Next he called a professional who lived in Yonkers and gave him the name and address of a purser. The professional was to pick up his advance from the office of Imports, Inc., and do a job with a purser.
A phone call to Alverato’s Construction Enterprises, Inc., got him the telephone number of the accountant for the firm.
“This is Benny Tapkow I’m sending a man from the O’Toole firm over to your place. Get your books from the safe and wait for the man in your car. I’m setting up a place for you so you guys can get to work on those books starting right now and all night. You heard about Alverato?”
“Yes, sir.”
The next call was to Squinty Gold, who was head man for the pushers; then to Edna Convair, who handled the houses; a call to Lucky Black to tell him to shut down every game he had floating around town. There were a few others, all with the same kind of message: Pull in all operations and lie low. They said yes, sir, Mr. Tapkow, and some of them called him Benny.
Two hours later he was through. He did just one more thing. He got an ax from a servant and knocked the button off a little safe behind a bookshelf. Benny took out what he found there and the folded list of Italian cities and put everything in other places of his own choosing.
Then he ate in the kitchen, smoked two cigarettes, and called Scotty again. Still nothing on Pat. He went upstairs to bed.
The extra lay in a wastebasket somewhere. “Dope Ring Smashed,” it had said.
They all got another phone call from Benny at eight the next morning. At ten they were in the office of Imports, Inc., where Benny showed them into a room to the rear.
He wasn’t the tallest in the bunch and he didn’t have a big voice, but they sat and listened because he never doubted that they would. Lucky Black was there, and Edna Convair, Squinty Gold, De Marco, and a man who had come in from Saratoga. One of the Levinsons had come too.
“Where’s Hogan?” Benny asked.
They shrugged, not knowing why Hogan hadn’t shown up.
“Everything under control, like I said last night?” Benny looked from one to the other.
They nodded.
“It’s gonna cost a fortune,” Edna said. She recrossed her legs. They were the only things that hadn’t changed on her through the years.
“It’s worth it.” Benny tapped on a newspaper that stuck out of his pocket. “Now they found some dead guys out in the country. Not more than five miles from the Beau Brummel. They’re trying to tie it up with the other thing, so for a while we lie low.”
“Takes me more than a day,” Squinty Gold said. His pushers were all over the area. “Besides losing customers, maybe. Perhaps-”
“Haul them in fast or you’ll lose more than customers, Gold. Whatever you got in storage, keep it there. When I tell you to push it again, the price will be double, and when that H is gone there’ll be a new supply ready. I’m arranging it now.”
“Like the last time. Big Al arranged it the last time and look what happened.”
“Big Al is dead,” Benny said. “And so is the guy who tipped the deal.”
They looked at each other and understood.
“Anybody we know?” Edna asked.
“Pendleton.”
They understood that too, because Benny was telling them and nobody had seen a thing about it in any of the papers.
“What about the bail, Levinson?”
“They haven’t set it yet, but judge Nichols-”
“He’s getting the pressure now. I sent a man over this morning.”
For a while longer he gave them instructions, then he left because he had planned a visit to Hogan.
They stayed after he had gone and Squinty Gold said, “Well?”
“Well what? He’s it.”
“I’ll go along with that,” Lucky Black said. “He’s got the pipeline now and it doesn’t look like he makes mistakes.”
They all thought of Hogan, who hadn’t shown up at the meeting.
“And no more Pendleton,” Edna said.
“I’m nervous,” De Marco said.
The man who had come in from Saratoga cleared his throat and they all looked at him. “You ain’t the only one who’s nervous,” he said, but his own voice was steady. “It’s all the same to me. But they’re nervous out West.”
“Out West?”
“They figure all these goings on have left a hole in the syndicate. First Old Man Ager, then Big Al, then Pendleton. They’re nervous.” He crossed his arms.
“But there’s Benny,” somebody said.
“Who’s Benny? They never heard of no Benny.”
“Perhaps we should tell him,” Levinson said. “I have a feeling-”
“You wanna get killed?”
Levinson shrugged. “Tapkow looks good to me,” he said, and then he leaned back, figuring he’d just listen some more.
“Perhaps he looks too good.” Lucky Black looked from one to the other. “Perhaps out West they figure how come there’s suddenly a Benny Tapkow here and just a minute ago there was a big hole?”
“I’m staying out of this,” said the man from Saratoga. “Just thought I’d mention it.” He lit a cigarette and made a noise when he blew out the match. “Just thought I’d mention it because they’re sending somebody over.”
“They’re what? Who’re they sending?”
“The syndicate’s sending them. Just two men from out West.”
“So-is he in or out?”
They didn’t know, one way or the other. And they didn’t feel like deciding, one way or the other.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
When Benny had finished with business he had stayed in town till late, but he hadn’t done any better than Scotty. He drove back to Westchester, tired but unable to sleep.
He’d done everything right, done it the way to make it pay off, and in the end there wasn’t a mistake he hadn’t corrected. Except Pat.
He stood by the open window above the black park that had once belonged to Big Al Alverato. Benny looked down to the stone terrace reaching out into the lawn and he thought that some night he’d have to sit down there on the terrace and relax.
The curtains billowed in slow curves but he didn’t notice. And he didn’t hear the door because she had never been in the habit of closing doors. “Lover.” She said it with that metallic ring.
He turned slowly, half wondering if he had heard right, and then the stiffness went out of his face, his shoulders, and his body moved with a deep breath.
“Pat. You’re back.”
Pat looked fine. Nothing wrong with her. She was smiling while she plucked at her ear lobe once and only her eyes looked too alive for her face.
“How are you, chauffeur?” she said. She walked around a chair, around and around, as if she had never seen a chair before. “How are you, chauffeur?”
He had heard her the first time but that type of thing didn’t get to him any more. He wasn’t a chauffeur any more.
“You look ten feet tall,” she said. “Like a freak.”
He saw it was bad, so he went to her with hands out, trying to reach her. “Patty-”
It surprised him when she didn’t step back, just waited. His arms went around her and he looked into her eyes. They were light and shiny. “It’s over, Patty. Now, Patty, now we start,” and he bent his head to her face.
She stood still and waited. He was so close now he couldn’t see her face.
The kiss was like murder. His head jerked back and he saw now how she had pulled back her lips, and where he had tried to kiss her he saw the teeth.
For a moment he didn’t talk. His arms dropped away from her.
“Where’d you get that jolt?”
“Had my head measured.” Her tongue went over her teeth a few times. “Us vipers stick together.”
He ran his hands through his hair with sharp strokes. “Pat. Try to hear me. I know you’re high. I-”
“High! So high you look like a runt!” His face had changed and she took a step back. “You want me to go, Benny?”
He watched her. “Did you come back?”
“Oh, Benny!” she called, and her arms were out. “Oh, Benny!”