“I guess I don’t look the same,” Nolan said. “Your sister didn’t recognize me at first, either. I think it’s the mustache.”
“Mustache my ass, I’ve never seen you before in my life. And what’s this about my sister . . . ?”
“I wouldn’t have recognized you, either. You’ve grown.”
Grown was right: Steve McCracken was more than a foot taller than the last time Nolan had seen him. Of course, then Steve was ten or twelve years old. Now he was in his mid-to-late-twenties and a massively built kid, whose whitish blonde hair and skimpy mustache made him look more like a muscle-bound California surf bum than a one-man army.
“If you’re here to shoot me,” Steve said, “get on with it.”
“Christ, you’re a melodramatic little prick. I guess it figures. You used to love those damn cowboy movies you and your dad used to drag me to. Randolph Scott. Christ, how you loved Randolph Scott.”
“Who . . . who are you?”
“I’m the guy who used to sit between you and your dad, when we went to Comiskey Park to watch the Sox on Sunday afternoons.”
“Nolan?”
Nolan nodded.
“I haven’t seen you since I was a kid,” Steve said. He seemed confused.
“You’re still a kid. And a screwed-up kid at that, and since your dad isn’t around anymore, I guess I’m all that’s left to get you straight again.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean somebody’s got to put a stop to what you’re doing before you get your ass shot off.”
“You go to hell.”
Nolan grinned. “Good. I like that. It’ll save time if we can skip the pretense and get right down to it. You been killing and generally terrorizing members of the DiPreta family. It’s crazy and it’s got to stop.”
“Go fuck yourself.”
“Will you listen to me? Will you hear me out?”
‘Why should I?”
“Because I got a gun on you.”
“Well, that is a good reason.”
“I know it is. But I’d like it better if we could forget the goddamn guns for a minute and go over and sit at that table and have some beer and just talk. What do you say?”
He shrugged. “Sure.”
Nolan rose from the couch. Steve got up off the floor, headed for the refrigerator. Nolan put the .38 away. Steve got the beers. Nolan approached the table. Steve handed him one beer, kept the other. They sat.
“Let me ask you a question, Nolan.”
“All right. I may not answer, but all right.”
“What makes you think you can trust me? How do you know I won’t hit you in the eye with a can of beer or something?”
“You might,” Nolan conceded, nodding. “You might even take my gun away from me. I don’t think you’re that good, really, but it’s possible.”
“Suppose I did. Suppose I took your gun away from you. What’s to prevent me from using it on you?”
“Your own inflated damn idea of yourself.”
“My what?”
“You’re a man with a cause. You make up your own rules, but you stick to them. This morning, for instance. You wouldn’t really toss a live grenade into a room full of mostly innocent bystanders. Oh, you don’t mind throwing a firecracker and scaring folks a little—that’s part of unnerving the shit out of Frank and causing more general chaos in the DiPreta ranks. But you don’t kill anybody but DiPretas, and maybe DiPreta people, and since you don’t know whether or not I’m a DiPreta man yet, I figure I’m safe for the moment.”
“That’s a pretty thin supposition, Nolan.”
“Not when you add it to my being an old friend of your father’s. After all, you’re in this because of your father, and you’re not about to go killing off his friends unless you’re sure they got it coming.”
“I get the feeling you’re making fun of me.”
“Well, I do think you’re something of an ass, if that’s what you mean. But I don’t mean to make light of this situation. I spent the afternoon with your sister, Steve. I like her. I understand she’s got a nice little daughter.”
“What’s your point?”
“I was hoping you’d have seen it by now. Look, how do you think I found you? Your phone is unlisted, isn’t even in your name, is it?”
“No, it isn’t. How did you find me?”
“Diane gave me the address.”
“But I told her not to give it out under any—”
“And yet here I am. I sweet-talked it out of her, but there are other, less pleasant ways of getting information out of people.”
