Dangerfield grinned at that. “I think I’ll have another small one just to settle the nerves,” he said. He poured one, rose, and walked over to a chair, taking the bottle with him. “Care to join me? The hop’s bringing up a refill at ten.”
“I’ve got a plane to catch at ten.”
“There’s another plane at twelve. You’ll catch that one. We’ve got some talking to do.”
“About what?”
“Don’t start being dumb again, just when I got my hopes up,” Dangerfield said as he raised his glass and smiled at it contentedly. “I don’t get much Chivas Regal. Can’t afford it.”
“Neither can I.”
“But Charlie Cole can, huh?”
“So they say.” I got up from the table and moved over to one of the couches.
Dangerfield watched me over the rim of his glass. When he finished his drink he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and put the glass down on the coffee table. “That’ll do for a while. Now we’ll talk a little.”
“What about?”
“About you and Charlie Cole and Angelo Sacchetti. How’s that for a start?”
“That’s all it is.”
Dangerfield leaned back in his chair and looked at the ceiling some more. “You flew in yesterday on United and were met at Dulles by Johnny Ruffo in that hearse that Cole spins around town in. Ruffo dropped you here at the hotel at six-thirty and picked you up an hour later. You got to Cole’s at ten to eight and stayed till eleven when the hearse brought you back here. You didn’t make any phone calls and I didn’t get to bed until two and got up with a hangover at six to get here by eight. I live in Bowie.”
“You told me.”
“But there’s something I didn’t tell you.”
“What?”
“I don’t want anything to happen to Charlie Cole.”
“Neither does he.”
Dangerfield snorted. “You can bet your sweet ass he doesn’t. Outside of you I don’t know of anybody who’s in more trouble than Charlie Cole. Not only has he got Angelo putting the blocks to him somehow or other, but he’s got Joe Lozupone down on him and that’s about as bad as news can get. He tell you about that?”
“A little,” I said.
“You know something,” he said. “I knew a guy that Joe Lozupone got down on back in the early fifties. So you know what Joe did? He invited this guy out to his house for a big party. And when the party was going good down in the rec room all of Joe’s friends took out their knives and carved this guy up into little pieces and then the wives got down on their hands and knees in their party dresses and scrubbed up the mess.”
“So what did you do about it?”
“Me? I didn’t do anything about it. In the first place I couldn’t prove it and in the second place Joe didn’t break any federal law.”
I got up and walked over to the coffee table. “I think I will have a drink.”
“You can fix me another one, too.”
I picked up two of the clean glasses and made another journey to the bathroom for water. When I came back I asked Dangerfield if he wanted his mixed and he said no. I poured him another three fingers and a smaller amount for myself and then added water to mine.
“You don’t look like the type that drinks in the morning, kid,” he said as I handed him his drink.
“Don’t tell the coach.”
“You are healthy looking,” Dangorfield said. “I just wonder how long you’re going to keep that way.”
“I thought you were worried about Cole, not me.”
“I’m not worried about old Charlie. I just don’t want anything to happen to him until he comes through.”
“With what?”
“With some information that he’s been promising for two years.”
“About who?”
“Joe Lozupone, that’s who.”
“He hasn’t got it anymore,” I said and sat back to enjoy Dangerfield’s reaction.
It wasn’t what I expected. He grew very still and then he put his drink down carefully on the table beside his chair. He looked around the room slowly, leaned forward, rested his arms on his thick knees, stared at the carpet, and then asked in a very quiet voice: “What do you mean he hasn’t got it anymore?”
“Angelo’s got it. In Singapore.”
“Cole’s got copies,” Dangerfield insisted to the carpet.
“Not this time.”
“He told you about it, didn’t he?”
“How else would I be telling you?”
“You’re not lying,” he said to the carpet. “No, you’re not lying. You’re not smart enough to lie.”
He looked up then and for a moment I thought that there was anguish in his eyes and on his face, but it passed too quickly for me to be certain. “I’ve never been in that house, you know,” Dangerfield said.
“What house?”
“Cole’s. I’ve been dealing with him for twenty-three years and I’ve never been in his house. I’ve listened to his fuzzy crap about accommodation and compromise in half the crummy bars in half the jerkwater towns in Maryland, and I listened to it because he always came through. I sat there in those lousy bars and drank cheap whiskey and listened to his crap about ‘shared goals’ and about how ‘appeasement is not bad in itself if it works’ because I knew at the end of the crap he’d hand over what I was after and then ask some two-bit favor in return. And all the time I was buttering him up for just one thing. Just one goddamned thing.”
“Joe Lozupone,” I said.
Dangerfield stared at me with reproach. “You think it’s funny, don’t you? You think it’s really funny that I should get shook just because something I’ve been after for twenty-five years has been snatched away. You got a real sense of humor, Cauthorne.”
“Twenty-five years is a long time, and I didn’t say it was funny.”
Dangerfield started talking to the carpet again, holding his big domed head in his hands. “It started during World War II. Blackmarket gasoline stamps, B stamps, but you’re too young to remember about that.”
“I remember,” I said. “My old man had a C sticker on his car.”
“I got on to Lozupone then. He had more than a hundred million gallons worth of B stamps that he was peddling, but he dumped them wholesale on small timers before we could get him. We busted it up all right, but we never got close to Lozupone.”
“Have another drink,” I said. “It’ll cheer you up.”
Dangerfield went on talking to the carpet. “Then after the war he started branching out. The bureau kept me on him — on all of them. I made the contact with Cole and with what I had and with what he gave me I knocked a lot of them off, but I never got close to Lozupone and he kept on getting bigger and bigger. He’s in everything now. Trucking firms, clothing manufacturing, banks, unions, even investment houses, and all the time it’s still rolling in from the gambling and the loansharking and the garbage collecting and God knows what else. Millions he’s got. And you know something, we’re just about the same age, me and Lozupone. He sent his daughter to Wellesley and I’m lucky to get mine into the University of Maryland. He’s got an eighth grade education and I got a law degree. He’s got at least thirty-five million stashed away and I’ve got $473.89 in my checking account and maybe two grand in savings bonds which I haven’t had to cash yet.”
“You’re on the wrong side,” I said.
He looked at me then and shook his head sadly. “Maybe you’re right, Cauthorne, but it’s too late to switch now. Take a good look at me. Twenty-five years of it, screwing around with punks and chiselers and half-witted hoods. It’s rubbed off on me. I talk like them. I even think like them. Christ, don’t kid yourself that I didn’t know what you were expecting when I said ‘FBI’ through the door. You were expecting something young and neat with lots of hair in a nice suit with manners to match. And what do you get? You got a fifty-one-year-old fat man in a Robert Hall outfit with a pig’s manners, that’s what you got.”
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