Ceepak hurries into the pizza parlor.
“Good of you to be here,” he says to his mother. “I’m sorry we had to drag you into this …”
“Come on, John. Time’s a-wasting.”
“We need another fifteen, twenty minutes,” says the Chief, getting real-time updates from the SWAT team on his earpiece.
“We’ll try to buy it for you. You ready, Mom?”
“Are you kidding? I was born ready.”
“Mrs. Ceepak?” says Christine.
“Yes, dear?”
“Be careful out there.”
“Oh, I plan on it. And when this is all over, I want you and Danny to come over to my place for a cookout. Just the two of you.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Stay behind me at all times,” Ceepak says to his mother.
“Even when I’m talking to Joe?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“I’d like to look him in the eye, give him a piece of my mind …”
“Mom? I need to be your shield.”
“Fine. You’re the boss, honey. Let’s just do this thing.”
And the two of them, son and mother, with Ceepak in the lead, march back out to the darkening no-man’s land between the pizza parlor and the Free Fall.
I just hope nothing happens to ruin our cookout plans.
68
“Where the hell is Adele?”
Mr. Ceepak is sort of teetering in the control booth, trying to see Mrs. Ceepak, who is hidden behind the massive bulk of her towering son.
“I’m right here, Joseph.”
“Step out where I can see you.”
“Why? I thought you wanted to talk.”
“I do.”
“Then talk. You don’t have to see someone to talk to them. That’s why they invented the telephone.”
“Still got a mouth on you, huh, Adele?
“That’s right, Joseph. And I still know to use it.”
“Okay, okay. Ease up already. Seriously, babe-what the hell happened to us? Where’d we go wrong?”
Great. Mr. Ceepak’s drunk has moved into the sloppy sad stage.
“I thought this was about money, Joseph, not us.”
“It is, it is. But we’re a team, remember? You and me against the world. What’s mine is yours, what’s yours is mine.”
“That stopped the first time I caught you stealing beer money out of my purse.”
“Why do you have to say things like that, Adele? What’d I ever do to you?”
“You mean besides murdering my youngest son?”
“That was a suicide.”
“No, it was not. You just fooled everybody into thinking it was for years and years. You killed your own son.”
“I had to. Billy was a weakling. Hey, I did him a favor. The world was too tough for a sissy boy like him.”
“Sir?” says Ceepak, stepping forward an inch or two, his mother scooting up behind him. “Currently, you are the one wasting valuable time. I suggest we add a few more minutes to your countdown clock.”
“What? No way. The SWAT team is coming …”
“Be that as it may, it will take considerable time for mother to organize the one million dollars you have requested.”
“How long?”
“Well,” says Mrs. Ceepak, “the bank’s closed. But they open tomorrow at ten …”
“Not gonna work. I need my money, Adele. I need it now. Hell, I earned that million dollars.”
“Oh, really? How?”
“Hey, I was married to you for twenty years, wasn’t I? I deserve that much in hazardous-duty pay.”
Mr. Ceepak wheezes out a laugh. Guzzles more booze.
“I’ll give you your money tomorrow, Joseph.”
“Tomorrow? I need to fly to Cuba.”
“Well, what do you propose I do? Write you a check?”
“No. Because no one would cash a check for a million dollars. Not unless you had a bank account with them, and I don’t have a bank account in Cuba.”
Yes, the drunker he gets, the stupider he becomes.
“So, what exactly is it you want, Joseph?”
“One million dollars!”
“Will you take cash?”
“Yeah. Fine. Cache.”
Mr. Ceepak sounds half asleep. His eyelids look heavy. His eyeballs blurry.
Mrs. Ceepak keeps going. “Does it need to be in unmarked bills? Tens and twenties only, like in the movies?”
“Are you mocking me, Adele?”
“You bet. Because you deserve it. Who the heck do you think you are, anyway? What you’re doing here is wrong.”
“No, Adele, what you did in Ohio was wrong. Taking all that money from Aunt Jennifer and not sharing it with me, your lawfully wedded husband.”
“You are not my husband. We are divorced.”
“We’re Catholic, Adele. Divorce is against the rules.”
“That’s why I got an annulment, too.”
“You can’t annul diddly. What God has joined together … let no man put us under a bus …”
I think the alcohol has officially destroyed all the brain cells that used to be employed memorizing bible verses.
“You stole from me, Adele. That’s a sin.”
Mrs. Ceepak jabs up her arm to point at David Rosen’s perch atop the Free Fall. “Nothing I have ever done or ever will do is half as sinful as what you’re doing here.”
“That boy murdered his father!”
“Then let the police deal with it.”
Mr. Ceepak brings up the brown paper bag and takes yet another swig. Or at least he tries to.
He shakes the bag.
I think his bottle is officially empty and the drunken fool doesn’t look happy about it.
“Why didn’t Aunt Jennifer put me in her will with you?” he mutters, sounding like a mad six-year-old.
“Maybe because she hated you for killing your own son.”
“Billy deserved it!”
Mrs. Ceepak disobeys her son. Steps to his side so she can directly confront her ex-husband.
“No. He deserved better. Better than you, anyway.”
“Screw you, Adele. Hey, am I in