“They wouldn’t dare—”
“They wouldn’t? You mean the DiPretas wouldn’t? Why? Because it’s not nice? You shoot Joey DiPreta with a Weatherby four-sixty Mag, tear the fucking guts right out of the man, and you expect the DiPretas to play by some unspoken set of knightly rules? You’re an ass.”
Steve looked down at the table. “They don’t have any idea it’s me, anyway.”
“They don’t? I heard Frank DiPreta, just a few hours ago, say he had a good idea who was responsible for Joey’s death. And I also know for a fact the Chicago family has a line on you, has had for months.”
“How is that possible, for God’s sake?”
“It’s possible because the rest of the world is not as stupid as you are. Everything you’ve done points not only to a Vietnam vet but a Vietnam vet with a hard-on for revenge besides—military-style sniping, the use of a weapon designed not only to kill but to mutilate the victim, the grenade hoax, the half-ass psychological warfare of that ace-of-spades bit. . . . Christ, was that self-indulgent! And top it all off with an obvious inside knowledge of the DiPreta lifestyle. The kind of knowledge provided by those tapes you have, for example. The ones your father gave you.”
Steve whitened. With his white-blond hair, he was the palest human Nolan had ever seen.
“The possibility of you having copies of those tapes occurred to the people in Chicago long ago. You’ve been in their sniperscope ever since, friend. Not under actual surveillance maybe, but they were aware you were out of the service, aware you were back in Des Moines.”
“Jesus,” Steve said.
“And when Joey DiPreta was killed by a sniper, who do you suppose was the first suspect that came to everybody’s mind?”
Steve was staring at the table again. His color still wasn’t back completely. He looked young to Nolan, very young, his face smooth, almost unused. Finally he said quietly, “I thought they might figure it out, yes, but not so soon.” Then he picked up the can of beer, swigged at it, slammed it back down and said, “But what the hell. I knew the odds sucked when I got into this.”
“What about your sister, Steve? Did she know the odds would suck?”
“She doesn’t know anything about it. You know that. This . . . this has nothing to do with her, other than it’s her parents, too, whose score I’m settling.”
“Score you’re settling. I see. Do me a favor, Steve, will you? Tell me about the score you’re settling.”
“Why? You know as well as I do.”
“I just got a feeling your version and mine might be a little different. Let’s hear yours.”
Steve shrugged. Sipped at the can of beer. Looked at Nolan. Shrugged again. Said, “I came home on leave a couple of years ago. Dad and I were always close, even though I was living with Mom, and he would confide in me more than anybody in the world, I suppose. I’d known for a long time about his . . . Mafia connections, I guess you’d call them. I knew that was the real reason for the trouble between Mom and him—that she wanted him to get out, to break all his ties with those people, and when we came to Des Moines, that was what she thought he was doing. But then she found out about the DiPretas, that they owned the motel Dad was managing and were no different from the bosses Dad had had in Chicago, and that was the end for her. She divorced him after that. Dad was crazy about her, but he liked the life, the money. I think you know that Dad gambled—
that was a problem even in Chicago. And without the sort of money he could make with the DiPretas and people like them, he couldn’t support his habit, like a damn junkie or something. Then when I came home on that leave, couple years ago, he told me he was through gambling, that he hadn’t gambled in a year and wanted out of his position with the DiPretas. But he was scared, Nolan. He was scared for his life. He knew too much. It sounds cornball—he even kind of laughed as he said it—but it was true. He just knew too much and they’d kill him before they let him out. I thought he was exaggerating at the time and encouraged him to go ahead and quit. Screw the DiPretas, I said. He wanted to know if I thought Mom would take him back if he cut his ties with the DiPretas, and I said sure she would. And she did. They were going to get back together. He wrote me about it. In fact they both wrote me, Mom and Dad both. Two happiest letters I ever got from them.”
Steve hesitated. His eyes were clouded over. He took a moment and finished his beer, got up for another one, came back and resumed his story.
