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I mustered every ounce of Puerto Rican cool I could draw from my mother’s ancestry and stepped out of the car without haste and without hesitation. I had changed into the most expensive, dark blue, Italian worsted wool suit I had in my wardrobe. It was, in fact, the only Italian wool suit I had in my wardrobe. My understated swagger said otherwise.
There wasn’t an eye in any hairy face in the crowd that wasn’t taking in every inch. I was about as in sync as Prince Charles at a slam dance.
And that was the idea. I prayed that every move of every barely-in-control feature would radiate the signal — This dude is connected. Don’t touch.
I moved with unhurried deliberateness directly to the door without wasting a glance at any of the palace guard. I caught a glimpse of one of the younger ones rising off his bike and moving toward the car. An older hand with scars on every knuckle caught him by the shoulder and settled him back down. I thanked God and prayed at the same time that I’d soon find a men’s room.
I passed through the door knowing that if one chink showed in the masquerade, I’d be fodder for the mackerel off the Revere shore, one piece at a time.
The inside was a dark, dank replica of some bar in Tombstone with a few touches of the Pirates of the Caribbean. The air, what there was of it, hung heavy with the stench of beer and sweat.
My entrance stilled the place with the pall of a sudden quiet. Every eye was on the creature from civilization. I moved slowly and deliberately to the bar without a wasted step and no eye contact whatsoever. The pool game on my left stopped, and beer bottles rested where they were. I felt a ball of acid rising from the bottom of my stomach to the back of my throat.
Without even a side-glance, I could see that this was not a random collection of misfits. Every misfit in the place wore the colors of the Satans. Even other bikers had sense enough not to wander into The Pirate’s Den — only the kid in the Italian wool suit, feeling very much like an anchovy on a Ritz cracker, being served up as an hors d’oeuvre.
There was a mirror behind the bartender. It gave me a perfect view behind me of two particular masses of flesh with chains in each hand moving into position to block the door. I knew that the only way out intact was to stay the course.
When I reached the bar, I was looking into the hairy face of the six-foot three-inch bartender. He was glaring back at a gnat in a blue suit. Thank God he spoke first.
“You’re a little far from Beacon Hill, ain’t you, Percival?”
I returned the look and let five seconds go by in silence for whatever unsettling effect it might have on him. None was visible.
When I spoke, it was quiet, cool, and in control. I said one word.
“Tedesco.”
He looked around at the fifteen or so racks of muscles wearing the colors, including the two at the door, and then back at me.
“You mean Mr. Tedesco, Percival.”
I dropped the voice to another level of softness to emphasize the point.
“Your Mr. Tedesco is being given other titles even as we speak by people he would not like to offend.”
I caught the slightest freeze in the sarcastic grin on his face. That was enough to send my motor into the next gear. I reduced the volume yet one more notch as I played my last card. The surface was cool, but I was squeezing the Saint Anthony medal in my suitcoat pocket until the saint must have been writhing in pain.
“Tell Mr. Tedesco that someone he knows is very displeased with the way he carried it off. You might say I’m here with a policy of life insurance. Take your time. I have another thirty seconds to waste on this business.”
The grin was gone. The mean was there, but it was mixed with a grain of confusion. That was all I could ask. He picked up a phone behind the bar and turned his back. I could hear him punch one number, which meant it was an intercom. Tedesco was on the premises.
A door at the side of the bar opened. A dark, balding figure about five foot five waddled along behind the bar. He looked like a child’s drawing of a man — one large circle for the body, another smaller circle for the head without benefit of a neck in between. The bushy moustache was, to me, a thing of beauty. It meant he was southern Italian and old enough to be of the old school in his understanding of Mafia ways. That meant to me that he’d get my drift without my having to dream up specific details.
He waddled splayfoot to stand beside the bartender. I had the honest pleasure of facing off with someone I could look down to. It was amazingly comforting.
“I’m Tedesco. Who are you?”
