Part 43 (1/2)
”I'm thinkin' I'm sick to death of f.u.c.kin' snow. I'm thinkin' the warm weather might be good for my arthritis. I'm thinkin' that if I move down there, I won't have to listen to Maggie talk about moving down there every f.u.c.kin' night.”
”But?”
”But she's got her heart set on one of them retirement villages in Vero Beach or Boca Raton. Keeps shovin' brochures in my face. 'Look at this, honey,' she tells me. 'They got maid service, swimmin' pools, croquet, a golf course, horseshoes, craft rooms, shuffleboard. And have you ever seen so many flowers?'”
He made a face, the same one I once saw him make when he absentmindedly stuck the coal end of a Lucky Strike in his mouth.
”Sounds nice,” I said.
”Oh, yeah? Then you move down there with her.”
”What's wrong with it?”
”You s.h.i.+ttin' me? Craft rooms? Croquet? And I hate f.u.c.kin' shuffleboard. No way I'm wastin' whatever years I got left listenin' to a bunch of wheezers with b.u.m tickers and colostomy bags pa.s.s gas and brag about the grandkids that never visit while they wait for the reaper to show up. Jesus Christ, Mulligan. Have you ever seen them f.u.c.kin' places? They're full of old people.”
Whoosh was a few months short of eighty.
”Don't you dare laugh at me, a.s.shole.”
”I'm not.”
”Yeah, but it's takin' some effort.”
He waved the waitress over and ordered us both another round of Bushmills shots with Killian's chasers.
”Maybe you could compromise,” I said. ”Get yourself a beachfront cottage on Sanibel Island or a luxury condo in Fort Myers.”
”Where the Sox have spring training? I already thought of that. Trouble is, ain't no way I can hand the business over to Mario.”
”Why not?”
”Cuz he's a f.u.c.kin' moron.”
Mario, just twenty-six years old, had already done state time for drunken driving and for using his girlfriend as a tackling dummy. Now he was awaiting trial for kicking the c.r.a.p out of a transvest.i.te who made the near-fatal mistake of slipping out of the Stable, Providence's newest gay bar, to smoke a cigarette. But he was Whoosh's only living blood relative. The punk had inherited the t.i.tle two years ago when his father was gunned down in a botched East Providence bank robbery. Mario's grandfather, Whoosh's only brother, fell to esophageal cancer back in 1997 while serving a ten-year stretch for fencing stolen goods.
Whoosh and Maggie did have an adopted daughter; but Lucia, a young mother who performed with a New York City dance troupe, was an unlikely candidate to take over his bookmaking business. My old friend and his wife never had any kids of their own.
”Wouldn't trust Mario with the business even if Arena gave a thumbs-up,” Whoosh was saying. ”Which there's no f.u.c.kin' way he's ever gonna.”
”No?”
”He already said. The kid's unreliable. Draws too much attention to himself.”
”So what are you going to do?”
”Find somebody I can trust,” he said. ”Ain't all that much to it, really. Take the bets, pay off the winners, collect from the losers. Keep half of the profits, and wire the rest once a month to an account I got down in the Caymans.”
”Got somebody in mind?”
”Yeah. You.”
”Me?”
”Why not? You been tellin' me how much you hate the corporate p.r.i.c.ks who bought The Dispatch. You keep sayin' they're gonna fire your a.s.s if you don't up and quit first. We been friends a long time, Mulligan. You've hung around me enough to understand how I do business. Anything you don't know, I can show you. How to write bets down in code. Which cops to pay off. How much tribute you gotta kick upstairs to Arena every month.”
”Huh.”
”So whaddaya say?”
I'd never had a moral objection to bookmaking, at least not the way Zerilli went about it. Unlike the officially sanctioned gangsters at the Rhode Island Lottery Commission, who peddled chump numbers games and scratch tickets to suckers, my bookie had always given me a fair chance to win. But I was reluctant to climb into bed with Giuseppe Arena. As head of the Patriarca crime family, his interests included truck hijacking, union corruption, prost.i.tution, arson-for-hire, money laundering, and New England's biggest luxury-car-theft ring.
Still, I was growing anxious about how I'd manage to pay the rent and keep my ancient Ford Bronco fed with gas and junkyard parts once The Dispatch was done with me. My young pal Edward Anthony Mason III-trust fund baby, son of The Providence Dispatch's former publisher, and first journalist laid off when the paper's new owners took over last year-was dangling a reporting gig at his online local-news start-up, The Ocean State Rag. But the venture wasn't making any money yet, so the job didn't pay much. A standing offer to join my old buddy Bruce McCracken's private detective agency would pay better, but it wasn't journalism.
But bookmaking? Now that was real money. I could replace the torn sofa I'd found on the sidewalk, buy myself a new Mustang convertible, move into a luxury condo on the bay, start an IRA. Maybe even invest in some Red Sox T-s.h.i.+rts that weren't adorned with cigar burns and pizza grease.
”Have you broken the news to Mario yet?” I asked.
”Not yet.”
”How he's gonna take it?”
”He's gonna be wicked p.i.s.sed.”
”He's still got that no-show Sanitation Department job, right?”