The Take

“I thought he was just being careful not to take too much sun.”

“Thing I liked about him,” said Jojo, “he was fair. The man never tried to short you. He thought about the future. Keeping your friends, friends.”

Coluzzi pushed the dish away from him. “That right?”

“You ought to try it sometime.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“It means you pay your partners what you promise.”

“So it’s true. You were talking behind my back.”

“And now I’m saying it to your face.”

The door of the kitchen swung open. Two men Coluzzi recognized entered.

“Or tell it to Bobby or Claude,” Jojo went on.

“Yeah,” said Bobby, who was squat and stocky with a neck like a tree trunk and hands as big as cleavers. “Tell us.”

Claude nodded. He was a “hitter”—a killer for La Brise—slim and oily with long black hair and a yellowish cast to his skin. If he said ten words in a day, it was a lot.

“What is this?” said Coluzzi. “I asked you earlier if there was a problem. Come on, Jojo. You can’t be serious.”

“Knowing you, I’m pretty sure you’ve already spent what you owe us. We’ll take payment in a different currency.”

“I paid you your share.”

“No,” said Jojo. “You didn’t.”

Coluzzi saw there was no point in arguing. “So what are you going to do? Bust my legs? Grow up.”

“For a start,” said Jojo. “Then I’ll let Bobby and Claude get creative on you. Unless, of course, you want to settle up.”

“How much do you think I owe you?”

“A hundred grand.”

“Not likely.”

“Then it is what it is.”

Coluzzi shrugged, giving Jojo one last chance. “Come on. It doesn’t have to be like this.”

“Yeah,” said Bobby. “It does.” He stepped toward Coluzzi, his fat hand going into his jacket for his gun, Claude casually picking up a carving knife, testing it for weight.

“Hey, hey,” said Coluzzi, standing from his stool, eyes wide, trying to make them think he was pissing his pants, that his time in Paris had softened him up, turned him into a pussy who shied from a fight.

Bobby cleared his gun, a snub-nosed .38. “You greedy…”

Coluzzi drew his stiletto from his sheath and slashed it through the air, the tip slicing Bobby’s fleshy neck, releasing a spray of arterial blood. Bobby fired a shot, even as he dropped the pistol and reached for his ruined neck. Claude lunged at him, the carving knife aimed at his belly. Coluzzi had always been the fastest guy around. He jumped to one side, the blade missing him by a long shot. In the same motion, he thrust the stiletto into Claude’s chest, just below the sternum, giving the handle a vicious twist when he felt the blade tear through something heavy and fibrous, probably the lung or the liver. Claude opened his mouth and blood seeped out over his lousy teeth.

Coluzzi yanked the blade free and turned on Jojo, who just then launched a pounding hammer straight at his head. Coluzzi ducked, the hammer bouncing off the wall and clattering onto the floor. In his other hand, Jojo held his stubby chopping knife. Realizing it wasn’t any kind of weapon, he searched the counter for something he could use, settling on a rolling pin. He came at Coluzzi like a barroom brawler, swinging the rolling pin and jabbing with the knife.

Coluzzi backed up as much as he could in the cramped area, hemmed in by counters and shelves and the ovens and stoves. He had to be careful. No one cared about Bobby or Claude. They were both Italians, not even real members of La Brise. But Jojo…he was royalty. Should Coluzzi lay a hand on him, do any real damage, there would be hell to pay.

Coluzzi ducked and dodged the wild blows, shouting for Jojo to calm down. But Jojo liked a fight and there was no doubting the blood in his eye.

Jojo lurched at him, the knife catching Coluzzi on the forearm—nothing serious, but a cut nonetheless. The rolling pin swooshed angrily at his head, barely missing.

“Enough,” said Coluzzi, fed up with Jojo’s nonsense. The man was sixty. Didn’t he know when to throw in the towel? Coluzzi waited for his spot, then lunged at Jojo, knocking the knife to one side and slugging him in the jaw.

It was enough.

Jojo went down on his knees, half out of it.

As luck had it, Bobby’s gun was right there, in arm’s reach.

“Don’t,” said Coluzzi.

But Jojo was already going for it, probably not even thinking what he was going to do with it or how he might get a shot off. His fingers found the grip, his hand pulling it closer. Coluzzi dropped to a knee and drove his stiletto through the top of Jojo’s hand, impaling it on the cracked linoleum floor.

Jojo was too stunned to shout. He sat there as if paralyzed, staring at the blade protruding from his hand, shaking with rage.

Coluzzi tossed a packet of ten thousand euros onto the floor. “There,” he said. “We’re even. Got it?”

Jojo looked at him, then at the money. “Sure,” he said. “We’re even.”

“Swear it.”

“I swear.”

“And you’ll never pull any kind of bullshit like this again.”

Jojo nodded.

“Say it.”

“I swear.”

“Okay, then.” Coluzzi pulled the stiletto out of Jojo’s hand. “Jesus,” he said, wiping the blade on a dishtowel. “What a mess.”

Jojo stood up, shakily, and put his hand under a stream of cold water.

“And one more thing,” said Coluzzi. “I need your ticket to the game tomorrow.”





Tuesday





Chapter 17



Simon woke at seven. After a shower and a light breakfast ordered from room service (cost: one hundred euros—apologies to Mr. Neill), he walked to the Champs-élysées and hailed a cab.

“Porte d’Orléans,” he said.

Twenty minutes later, the taxi turned onto the Avenue du Général Leclerc in the southern perimeter of Paris. It was a working-class area, the street lined with bakeries, laundries, hair salons, and corner grocery stores.

It was here thirty-six hours earlier that the prince and his entourage had been robbed.

Simon stepped out of the car, handing the driver a fifty-euro note and asking that he wait. Slowly, he made his way up the block. He envisioned the line of sedans advancing along the boulevard. Coluzzi would have needed to wait until the last one crossed through the intersection before blocking the lead car. Timing was crucial.

All over in sixty seconds.

Simon started the timer on his wristwatch, then retraced his steps, stopping in the middle of the block, looking one way, then the other, playing out the scenario in his mind. The entry to the highway lay three hundred meters ahead, the green placards in sight. The drivers would have spotted them and relaxed. For all intents and purposes, they were home free. So much more the surprise when Coluzzi’s men appeared from a side street to bar the route. The lead chauffeur would have had no time to warn his colleagues before they were blocked from the rear as well.

Fifty-eight…fifty-nine…sixty.

Simon stopped the chronograph. The Corsican had chosen his spot well. There was no question but that he’d known the route in advance. A day, if not more, to allow for him and his accomplices to rehearse.

“How would you have planned it?” Neill had asked him yesterday morning.

Simon had his answer. No differently than Coluzzi.

He made a second tour of the block, more briskly this time, looking for security cameras. Paris wasn’t London. He couldn’t find one.

He had a last impression before returning to the taxi. Tino Coluzzi had gotten smarter since he’d last seen him. Simon would be wise not to underestimate him. He’d done so once before and it hadn’t turned out well.

“Back to the hotel,” said Simon.

He rode the entire way in silence, lost in thought. He was not in Paris. He was in Marseille. In Les Baumettes. Reliving the worst moments of his life.



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