From there Frank went to the Chemical Bank in the Bronx where the banker he’d seen at Bumpy’s wake watched, at Frank’s invitation, as Frank emptied packet after packet of cash from a safety deposit box into a briefcase.
One packet Frank slipped into the banker’s jacket pocket.
“Get yourself a new suit,” Frank said with a wisp of a smile. Then he added: “Now’s a good time to talk business.”
In an office arrayed with the portraits of dignified white bankers going back fifty years or more, the banker typed out a Chemical Bank check for Frank Lucas in the amount of $400,000.
“You’re not nervous,” the banker said, “traveling alone to Southeast Asia?”
“No.”
“Well, I would be.”
Frank took the check, folded it to fit in his billfold, where he put it. “Brad, I never went to school, not for a day. But I got a PhD in ‘Street.’ ”
“These are different streets, Frank.”
“Thanks for your concern. But I’ll make out.”
4. Past Due
The next afternoon, gray but not as cold as some recent days, Richie stood with his ex-wife Laurie in a Newark park, where their five-year-old son Michael could play in a grassy area with other youngsters, and not be party to their discussions about his welfare and future.
Already their talk wasn’t going well, and when a jet screamed overhead and then faded away, the interruption was almost a relief; that Frank Lucas was on that jet, heading to the Far East, was a small irony Richie was not privy to.
“I’m sorry, babe,” he said.
Laurie gave him a sideways glare that told him he’d long since lost the right to call her that. She was only one of a dozen moms in the park today, but probably the best-looking, with her curly dark hair brushing her shoulders, and a peasant blouse and slacks indicating what was still a nice body.
“You could have told me sooner,” she said, watching their boy frolic with other kids, their laughter and screams tinged with the happy hysteria of childhood.
“I’m sorry.” He sighed, shrugged. “I know. But it’s the big exam. It’s what all my work’s been leading up to.”
“I don’t know, Richie.”
“Can’t be avoided.” His hands were in his pockets and he was rocking on his heels; his eyes took routine stock of those other moms — one of whom rivaled Laurie at that, a hot young blonde. Got knocked up in high school maybe, and popped one out. “Next weekend I’m open. Be able to take Mike, no problem.”
When he glanced back at his own wife, ex-wife, she was studying him the way a lab student eyes a slide with some squirmy thing on it, obviously aware he’d been sizing up the blonde competition.
Maybe that was why something else was in Laurie’s expression, too: not disgust exactly, more... weariness.
Somehow that was worse than disgust to Richie; anger, disgust, were strong responses, emotional responses. Now, after all the loving and hating and cooing and yelling it had come down to this: she was tired of his cheating ass.
“Look... Rich.” She shrugged, sent her eyes toward their son. “The thing is, I’m... I’m moving.”
His forehead frowned, his mouth smiled. “What do you mean, moving?”
Her eyes came back to him, pointedly. “What do you think, moving? Pack your shit and get in the car and go, moving. Christ, Rich.”
“Where to?”
She laughed bitterly. “To the St. Regis, maybe. What the hell do you care.”
“I care.”
“Right. My sister’s.”
“Your sister’s. Your sister lives in Vegas.”
Laurie grunted a tiny laugh. “Thanks for paying attention. I didn’t know my family even made it on your radar.”
He was shaking his head now, grinning, astounded. “Vegas? You want to take our kid to Vegas?”
The crunch and snap of breaking glass interrupted his words and his thoughts. He glanced over and a quartet of white kids were breaking pop bottles, hurling them onto the concrete path.
Richie picked up the thread, and tried to keep his tone civil. “Come on, Laurie. Be reasonable. You can’t move to Vegas.”
“Sure I can.”
“Not with Michael, anyway.”
Her eyebrows arched as she turned to him again. “Oh, there’s another option? What else am I supposed to do with him? Leave him with you? There’s a picture. You could turn the closet into his bedroom, long as you keep your box of weed on the top shelf where he can’t get to it.”
“That’s not fair...”
More glass shattering seemed to mirror the state of his mind, and he yelled over to the smart asses, “Hey! You want to keep it down over there? Find a new hobby!”
The teenagers looked at him, started laughing and went on smashing the bottles.
Doing his best to ignore this shit, finding it hard to think much less reason with Laurie over the constant brittle background noise, Richie said evenly, “You know we have joint custody, Laurie. Court won’t allow you to drag him out of state like that.”
“Are you sure?”
His eyes tightened. “I’m sure I won’t.”
She smiled at him but it was mostly a sneer. “You? It’s up to you, now?”
He slapped his chest. “You drag him out there, when am I supposed to see my goddamn son?”
Her eyes were wide and she was smiling, but it had nothing to do with the usual reasons for smiling; she was shaking her head, as if having witnessed something amazing.
She said, “How about last weekend? Or this weekend? Only you had to cancel. You had work. You had school. Maybe you had a bimbo or two, too.”
Michael, playing with two other little boys, heard the edge in his mother’s voice and turned to them with a pitiful little frozen smile.
Caught cold, both parents smiled and waved and nodded, and the boy — not entirely convinced, but placated, anyway — returned to his play.
Richie did his best to keep it low key. “Laurie, please. You can’t be serious about raising Michael in Las Vegas. What kind of place is that to—”
“Oh, and this is a good environment?” She looked at the sky for support. “What could I be thinking of? Mike would miss out on all your colorful friends, wise guys you grew up with, cop pals who’re even sleazier.” She gazed across the park toward the colorless Newark skyline. “Far as I’m concerned, there’re less creeps per square inch in Vegas than in this godforsaken armpit.”
Now Richie was shaking his head; it was his turn to feel amazed. “Vegas is the most mobbed-up town in America, Laurie! What’s Mike gonna grow up to be in that cesspool? What the hell are you thinking?”
Her eyes bored into him and through him. “I’m thinking, Richie, of him. Not you. Not me. And not us. But Michael.”
Another bottle breaking put an exclamation mark after Laurie’s already pointed words; the noise was driving him fucking crazy... Little pricks...
“Goddamn it,” he said. He raised a finger to Laurie, as if telling a dog to stay, and he strode over toward the teenagers, kids wearing letter jackets and smartass expressions.
Richie was a big guy, but there were four of them, who laughed as he approached, trading looks with one another before they all glared mockingly his way: What are you gonna do about it, old man? Four against one!
“I told you nice,” Richie said evenly, “to shut the fuck up.”