“Dad had to find a way out. That’s where the tapes you mentioned come in. Dad installed listening devices in some of the rooms at the motel, and so on. Then he offered the tapes to the DiPretas in exchange for some money and a chance for a clean start, fresh start. They didn’t believe that was all he wanted. They thought he was going to try and milk them, so they tried to get the tapes from him, without holding up their end of the bargain. Dad sent one set of the tapes to me for safe-keeping. He left another set with Mom. The DiPretas must’ve known about Mom and Dad being on friendly terms again, because somebody broke into her house, when she wasn’t supposed to be home, to search for the tapes. But Mom came home early and . . . and got killed for it. The next day Dad hanged himself at the motel.”
And Steve covered his face with one hand and wept silently.
Nolan waited for the boy to regain control. Then he said, “It’s a touching story, Steve. But it’s just a story.”
“What the hell do you mean?”
“You put most of it together yourself, didn’t you? From the pieces of the story you knew.”
“No! I talked to Dad when I came home on leave that time, and he sent a letter with the tapes, and—”
“I guess maybe it’s just a matter of interpretation and ordering of events. You say your father was afraid for his life. I believe that. But he wouldn’t have cause to be afraid until after he’d begun recording tapes and collecting the various other dirt he was using to blackmail the DiPretas.”
“Blackmailing . . .”
“Your father didn’t want out, Steve. He was happy where he was. The DiPretas were considering firing him because his gambling habit was out of control.”
“That’s a goddamn he!”
“It isn’t. I listened to your version, now listen to mine. Your father bugged certain rooms in the motel, used the information he gathered to try and blackmail the DiPretas and the Chicago family as well. Part of it was to blackmail his way out of certain gambling debts he owed his bosses. Part of it was to hopefully retain his position, not leave it.”
“No!”
“By giving your mother those tapes to keep for him, he was putting her in mortal danger. He hanged himself because he felt responsible for your mother’s death, Steve.”
And Steve lurched across the table and swung at Nolan.
Nolan swung back.
Steve sat on the floor and leaned against the refrigerator and touched the trickle of blood running out of his mouth where Nolan had hit him.
Nolan had remained seated through all of it but half rose for a moment to say, “Get off the floor and listen to me, goddamnit. There are more things you don’t know, and need to.”
“I’ll listen, Nolan,” Steve said, getting back up, sitting back at the table. “I’ll be glad to listen. I won’t believe a word of your shit, but I’ll listen.”
“Christ, man, don’t you want to hear about the DiPretas? Don’t you want to hear about the object of your crusade? The DiPretas are not Mafia people, as you put it. Oh, they have connections to the Chicago family, they sure do. And they do have a family background that includes a good deal of mob activity, prior to the last fifteen years or so. But more than anything they are businessmen. Crooked businessmen, yes, with connections to what you call the Mafia. But if you want to kill all the businessmen in America who fall into that category, you got a busy season ahead of you.”
“That’s bullshit! Vince and Frank DiPreta are gangsters, they’re—”
“Vince used to be a gangster, of sorts. Vince the Burner, he was called, but even then he treated arson like a business. Lately Vince’s been the conservative DiPreta, wanting to shy away from illegal business interests and associations. Frank? Frank likes to carry guns around. Frank likes to play mobster, but he isn’t one, not really. Not in the sense you’re thinking of. Income tax evasion and stock swindles and graft, sure. Should be plenty of that on those tapes of yours. But cement overshoes and Tommy guns and dope-running? Come on. The DiPretas are restaurateurs, motel and finance company owners, discount-store proprietors, highway and building contractors. Shady ones. But nothing more. Your first victim? Joey DiPreta never did anything more vicious than swing a golf club at a ball. Like all the DiPretas, he liked to play the Mafioso role, to a degree, anyway. It was his heritage. But he was no gangster.”
Steve had the stunned look of a man struck solidly in the stomach. He said, “Then . . . then who sent the man who killed my mother?”
“Chicago. The Family wasn’t satisfied the DiPretas could handle the situation, and they sent a man in, and that’s who killed your mother. The DiPretas were incensed and have since been considering severing their ties with the Family.”
