One Dog Night (25 page)

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Authors: David Rosenfelt

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“What happens after you get the company?”

“There will be further instructions, which they assure me will be painless.” His smile has no humor in it. “Painless is not how I would describe this situation.”

“And what if you don’t get the company?” Laurie asks.

“They don’t seem to be concerned about that. My analysis is that it’s a close legal call, but if Loney is worried, he certainly hides it well.”

There is no doubt in my mind that this is where Judge Holland comes in, and less doubt that he will rule in favor of Bauer and Entech Industries. Alex Bauer is not the only one they have something on.

“Why are you cooperating with them?” Laurie asks.

“That I can’t reveal, to you or anyone else. Suffice it to say that they have knowledge of something that, if revealed, would destroy my career, and most of my life. But I will tell you that it has absolutely nothing to do with the fire, or the Galloway trial.”

“How did they get that knowledge?”

“That is something I’ve never been able to uncover. It may seem a little cryptic for me to say this, but they may have been responsible for facilitating the situation in the first place.”

“They set you up?” Laurie asks.

“It’s possible, but ultimately I am to blame.”

“Why did you come to us with this?” I ask.

He shrugs. “Probably because you were coming to me, and I figured you’d find it all out anyway. But I also would like to nail them, and I’m hoping that you’ll be able to do that.” He pauses, and then says, “While leaving me out of it.”

“That would be nice,” I say.

“Where the hell have you been?”

Vince Sanders is referring to the fact that I haven’t been to Charlie’s to watch football for a couple of weeks. He’s yelling, so I hold the phone a few inches from my ear, which is the position it’s usually in when I’m talking to Vince.

“I’m in the middle of a trial, Vince. It’s on the front page of your paper every day.”

“So you’re in a trial, and I have to buy my own beer?”

“Vince, it was completely inconsiderate of me, and I apologize. From now on, just put everything on my tab.”

“You don’t have a tab,” he points out.

“Damn. If I get one, put everything on it.”

“What do you want?”

“What makes you think I want something?” I ask.

“When people ask me for a favor I get a rash. I’ve been scratching ever since the phone rang.”

“What about when the favor could result in a big story, which you would get the exclusive on?”

“That, my dumb, annoying friend, is like a soothing balm. What are we talking about here?”

“I need to talk to Dominic Petrone right away.” Petrone is the head of the largest organized-crime family in New Jersey, and he is one of the four or five billion people that Vince has access to.

“Why don’t you ‘friend’ him on Facebook?”

“Vince…”

“What should I tell him this is about?”

“The Galloway trial.”

“Let me have your credit card number,” he says.

“Why?”

“Because if Petrone puts you under Giants Stadium, I don’t want to have to buy my own beer.”

“Why do you say that?” I ask, but realize the answer as I ask him.

“Because they tried to pin the fire on him when it happened. The theory was that the drug guys in the house were moving on his territory. He was all over the papers, including mine, and he wasn’t happy about it.”

“But he got cleared of it,” I point out.

“I still wouldn’t go around accusing him if I were you.”

“I’m not accusing him; tell him it’s about Carmine Ricci.”

“Stay by the phone.”

“For how long?”

“Until it rings.”

Click.

Vince never says “hello” or “good-bye.” It’s part of his charm. But he does have the significant trait of always coming through, and the phone rings ten minutes later.

It’s Vince. “Be outside your house at nine
P.M.

“At night?” I’m nervous enough about meeting Petrone, since all he would have to do is nod for someone to kill me. It just seems somewhat safer during daylight hours.

“Wow, you don’t miss a thing.”

Click.

Meeting with Dominic Petrone is one of those things that seems right when you plan it, but then dread when the actual time approaches. In this case the dread starts as soon as Vince hangs up the phone.

“Let me go with you,” Laurie says.

I shake my head. “No. This is me and Dominic, one on one, mano a mano.”

“Mano a mano?”

I nod. “Right. Law of the jungle.”

“You’re a wonderful, talented man, Andy, but the jungle is not your thing.”

“What does that mean?”

