into his mouth. “He’ll do it.”
Tony eyed the empty chair behind Vinnie’s desk. Pushing away from the wall, he strolled over and sat down, listening with satisfaction as the rich leather creaked under his weight. The casters rolled easily on the hardwood floor as he slid up to the desk and propped his elbows on the lacquered top. “You didn’t see him with that cop downstairs. I don’t think he’s bullshitting when he says he ain’t got no friends on the department anymore.”
Vinnie upended the jar, pouring the last of the peanuts directly into his mouth. When he finished crunching them, he said, “My brother’s gonna think it’s funny if I don’t put Shane on the job.”
Tony knew that Vinnie lived in his older brother’s shadow. He also knew Vinnie didn’t like it, but there was nothing Vinnie could do about it. He wasn’t tough enough to really stand up to his brother. Old Man Carlos put up with a certain amount of posturing from his kid brother, but that was it. Vinnie wasn’t his own man. He certainly would never be able to replace his brother. Someone else would have to do that. “Then why did you let that prick Charlie Rabbit talk you out of it?” Tony said.
Vinnie set the empty peanut jar down on the end table. “He didn’t talk me out of it. I agreed that Shane could think about it until tomorrow.”
“Since when do we let our guys think about whether or not they’re going to do what we tell them?”
“We don’t tell anybody anything,” Vinnie snapped. “I tell them what to do. And they’re not our guys. They’re my guys.”
Now wasn’t the time to argue. Patience, Tony told himself. He had to have patience. “That’s what I meant.”
“I know you got a beef with him over that broad downstairs, but-”
“I don’t give a shit about her,” Tony snapped. “She’s just a piece of tail, like half a dozen others.”
Vinnie stared at him. “When you let things get personal, that’s when you lose control.”
Tony Z. waved a hand at him. “I just don’t like the guy.”
“I like him, and my brother likes him. He did five years for us.”
“It wasn’t five years,” Tony said, tired of hearing about how tough Ray Shane was supposed to be. Everything he had seen of Shane lately just convinced him even more of what a scared little prick he was.
“Close enough to five,” Vinnie said. “But the important thing, at least as far as my brother is concerned, is the guy didn’t rat.”
“He knows what we do to rats.”
Vinnie struggled to his feet. “Point I’m making, Carlos appreciates Shane’s loyalty. And so do I. Shane is an ex-cop. He’s perfect for this job.”
Tony watched Vinnie, wondering if the fat man was going to want his chair back. But Vinnie lurched to the nearest window. Gazing out at the filthy streets of the French Quarter, Vinnie said, “The one thing my brother admires most in people is loyalty.”
Tony swiveled the chair toward the window, looking at Vinnie’s back. “How does doing a few years in the joint make him so loyal? I say it shows how stupid he is for letting the FBI get him on tape.”
Without turning, Vinnie asked, “You know why Charlie Rabbit was here?”
“He said he was here to help, whatever that means.”
“More than that,” Vinnie said. “My brother values Charlie’s opinion over anyone else’s. If he doesn’t like what Charlie tells him about how we handle this situation… Well, a lot of people might end up paying for what happened last night.”
Tony leaned back in the big chair, getting comfortable. “I don’t trust Shane.”
Vinnie turned away from the window, fixing Tony with a stare. Surprisingly, the gaze of the man he considered little more than a fool suddenly made Tony uncomfortable. Vinnie’s eyes had something burning in them that Tony had never before seen in the blubbery fool’s expression. Menace. “Carlos is watching us, so you make sure Shane does what I want him to do.”
CHAPTER FIVE
Ray stepped out of the Hog’s Breath Saloon and into a torrential downpour. As he ran across the street to the Rising Sun, he held a newspaper he had swiped from the bar over his head as a shield. At the House, he stood under the awning waiting for the rain to let up so he could make a dash for his car, which sat two blocks away on Decatur Street.
But after ten minutes of smoking and waiting, the rain was still coming down in a windswept torrent, so Ray tossed his cigarette into the street, raised the sopping wet newspaper over his head again, and ran. When he reached the parking lot, he was sure he was dying. His lungs burned, and the stitch in his side felt like a knife wound. A small booth stood at the entrance to the parking lot, set between two lift gates, one for entry and one for exit.
Ray ducked into the booth and squeezed the attendant against the wall. “Sorry, Shorty,” Ray panted. “I just got to catch my breath.”
Shorty was an old black man, no more than five foot two, bald and pudgy. He had been the parking lot attendant for as long as Ray could remember.
“That’s all right, Mr. Ray,” Shorty said. “Take your time, you don’t look too good.”
As Ray sucked in a lungful of damp air, he choked down a cough. Still, he wondered if there was enough room in this sardine can for him to reach his cigarettes. “You wouldn’t know it now,” he wheezed to Shorty, “but I used to run five miles a day, rain or shine.”
“Oh, I believe it, Mr. Ray. You still look in pretty good shape, but listen here. I know it ain’t none of my business what you folks do, but…”
Ray twisted to look at Shorty. “Yeah?”
“There was two men by here a little while ago asking ’bout you.”
The pain in Ray’s side, his burning lungs, both faded to nothing. “Who was it?”
Shorty looked away. “Ain’t really none of my bus-”
“Who?”
“Was Mr. Tony, and that other… that big fella. I can’t recall his name.”
“Rocco?”
Shorty nodded.
“What did they want?”
“Didn’t say, just wanted to know which car was yours.”
Ray glanced to the back of the lot and saw his Mustang. It was still there, same spot he always parked in. Backed up against the wall on the left side, ground level. Shorty’s parking lot was wedged between a pair of eighteenth-century brick buildings. Hydraulic lifts lined both sides of the lot so Shorty could double stack cars against the walls. Half the cars on the lot were Rising Sun employees.
“What’d you tell them?”
“I didn’t tell them nothing.”
“Shorty, I’m not blaming you for anything,” Ray said, meaning it. The old man was a friend. “I just need to know what you said.”
“I… I… had to show ’em.”
The booth’s windows had started to fog up. Ray wiped a hand over the glass. He scanned the entire lot. The rain was still coming down hard. There was nobody in sight. “Where’d they go?”
“I think they left.”
“You’re not sure?”
“No, sir,” Shorty said. “I had a car come in right about that time, and I didn’t see where they went. Time I turned around they was gone.”
Screwed into one wall was an inch-thick, two-foot-by-two-foot piece of plywood, painted black and laid out with a grid of numbered hooks, half of which had keys dangling from them. Shorty kept the keys to all the cars parked on his lot so he could shuffle them around and drive them on and off the hydraulic lifts. Rising Sun cars stayed on the ground just in case they were needed for a quick getaway. Ray pulled his keys down from one of the