Timothy's Game

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Timothy's Game Page 8

by Lawrence Sanders


  “Yeah,” Corsini says, nodding, “that could happen. He’s a stubborn guy who likes things his own way.”

  “Second of all,” Sally says, “how do I know you’re not scamming me? Maybe you just want to make a quick dollar on my tip and you couldn’t care less if or when I lose the dump.”

  He looks at her admiringly. “You got more between your ears than pasta fagioli,” he says. “And sure, you’re exactly right; I could be conning you. But you’re forgetting one thing: You got no choice. Without me, you’re going to lose the business for sure. Play along with me and at least you got a chance.”

  “I got other choices,” she says hotly.

  “Yeah?” he says with a death’s-head grin. “Like what? Like running to the DA and ratting on us? You’d be cold in a week, and so would your mother and brother. Is that what you want?”

  They sit a few moments in silence, eyes locked. They hear the sounds of the dump: trucks rumbling in and out, gears grinding, shouts and laughter. And beyond, the noises of the harsh, raucous city: sirens, whistles, the roar of traffic, and under all a thrumming as if the metropolis had a diapason of its own, coming up from underground vaults and vibrating the tallest towers.

  Sally Steiner pulls a pad of scratch paper toward her and scribbles on the top sheet.

  “The stock is Trimbley and Diggs,” she says. “Nasdaq Market. Right now it’s selling for about four bucks a share. And don’t, for God’s sake, buy more than nine thousand shares at a clip or the SEC might get interested.”

  Mario Corsini takes the slip of paper. “Nice doing business with you,” he says politely.

  He starts out the door. “Hey,” she calls, and he turns back. “Thanks for not calling me girlie.”

  He inclines his head gravely as if her gratitude is merited.

  She sits for about five minutes after he’s gone, thinking about their conversation and wondering if she’s doing the smart thing. But then she realizes the bastard was right: She really has no choice. As for his threat of what might happen to her, Becky, and Eddie if she goes to the cops, she has no doubt whatsoever that he and his thugs are capable of doing exactly what he said.

  She pulls the phone toward her and calls Eddie.

  “Hey, bro,” she says. “How’ya doing?”

  “Hanging in there,” he says. “How are you, Sal?”

  “Couldn’t be better,” she says brightly. “Paul around?”

  “Won’t be back till noon. He’s auditioning for a commercial for a strawberry-flavored laxative.”

  “Beautiful,” Sally says. “Could I pop over for a while? I’ve got some cash to leave for him. Our first step on the way to fame and fortune.”

  “Sure,” he says. “Come ahead. Got time to pose?”

  “Maybe an hour or so. Okay?”

  She walks down to Eddie’s apartment, stopping on the way to buy him a decent burgundy. It’s a sprightly day, summer around the corner, and the blue sky, sharp sun, and kissing breeze make her feel like she owns the world. Life is a tease; that she knows. All souls dissolve; but meanwhile it can be a hoot if you keep running and never look back.

  She poses nude for Eddie for almost an hour, sitting on that stupid stool and trying to make her body as tense, muscular, and aggressive as he commands. Finally he slaps his sketch pad shut.

  “That’s it,” he says. “I’ve got all the studies I need. Now I’ll start blocking out the canvas. This is going to be a good one, Sal; I just know it.”

  “Make me pretty,” she says. “And about six inches taller and twenty pounds thinner.”

  “You’re perfect the way you are.”

  “Marry me,” she says. “And also pour me a wine while I get dressed.”

  They’re sitting on the couch, drinking her burgundy, talking about their mother and whether or not they should try another doctor, when Paul Ramsey comes ambling in. He gives them a beamy smile.

  “I didn’t get the job,” he reports. “They decided I wasn’t the strawberry laxative type.”

  “Thank God,” Eddie says. “I don’t think I could stand seeing you in a commercial, coming out of a bathroom and grinning like a maniac.”

  “Paul,” Sally says, taking the manila envelope out of her shoulder bag, “here’s thirty-six thousand in hundred-dollar bills.”

  “Hey,” he says, “that’s cool.”

  “You opened a brokerage account?”

  “Oh, sure. No sweat.”