“I’m your life insurance salesman.” I’d grown to like that concept. “You had a simple assignment. You screwed it up. He’s deciding what to do about it right now.”
His Italian skin lost some of its olive glow. I was apparently right about his filling in the blanks. Beads of sweat began to appear on his forehead to match the drops of battery acid that were percolating in my stomach. He leaned as far over the bar as his girth would allow.
“I did just what Benny Ig—”
“Tedesco!” I caught him in mid-sentence. “You throw out names in a public place?”
He backed off the bar like a kid with his finger in the cake icing. He snapped a command at the bartender who was by now standing slack jawed and totally clueless as to why this pissant in the blue suit was sending his boss into sweating fits on his own turf.
Tedesco snarled an order out of the side of his mouth. The gorilla in the apron retreated into the backroom.
Meanwhile, I had exactly what I came for. When he mentioned Benny Ignola’s name it was clear that he was the contact. Benny was the messenger who delivered the order for Tedesco to turn Salvatore Marone over to the police for extortion. That started the chain of dominoes falling into place. Marone was then in a position to deal the name of Mike Simone to the D.A. as the bomber who killed John McKedrick. Once the D.A. made the arrest, Simone could deal his way to a manageably low sentence by fingering Peter Santangelo as the one who gave the order for the bombing. It was all part of a plan. That was why little Anthony Tedesco had the courage to buck the Mafia by ratting on Marone for extortion. He did it under orders from someone high up in the “family.”
The real question was who was pulling Benny Ignola’s strings and why. I was sure little Tedesco was not brought into the loop on that information. My next goal was to get my unkilled body out of Revere as successfully as I had bluffed my way in.
With the bartender gone, we could speak privately. I could see the level of panic rising in Tedesco’s eyes as the possibilities sank in. His throat was so tight he was hissing the words.
“I did what I was told.”
“Listen to me, Anthony. Tony. May I call you Tony?” I didn’t wait for an answer. “Listen to me, Tony, and look me right in the eye. You were about to be — replaced. You understand what I’m saying? I said, wait a minute, why waste an asset? Tony’s been okay for a lot of years. One mistake. Would it hurt if I met with him just once? Maybe he can fix it.”
“What mistake? What did I do? I followed orders.”
“Tony, are you listening to me?”
He seemed confused, but he nodded.
“This is an act of mercy. What you see on the bumper stickers, a ‘random act of kindness.’ He likes to do that kind of thing maybe once a week. This week you’re it.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means you’ll meet with Benny tomorrow. Noontime. Same place.”
I figured that Benny Ignola would have needed to be wearing Depends to walk into The Pirate’s Den. He must have set up his meeting with Tedesco someplace closer to Benny’s safe ground. Sometimes it pays to throw a wild pitch to see if the batter swings at it.
“That’s the life insurance, Tony. It’s a one-time offer. It expires tomorrow if you don’t show. Capisce?”
“Yeah. Yeah.”
“That’s all.”
I turned around to close out the longest five minutes of my entire life. I saw the two primates with the chains still barring the d
oor. I played one more card, the last one in my deck. I looked back at Tedesco and motioned to the two slabs of beef with my chin as if they weren’t worthy of a hand signal. I gave a head motion that I hoped would be interpreted as “Get those two out of here.”
My newfound friend, Tony, caught the signal. One sweep of his hand and they backed off the door.
I gave Tony the coolest look I could muster on a tank that was now running on fumes.
“Noon.”
He just nodded.
I began the trek across the floor to the door and freedom without a glance to either side. One thought propelled one foot ahead of the other. It was six thirty.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
It was ten to seven when I found the address Terry had given me on Andrew Street in Winthrop on the North Shore of Boston. The small, neat house laid just a quiet stretch of beach away from the serene, rolling expanse of the Atlantic.
For a few seconds, I let my mind play with the notion that if Terry chose to live in the lap of Mother Atlantic, it might reflect a certain depth of character. Then again, what difference would it make? For the fortieth time I reminded myself that this was purely business. My dinner companion was the probable fiancée of my recently passed best friend.
