay, we'll let the carve at some writing time after we see Quartez. Honey, I know will be super careful. Careful is not in your nature? Where's Nikki Mickey's gone?

The silence in the room was total. You could faintly hear the traffic on the street and in the distance New York City's endless sirens. Her pain was manifest, and I empathized, but I was simultaneously filled with elation. I held myself back from the obvious question and asked another one instead. Where'd he go? Why? It doesn't matter? He was never going to get clean. For years now it hasn't been good. I don't know what'll happen

to him now. She looked at me suddenly, with desperation in her eyes. Tony, don't go against the cartel, please? I told her we wouldn't. Technically it was true. That's what I tried to think. Is Reggie and I drove to Cortes's garage the next day. Why are we doing this? She's Lee's assistant. That makes it practically family to us. Someone steps in dogs shit in a field of dogs shit they knowingly walked into. I don't think it's our responsibility to buy them new shoe. You can bounce

if you need to. I won't be man. I finished my essay last night. My day's free. We rolled up the street until we reached Cortes's garage. We got out, strolled around the lock, and strutted inside. I looked around. There were no witnesses. A mechanic had a batted sedan on the hoist. His dark hair was covered in sweat. He was short, stocky, and muscles bulged in his arms like overstrained houses. He wore a white tank top and baggy dark pants. He had dark blue tattoos stretching

from either shoulder down his arms. One was of a mustachioed man in a dark suit in for Dora, pointing a handgun. The other was of a victim taking shots from the gun in his midsection. This aldero had the butt of a cigarette in his mouth. We pulled on gloves and ski masks. My right hand clutched Mollie in my jacket pocket. My left groped for the switch controlling the front gate. The gate started to roll down. The Saldero

looked surprised before he looked belligerent. Reggie hit him once a short modulated left to the point of his jaw, and he collapsed like an imploded building. I nodded the Reggie watched for cops on their payroll. I started up a short flight of grease stained wooden stairs to a glass enclosed office. A big guy in black sweat came out with a pistol in his hand, but I got molly under his chin, pointed up his drain. Before he could turn to me, I shoved him into the office. Inside, a wiry dude

with a shock of black hair sat behind the desk. He'd heard the commotion and had the baleful snout of an AAR fifteen pointed my way, Cortez. I guessed one question, one answer, or I then late your co over here. We just want to know what you did to Destiny Hunter. They're coming. Locked the doors the thief. You're here for her? She stole from us. How'd you know it was herne The shimmon was coming. I could hear a police car roaring up towards the garage. Siren on what happened

to her. I don't know if she ran. If we find Destiny with your coke or the money from the sale of your coke, we'll return all the drugs or cash to him. But you need to leave a bee after that. Do it, and there's a conversation to be had. I can't promise more than that. I started down the stairs. Something was tugging around in my brain, but I didn't have it yet. Reggie and I flattened. We went over side fences and kept going over him toward the avenue one,

which we parked. We got in the car and slowly rolled out of there. We shoved ski masks and gloves into a plastic trash bag some twenty blocks away. Reggie hopped out and shoved it near the bottom of a garbage filled restaurant thumpster. At the speed limit. We drove silently out of Brown's, though we were well on our way to Bedstye before Reggie spoke, did you get what you needed? Grimly, I nodded. I knew were to find the answers, and tonight alone I would do it. Okay, okay,

what I'll tell you? What the hell is destiny? Really everything. She went by Channel Chisholm, nicknamed Chaci in her youth. She came from rural Jamaica, a poor family. She ran off from brutal farm work as a child. We don't know how old. Makes her way to Kingston, lives by her wits, eventually emigrace to the US, where my parents adopted her in her early teens. Things were great between us, but the trauma of her youth never left her. She couldn't be in someone else's care had

always made her uneasy. She was like a street dog that couldn't adopt app to a loving home. So she emancipated herself at eighteen, Sharp as a hatchet, pretty as a show cat, cool as the trade winds, she makes her way from pickpocket to credit card fraud consort of lonely millionaires, bilking them for cash. Works this last angle successfully for years. Eventually, with chains and pipes beaten within three millimeters of life by a drug gang she defrauded.