  “Well, dump this lettuce in your personal checking account. Draw on it to buy nine thousand shares of Trimbley and Diggs. Your broker will find it on the Nasdaq exchange. I wrote it all out for you. Buy the stock today, as soon as possible. You’ve got five days to get a check to the broker.”

  “Does this make me a tycoon?” Paul Ramsey asks.

  “A junior tycoon,” Sally tells him. “But we’re just getting started.”

  She sits in the one comfortable armchair in the apartment. Eddie and Paul sit close on the rickety couch. The three kid along for a while, chattering about this and that. But then Sally falls silent and listens while the two men, holding hands now, chivy one another as they plan what they’re going to have for dinner and whose turn it is to do the cooking.

  She can see the intimacy between them, a warm bond that may be fondness, may be affection, may be love. Whatever, each completes the other. They are easy together, and no strains show. There is a privacy there, and Sally finds it disturbing. For that kind of sharing is a foreign language to her and yet leaves her feeling cheated and bereft.

  The stock of Trimbley & Diggs, Inc., is going up, up, up, and Sally is ecstatic. When it hits seven dollars, she has Paul Ramsey buy another 9,000 shares.

  She also notes the trading volume of T&D is increasing as the value of the stock rises. She figures there’s either an inside leak at Snellig Firsten Holbrook or the arbitrageurs have ferreted out the takeover and are looking to make a bundle. So is Sally. And so, apparently, is Mario Corsini. He calls her at home, late at night, a week after their talk in her office.

  “Good tip,” he says, his raspy voice revealing neither joy nor enthusiasm. “You buying more?”

  “Thinking about it.”

  “How high do you think it’ll go?”

  “Who knows?” she says. “Ten. Twelve maybe.”

  “Twelve?” he says cautiously. “If it hits twelve, you think I should bail out?”

  “Hey,” she says, “I’m not your financial adviser. I gave you a good tip. What you do with it is your business. And what about my business? What’s going to happen to Steiner Waste Control?”

  “I’m working on it,” he says. “Listen, one of the reasons I called: Tony Ricci will be late for work tomorrow. There’s a family funeral, and I want him to be there. He’ll show up around noon. Okay?”

  “I guess it’ll have to be,” Sally says. “It’ll screw up my truck schedules, but I’ll work it out.”

  “You do that,” Corsini says. “And if you get any more tips, let me know.”

  He hangs up abruptly, leaving Sally staring angrily at her dead phone. It infuriates her that she’s enabling that gonnif to make even one lousy buck. It’s she who’s breaking her nails digging through garbage from Bechtold Printing. All Corsini has to do is call his broker.

  She drives to work early the next morning, checks in at the office, then crosses Eleventh Avenue to the Stardust Diner. Terry Mulloy and Leroy Hamilton are seated at the back table. Both men are working on plates of three eggs over with a ham steak, a mountain of home fries, a stack of toast with butter and jelly, and coffee with cream and sugar. Sally joins them.

  “You’re both going to have coronaries,” she says, and tells Mabel to bring her a plain bagel and a cup of black coffee.

  It’s payoff day, and she slips each man an envelope under the table.

  “I thank you kindly,” Hamilton says, pocketing his hundred. “And the best part is my wife don’t know a thing about it.”

  “How long is this going to last
?” Mulloy wants to know.

  “Till I tell you to stop,” Sally says. “What’s the matter—getting all worn out, poor baby? I can always find two other imbeciles to handle Bechtold Printing.”

  “Nah,” Leroy says, “no call to do that. We like the job, don’t we, Terry?”

  “Well, yeah,” the redheaded harp says. “The money’s good, but I’d like to know what’s going down. I don’t want to get my ass busted for a hundred a week.”

  “You worry too much,” Sally says. “You know those three monkeys: See No Evil, Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil. That’s the way you monkeys should be.”

  At about the same time, a silver gray Cadillac limousine pulls into a No Parking space in front of the marquee of the Hotel Bedlington on upper Madison Avenue.

  “What’re we stopping here for?” Angelo asks.

  “Vic,” Mario Corsini says, “we got plenty of time to get downtown for the meet. I figured we’d grab some breakfast. You like it here. The French toast—remember?”

  “Oh, yeah,” Angelo says. “Good idea.”

