“Pour me one, would ya?”
Maso turned, saw Joe sitting on the couch by the window. He had his Savage .32 sitting on his knee with a Maxim silencer screwed onto the muzzle.
Maso wasn’t surprised. Not even a little bit. Just curious about one thing.
“Where were you hiding?” He poured Joe a glass and brought it to him.
“Hiding?” Joe took the glass.
“When Seppe cleared the room?”
Joe used his .32 to point Maso to a chair. “I wasn’t hiding. I was sitting on the bed over there. He walked in and I asked him if he wanted to work for someone who’d be alive tomorrow.”
“That’s all it took?” Maso said.
“It took you wanting to place a fucking dunce like Digger in a position of power. We had a great thing here. A great thing. And you come in and fuck it all up in one day.”
“That’s human nature, isn’t it?”
“Fixing what ain’t broke?” Joe said.
Maso nodded.
“Well, shit,” Joe said, “it doesn’t have to be.”
“No,” Maso said, “but it usually is.”
“You know how many people died today because of you and your fucking greed? You, the ‘simple Wop from Endicott Street’? Well, you ain’t that.”
“Someday, maybe you’ll have a son and then you’ll understand.”
“Will I?” Joe said. “And what will I understand?”
Maso shrugged, as if to put it into words would sully it. “How is my son?”
“By now?” Joe shook his head. “Gone.”
Maso pictured Digger lying facedown on a floor in the next room over, a bullet in the back of his head, the blood pooling on the carpet. He was surprised by how deep and suddenly the grief overtook him. It was so black, so black and hopeless and horrific.
“I’d always wanted you for a son,” he said to Joe and heard his voice break. He looked down at his drink.
“Funny,” Joe said, “I never wanted you for a father.”
The bullet entered Maso’s throat. The last thing he ever saw was a drop of his blood landing in his glass of anisette.
Then it all went back to black.
When Maso fell, he dropped the glass and landed on his knees and his head hit the coffee table. It lay on the right cheek, empty eye staring at the wall to his left. Joe stood and looked at the silencer he’d picked up at the hardware store for three bucks that afternoon. Rumor was Congress was going to raise the price to $200 and then outlaw them entirely.
Pity.
Joe shot Maso through the top of the head just to be sure.
Out in the hall, they’d disarmed the Pescatore guns without a fight as Joe suspected they might. Men didn’t like to fight for a man who thought so little of their lives he’d put an idiot like Digger in charge. Joe exited Maso’s suite and closed the doors behind him and looked at everyone standing around, unsure what would happen next. Dion exited Digger’s room, and they stood in the hallway for a moment, thirteen men and a few machine guns.
“I don’t want to kill anyone,” Joe said. He looked at Anthony Servidone. “You want to die?”
“No, Mr. Coughlin, I do not want to die.”
“Anyone?” Joe looked around the hallway and got a bunch of solemn head shakes. “If you want to go back to Boston, head back with my blessing. You want to stay down here, get some sun, meet some pretty ladies, we got jobs for you. Ain’t too many people offering those these days, so let us know if you’re interested.”
Joe couldn’t think of anything else to say. He shrugged, and he and Dion got on the lift and took it down to the lobby.
A week later, in New York, Joe and Dion walked into an office at the back of an actuarial firm in Midtown Manhattan and sat across from Lucky Luciano.
Joe’s theory that the most terrifying men were also the most terrified went right out the window. There was no fear in Luciano. There was very little that resembled emotion, in fact, except a hint of black and endless rage in the furthest depths of his dead sea gaze.
The only thing this man knew about terror was how to infect other people with it.
He was dressed impeccably and would have been a handsome man if his skin didn’t look like veal that had been pounded with a meat tenderizer. His right eye drooped from a failed hit on him back in ’29 and his hands were large and looked like they could squeeze a skull until it popped like a tomato.
“You two hoping to walk back out that door?” he said when they took their seats.
“Yes, sir.”
“Then tell me why I gotta replace my Boston management group.”
They did, and as they talked, Joe kept looking for some indication in those dark eyes that he saw their point or didn’t, but it was like talking to a marble floor—the only thing you got back, if you caught the light right, was your own reflection.
When they finished, Lucky stood and looked out the window at Sixth Avenue. “You’ve made a lot of noise down there. What happened to that Holy Roller who died? Wasn’t her father police chief?”
“They forced him into retirement,” Joe said. “Last I heard he was at some kind of sanitarium. He can’t hurt us.”
“But his daughter did. And you let her. That’s why the word on you is that you’re soft. Not a coward. I didn’t say that. Everyone knows how close you got to take care of that yokel back in ’30 and that ship heist took brass ones. But you didn’t take care of that ’shiner back in ’31 and you let a dame—a fucking dame, Coughlin—block your casino play.”
“That’s true,” Joe said. “I got no excuse.”
“No, you don’t,” Luciano said. He looked across the desk at Dion. “What would you have done with the ’shiner?”
Dion looked uncertainly at Joe.
“Don’t you look at him,” Luciano said. “You look at me and you tell me straight.”
But Dion continued to look at Joe until Joe said, “Tell him the truth, D.”
Dion turned to Lucky. “I would have turned out his fucking lights, Mr. Luciano. His sons’ too.” He snapped his fingers. “Taken out the whole family.”
“And the Holy Roller dame?”
“Her I would have disappeared-like.”
“Why?”
“Give her people the option of turning her into a saint. They can tell themselves she’s immaculately concepted up to heaven, whatever. Meanwhile, they’d damn well know we chopped her up and fed her to the reptiles, so they’d never fuck with us again, but the rest of the time, they’d gather in her name and sing her praises.”
Luciano said, “You’re the one Pescatore said was a rat.”
“Yup.”
“Never made sense to us.” He said to Joe, “Why would you knowingly trust a rat who sent you up the river for two years?”
Joe said, “I wouldn’t.”
Luciano nodded. “That’s what we thought when we tried to talk the old man out of the hit.”
“But you sanctioned it.”
“We sanctioned it if you refused to use our trucks and our unions in your new liquor business.”
“Maso never brought that up to me.”
“No?”
“No, sir. He just said I was going to take orders from his son and I had to kill my friend.”
Luciano stared at him for a long time.
“All right,” he said eventually, “make your proposal.”
“Make him boss.” Joe jerked his thumb at Dion.
Dion said, “What?”
Luciano smiled for the first time. “And you’ll stay on as consigliere?”
“Yes.”
Dion said, “Hold on a second. Just hold on.”
Luciano looked at him and the smile died on his face.
Dion read the tea leaves fast. “I’d be honored.”
Luciano said, “Where you from?”