Every Dead Thing

Chapter 10

 

 

 

* * *

 

 

 

We walked a block or two to a late–night bar and diner Angel knew. Louis strolled a few yards ahead of us, the late evening crowds parting before him like the Red Sea before Moses. Once or twice women glanced at him with interest. The men mostly kept their eyes on the ground, or found something suddenly interesting in the boarded–up storefronts or the night sky.

 

From inside the bar came the sound of a vaguely folky singer performing open–guitar surgery on Neil Young’s “Only Love Can Break Your Heart.” It didn’t sound like the song was going to pull through.

 

“He plays like he hates Neil Young,” said Angel as we entered.

 

Ahead of us, Louis shrugged. “Neil Young heard that shit, he’d probably hate himself.”

 

 

 

We took a booth. The owner, a fat, dyspeptic man named Ernest, shambled over to take our order. Usually the waitresses in Ernest’s took the orders, but Angel and Louis commanded a degree of respect, even here.

 

“Hey, Ernest,” said Angel, “how’s business?”

 

 

 

“If I was an undertaker, people’d stop dying,” replied Ernest. “And before you ask, my old lady’s still ugly.” It was a long–established exchange.

 

“Shit, you been married forty years,” said Angel. “She ain’t gonna get no better lookin’ now.”

 

 

 

Angel and Louis ordered club sandwiches and Ernest wandered away. “I was a kid and looked like him, I’d cut my dick off and make money singin’ castrato, ‘cause it ain’t gonna be no use no other way,” remarked Angel.

 

“Bein’ ugly ain’t done you no harm,” said Louis.

 

“I don’t know.” Angel grinned. “I was better looking, I coulda screwed a white guy.”

 

 

 

They stopped bickering and we waited for the singer to put Neil Young out of his misery. It was strange meeting these two, now that I was no longer a cop. When we had encountered one another before — in Willie’s garage, or over coffee, or in Central Park if Angel had some useful information to impart, or if he simply wanted to meet to talk, to ask after Susan and Jennifer — there had been an awkwardness, a tension between us, especially if Louis was nearby. I knew what they had done, what Louis, I believed, still did, silent partnerships in assorted restaurants, dealerships, and Willie Brew’s garage notwithstanding.

 

On this occasion, that tension was no longer present. Instead, I felt for the first time the strength of the bond of friendship that had somehow grown between Angel and me. More than that, from both of them I felt a sense of concern, of regret, of humanity, of trust. They would not be here, I knew, if they felt otherwise.

 

But maybe there was something more, something I had only begun to perceive. I was a cop’s nightmare. Cops, their families, their wives and children, are untouchables. You have to be crazy to go after a cop, crazier still to take out his loved ones. These are the assumptions we live by, the belief that after a day spent looking at the dead, questioning thieves and rapists, pushers and pimps, we can return to our own lives, knowing that our families are somehow apart from all this, and that through them we can remain apart from it too.

 

But that belief system had been shaken by the deaths of Jennifer and Susan. Someone wasn’t respecting the rules, and when no easy answer was forthcoming, when no perp with a grudge could conveniently be apprehended, enabling all that had taken place to be explained away, another reason had to be found: I had somehow drawn it on myself, and on those closest to me. I was a good cop who was well on the way to becoming a drunk. I was falling apart and that made me weak, and someone had exploited that weakness. Other cops looked at me and they saw not a fellow officer in need, but a source of infection, of corruption. No one was sorry to see me go, maybe not even Walter.

 

And yet what had taken place had somehow brought me closer to both Angel and Louis. They had no illusions about the world in which they lived, no philosophical constructions that allowed them to be at once a part of, and apart from, that world. Louis was a killer: he couldn’t afford delusions of that kind. Because of the closeness of the bond that existed between them, Angel couldn’t afford those delusions either. Now they had also been taken away from me, like scales falling from my eyes, leaving me to reestablish myself, to find a new place in the world.

 

Angel picked up an abandoned paper from the booth next door and glanced at the headline. “You see this?” I looked and nodded. A guy had tried to pull some heroic stunt during a bank raid in Flushing earlier in the day and ended up with both barrels of a sawed–off emptied into him. The papers and news bulletins were full of it.

 

“Here’s some guys out doin’ a job,” began Angel. “They don’t want to hurt nobody, they just want to go in, take the money — which is insured anyway, so what does the bank care? — and get out again. They only got the guns ‘cause no one’s gonna take them seriously otherwise. What else they gonna use? Harsh words?”

 

 

 

“But there’s always gotta be some asshole who thinks he’s immortal ‘cause he’s not dead yet. This guy, he’s young, keeps himself in good condition, thinks he’s gonna get more * than Long Dong Silver if he busts up the bank raid and saves the day. Look at him: realtor, twenty–nine, single, pulling down one–fifty a year, and he gets a hole blown in him bigger’n the Holland Tunnel. Lance Petersen.” He shook his head in wonderment. “I never met anyone called Lance in my whole life.”

 

 

 

“That’s ‘cause they all dead,” said Louis, glancing seemingly idly around the room. “Fuckers keep standing up in banks and getting shot. Guy was probably the last Lance left alive.”

 

 

 

The clubs arrived and Angel started eating. He was the only one who did. “So how you doin’?”

 

 

 

“Okay,” I said. “Why the ambush?”

 

 

 

“You don’t write, you don’t call.” He smiled wryly. Louis glanced at me with mild interest and then returned his attention to the door, the other tables, the doors to the restrooms.

 

“You been doin’ some work for Benny Low, I hear. What you doin’ working for that fat piece of shit?”

 

 

 

“Passing time.”

 

 

 

“You want to pass time, stick pins in your eyes. Benny’s just using up good air.”

 

 

 

“Come on, Angel, get to it. You’re rattling away and Louis here is acting like he expects the Dillinger gang to walk in and spray the counter.”

 

 

 

Angel put down his half–eaten section of club and dabbed almost daintily at his mouth with a napkin. “I hear you’ve been asking after some girlfriend of Stephen Barton’s. Some people are very curious to know why that might be.”

 

 

 

“Such as?”

 

 

 

“Such as Bobby Sciorra, I hear.”

 

 

 

I didn’t know if Bobby Sciorra was psychotic or not, but he was a man who liked killing and had found a willing employer in old man Ferrera. Emo Ellison could testify to the likely result of Bobby Sciorra taking an interest in one’s activities. I had a suspicion that Ollie Watts, in his final moments, had found that out as well.

 

“Benny Low was talking about some kind of trouble between the old man and Sonny,” I said. “ ‘Fuckin’ goombas fighting among themselves’ was how he put it.”

 

 

 

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