  They get out of the car. The uniformed doorman comes forward, and Corsini slips him a sawbuck. “Take care of it,” he says. “You have any trouble, we’ll be in the dining room.”

  “No trouble, sir,” the doorman says. “No trouble at all.”

  The cavernous dining room is almost deserted; just one wimp by himself and two old ladies together, sipping tea and nibbling on dry rye toast. The two men take a corner table so their backs are against the wall. Vic Angelo orders a large glass of freshly squeezed orange juice, French toast with plenty of butter and syrup, and decaf coffee. Mario Corsini has warm blueberry muffins and regular coffee, black.

  “Nice quiet place,” Angelo says, looking around.

  “Yeah,” Corsini says. “You could plan a revolution in here and no one would be the wiser. Also, it gives me a chance to speak my piece.”

  “Oh, Jesus,” Angelo says, groaning. “Not that Steiner thing again. Lay off, Mario. We been over that twice, and what I said still goes.”

  “I gotta tell you, Vic, I called and leaned on her. She gave me that stock tip she told us about. I played it—on my own, Vic, on my own—and it’s almost doubled in a week.”

  Angelo stares at him, face rigid. “That wasn’t very smart, Mario. I told you I want no part of Wall Street. We’re going to take over the Steiner dump and that’s it.”

  “Vic, will you listen just for a minute,” Corsini says, leaning over the table. “She wasn’t conning us; she really does have an inside pipeline. Maybe I’ll triple my stake. Jesus, we can make more with her than we can from garbage and linen supply. And the—”

  But then their breakfasts are served, and neither man speaks until the waiter moves away.

  “And the best part,” Corsini continues earnestly, “is that we don’t have to kick anything upstairs. Let’s face it, Vic, we’re hired hands. Messenger boys—right? Sure, we collect plenty, but how much sticks to our fingers after we pay our dues and grease the lousy politicians, the cops, the union guys, and everyone else and their uncles? This thing with Sally Steiner is a nice clean deal. What we make is what we keep. No dues, no payoffs.”

  “You’re talking shit,” Angelo says, smothering his French toast with butter and syrup and beginning to wolf it down. He talks with his mouth full. “How long do you think it would take Fat Lonny to find out what’s going on? He’s no dope. Then he’ll want to know why we didn’t cut him in, and our ass is in a sling. Just forget about it, will ya, and let me finish my breakfast in peace. No more stock deals with Sally Steiner. As soon as the papers are ready, we’re moving in on her. And that’s final.”

  “If you say so, Vic. You’re the boss.”

  They finish their food in silence, then light up cigars from Mario’s gold Dunhill. When they get up to leave, Corsini stays behind a moment to inspect the check. He leaves enough cash on the table to cover it, with a generous tip.

  They exit from the hotel together. Their Cadillac is still parked in front of the marquee.

  Corsini slaps his jacket pocket. “Shit,” he says, “I must have left my lighter on the table. I’ll be right back.”

  He reenters the hotel. Vic Angelo gets into the front seat on the passenger side. He has closed the door when a young man comes out from between parked cars behind the limousine. He’s wearing a black raincoat with the collar turned up and a black slouch hat with the brim pulled down.

  He walks swiftly to the Cadillac. He pulls an automatic pistol from the pocket of his raincoat. He sticks his arm through the open window and fires four rapid shots into the startled face of Vic Angelo.

  Then he walks quickly to a car double-parked north of the hotel. He gets in. The car pulls away.

  The doorman, hearing the shots, comes running from the lobby. Mario Corsini comes running from the hotel. Pedestrians come running from all directions. They peer into the front seat of the limousine where Vic Angelo lies sprawled in a fountain of blood, still spouting. His face and half his head are blown away.

  “Oh, my God,” the doorman cries.

  “I saw who done it,” someone shouts. “It was a guy in a black raincoat.”

  “Call the police,” someone yells.

  “There’s never a cop around when you need one,” says Mario Corsini.

  Sally Steiner wasn’t born yesterday; after watching TV reports and reading newspaper accounts of the assassination at the Hotel Bedlington, she makes a shrewd guess at what actually went on and who’s responsible. It’s no skin off her teeth. Let the bastards kill each other; she couldn’t care less.