“Well, you’re afraid of wild animals, bugs, snakes, lizards, spiders, scary-looking plants, and not having indoor plumbing. I have a feeling you wouldn’t sleep that comfortably in your tent if you knew that Mafia dons were lurking around either.”

“While all of that may be true, I told Vince that I wanted to talk to Petrone. I didn’t mention anyone else, and I don’t want to pull any surprises.”

I go outside at a quarter to nine, and exactly fifteen minutes later a black sedan pulls up. One of Petrone’s very large people gets out of the backseat, and holds the front door open for me. I get in the passenger seat and see that two other goon clones are in the car, one obviously driving.

“Hey, guys,” I say, and none of them answer. That sets the tone for the rest of the ride, as they don’t speak a single word the entire way. It makes me uncomfortable, but I’d prefer the silence to somebody saying “Sonny says we’re going to the mattresses,” or “Leave the gun and take the cannolis.”

We get on Route 80, which surprises me because I know from previous visits that Petrone lives in the Riverside section of Paterson. Then we get on the lower level of the George Washington Bridge, but the driver does not execute the amazing U-turn that they did in
The Godfather.

My keen intuition tells me I’m seeing Petrone in New York.

We head down to lower Manhattan, and park in a lot in the West Village. We get out of the car, and I follow them down the street. They stop at a building on the street, with no sign, though there is a flag flying above the door. It’s not a flag I recognize.

The driver knocks on the door, and within fifteen seconds it opens. The person who opens it looks at us and opens the door wider, so we all go in. Still not a word has been spoken.

It seems to be some kind of restaurant/club that we’re in, but certainly a private one. I follow my escorts to a back room, which is an ornate bar. Petrone is having drinks with four other men.

They all turn to see us as we enter, and the four men start to get up in unison, obviously preparing to leave us alone. Petrone slightly shakes his head, and raises his hand, as if telling them to stay, and they sit back down.

Petrone gets up and walks into an adjacent room, and I am led into it as well. My three escorts, whom I’ve really grown close to, stand with their backs to the wall, while I sit at a table with Petrone.

I’m very nervous, but not quite as much so as in previous meetings with Petrone. I assume that is because in each of those meetings he hasn’t killed me, so therefore my chance of survival this time seems good. Had he killed me one of those other times, I would not be so optimistic now.

“Hello, Andy,” Petrone says. “To what do I owe this unexpected visit?” Petrone can be quite gracious, a refined gentleman, probably in his mid-fifties, who seems the type that might have some mixed emotions when he orders people executed.

“There is something going on that I thought you might not know about.”

He smiles. “There’s always a first time.”

“Carmine Ricci from Las Vegas; I assume you know him?”

“I prefer you to make statements, rather than asking questions.”

I nod. “Gotcha. Anyway, it seems that Mr. Ricci is involved, at least peripherally, in a case I’m working on. And his involvement consists, among other things, of having a man in his employ do some rather illegal things. Right here in North Jersey.” My assumption and hope is that Petrone will not like a counterpart from across the country operating in his territory.

“Interesting,” Petrone says. “And the name of this man?”

“Loney. If I’m right, he’s already committed a murder, blackmailed a bunch of people, and threatened a woman. And that’s just before lunch.”

“Do you have any reason to believe that Mr. Ricci is an interested party in this, other than providing access to one of his employees?”

“I don’t know that either way,” I say.

“What would you have me do about all this, on the off chance that I believed you?”

“Well, in a perfect world, first you would call Mr. Ricci and get him to withdraw his troops, so to speak.”

“You think he and I are part of one large club?” Petrone asks.

“I think he might respect you enough to see your point.”

“You said ‘first.’ Is there a second?”

I nod. “Yes. I’d like to go talk to Mr. Ricci, perhaps make him a proposition. Under your protection.”

“What might be in this for me?”

“Well, the fact that I’ve alerted you to this situation is something I would hope you’d appreciate. And then there is the help I provided on Quintana.” I’m referencing my providing Petrone with a way to get rid of a former rival, who in terms of viciousness made Petrone look like Mary Poppins. It also benefited me on a case, but there’s no reason to mention that now.

“I’ll call you at noon tomorrow,” Petrone says.

