Al signed and handed it back to him.
“I’ll be right back,” the manager said. He walked across the room and let himself through a door with his key. He took the deposit slip and check to a teller, who stamped the receipt and handed it back, then he walked out of sight behind a wall. He was gone for perhaps five minutes and returned, holding a canvas envelope, which he handed to Al. “There are fifteen stacks of one hundred hundred-dollar bills there, totaling one hundred and fifty thousand dollars in cash. Count them, if you wish.” Al shook his head. The manager stood up and offered his hand. “It’s a pleasure doing business with you,” he said.
Al shook the hand and walked out of the bank. He hailed a cab. “There’s a Mercedes dealer in midtown somewhere. You know it?”
“Yeah, I know it.”
“Take me there.”
—
A couple of hours later, Al walked into the bar downtown where he and Gene hung out sometimes. Gene was already at the bar. Al sat down next to him. “I’ve got good news and bad news,” he said.
“Okay, gimme the bad news first.”
“We’ve been fired.”
“Well, shit, I guess I knew that would happen when the old man got offed. What’s the good news?”
Al took the thick envelope from his pocket and handed it to Gene. “That’s five thousand bucks. It’s your severance pay.”
Gene looked at him suspiciously, then opened the envelope. “Well, I’ll be damned.”
“I ’spect so,” Al said. “Make it last, there won’t be any more.”
“I’m still gonna kill Barrington,” Gene said. “You want some of that?”
“Nope, I’m out of the Gene Ryan business,” Al said. He tossed off the drink that had been set down for him. “You’re on your own now, Gene, I don’t wanna know you no more.” He turned and walked out of the bar and back to his new Mercedes. He headed to the Lincoln Tunnel and New Jersey, where there was a girl he wanted to see.
Ryan looked into the envelope again; he had never seen that much money all at once—not that was his. “Arnie,” he said to the bartender, “what’s my tab?”
Arnie picked up a small ledger and ran a finger down a page. “Two sixty-one,” he said. “Call it two-fifty.”
Ryan retrieved three hundreds from the envelope and handed them to Arnie. “The rest is yours,” he said.
“Hey, thanks, Gene. How about one on the house?”
Ryan shook his head. “I gotta get sober,” he said. He hopped off the bar stool and walked out of the bar and into the sunshine. If he was going to kill Barrington, he’d have to be sober.
—
Stone walked up to the Four Seasons to have lunch with Herbie Fisher. Over the past few years Herbie, who had been well-qualified as a juvenile delinquent not so long ago, had finished law school, gotten hired at Woodman & Weld as an associate, with Stone’s help, and had been such a rainmaker in the firm that he had made partner in record time. Stone joined Herbie at his regular table.
“Tell me, Stone,” Herbie said, “why don’t you have a regular table here?”
“Because you and Bill Eggers have regular tables. Why would I need one?”
“Fair enough.”
“I want to thank you for producing the paperwork for the Perado closing. I’d like you to go on backing me up. Pepe liked you, and he’s going to move to New York full-time.”
“I thought his son was going to move to New York.”
“Pepe liked New York a lot, and he says his son is a Texan, not a cosmopolitan. He’s already started looking for an apartment to buy.”
“How much work is the account going to be?”
“Quite a lot, I should think. Pepe’s going to start brewing his beer here, so we’ll be billing a lot of hours, what with one thing and another.”
“You’re on.”
“That’s great, Herbie. I’m out of town a lot, and I know the account will be in good hands. You seeing a lot of Heather?”
“Yeah. She hasn’t moved in, but I see her most evenings—and nights.”
“I liked her.”
“She’s very bright and very beautiful, and it’s hard to beat that combination. What’s this I hear about somebody wanting to kill you?”
“That’s over. The guy who wanted me dead was killed by the people he’d hired to do it, who are now fugitives from justice. I don’t anticipate further problems.”
“Would the guy have been Gino Parisi?”
“That’s right.”
“I knew him when I was a kid in the old neighborhood. He was always a real shit—his old man, too.”
“That sort of thing frequently runs in the family.”
“So the heat is off Pepe and his operation, too?”
“That’s right—clear sailing ahead.”
—
Frank Russo sat on the balcony of his condo in Miami Beach, reflecting on his good fortune in real estate investing. He had bought the apartment dirt cheap when the building was shuttered and unoccupied, during the last housing bust. The building was sold out now, and his condo was worth three times what he had paid for it.
Susie came out and joined him on the double chaise longue. “Frankie, I never knew you to sit around doing nothing. You’re not gonna get under my feet, are you?”
“Well, I’m new in town, and I don’t know much about the local action.”
“I might be able to help,” she said.
“Oh, yeah?”
“My girlfriend’s boyfriend is pretty plugged in around town. You two might do some business.”
“What kind of business?”
“The kind that makes lots of money, judging from the way he spends it.”
“What’s his name?”
“Jimmy James.”
“Is he connected?”
“You mean, like, to-the-mob connected?”
“Yeah.”
“I get the impression that he knows those guys, sometimes does business with them, but he’s independent.”
“Then I’d like to meet him.”
She got up. “I’ll go call Gina, see when they’re free.”
“That’d be good. Oh, by the way, my last name is now Riggs.”
“Whatever you say, baby.”
Frank lay back and watched the yachts move up and down the waterway.
Susie returned. “Tonight at seven. They’ll pick us up.”
“Sounds good.”
—
A new BMW pulled up to where Frank and Susie waited, and a handsome man in a good suit got out and shook Frank’s hand. “I’m Jim James,” he said.
“Frank Riggs.”
Everybody got into the car, and they made first-date conversation on the way to the restaurant, which was very fancy American; Frank had expected Italian, somehow. They ordered drinks, and the two men had a chance to talk. Frank was impressed that Jim didn’t have a New York accent and that he spoke in complete sentences, with very little slang. He was going to have to work on his own speech, if he wanted to do well down here.
“You Italian?” Jim asked.
“Used to be. You?”
“Same here. Tell me,” Jim said, “what were you doing with yourself in New York?”
“I suppose you could say I was an entrepreneur,” Frank replied. “I recently ended a business relationship, and I thought I’d invest my profits in a place with no winter.”
“Did the business relationship end badly?”
“Not for me.”
“Susie has a high opinion of you, Frank, and I have a high opinion of Susie.”
“She has a high opinion of you, too, Jim. Everybody has a high opinion of everybody. I think that’s a good start.”
“Perhaps we could do some business sometime.”
“I’d be interested in that.”
The girls came back and started in on their margaritas.
The evening went swimmingly; the two men split the check and made a date for lunch the next day. Frank and Susie were dropped off at their building.