  The only thing that concerns her is how the death of Angelo is going to affect the future of Steiner Waste Control. She doesn’t have to wait long to find out. Three days after the murder, she gets a call at the office from Mario Corsini.

  “I’m driving out to your place tonight,” he states. “About twelve. You’ll be there?”

  “Sure,” she says. “Sorry about Angelo.”

  “Yeah,” Corsini says. “He was an okay guy.”

  The prospect of being alone with that mobster at midnight is not a prospect that fills her with glee. She puts her loaded pistol in the top drawer of the desk. She doesn’t think he’ll try any rough stuff, but still. …

  It’s a balmy night, and she’s strolling around the front lawn when the silver gray Cadillac pulls into the driveway a little after twelve. Sally goes back to the lighted porch and waits for Corsini to come up.

  “Still got the same car,” she observes.

  “Yeah,” he says. “I had to have the front seats re-covered.”

  In the den, she offers him a drink, and this time he accepts. She hasn’t any Chivas Regal, but he takes a snifter of Rémy Martin. That was Jake’s favorite, and no one has touched the bottle since he died.

  “I’m taking over from Vic,” Corsini announces. “It’s been cleared. I don’t want you coming to Ozone Park, so from now on you’ll make your monthly payments to Tony Ricci, and he’ll deliver. I’m bringing him along slowly. He’ll be my driver one of these days.”

  “My monthly payments?” Sally says. “Does that mean I keep the dump?”

  “For the time being,” he says coldly. “Just keep running it the way you have, and we’ll see. You got another stock for me?”

  “No. Not yet.”

  He takes a sip of his cognac. “You better be extra nice to that boyfriend of yours,” he advises. “Figure it this way: As long as you keep coming up with inside tips that pay off, that’s how long you’ll own Steiner Waste Control. You can understand that, can’t you?”

  “Yeah, sure; it isn’t all that complicated.”

  “Well, now you know where you stand. I like everything open and aboveboard.”

  “Uh-huh,” Sally says.

  He sits back in the armchair, beginning to relax. He crosses his knees, inhales the aroma from his glass of brandy.

  “Now about that Trimbley and Diggs stock,” he says, watching to c
atch her reaction. “Right now I’m holding about a hundred thousand shares.”

  “What!”

  “You heard me. A hundred thousand. But don’t get your balls in an uproar. I only bought nine thousand in my own name. The other buys were made by friends of mine around the country. They’ll get a cut of the profits. And none of them bought more than nine thousand shares each, so there’s nothing to worry about.”

  “I hope you’re right,” Sally says nervously, biting at her thumbnail. “Jesus, you must have well over half a million tied up in that stock.”

  “About,” he says carelessly. “I had to borrow to get up the kale. And the people I borrowed from wouldn’t like it if I stiffed them. So I’m going to start taking some profits.”

  “Oh, my God!” Sally says despairingly. “Don’t tell me you’re going to dump a hundred thousand shares all at once? It’ll kill the market.”

  “Whaddya think—I’m a klutz? Of course I’m not going to dump it all. I’m selling off little by little. It won’t hurt the stock price. But I want to see some money. Enough to pay off the sharks. How much you in for?”

  “As much as I can afford,” Sally says. Then she figures she better prove her confidence in T&D. “I had eighteen thousand shares,” she tells him, “and bought another nine this morning. Through a friend.”

  “That’s smart,” he says, nodding. “You really think it’ll go to twelve bucks a share?”

  “Now I think it may go to fifteen. It’s a leveraged takeover, and from what my boyfriend tells me, it’s going through.”

  He finishes his drink, sets the crystal snifter carefully on the desk. He stands up to go.

  “Just remember what I told you,” he says. “Your family keeps the business as long as you keep coming up with cash cows. That’s fair enough, isn’t it?”

  “Oh, sure,” Sally says, “that’s really fair.”

  At the front door, he pauses and turns to her. He reaches out to stroke her cheek, but she jerks angrily away, and he gives her a mirthless smile.

  “You’re some woman,” he says. “You’ve got guts. I’d teach you how to be nice, but I don’t want to ruin what you’ve got going with your Wall Street guy. That’s where our loot’s coming from, isn’t it?”

 

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