"Certainly."
"And he asked me, would I do him the favor of handling his merchandise through Philadelphia. The point of origin is San Juan, Puerto Rico."
"We don't have anybody at the airport…"
"There are two reasons I told this man that I would be happy to help him," Mr. S. said. "The first being that I owe him, and when he asks: And the second being that I did not want it to get around, and it would if I told him, that at this moment, I don't have anybody at the airport."
"I understand."
"So what I want to know from you, Ricco, how are things going with your friend who works at the airport?"
"I had a telephone call at eight this morning, Mr. S. Our friend was up there last night and he had bad luck, and he signed four thousand dollars' worth of markers."
"You ever think, Ricco, that somebody's bad luck is almost always somebody else's good luck?"
"That's very true, Mr. S."
"So you have these markers?"
"No, sir. They're going to have a truck coming to Philadelphia today, this afternoon, and they'll bring the markers with them then."
"I think I would like to have them sooner than that. Do you think you could call them up and ask them, as a favor to you, if they could maybe put somebody in a car and get them down here right away?"
"Or we could send a car up there, Mr. S.," Gian-Carlo suggested.
"Let them, as a favor to Ricco, bring the markers here to the restaurant. Then, when they come, Ricco can call me, at the house, and say that he has the papers you were looking for, and you'll come pick them up, and take them, and also those photographs Joe Fierello took at the car lot, over to Paulo, and then Paulo can go have a talk with this cop."
"Right, Mr. S."
"Where would you say this cop would be, Ricco, in, say, three hours?"
"I don't know, Mr. S., to tell you the truth."
"You know where he is now? I thought I asked you to have that girl keep an eye on him."
"He's at her apartment now, Mr. S. But what you asked is where he' ll be at about noon. He may be there. He may go by his house, Tony told me he had to have new pipes put in, or he may just stay at Tony's apartment until it's time for him to go to work. I just have no way of telling."
"I understand. All right. The first thing you do is you get on the phone and ask them to please send the markers right away to here. Then, can you do this, you call this girl, and you tell her if she can to keep the cop in her apartment as long as she can, and if she can't, she's to call you the minute he leaves, and tell you where he's going. And I think it would be best if you made the calls from a pay phone someplace."
"I'll have to leave the keys to the restaurant with Gian-Carlo, otherwise you'd be locked in."
"There's nobody else here?"
"The fewer people around the better, I always say."
"And you're right. But I'll tell you what. We'll leave, and then you go find a pay phone and make the call, and when you find out something, you call the house and all you have to say is 'yes' or ' no.' You understand?"
"That would work nicely."
"And besides, if I stayed here, I'd eat all this pastry, it's very good, but it's not good for me, too much of it."
"I understand, Mr. S."
Gian-Carlo got up and walked to the door and pushed the curtain aside and looked for Pietro.
"He's not out there, Mr. S."
"He probably had to drive around the block," Mr. S. said. "He'll be there in a minute."
For the next three minutes, Gian-Carlo, at fifteen-second intervals, pushed the curtain aside and looked out to see if Pietro and the Lincoln had returned.
Finally he had.
"He's out there, Mr. S.," Gian-Carlo said.
Mr. Savarese stood up.
"Thank you for the pastry, even if it wasn't good for me," he said, and shook Ricco's hand.
Then he walked out of the restaurant and quickly across the sidewalk and got into the Lincoln. As soon as Gian-Carlo had got in beside him in the front seat, Pietro drove off.
"I'll tell you, Pietro, if anything, it smells worse than before."
"As soon as I get a chance, Mr. S., I'll take it to the garage and swap it."
"Why don't you do that?" Mr. S. replied.
"Anthony, something has come up," Mr. Ricco Baltazari, proprietor of Ristorante Alfredo, said to Mr. Anthony Clark (formerly Cagliari), resident manager of the Oaks and Pines Lodge, over the telephone. Mr. Clark was in his office overlooking the third tee of the Oaks and Pines Championship Golf Course. Mr. Baltazari was in a pay telephone booth in the lower lobby of the First Philadelphia Bank amp; Trust Building on South Broad Street.
"What's that?"
"The financial documents you're going to send me…"
"They're on their way, Ricco, relax. The van just left, not more than a couple minutes ago."
"That's not good enough. It'll take him for fucking ever to get to Philly."
"What do you want me to do, get in my car and bring them my fucking self?" Mr. Clark said, a slight tone of petulance creeping into his voice.
"It's not what I want, Anthony. It's what you know who, our mutual friend, wants," Mr. Baltazari said. "He wants those financial documents right fucking now."
There was a moment's silence.
"The only thing I could do, Ricco," Mr. Clark said, "is put somebody in my car and send him after the van, see if he could catch it, you understand?"
"Do it, Anthony. Our mutual friend is very anxious to get his hands on those financial documents just as soon as he can."
"If I had known he wanted those documents in a hurry, I would have brought them myself, you understand that?"
"If I had known he wanted them, I would have come up and got the fuckers myself," Mr. Baltazari replied. "I just left him. He said I should tell you he wants them, as a special favor, right now."
"I'll do what I can, Ricco. You want I should call our friend and tell him what I'm doing, in case my guy can't catch the van? Or will you do that?"
"He don't give a shit what you're doing. All he wants is the fucking markers. How you do that is your business."
"I tell my guy to take them right to our mutual friend?"
"You tell your guy to bring them to me, at the restaurant. When I got them, I'm to call our friend."
"Ricco, I would be very unhappy if I was to learn that you weren't telling me the whole truth about this."
"Anthony, get your guy on the way, for Christ's sake!"
"Yeah," Mr. Clark said, and hung up.
Mr. Clark took a pad of Oaks and Pines notepaper from his desk, and a pen from his desk set.
On one sheet of paper, he wrote, "Give Tommy the envelope I gave you, A.C." and on the other he wrote Ristorante Alfredo, Ricco Baltazari, and the address and telephone number.
Then Mr. Clark went down to the money room off the casino. There he found Mr. Thomas Dolbare sitting all alone on one of the stools in front of the money counting table, on which now sat a small stack of plastic bank envelopes. Mr. Dolbare, a very large and muscular twentyeight-year-old, was charged with the security of last night's take until the messenger arrived from Wilkes-Barre to take it for deposit into six different, innocently named bank accounts in Hazelton and Wilkes-Barre.
"Tommy," Mr. Clark said, "what I want you to do is take my car and chase down the van. He just left. He always goes down Route 611. Stop him, give him this, and he'll give you an envelope. You then take the envelope to Mr. Baltazari. I wrote down the address and phone number."
Mr. Clark gave Mr. Dolbare both notes.
"Right."
"As soon as you have it, go to a pay phone and call me. Or if you can't catch the van, call me and tell me that too."
"I'll catch it," Mr. Dolbare said confidently. He was pleased that he was being given greater responsibility than sitting around in a fucking windowless room watching money bags.