Before getting out of the car, I had made a call to Mr. Devlin. After calming the volcanic burst over my recent excursion into hell, I briefed him on the news. He was less than surprised to hear that Benny Ignola was the messenger boy who pushed the domino that started with Tony Tedesco’s informing on Sal Marone for extortion and ended with Peter’s indictment for John’s murder.
We were both aware that the real question was who sent Benny to deliver the message. Clearly it was not Dominic Santangelo. That meant that the don had a rebellion in his family that could easily become our problem in representing Peter.
I told Mr. Devlin about the imaginary meeting I set up between Tedesco and Benny for noon the next day.
“An interesting ploy. To accomplish what?”
For the first time, I realized that I didn’t have a clue as to what it would accomplish. As things stood, only Tony would show up, since Benny remained unadvised of the meeting.
“I don’t know. I guess I thought I’d shake the cage. Everything seemed to be standing pat.”
Actually, it had been the only thing I could think of to pad my bluff in order to get my endangered posterior out of The Pirate’s Den without being stuffed and mounted over the bar.
“Brilliant, Michael. And when this shaken cage of rattlesnakes decides to come after the shaker?”
“No problem. I didn’t leave a name. Tedesco has no idea who I am. He just thinks I fit somewhere between Benny Ignola and the Godfather. I’m under the protection of the don, whether he knows it or not.”
“Listen to me, Michael. There’s not a client in this world that’s worth you’re getting killed. Or even slightly maimed. You start being a lawyer and stop playing the Green Hornet.”
“Playing what?”
“Never mind. I forget you’re an adolescent. You know what I’m saying.”
I did, and I appreciated the thought. It was a nonproblem at the moment, since the rest of the evening promised a peaceful ride up the North Shore for dinner.
Just as I hung up, another thought ran across my mind. I went through information and dialed up Benny Ignola. When Benny answered, I held a handkerchief over the mouthpiece and gave my best impersonation of Tony Tedesco’s Revere accent in a forced whisper.
“Mr. Ignola. Tony. Tedesco. Can’t talk. Too many people. Gotta meet witcha. Same place, tomorrow at noon.”
“What the hell’s wrong with you? I told you not to call me.”
“It’s important. Gotta talk to you. I’ll be there at noon. What do you say?”
There was a pause on Benny’s end that sent chills down to my heels. I had no idea what the pause meant, but I had to get it off dead center.
“Or I could come to your office, Mr. Ignola. Or you could come to The Pirate’s Den if you want.”
I nudged Benny with two options that I knew he’d turn down in favor of root canal.
“No. I’ll meet you. Same place. This better be worth it.”
I could hear the distinct sound of a rattled cage in the slam of the receiver when Benny hung up.
I dialed Tom Burns’s cell phone. He answered, as always, in the hushed baritone of a private detective on his private line.
“It’s your favorite client, Tom. How’re we doing?”
“I don’t know about you, Mikey. I’m doing well.”
“Could you be specific?”
“Your little mouse—”
“That would be Benny.”
“It would indeed. He went directly to a locker in South Station. Do you need the number?”
“I have it. Go ahead.”
“He opened the locker, took out an envelope, looked over his shoulder, and put it in his briefcase.”
“And then?”
“He used his cell phone to make one call. I couldn’t hear it. He got his car out of the parking garage on Devonshire and drove to the North End. He parked and went in the front door of Stella Maris, the restaurant on Prince Street. I waited a few minutes and went in like a customer. He was nowhere in sight.”
“Which means either there’s a back room or he went out the back door. Let’s hope for the back room. If he went out the back door it’s because he spotted you on his tail.”
“Mikey, you know that Corvette that you love?”
“I do know it and I do love it. Why?”
“You can bet on there being a back room. Nobody spots me on their tail. Besides, I waited out front. He came out half an hour later. I followed him to his office and then broke it off. I was about to call you.”
