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A century. In a span that long of life on earth

Talent and destiny will often war,

Sea becomes mulberry field and returns to sea

And you must watch things that sicken the heart.

Yet, is it so strange that loss and gain balance, although

Blue Heaven, in spite, strikes down the rosy-cheeked girl?

She shuddered with pleasure as the meaning revealed itself, and attacked the next verse at once. She was so absorbed in this difficult work that she forgot where she was. She did not notice the gradual emptying of the car as the train moved farther north on its route, nor did she notice the three young oriental men in black clothes and sunglasses sitting together at the car’s other end, did not even notice when the train stopped at and departed from 168th Street. Three minutes too late, in the irrational spasm well known to subway riders, she yelped and leaped to her feet, hurriedly stuffing the book back into her shoulder bag, and went and stood swinging from a strap in front of the door, cursing silently to herself and watching the columns whiz by in the dark.

Lucy exited at 181st Street and made for the crossover to get back on the southbound line, and that was when she noticed the three oriental youths for the first time. They had followed her off the train. A pulse of fear, a flush of embarrassment: How could she have been so stupid. .!

She kept walking, searching for people, but the crossover and the adjoining stairways were deserted. One of the youths moved past her, to the stairs that led to the southbound platform, and turned, grinning up at her. The other two closed in from behind. Lucy bolted down the stairs, faked past the guy below, and dashed toward the stairs to the platform. With relief she saw that there were a half dozen people waiting for the southbound Broadway express.

Then she was falling, jerked off her feet by a hand gripping her shoulder bag. She landed painfully on her hands and knees, rolled down three steps, and staggered to her feet. She saw the backs of the three men retreating, heard their running footsteps echoing off the tile walls. Her heart jerked as she realized they had taken the bag with Tran’s book inside it. Without further thought she raced after them.

On the street, out in the sunlight, she looked around wildly, spotted the three of them crossing Broadway, and headed toward them. She had no idea how she was going to get the bag away from three men. If there was anything at all rational lurking under the stew of fear and rage that occupied her mind, it was the belief that, having taken the few dollars she had in there, they would toss the bag in the gutter and she would get the book back. She was not going to leave without Tran’s Tale of Kieu.

The youths were about twenty yards ahead of her, laughing and tossing the bag back and forth. Every so often one of them would glance over his shoulder to see if she was still following. This should have tipped her off that something was up, but her usual instincts were in suspension. All she could think about was the book, and losing it, and what it would mean.

They went east on 182nd Street, Lucy following. They hadn’t looked in the bag yet. Vaguely she wondered why. They should rifle the bag, take the cash, and dump it. She prayed for a cop car to come along. It was not the sort of neighborhood where a little white girl could ask a stranger to go up against three Asian toughs over a grungy-looking canvas bag.

They stopped and conferred, the three dark heads close together, and then they headed for an abandoned building, a sooty former tenement with weathered plywood over its doors and windows. One of them found a way in, clearly much used from the evidence of the trash and crack vials scattered around it, and the three of them disappeared inside. Hopelessly, Lucy followed them in, as if drawn by an unbreakable wire. Her sneakers crunched thin glass, she ducked under a plank, entered darkness, and immediately, as she had half expected, was grabbed in a bear hug from behind, with the hand of her captor jammed across her mouth. The man holding her said nothing as he hustled her along the ruined corridor. She didn’t bother to struggle, but went dead in his arms, making him carry her weight. He was a slightly built but muscular man, smelling of acrid sweat, a lilac hair oil, and, strongest of all, a smell she knew very well. It was nuoc mam, a pungent sauce made from fermented fish, and it told her that she had been captured by Vietnamese.

“Why does this make me want to grumble?” said the district attorney. It was the morning after Karp’s interview with Fogel, and Karp was in the D.A.’s office, filling him in on the abortive negotiation.