She crawls back to me and promises she's going straight. I guess she didn't. Why didn't you tell me? I thought you wouldn't look for her? Are you kidding? She's your sister? Yet I killed ten men to find your cat, Lisa, you need me to say it out loud. We were seated close to each other. She put her hands on me, something between an apology and a thank you. I kissed her. She twisted in my arms. Her arms went around my neck and kissed her again.

I continued to kiss her. I refused to stop kissing her. I bent and scooped her in my arms, carried her slender form into the living room and laid her down on the sofa. It had been as long for her as it was for me. Afterwards, we lay together, unmoving, incapable of moving, in each other's arms and breathed. We lay together for long moments of quiet. She fell asleep. Eventually I got up and got a

glass of tap water from the kitchen. As giddily happy as I was, that something nagged at me again, from the deep recesses of my brain and intuition that would only get louder until it was dealt with. Feeling my heart beat against my chest, wanting to stop my legs from moving, I crept down the basement stairs. A dim light from the kitchen illuminated the room, but I knew my way even if it pitch black. There was a painting on the wall behind it was Lisa's wall safe, the wall safe to which

she had long ago given me a key. Finally I understood why I was certain she had not subsequently changed the lock, and it hit me. The whole goddamn scheme fell at the place I'd had all the pieces, had them for days. I could have should have put this together days ago, but only now it coalesced. I thought of Stevie's words, his words on the boat, and I shook my head at how I had missed what was right

in front of me. For a moment, I stood and marveled at the scheme, so simple yet so complex, drawing into her web the man who loved her, drawing him in. For multiple reasons, but one overriding reason, I was certain of it. Lisa should have been a marine, simplify, always faithful, whatever devil stocked the clandestine byways of a soul, never faithless to a man as such, certain that a man would never be faithless to her, and never turned her into the heads. I slipped the key

into the lock. It fits snugly, and the door swung open, readily, swung wide. I hadn't even shined the flash from my phone inside, but I knew what I would find. For a moment, I paused, how could I have missed it? Destiny Cortez's lover knew when and where the shipment arrived. She was terrified, would never rob a drug gang again. But she knew somebody who was just this side of fearless and mentioned it.

Somebody expert with a gun, somebody with a devil inside her, somebody who would go against the cartel the way some climber's free solo three thousand foot vertical rock faces. Lisa had access to Muldoon, who regarded her like a daughter. She knew she could sell the blow for over two million, and that it would be trafficked in Hell's Kitchen and on the upper west side. I was about to shine the light inside when I heard a noise from above.

I turned off the light silently. I pushed the door almost shut, listened slight sounds came from the rear door of the lock being picked picked quietly, expertly by professionals. I pulled Molly, I held her in my right hand and got on the floor. Was it the d ea? I wouldn't shoot federal offices. If it was them, I would just surrender, but with it. When all hope of saving Lisa from long years in the ice box was at the cartel, I made my way back to the sofa, but

Lisa was gone. She had heard the noise too. I rolled behind Lisa's sofa. These would not be cortez vacarios. These would be hitmen from Mexico, professionals. I breathed, trying to calm myself. How many of them would there be? Probably two? Again, silently, I snarled. My nine was fully loaded. The back door opened. It was the slightest squeak, but my hearing was so attuned I could hear an ant cough even now and want them going after her. Even after she suckered me and played with

my life, I was still determined to save hers. My hands shook gunfights with professional killers when nobody's idea of fun. I tried to breathe slowly. I pointed my phone at the far wall. I switched on the light and ducked behind the sofa. There they were, two of them, illuminated in the glare. Instantly they cut loose redmeat. Village is a production of voyage Media. The series is produced by nat Mondel, Robert Midas, and Dan

Bendimore. Directed, produced, and adopted by Dan Bettimore, based on Andrew Bernstein's upcoming novel at the same name. When a link to the novel is available, it will be listed in the show notes. Starring Catherine Bell as Lisa, Malik Yoba as Reggie, and Ryan Heppy as Tony. Additional cast credits are available and showed edited, sound design and mixed by Nick Missidi,

original music by Derlas Gonzalez. If you're enjoying the show, please leave us a five star review and Apple Podcasts or anywhere you're listening and subscribe now for future episodes.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android