“Did anyone else come out of the restaurant?”
“A few customers in and out. Nobody recognizable. I figured you wanted me to stay on Benny.”
“You did the right thing. I’ll tell you, I’d give my Bruins season tickets to find out who it was he met with.”
“Not in the cards, Mikey. The moment came and went. It could be anyone in the family. That restaurant is one of the places they do business. I don’t see that we’ll get another chance.”
“Not to be so sure, Tom. I need you tomorrow. You personally, no hired help. There’s going to be a meeting at noon between Benny and Anthony Tedesco. Tedesco owns The Pirate’s Den in Revere. I don’t know where the meeting’ll be. You can follow either one of them to the meeting. You choose.”
“I’ll take Benny. I know his habits.”
“Whatever. After the meeting, stick with Benny. He’ll be running like a scared rabbit to someone up the food chain. This time I need to know who. Can you do it, Tom?”
“As long as the meter’s running, I can get you a picture of Elton John in his Jockey shorts.”
“I believe you could. I’ll settle for the report on Benny. Let me or Lex Devlin know as soon as you have something. And would you send the bill for your excellent services to Mr. Devlin? He has a stronger heart.”
Terry O’Brien was ready when I rang. She could not have been more stunning. It was the first time I’d seen her in moonlight, and the gentle rays lit her auburn hair in a way that all but toppled the mental wall I had built between business and dating.
The drive up the North Shore took us past a rocky coastline dotted with occasional white sand inlets. We passed through a succession of seacoast towns that dated back to the colonization of New England. Many of them, such as Marblehead, Gloucester, Manchester-by-the-Sea, and Salem, clung to their historical character as if the past three hundred years occurred somewhere else. I never pass along that route without a refreshment of the spirit.
The spiritual lift on this particular trip was somewhat less effective than unsual. There was a tension that I couldn’t quite work out. Terry let her long hair blow freely in the open convertible, and we talked about everything under the sun except what was on both of our mind
s. Somehow a seat had been reserved between us for John McKedrick.
At some point, I asked a few questions about John’s mental state during that last week of his life, and whether or not he had mentioned any names that she could recall. It all resulted in nothing new, but it lent a certain business purpose to the evening that made me feel a bit more at ease.
We arrived in the heart of Rockport as God was putting the finishing touches on a starlit night that could inspire poetry. We cruised slowly past the tiny sea-themed shops that line all the narrow streets. When we reached the town center, Terry twisted around to face me. She was in navy blue Docker pants and loafers with a pale blue Ralph Lauren shirt that matched the color of her eyes. She looked as if she could have arrived on one of the yachts that docked in Rockport Harbor for a shore dinner.
“Michael, how do you feel about lobster?”
I was stopped for a light, so I could lock eyes with her.
“It’s the reason we’re here.”
Her grin broadened. “No, I mean, is it a passion?”
I never thought about it that way, but when I did, the answer was yes.
She moved closer without even thinking about it. “And can you go one-on-one with a lobster without instruments?”
It had the ring of a challenge. I was so totally captured by the moment, I would have said yes to one-on-one with a Komodo dragon.
We parked just off the square and started walking up a side street. I followed her lead in the direction away from my original idea of the dining room of the Peg Leg.
The street darkened as it wound away from streetlights toward a cove nestled into the rocky shore. One blue gray, weathered shack stood just shy of the sand’s edge. Just inside the open door, a cauldron the size of a skiff was steaming over an open gas fire. The only other object in the room was a glass tank the size of the cauldron. About fifty of those prehistoric creatures with the claws that excite the taste buds stood in a torrent of bubbling cold saltwater being pumped in and out of the tank.
Terry looked at me with that smile that never seemed to leave her lips. “Trust me?”
I nodded. She leaned over the glass tank and pointed out four pound-and-a-halfers to the sweating, bearded man in a rubber apron. He clutched each one by the hard shell above the legs and shovel passed it into the steaming cauldron.