“Because you want it to have been a break for us, and it may be a break, but not in the form it was offered. Lie thinks he’s being smart. Okay, he is smart, the little fucker. You know what they say, Jack, we only think criminals are stupid because we never meet the smart ones. Here’s a mutt who’s been selling dope and doing all kinds of evil for four or so years, and he’s got no sheet at all. If I took his bait, we could’ve found ourselves committing to look the other way on God knows what kind of mass destruction.”

“Somehow I doubt Tommy Colombo is going to have those kind of scruples,” said Keegan sourly. His immaculate cigar drooped below a lower lip petulantly protruding.

“I agree, and that’s the difference between a cheap grandstander like Tommy Colombo and us. What’s the matter, Jack? You don’t look happy.”

“I’m struggling to keep my joy under control. You know we’re going to get raped in the press on this. Colombo’s going to have a field day.”

“True, but meanwhile it’s over three years to the next election. Let him have his thrill. Meanwhile, we still have our ace in the hole.”

“Which is what?”

“Murder,” said Karp. “The feds can’t offer immunity against a crime that’s not on their books. So sooner or later we’ll have our crack at Mr. Lie and whoever really did Eddie Cat. Even assuming that’s not saying the same thing.”

“You think Lie was more involved than he’s letting on?”

“It wouldn’t knock me off my chair. Priority one is finding out more about this guy. Especially where he was on the night of, although I’d lay money he’s alibied to the hairline.”

Keegan considered for a moment, then nodded, and placed his cigar on his desk. “Okay, go do it, and keep me informed. And fill in Roland, too. He’s going to be even more delighted than I am.”

“He’ll get over it,” said Karp.

“Oh, yeah. Especially since he’s going to have to field the press questions, him or you, buddy, because this is one I’m happy to delegate to my loyal staff. What about the Colombo front?”

“Oh, I think he’ll give Mr. Lie a big, sloppy kiss. He’ll buy whatever he has to say and put him in front of the federal grand jury and use his testimony to indict Pigetti under any number of federal statutes. Conspiracy, interfering with a federal prosecution, witness intimidation, depriving Mr. Catalano of his civil rights. There’s a grab bag for him there.”

“And what does Lie get out of all this?”

“Oh, he’ll get federal immunity, of course, but what he mainly wants out of the feds is the witness-protection program. Mr. Lie is what they used to call a shadowy figure, Jack. He tried to set it up with us so that he’d start with a clean slate regarding any state crimes he’s committed. I wouldn’t roll on that, so he’s dropped back to his second choice. I have the feeling that he wants to fade away entirely about now, and Colombo is going to help him.”

“And we’re going to stop him, I hope you’re going to say.”

“Oh, yeah,” said Karp. “If we can.”

[NYT 12 JUN 60]

Gangland Lawyer in Suicide Leap from Empire State

By Joseph P. Huntington

Police sources revealed today that the man who threw himself from the observation deck of the Empire State Building at 9:30 yesterday morning was Gerald S. Fein, of Brooklyn, a disbarred criminal lawyer well known for his defense of reputed organized-crime figures. According to police, Mr. Fein left his home at 1320 Avenue M in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn at the usual time, about eight o’clock, and arrived at his parking garage at 8:45. He then walked to the Empire State Building, where his law firm, Kusher, Fein and Panofsky, had offices on the fifty-seventh floor. Witnesses, including Dennis Horgan, 32, a ticket taker at the Empire State’s observation deck, stated that Mr. Fein entered the deck at about nine, purchased a ticket, and strolled around the deck for a few minutes. The deck was relatively empty at that time of day, Mr. Horgan recalled, and Mr. Fein did not seem to be particularly distraught. Some minutes later, in a manner still under investigation by police, Mr. Fein made his way past a normally locked door to a service area, and then through another door to the parapet above the observation windows, where he threw himself off. He landed in the roadway of Fifth Avenue, ten yards from its intersection with 34th Street, causing several minor traffic accidents. No injuries were reported.