“I’m going to let you go,” said Angelo, “but before I do, I want you to know that my name is Angelo Fratelli. You don’t know that name, but you can probably find out who I am. You can tell your girlfriend that if I ever see her again—it doesn’t matter where or how: on the street, in a store, anywhere—she’s going to die.”
He let the man go, and the man walked stiffly to the table, pulled several bills from his wallet, left them on his empty plate and then continued out the door. Angelo put his quarter into the telephone and dialed the number of the Vesuvio.
Driving up Delaware Avenue, Wolf concentrated on the moves he had made in the past few days. He’d never bothered the bastards in ten years, but they had found him and sent three badly chosen messengers to kill him. He was still convinced he had done the only sensible thing. As fast as he could he had followed the trouble to its origin, Tony Talarese. Then he had taken the most direct route out of their way, trying to fly out of the country through Los Angeles, but they had managed to have a shooter in the airport waiting for him. They should have known he would go for the only man who could have sent a specialist, Peter Mantino. But he still had to get out of the country, which required that he go see the old man for a fresh passport. Then soldiers who could only belong to Angelo Fratelli had killed the old man. Of course he would go after Fratelli now. Why didn’t they know that? Or had the ten years made each of them so fat and powerful and overconfident that they all thought he would just lie down and die?
Angelo sat across the table from McCarron, nodding and smiling. The table was the one that had been occupied by the young couple he had met at the telephone. While he was talking to Salvatore on the phone, the hostess had come up to McCarron and told him that a table had unexpectedly become available. Angelo was preoccupied, and his practiced jovial demeanor returned unannounced, like a facial tic. Now he knew the cause of his problem, and it was giving him a tight stomach. Some forger had thought he could pick up some extra money by mentioning to Angelo’s stringers that he had a passport request that sounded a whole lot like somebody who wanted to get out of the country instead of into it. But Angelo’s men had not risen to the occasion. They could have had the forger tell the old black man that the customer needed to come in person to get his picture taken. When he got there, if he was who they thought he was, they could blow his head off; instead, they had killed the fucking middleman. Angelo wasn’t known as an eminent strategist, but at least he knew that when a hornet flies into your house you don’t slam the door shut and consider the problem solved.
“Sure, we can still do the deal,” said Angelo. “If you want to spend the money, I can handle things for you.”
McCarron said, “Thanks. You don’t know how much better that makes me feel.”
Angelo saw the door of the restaurant swing open and Salvatore walk in. Behind him, standing out on the sidewalk, Angelo could see two other men looking the other way at the passing cars. The sheer bulk of Salvatore in his dark gray overcoat reassured Angelo because part of the bulk was the little Uzi submachine gun in a sling inside the coat. Angelo stood up. “Our ride is here. I hope you weren’t hungry.”
“No,” said McCarron. He stood up too and, like the young man before him, set some money on the plate before he followed.
Wolf was getting tired. He knew that what he was doing wasn’t certain to work. But Fratelli had picked the man up here in Delaware Park, and there was a small chance that he might come back and drop him off on his way into hiding. Wolf had already decided that there was no way he could hope to get into the mansion Fratelli had built in the hills overlooking the Niagara escarpment in Lewiston. Fifteen or twenty years ago there had been stories about people who had tried, and now Fratelli knew he was in danger. The only hope was to catch him in a place like this, where dark and emptiness would help.
It was taking a long time. He had no choice except to wait, but now he began to study the area for signs that someone else was waiting too. He watched the cars going by on the distant road around the park. They looked the way cars look from an airplane, not unreal like toys, but separated from him so completely by the unfamiliar distance and lack of sound that they were part of art alternative world. As long as none of them stopped, he was safe. Then he saw the gray Toyota. As it pulled up in front of a big brick house, a door opened.
He watched the car, but he couldn’t see how many people were in it. Nobody got out, but then it slowly pulled away. Something had happened that made no sense. The big dog was standing on the front lawn; then it stopped looking after the car and trotted happily around to the back of the house.
Wolf decided it was time to move. He wasn’t sure why they had stopped to let the dog out, but he knew he had to ignore it. He had to keep his eye on the car. He moved out of the woods quickly, glancing to his right from time to time to be sure he was keeping the trunks of the tall trees behind him. He could see the little gray Toyota move along the road toward the zoo, past the basketball courts and then past Wolf’s car. He stopped and watched it go. He could discern a couple of heads in the car, but it was too dark to see the faces.
When the Toyota stopped by the curb, he broke into a run for a spot from which he hoped he could get a clear view. But at this distance the trees seemed to leap into his field of vision, so he went on, finally slipping from the grove of trees to a big oil drum full of trash. As he dropped behind it, he heard a door open and ventured to peer around the can at the car.
Two big men got out of the car and moved around to the trunk. One of them was Fratelli, but he couldn’t be sure the other was the man he had seen with him earlier. This man was wearing a bulky gray overcoat that Wolf hadn’t seen before. Now Fratelli bent over and opened the trunk. Both men leaned in and seemed to be dragging at something inside. Then they both bent their knees and hauled something out.
Wolf moved closer. They were carrying the man who had been with Fratelli in the Toyota. His head lolled to the side at nearly a right angle to his shoulders, and swung a little as the two men staggered into the park carrying him. Wolf had seen too many corpses to have much doubt that this was another. What the hell was going on? He kept moving from tree to tree, closer and closer, as the two men carried the body into the park. He had never seen the man in the overcoat before, but there was no doubt about the other; he was Fratelli.
Angelo wheezed at each step as he backed into the park, his leather soles slipping a little on the wet leaves. McCarron’s legs were heavy, but Angelo was feeling better now. All evening he had been waiting for a chance to get this asshole into a dark place. Every second with the man, his rage had grown and sharpened. Finally, when he had gotten him out of the restaurant, he had made Salvatore take them to the building on Allen Street. Angelo owned the whole block of old brick buildings, and they were all fenced and boarded. He was remodeling them to accommodate restaurants and shops, but for now they were empty. He had told McCarron that this was the ultimate hiding place; but as soon as the man was in the door, he swung his right forearm around McCarron’s neck and gripped his own wrist with his left hand. It had taken only a couple of seconds, so it didn’t last quite as long as he had hoped, but he had felt the neck crack and the muscles tighten spasmodically, then go limp, so he supposed he had gotten as much out of it as possible. He had also been able to tell him a little bit about being a self-important crazy asshole who didn’t do what he was told, hissing it into McCarron’s ear as he broke his neck. Probably he hadn’t heard all of it, but enough. Angelo had caught a glimpse of Salvatore’s face while he was doing it, and it was a mask of dumb surprise and horror. It was kind of funny to remember it, and now he couldn’t stifle a little laugh, but as his breath huffed out of him, he never got to draw it back in because at that moment there was the blast of a shotgun.