him, should she remember him at all, will begin at his neck and work their way down.
FIVE
Bobby Ditto loses his temper for the first time that day. He slams the desktop with the side of his fist and tosses a jar of mint-flavored TUMS at the hapless tech sweeping the room for bugs. The TUMS jar bounces off the tech’s shoulder and he begins to shake.
‘What, you’re gonna be all fuckin’ day?’ Bobby demands. ‘I got things to do. I’m runnin’ a business here and I can’t do it with you in the goddamn room.’
Benedetti and the tech, Levi Kupperman, are in the Bunker, an underground room in a wholesale carpet warehouse in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Benedetti had the room built when he purchased the warehouse in 2005, the year his first big deal went down. The walls and ceilings of the windowless bunker are solid concrete, two feet thick, and proof against any remote listening device. That leaves the mismatched furniture, the alarm, the sprinklers, the ventilation system and the computer (used only for the carpet business and not connected to the Internet) as the only points of vulnerability.
‘You want me to stop?’
Bobby Ditto stares at Levi for a moment, then shakes his head. When he first hired Levi, the kid was a hotshot with his own equipment and an expanding electronics company. That was before he got too strung out to think about anything but cocaine and more cocaine. Now he’s a scarecrow who works for an eight-ball of coke – three and a half grams of white powder that’ll be gone up his nose by tomorrow morning.
‘Ya know, you’re tryin’ my patience.’ Benedetti notes the kid’s panicky look with some satisfaction. Bobby’s renowned for his bad temper and his willingness to act on it. Not this morning, though. Now he’s got more important things to consider. ‘Just finish up and get the fuck outta here.’
Fifteen minutes later, Levi opens a door thick enough to defend a castle and disappears. Two men replace him, Marco Torrino, called ‘the Blade’, and a man named Samik Atwal. In the old days, the Blade would have had a formal title:
The Blade’s companion, Samik ‘Sammy’ Atwal, has come to the Bunker as a courtesy. Atwal’s a second- generation Indian-American who captains a small crew located in the Queens neighborhood of Jackson Heights. The crew deals powder and crack to Atwal’s countrymen. That’s fine with Bobby Ditto, who’s as big on ethnic identity as he is on entrepreneurship. But he does sometimes wonder how the raghead came to be best buddies with his brother, Ricky, now deceased.
Ricky Ditto’s murder is the sole cause of Bobby Ditto’s foul mood. That’s because Bobby has to do something about it. Revenge, retribution, an eye for an eye? That’s how the system works. That’s how it has to work when you can’t go to the cops. You want justice, you either get it yourself or appear weak. Bobby and his crew are mid-level drug wholesalers. They purchase ecstasy, heroin and cocaine in bulk and sell it off in smaller units, untouched. Large sums of money are exchanged along the way and rip-offs are a constant hazard. It really doesn’t pay to look weak, not at all.
‘First thing,’ Bobby Ditto says when Atwal takes a seat on the other side of his desk, ‘I wanna thank you for comin’ down. I appreciate the courtesy.’
‘Hey, Ricky was my friend. You find out who did this, you tell me. I’ll do what’s necessary.’
Bobby stares at Sammy for a few seconds before he speaks, a move he knows to be disconcerting, but the man fails to react. Still, Bobby tells himself, the raghead’s gotta think he’s a suspect.
‘You want coffee?’ Bobby Ditto asks. ‘I got a machine upstairs. Cappuccino, espresso, you name it.’
‘Nah, I got somethin’ I gotta do this morning.’
‘Have a cup anyway.’ Bobby nods to the Blade and says ‘Do me a favor, Marco.’ He waits until Marco takes the hint and disappears. Then he turns to Atwal. ‘You shouldn’t take this the wrong way, Sammy, but it’d be good if we had this moment to ourselves.’
‘Whatever you want.’
Bobby Ditto brings his chair forward. He’s a big man, much bigger than Atwal, and he leans across the desk to stare into Atwal’s round eyes. Bobby’s thinking that Sammy looks soft, what with his chocolate-brown skin and fat cheeks, but that appearances can be deceiving. The man’s eyes reveal only patience. ‘You told the Blade there was somethin’ I needed to know.’
‘Yeah, it’s this. I’m like ninety-nine percent sure that Ricky had a date that night.’
‘A date?’
‘With a whore.’
Bobby sits back and stares at the ceiling for a moment. ‘OK, so he wanted a little strange. What’s the big deal?’
‘He told me he was takin’ her back to the house.’ Sammy spreads his hands and smiles apologetically. ‘Rose and the kids were off visitin’ Rose’s mother. Ricky wanted to do an all-nighter at home.’
Bobby Ditto groans. ‘Sammy, this is something you really should not spread around. Rose’s got problems enough without knowin’ her husband was gonna party with a whore in her bed. Besides, we can’t be sure it’s even true.’ Bobby traces a little circle with his forefinger. ‘Ricky, as you know, had a way of stretchin’ the facts.’
The door opens and Marco enters. He’s carrying two cups of coffee and a plate of anisette-flavored biscotti on a tray. He sets the tray down and disappears.
Sammy takes a biscotto and dips it into his coffee. He bites into it and nods. Compliments on the pastry are mandatory at meetings of this kind and he plays his part. ‘This ain’t from the supermarket,’ he observes. ‘This is the real deal.’
‘The Blade’s grandmother,’ Bobby explains. ‘She was born in Sicily, like a hundred years ago. So, tell me about the whore. Do you know her? She from the neighborhood?’
‘Sorry, but I never laid eyes on her. See, what happened is that Ricky hooked up with this high-end escort service about a month ago. They do some kinda fantasy thing where you get to make up a story and the girls act it out. According to Ricky, the girls are beautiful. Any color you want, any age, too. They got like a website with pictures, but you have to be a member to get on it.’
‘So, what you’re telling me, it’s like nothin’, right?’ Bobby allows a trace of annoyance to creep into his voice. ‘You don’t know who she is, where she came from or even if she was there?’
Atwal picks up his coffee, leans back and crosses his legs. ‘I was with Ricky on Wednesday afternoon, playin’ pool in the Bronx. When he left around three, he said he was going straight over to pick up the girl.’
‘Pick her up where?’ Bobby doesn’t like any of this, not at all. The way the raghead’s lettin’ out the information, bit by bit? There’s gonna be a pay-off somewhere down the line.
‘On a corner in Manhattan. I remember he told me Broadway and 106th, only I could be wrong about the street.’
‘But the Broadway part is right?’
‘Broadway and somewhere uptown on the West Side. That I’m sure of. Plus, I got a business card from the escort service, Pigalle Studios.’
‘The card have an address on it?’
‘A phone number, that’s it.’
Mollified, Bobby finally takes his coffee cup from the tray. He lays it on his desk, then picks up a biscotto. He won’t have any problem linking the phone number to an address. He watches Atwal take a business card from his shirt pocket and lay it on the desk, a gift.
‘I never wanted the card in the first place,’ he explains with a shrug. ‘Plus, I couldn’t use it anyway. Ricky woulda had to vouch for me first.’
Bobby Ditto picks up the card and looks at it for a moment before sliding it into a drawer. ‘Don’t take offense, Sammy, because I’m definitely grateful for you comin’ in. But what you told me, it’s gotta be what actually happened, word for word. See, I don’t know you, which is why I’m worried you might be sendin’ me on a wild goose chase. I don’t need to be whackin’ some bitch whose only crime is givin’ my brother a blow job. Are you sure you