“Great. I’ll look forward to it. How’s the food here?”

“The best in the city; I’m looking forward to dinner right now. Good-bye, Andy.”

I’ve got a hunch I’m not eating here. Maybe my three buddies and I can stop at a Taco Bell on the way home, where we can eat quesadillas and chat the night away.

Hike comes over at eight o’clock in the morning.

He does so for two reasons, probably of equal importance in his mind. The first is that he knows Laurie makes French toast on Sundays, and there is no better French toast on planet Earth. The second is that I pay him by the hour, and if it meant getting paid, Hike would eat asbestos toast.

He’s already there when I come back from my walk with Tara and Bailey, hovering around the kitchen while Laurie cooks. When I enter he looks at his watch, and says, “You’re late. We’ve got a lot of work to do.”

“Sorry. Maybe we should skip breakfast.”

He laughs. “Not in this lifetime.”

During breakfast we talk about our next steps in the investigative, nontrial area of our efforts. More accurately put, Laurie and I talk, while Hike mostly chews. When it comes to eating, Hike is a mini-Marcus.

“No matter what Petrone sets up, I don’t think you should go to Vegas,” Laurie says.

“Why not?”

“It’s not obvious? Ricci is the head of an organized-crime family. If he’s been behind all this, then you have set yourself up as, if not his enemy, then at least a pain in his ass. He could decide to remove the pain.”

“But maybe he’s not, maybe he’s just providing the muscle. That’s what Petrone implied might be happening. In that case, he has no overriding interest, and he might pull the plug.”

“You’re dreaming.”

“I’m not.”

“I’m going with you.”

“You’re not.”

We argue about this for a while, and we finally settle on a compromise, which is mostly in my favor. If I go to Vegas, Marcus comes with me.

“What about the judge in Delaware?” Hike asks.

“What about him?”

“He seems to be a key part of this. Maybe we can pressure him to cave.”

“He won’t even take my call,” I say.

“Maybe we can find out who he’s called. That might lead us to Loney.”

“How would we do that?” Laurie asks. I think I know what Hike is thinking, but I hope I’m wrong.

I’m not.

“We have his cell number from Loney’s original phone, right? So we find out who he has called. If Loney was calling him, the reverse is probably true, and we can get Loney’s new number.”

I put down my fork. “You’re going to try and illegally obtain the private phone records of a prominent judge?”

Hike shakes his head. “Who said anything about me? I’m a law-abiding citizen and, I might add, an officer of the court. Sam can get it.”

“Let’s assume for a second that Sam would be crazy enough to do it…”

“A likely assumption,” Laurie says.

I nod. “True. But what does it really do for us? We already know who Loney is, and that he has been in contact with the judge. Do we really need more confirmation of that? What we need to do is find Loney.”

“That’s what I’m talking about,” he said. “Call Sam; let’s make sure my idea will work.”

I call Sam and put him on the speakerphone. After hearing Hike’s plan, he confirms that it is very feasible, and blames himself for not thinking of it earlier. If we can get Loney’s number off the judge’s records, Sam could hack into the phone company’s computers, something that is for him about as difficult as breathing.

Once in the computer, he could trace the GPS signal that is within every cell phone. In that way we could locate Loney’s phone, and very likely Loney.

“And you are willing to illegally invade a prominent judge’s records?”

“A crooked prominent judge,” Sam points out.

“You can mention that at your sentencing hearing,” I say.

“I’m not going to jail,” Sam says. “Not with you as my lawyer.”

I try to talk him out of it, but of course I’m not sure if I really want to. Hike’s idea, while risky, is a good one, and could lead us to Loney. Of course, I have no idea what the hell I would do with Loney if we found him, but suffice it to say Marcus would be involved.

“I’ve got to get off the phone,” I say to Sam. “I’m waiting for a call from a Mafia don.”

“Now that’s cool,” Sam says.

Among the more admirable qualities of ruthless crime bosses is their punctuality.

The phone rings at noon, though it is not Petrone who calls. It’s his first lieutenant, Joseph Russo, which doesn’t make me any less nervous. It’s a sign of how uncomfortable these people make me that I’d rather deal with lawyers.

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