next. He couldn't figure out what she'd gone through in her life to make her sound like that. He stared at her for another second, speculating what it might have been, and she said, “Stop fucking looking at me like that.”
“Okay.”
“You don't charm me.”
“I realize that.”
“I don't think you do.”
“No, really, Franny, I do.”
She had her hand under the counter again, grabbing hold of the nine iron. He leaned forward, kind of daring her, wishing she'd make a go of it. Maybe all she needed was to give him one good crack across the head, then they could settle into being amiable coworkers. “I'm waiting for the day you're found floating in the surf,” she told him.
“I know; I'm just wondering why you hate me so much.”
“Because you deserve it.”
She believed it so honestly, with such affirmation, that it almost made him believe it too. That he had done something so terrible in his life he should never be forgiven for it.
“What box did you pick in the pool?”
“Tomorrow. Do me a favor and drop dead, will you?” She stuck a toothpick in her mouth and started champing it to shavings. “At noon.”
“Where's Pepe?”
“I don't know, but if you find him, tell him to get his ass back in here. Like I don't have enough to do, I have to cover his job too.”
Dane went around to the garage parking lot and saw Pepe mixing it up with two enormous thugs.
For a guy weighing only about 120, Pepe was handling himself pretty well. He was fast and knew how to throw a punch, duck and weave and work from the outside.
It was a cold day but Pepe wore only a sleeveless T-shirt, his muscles corded and perfectly defined as he backpedaled and rope-a-doped, slugging each of the mooks in the chin with a one-two punch. A couple of quick raps, shoulders loose, then skipping back out of the way as they lunged.
Dane wasn't sure if he should get involved yet, because Pepe was smiling and having such a good time. He skipped around the parking lot like he was back in the ring.
Dane recognized one of the wiseguys from the Don's yesterday and the other from Chooch's when he'd shot the other asshole in the leg. There was a time when all the Monti family members had been made guys, top lieutenants who'd worked their way up the ranks pulling big heists nobody could pin on them. Now all these no- name slabs of meat.
He called out, “Need help?”
“You trying to insult me?” Pepe said, moving like he was listening to a nice salsa beat.
“I was asking them.”
The thugs were trying to prance away without looking like they were running. They each had a bloody nose and a split lip and the beginnings of a shiner. The punk from the Don's looked at Dane and said, “You!”
“Me.”
“I've got orders to pulp your ass!”
“Watch for the hook,” Dane told him just as Pepe's left fist connected with the point of the prick's chin. It really was beautiful to watch, the supple way Pepe moved in and out and around with the quality of ballet. The thug's eyes started to roll and Pepe shifted and caught the other legbreaker with a right cross that threw the punk backwards like he'd been shot. Both Monti boys fell together in a heap, mostly unconscious and breathing shallowly, blood bubbling over their faces.
“They're not even as tough as the guy who came around last time,” Pepe said.
“That one's name is Joey Fresco, and he's not even as tough as he used to be a few years ago.”
“They got legit and they got soft.”
“These two tell you the same spiel? It'd be in your best interest to do a favor for the Monti crew?”
“Yeah, but without the subtlety of that guy Joey shaving with his butterfly knife. These pricks, they just came right out with it, said they wanted me to fire you. If they were going to make a play, I thought they would've pulled it weeks ago, carrying some real firepower.”
“Me too,” Dane said. “I paid the Don a visit yesterday. It must've pushed a few buttons.”
“Not any serious ones. They didn't even draw down on me.” His hands kept working in the air as he talked, like he still wanted to throw punches.
In the corner of the lot sat a maroon LeSabre with the passenger door ajar. “This their car?”
“Yeah, they pulled in while I was catching a smoke and just started staring me down. When that didn't work they called me spic, like I might break down and weep out of shame for my family heritage. They threaten to beat up some of the other drivers, but the guys just ignore them. Then this one here actually shoves me.” Pepe grinned telling the story, his small hands moving in the air. “It was like junior high school all over again. I think they were working their way up to stealing my lunch box or giving me noogies. What the hell happened to the real wiseguys?”
“I don't know,” Dane said. He frisked both the mooks and they weren't even carrying guns.
“Nothing?” Pepe asked.
“No. He had a pistol yesterday. Maybe they're scared of getting pulled over by the cops and found carrying.”
“Does the Don know he's hiring such pathetic examples of
“You know, I've got a feeling he does. But he's so sick and crippled that he smokes a lot of weed to help him with the pain.”
“Really? Like any punk on the corner. That's sort of sad, ending up like that.”
“I have to agree.”
They wrestled the two legbreakers back onto their feet and helped them over to the LeSabre. Dane got the driver in and said, “Listen, tell Berto and Vinny to relax, I'm quitting Olympic. Oh no, my life is in tatters, how will I survive? The terror, the horror. Hey, watch your head now,” and carefully closed the door. Pepe tapped the roof and the car pulled out.
“I have mixed feelings about all that,” Pepe told him, still bouncing on his feet like he wanted to go another few rounds. “I kind of miss the old neighborhood, you know?”
“Yeah.”
“A man is defined by the strength of his enemies.”
Dane looked at him. “You quoting
“It's a line from
“I fast-forwarded through a lot of that.”
“So did I the first twenty times, but then I finally let it roll.”
Dane glanced over at the limousine in the garage, the back bumper all banged out and polished up again after the fracas with Big Tommy, and he felt a twinge of regret. He'd miss working on it. “I'll quit tomorrow, okay?”
“You don't have to leave on account of those mooks. Stick around if you want. Besides, didn't you want to build a stake?”
“Like you said, what do I need money for? Besides, something's happening.”
Pepe gave him that long once-over. “What do you mean?”
“I'm not sure. Things are just coming into focus a little better.”
Pepe made the same face again, but not nosy enough to ask if Dane had any kind of a plan in mind.
“What time does Glory Bishop want to be picked up?”
“What, you need an invitation from her now? Just go. Drop the limo off tonight or early tomorrow. Maybe I'll send Fran on the Montauk run from now on. She could use a little ocean air.”
“By the way,” Dane said, “I think she's insane.”
“I've had some worries about that, but she's pretty stable most of the time. Like I told you, she's mostly a sweetheart, but she's got a fine-tuned instinct for criminal-type activity, you know? The action boiling behind the scenes.”