Al got out of the cab and ran into the office building. He emerged into the reception room, and Hilda jerked a thumb toward Jerry Brubeck’s office. “He’s expecting you.”
Al went down the hall, patted his hair down, adjusted his tie, buttoned his jacket, and knocked. “Come in, Al.”
Al opened the door and found Jerry at his desk, as usual.
“Hi, I was on my way to the wake.”
“I’ve already been,” Brubeck replied. “Have a seat.” He pointed at the comfortable chair opposite him.
Al sat down and gazed at his uncle. “So,” he said, “how are we going to work this?”
Jerry regarded him with a semblance of sympathy. “First of all, I want to offer my condolences on the death of your father.”
“Thanks.” Uncle Jerry wasn’t usually this polite to him.
“I have some good news for you.”
This he had really not expected. “Okay.”
“Your father and I had a contract that we both signed twelve years ago.” He handed Al half a dozen pages stapled together. “Look at the last page, I’ve highlighted the relevant paragraph. Read it.”
Al read it, but he wasn’t sure he understood it. “Okay, I read it.”
“What the paragraph means is, we established a formula for working out the value of the company. If either of us wanted out, or if one of us died, the other could buy his interest in the company for the result of that formula.” He handed Al a page with a lot of numbers on it. “This is how the formula worked out. Look at the last number on the bottom right. That is the calculated value of the company today.”
Al looked at the number, and he was impressed; he hadn’t had any idea what the company was worth.
“Your father owned forty percent of the company. Now look at the last number in the bottom left corner of the page. That is the value of his shares.”
Al looked at the number. “Wow,” he muttered under his breath.
Jerry handed him a check. “This is my check for that number. I’ll sign the check as soon as you sign this paper, acknowledging the proper value of the company according to the formula and accepting that sum for your father’s shares.” Jerry handed him a single page and waited for him to read it.
Al read it and looked at his uncle, dumbstruck.
Jerry handed him a pen. “Your signature, right over your name.”
Al signed the document without hesitation. Jerry took the check, signed it, and handed it to his nephew.
“That’s it, we’re done,” Jerry said. “My advice to you, for what it’s worth, is that you invest that check and live off the proceeds.” He handed Al a business card. “This is the name and number of a good stockbroker who will make sensible investments for you. If you follow his advice, you’ll be set for life. If you go out and spend all that money, you’ll be broke in a year and probably dead in a gutter somewhere.” He handed Al a thick envelope. “This contains five thousand dollars for your friend Gene Ryan. Tell him he’s fired, and that’s his severance pay. You’re fired, too. You are both now free agents. Goodbye.” Jerry stood up and offered his hand.
Al stood up and shook the hand. “Thanks, Uncle Jerry.”
“Keep those copies of all the documents and show them to a lawyer, if you want to.”
“I trust you, Uncle Jerry.”
Jerry gave him a little wave, sat down, and went back to work.
Al let himself out of the office and, in a daze, took the elevator down to the street. The bank where he kept a small checking account was across the way. He entered and saw that there was a line of people at the single teller’s station that was open. He looked around and saw the manager sitting at his desk, the guy who had turned him down for a car loan last month. He walked over to his desk and sat down.
The man looked up at him. “And what can I do for you this morning, Mr. Parisi? I’m afraid the loan committee will not change its mind.”
“Fuck the loan committee,” he said as politely as possible. Al handed him the check. “I’d like to deposit this in my account,” he said, “and I want a hundred and fifty thousand dollars of it in cash.”
The manager looked at him, disbelieving, then he looked at the check and at the signature. “Excuse me for a moment,” he said. He picked up the phone, dialed a number, and swiveled his chair so that his back was to Al. He talked for a moment, then hung up. “All is in order,” he said. He took a deposit slip from a desk drawer, filled it out, and handed it to Al with a pen. “Sign, please.”
Al signed and handed it back to him.
“I’ll be right back,” the manager said. He walked across the room and let himself through a door with his key. He took the deposit slip and check to a teller, who stamped the receipt and handed it back, then he walked out of sight behind a wall. He was gone for perhaps five minutes and returned, holding a canvas envelope, which he handed to Al. “There are fifteen stacks of one hundred hundred-dollar bills there, totaling one hundred and fifty thousand dollars in cash. Count them, if you wish.” Al shook his head. The manager stood up and offered his hand. “It’s a pleasure doing business with you,” he said.
Al shook the hand and walked out of the bank. He hailed a cab. “There’s a Mercedes dealer in midtown somewhere. You know it?”
“Yeah, I know it.”
“Take me there.”
—
A couple of hours later, Al walked into the bar downtown where he and Gene hung out sometimes. Gene was already at the bar. Al sat down next to him. “I’ve got good news and bad news,” he said.
“Okay, gimme the bad news first.”
“We’ve been fired.”
“Well, shit, I guess I knew that would happen when the old man got offed. What’s the good news?”
Al took the thick envelope from his pocket and handed it to Gene. “That’s five thousand bucks. It’s your severance pay.”
Gene looked at him suspiciously, then opened the envelope. “Well, I’ll be damned.”
“I ’spect so,” Al said. “Make it last, there won’t be any more.”
“I’m still gonna kill Barrington,” Gene said. “You want some of that?”
“Nope, I’m out of the Gene Ryan business,” Al said. He tossed off the drink that had been set down for him. “You’re on your own now, Gene, I don’t wanna know you no more.” He turned and walked out of the bar and back to his new Mercedes. He headed to the Lincoln Tunnel and New Jersey, where there was a girl he wanted to see.
Ryan looked into the envelope again; he had never seen that much money all at once—not that was his. “Arnie,” he said to the bartender, “what’s my tab?”
Arnie picked up a small ledger and ran a finger down a page. “Two sixty-one,” he said. “Call it two-fifty.”
Ryan retrieved three hundreds from the envelope and handed them to Arnie. “The rest is yours,” he said.
“Hey, thanks, Gene. How about one on the house?”
Ryan shook his head. “I gotta get sober,” he said. He hopped off the bar stool and walked out of the bar and into the sunshine. If he was going to kill Barrington, he’d have to be sober.
—
Stone walked up to the Four Seasons to have lunch with Herbie Fisher. Over the past few years Herbie, who had been well-qualified as a juvenile delinquent not so long ago, had finished law school, gotten hired at Woodman & Weld as an associate, with Stone’s help, and had been such a rainmaker in the firm that he had made partner in record time. Stone joined Herbie at his regular table.
“Tell me, Stone,” Herbie said, “why don’t you have a regular table here?”
“Because you and Bill Eggers have regular tables. Why would I need one?”