“Nolan, Jesus, stop, Nolan. Is this true? Is what you’ve been saying true?”
“Every word.”
“Then I’ve been . . .”
“Killing the wrong people.”
“I don’t believe it.”
“I don’t blame you. If I were you, I wouldn’t want to believe it either. It would make everything I’d done without meaning.”
“How do I know you’re telling the truth?”
“How do you know I’m not? Haven’t I at least established the possibility you’re tilting at goddamn windmills? And the wrong windmills, at that.”
“I got to have time to think, Nolan. I got to have time to think this through.”
“There isn’t any time to think. Frank DiPreta’s closing in on you, friend, you and your sister both.”
“What happened to the song and dance about how harmless Frank DiPreta is?”
“I didn’t say he’s harmless. I said he’s a crooked businessman who likes to think of himself as some mob tough guy. And another thing: he’s got this funny quirk. He doesn’t like it when members of his family get murdered. He wants revenge. Is that hard for you to understand, Steve?”
“I . . . I see what you mean.”
“I hope to hell you do.”
“But there is something I don’t see.”
“What?”
“I don’t see where you figure into this, Nolan. I don’t see you as a DiPreta man, and I don’t see you being lined up with those Chicago people, either. I mean, I heard the story from Dad about how you bucked the Family, walked out on them when they wanted you to do their killing for them.”
Nolan spread his palms. “Well, there’s been a shake-up in Chicago, Steve. Most of the people I had my problems with are dead. The same is true of the ones who sent the guy into Des Moines who killed your mother. I won’t say it’s a whole new ball game, but I will say the line-up’s changed considerably.”
“You work for the Family, then?”
“In the same sense your father did . . . the very same, in fact: I run a motel for them, too. I was asked to come here and talk to you, to act as an intermediary, because I was ‘uniquely qualified’ for the role, they said. I got unique qualifications because for one thing I got a reputation for refusing to be
involved in Family bloodletting. But mainly I was asked because I was a friend of your father’s. And yours, too.”
Steve looked at Nolan for a moment. A long moment. Then he held out his can of beer in the toasting gesture and said, “Comiskey Park.”
“Comiskey Park,” Nolan said, and touched his beer can to Steve’s and they drank.
“What happens now?” Steve said.
“A lot of things could happen. More people could die, for instance. Or . . . the killing could stop.”
“Suppose I think that’s a good idea. Suppose I’m ready for a cease fire, Dr. Kissinger. What then?”
And Nolan told Steve about the Family’s offer, the one Felix had outlined to Nolan the night before in the back of the Lincoln Continental outside the antique shop.
The Family’s offer was this: Steve was to leave town immediately and drop out of sight as completely as possible, not telling even his sister he was going and not contacting her after he was relocated, either. For traveling and living expenses the Family would give Steve $100,000, to be deposited in the bank of his choice. All he had to do was contact Nolan after relocation, and Nolan would see to it the money was routed to Steve. The Family would provide Steve a new identity, with Social Security number, personal background history, the works. Several years of cooling off would be necessary. While the official police investigation would most likely be relatively brief, Frank DiPreta’s interest in the matter would continue indefinitely. The Family would keep an eye on Frank and make sure Steve’s sister and her little girl were not bothered. Eventually Steve should be able to reunite, at least occasionally, clandestinely, with Diane and Joni. But for a while—a good while—precaution would be the rule. In return, the Family wanted one thing.
“The tapes,” Steve said.
“The tapes,” Nolan said.
Steve sat and stared, his face a blank.
“Well?” Nolan said.
Steve stopped staring. Took a sip of his beer. “Okay, Nolan. You want the tapes? You can have ’em. You can have ’em right now.” He got up, turned to the refrigerator and opened it. He pulled out a drawer in the bottom of the refrigerator crammed with packages wrapped in white meat-market-type paper. Steve yanked the whole damn drawer out and tossed it on the table.
Hush Money Page 13