The Assassin - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"What have you got in mind?"
"You don't look like a cop," Martinez said. "You drive a Porsche. You could get into this place in the Poconos."
"How would we know when he was going to be there? And if we did, what am I supposed to do, tell Wohl I want the day off to take a ride to the Poconos?"
"I don't think he'd be going up there in the daytime," Martinez said. "Except over the weekend. He's got Friday-Sat.u.r.day off. With a little bit of luck, he'd go up there then."
"And what if he just came across this book of matches someplace? Picked it up in a bar or something? You don't know know that he's ever even been in this place." Matt picked up the matchbook. "Oaks and Pines Resort Lodge." that he's ever even been in this place." Matt picked up the matchbook. "Oaks and Pines Resort Lodge."
"Then I'll think of something else," Martinez said.
"Okay, Hay-zus," Matt said. "Let me know what you want me to do, and when you want me to do it."
"See, Hay-zus," McFadden said. "I told you."
"But don't let your Latin-American temper get out of joint if I can't jump when you call. I may be doing a lot of overtime."
"Overtime, you?" McFadden asked.
That was an honest question, Matt decided, Matt decided, not a challenge not a challenge.
"Special Operations has been given Dignitary Protection. The Vice President's coming to Philly. There's a looney tune out there that wants to blow him up."
"No s.h.i.+t?" McFadden asked.
"Yeah, and the Secret Service thinks this guy is for real."
"What's that got to do with you?"
"Malone is in charge. For the time being, I'm working for Malone."
"We'll just have to see what happens," Martinez said. "If you're working, you're working."
When Joe Fierello drove his Mercedes-Benz onto the lot of Fierello Fine Cars at quarter to nine in the morning, he found Vito Lanza waiting for him.
"Don't tell me," Joe said as he got out of his car, "the transmission fell out."
"Not yet," Vito said. "I wanted to take care of my markers."
"Tony tell you I called?" Joe asked, but before Vito could answer, he went on, "Come on in the office. I'm not worth a s.h.i.+t in the morning until I have my coffee."
Fierello's secretary smiled at them as they walked past.
"Darlene, get us some coffee, will you?" Joe said, and as he walked behind his desk, he waved Vito into a chair in front of his desk. "Take a load off. You take anything in your coffee?"
Vito shook his head, no.
"Black both times, darling," Joe called out.
Darlene delivered the coffee and then left, closing the door behind her.
"Nice," Vito said.
"My wife's sister's girl," Joe said. "A nice nice girl." girl."
"That's what I meant," Vito said.
Joe Fierello smiled at Vito. Vito did not like the smile.
"Like Tony," he said.
"Darlene doesn't go off overnight to the Poconos," Joe said. "You understand?"
"Absolutely."
"Don't misunderstand me, Tony's a nice girl. She's over twenty-one and she can do what she likes.
"I'm sorry there was that confusion about the markers," Joe said.
"They offered me the markers," Vito said. "I didn't ask for them."
"You went up there as my guest; they're holding me responsible for the markers. You're a nice fellow, Vito, but I don't like you six big ones worth. How soon can you make them good?"
"Right now, Joe. That's what I came here for."
He reached in his pocket and took out the envelope from the Flamingo.
"Hey, what are you doing?"
"I'm making good my markers," Vito said, now very confused.
"You don't understand," Joe said. "I'm a businessman. You don't make your markers good with me."
"With who, then?"
"You really don't know, do you?"
"You got me pretty confused, to tell you the truth," Vito confessed.
"Let me make a call," Joe said.
He took a small leather notebook from his jacket pocket, found a number, and dialed it.
"This is Joe Fierello," he said when someone answered. "Could I talk to Mr. Ca.s.sandro, please?" He covered the microphone with his hand. "Mr. Ca.s.sandro is sort of like the local business agent, you know what I mean?"
Vito nodded.
Business agent, my a.s.s; this Ca.s.sandro guy is with the mob.
"Paulo? Joe Fierello. You know those financial doc.u.ments you were a little concerned about? Well, don't worry. They're good. Mr. Lanza is right here with me now, and he's anxious to take care of them."
He started nodding, and again covered the microphone with his hand. "He says he's sorry, I don't know what the f.u.c.k he means."
He removed his hand from the microphone.
"I'm sure Mr. Lanza would be perfectly willing to come wherever you tell him, Paulo," Fierello said, and there was a reply, and then he went on: "Whatever you say, Paulo. He'll be here."
He hung up the telephone and looked at Vito.
"He's coming right over. He said there was some kind of a mixup, and he wants to make it right. It'll take him five, ten minutes. You got to be someplace else?"
Vito shook his head. "I really don't understand this," he said.
