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I would have liked to ask Gazzo about what he knew, about why the police were so sure Weiss was their man, about the circumstances and the alibis of others, but you don’t ask those things when you’re being told that the higher powers don’t want you around. I would have to dig myself-especially into that $25,000 Weiss said he had won from Walter Radford.

Cellars Johnson sat alone at the green table in the cellar on Houston Street where he holds his steady game. He was dealing poker hands to himself.

“Take a hand,” Cellars said.

Cellars squeezed his cards as if it were 4:00 A.M. in his regular game and all the night’s winnings were in the pot. His black face sweated, but his eyes were a blank wall. In a real game even his sweat glands would have been under control, and there is nothing that happens around the Village that Cellars doesn’t know.

“Have you seen Sammy Weiss?” I asked.

Cellars studied his cards. I had jacks over fives.

“Bet fifty,” Cellars said. “I saw him maybe two A.M. last night.”

“Raise fifty,” I said. It’s easy to gamble big in the mind, for fun. “Did he play last night?”

“He couldn’t show the cash.”

“How much cash do you ask now?”

“A hundred to sit down,” Cellars said. “Gimme two cards.”

I took one card myself. I still had jacks and fives.

“Bet the pot,” Cellars said.

“Raise the pot,” I said. The big plunger. “I heard Weiss won $25,000 from a kid named Walter Radford.”

Cellars didn’t seem to hear me. He tossed in his cards. “Let’s see what you raised a pot bet on.”

I showed him my two pair. It was just a game for laughs. Cellars didn’t laugh.

“You don’t even see a pot bet by a two-card draw with a lousy two pair,” Cellars instructed. “I folded three queens.”

He was telling me that in a real game I might get away with that kind of playing once, maybe twice, but in the end I’d be begging cab fare. Cellars can’t play bad poker even for fun.

I said, “You know anything about this Walter Radford?”

Cellars gathered the cards. “You for or against Weiss?”

“For, I think.”

He began to shuffle. He needs the cards in his hands. “A party named Radford had Costa’s place up in North Chester closed down ten months ago.”

“Who’s Costa?”

“Carmine Costa. Independent operator. No book or numbers. A casino operation with some private games.”

“Why was he closed?”

“Who knows? You know Westchester, Dan. Costa opened up in the next town.” Cellars began to deal solitaire. “Weiss ain’t such a bad guy. I hear the heat’s on him big. Freedman been around twice.” He looked up at me. “Paul Baron, too.”

“Paul Baron?” I said. The name rang a faint bell, but I couldn’t place it.

“Alias The Baron, Baron Paul Ragotzy, some other names,” Cellars said. “A con artist; the badger games. He handles the cards, too.”

“He was looking for Weiss?”

“Once last night, and once today.”

“What did he want?”

“Just Weiss.”

“How about a woman? A redhead, tall, probably a showgirl or stripper in some club.”

Cellars shook his head. “No, just Freedman and Baron. Only one of Baron’s women is a tall redhead. Misty Dawn. She works the Fifth Street Club.”

I stood up. “Thanks, Cellars.”

Cellars nodded, but he was thinking. I waited. He seemed to be making some decision.

“Weiss ain’t such a bad guy,” Cellars said again.

I still waited. I knew that Cellars was deciding to tell me something. It was a hard decision for him.

“There was a game, about two months ago,” Cellars said. “I played. Baron was there. He brought a kid. Walter Radford IV. I remember that number part, you know?”

“Thanks again,” I said.

“Sure,” Cellars said. “Come back for the action.”

The snow had stopped, and the Fifth Street Club was open. I went down into the dim light of the deserted bar and ordered an Irish. It was just too early for the cocktail hour. In the main room one drunken group was trying to eat what had to be a very late lunch. The bartender had cunning eyes and a loose mouth.

“I’d like to buy Misty Dawn a drink,” I said.

“So would a lot of guys.”

I laid a five-dollar bill beside my whisky. In a club Like that one, the girls usually had orders to drink with any customer, but it was early. The five was to make the bartender eager to help me. He took the bill and vanished toward the small stage. In the main room the waiters leaned on the walls and yawned.

The bartender returned. He nodded. A minute or so later I sensed someone come out of the curtained doorway at stage left. She slid onto the stool beside me in a dead heat with a whisky sour from the bartender.

“Hello,” she said.

Her voice was deep and rough from shouting songs into noisy rooms. She wore her full work make-up, with mounds of orange-red hair piled on her head. Her body was trim and inviting in a black velvet leotard and net tights.

She smiled at me. “I’m Misty Dawn, Mr…?”

“Fortune,” I said. “I’m looking for Sammy Weiss.”

She stood up. “Get lost.”

“I want to help Sammy.”

Her eyes were black in the dim light. They might have been brown, or green, or gray if I could have seen them.

“I don’t know Sammy Weiss,” she said.

“How about a Radford? Jonathan or Walter.”

“How about the Mayor?” she said. “What are you, mister?”

“A friend of Sammy Weiss,” I said. “How about Paul Baron? He wants Weiss, too.”

“Okay, I know Paul Baron. That’s one out of four.”

“Do you know what Baron wants with Weiss?”

“I don’t even know if Paul knows the guy.”

“Yes you do,” I said. “I saw you with Weiss on Eighth Avenue last night.”

“No you didn’t,” she said, and walked away.

I watched her go. She walked nicely in that leotard. I watched until she went through the door backstage. Then I paid and left.

5

There were plenty of Radfords in the telephone book, and enough Walter Radfords, but only one Walter Radford IV. Those numerals seemed to mean a lot to the Radfords. The address was Gramercy Park.

I was in Mary’s Italian Restaurant just off Seventh Avenue when I looked up Walter Radford, and I stopped for some shrimp marinara. When I went out into the street again to find a taxi, it was dark and quiet and ten degrees colder since the snow had stopped.

The taxi dropped me in front of a new and shiny building, all glass and red brick, that was not exactly on Gramercy Park although it had the address. The lobby was elegant but small, and there was no doorman. Walter Radford IV had apartment 12. I rode the stainless steel elevator to the third floor.

There was no answer to my ringing. I looked up and down the empty corridor. The door had an ordinary spring lock, with enough gap between door and frame. I took out the stiff plastic rectangle I carry, slipped it between door and frame and against the lock, and pressed hard. I worked the rectangle. The lock gave with a click and I skinned a knuckle.

Inside I switched on the light. The risk was worth not being taken for a burglar. It was a gaudy apartment of chrome, plastic and bad modern-designed without art and selected without taste. The main room was a mess, as if it was lived in by someone who was rebelling against his mother who had made him pick up his toys and dirty clothes when he was a boy. A poker table was strewn with cards, and a toy roulette wheel on the couch was surrounded by loose chips.

I went to work looking through the chests, bookcases, table drawers, and the one desk. For what? Something to connect Walter Radford to Paul Baron or anyone else except Weiss. I didn’t find much: books about gambling; decks of cards; Playbills; dirty paper napkins with figures scrawled on them; letters that proved that the Radford-Ames family was large and that Walter had a lot of friends. From the way the letters read, the friends were from prep school and college and hadn’t changed much.