"Neither do I," Joe Fierello said. "So we'll have our cup of coffee, and in five, ten minutes, we'll both know."
Ten minutes later, a silver Jaguar drove up the driveway into Fierello Fine Cars, and stopped beside Joe Fierello's Mercedes-Benz. Paulo Ca.s.sandro, wearing a turtleneck sweater and a tweed sports coat with matching cap, got out of the back seat.
He looked toward the window of Joe Fierello's office.
"I think he wants you to come out there," Joe said.
Somewhat uncomfortable, but not quite sure why he was, Vito nodded at Joe Fierello and walked out of the building and down the stairs.
Joe Fierello opened the drawer of his desk, took out a 35-mm camera in a leather case, went to the window, and started snapping pictures.
"Mr. Lanza, I'm Paulo Ca.s.sandro," Paulo said. "I'm sorry about this."
"I don't understand," Vito said.
"We thought you were somebody else," Paulo said. "Lanza is a pretty common name. You, Mario the singer, and a lot of other people, right?"
"I guess so."
"I hate to tell you this," Paulo said, draping a friendly arm around Vito's shoulders, "but one of your cousins, maybe a second cousin, is a deadbeat. He owes everybody and his f.u.c.king brother. We thought it was you."
"I can't think of who that would be," Vito said.
"It doesn't matter. With a little bit of luck, you'll never run into him."
"Yeah," Vito said.
"We're sorry we made the mistake. We never should have bothered you or Joe with this. I hope you ain't p.i.s.sed?"
"No. Of course not. I just want to make my markers good."
"There's no hurry. Take your time. Once we found out you wasn't Anthony Anthony Lanza, we asked around a little, and Lanza, we asked around a little, and your your credit is as good as gold." credit is as good as gold."
"I always try to pay my debts," Vito said. "I like to think I got a good reputation."
"And now we know that," Paulo said. "So, whenever it's convenient, make the markers good. It don't have to be now. Next month sometime would be fine."
"Let me take care of them now," Vito said. "I already brung the cash."
"You don't have to, but if you got it, and it's convenient, that'd straighten everything out."
Vito handed him the six thousand dollars. Paulo very carefully counted it.
"No offense, me counting it?"
"No. Not at all."
"Watch the fifties, and the hundreds will take care of themselves, right?"
"Right."
Paulo put the money in the pocket of his tweed jacket.
"I want to give you this," he said, and took out a business card. "You want to loan me your back?"
Vito, after a moment, understood that Ca.s.sandro wanted to use his back as a desk, and turned around.
"Okay," Paulo said, and Vito turned around again.
Ca.s.sandro handed him the card. Vito read it. It said Paulo Ca.s.sandro, President, Cla.s.sic Livery, Distinguished Motor Cars For All Occasions Paulo Ca.s.sandro, President, Cla.s.sic Livery, Distinguished Motor Cars For All Occasions.
"You ever get back up to the Lodge, you just give that to the manager," Paulo said. "Turn it over."
Vito turned it over. On it, Ca.s.sandro had written, "Vito Lanza is a friend of mine. And I owe him a big one." "Vito Lanza is a friend of mine. And I owe him a big one."
"You didn't have to do nothing like this," Vito said, embarra.s.sed.
"I don't have to do nothing but pay taxes and die," Paulo said. "Just take that as my apology for making a mistake. Maybe they'll give you a free ice cream or something."
"Well, thank you," Vito said.
"I'm glad we could straighten this out," Paulo said, and wrapped his arm around Vito's shoulder.
Vito felt pretty good until he got to the G.o.dd.a.m.ned plumber's. The sonofab.i.t.c.h was waiting for him, and overnight, he'd gone back on his word. Now he wanted twenty-five hundred before he would fix a f.u.c.king thing at the house. That left him with nine hundred. The plumber said it would probably run another thousand, maybe fifteen hundred, for the labor and incidentals.
There isn't a plumber in the f.u.c.king world who ever brought a job in for less than the estimate, and even if this sonofab.i.t.c.h did, that would leave me, if he wants fifteen hundred, six hundred short. job in for less than the estimate, and even if this sonofab.i.t.c.h did, that would leave me, if he wants fifteen hundred, six hundred short.
I've got eleven, twelve hundred in the PSFS account, and I can always borrow against the Caddy.
Jesus, I hate to put a loan against the Caddy.
Why the f.u.c.k didn't I take Ca.s.sandro's offer to take my time making the markers good? I really didn't have to pay them off that quick. My credit is good.
The absence of inhabitants in most of the Pine Barrens does not obviate the need for police patrols. The physical principle that nature abhors a vacuum has a tangential application to an unoccupied area. People tend to dump things that they would rather not be connected to in areas where they believe they are unlikely to be found in the near future.