Read It Was a Very Bad Year Online
Authors: Robert J. Randisi
âNo, I'm in Reno,' he said. âI need you to come here.'
âWhy? What's going on?'
âI'll tell you when you get here,' Frank said. âDon't tell anybody you're coming.'
âFrankâ'
âGoddamnit, Eddie!' he said, cutting me off. âNo more questions! I need you here now! Yes or no?'
âSure, Frank,' I said. âWhere are you? Cal-Neva?'
âNo,' he said, âI'm at the Mapes Hotel. Just ask for me at the desk. Pack a bag.'
âThe Mapesâ' I caught myself before I asked another question. âOK, Frank. I'll be there as soon as I can get a flight.'
âTake a 'copter,' Frank said. âIt's waiting for you at McCarron.'
âYou cleared this with Jack, Fraâ?' I started to ask, but he hung up.
I hung up, wondering if I should call Jack Entratter and check. I decided that if the helicopter was waiting for me when I got there, it meant Entratter had okayed it.
I got dressed and drove to the airport.
There was a car waiting for me when we landed in Reno. All the driver said was that his name was Walter. He took my bag and tossed it in the trunk, then drove me right to the Mapes.
The Mapes Casino and Hotel was located on Virginia and E. To get there from the airport we drove past the Flamingo, The Sahara, and the five showgirls standing on the marquee over the doors to the Primadonna casino. At night all five ladies lit up. Just south of the Primadonna was the Horseshoe, across the street from Harrah's.
The Mapes had a twelve-story hotel and, according to their marquee, Milton Berle was playing.
I asked for Frank at the desk. They told me he was on the eleventh floor. When I asked what room, they just said to go up to the eleventh floor. On the twelfth floor was their restaurant, The Sky Room.
Still wondering what the fuck was going on, still shaking off the cobwebs, I took the elevator up. When the doors opened I stepped out, and immediately got grabbed on both sides.
âHey!'
âWe just have to frisk you, Mr Gianelli,' one man said.
âFrisk me for what?'
âJust a precaution.'
They put me against the wall, face first, started patting me down. One lifted my wallet, took a look at my license, and put it back.
âWhile you're at it you want to show me some ID?' I asked. In my mind it was a toss-up â cops, or hoods.
They finished patting me down, turned me around and put their IDs in my face. FBI.
âWhat the hellâ' I said.
âThis way.'
They walked ahead of me, which was encouraging. That meant I was following them of my own free will, not being âtaken' by force.
They stopped at a door with no number on it, knocked and opened it.
âHe's here,' one said.
âGo on in,' the other one said.
I entered the room, the two FBI agents closed it from the outside.
The room was full of men. When I entered they spread out a bit, revealing Frank in their midst. He was sitting by the window, next to a table with a phone on it. He was holding something in his hands, clenching and unclenching. I realized it was a roll of dimes.
There were five other men in the room with us. One of them stepped forward and put out his hand.
âI'm Jim Mahoney, Eddie, Frank's publicist.'
In fact, he was Frank's new publicist, replacing Chuck Moses, who I knew.
âThis man is Bill Raggio, District Attorney of Washoe County, Nevada; that's Frank's lawyer, Mickey Rudin. These two gents, and the two outside, are FBI agents.'
âHello, Frank,' I said.
âHey, Eddie,' Frank said, without taking his eyes off the phone. âThanks for coming.'
âYou wanna tell me what this is about?'
Frank tore his eyes away from the phone to look at me.
âYou guys wanna step outside, let me talk to Eddie?' he asked.
âMr Sinatraâ' Raggio started.
âFrank, listenâ' Rudin said.
âI just need a few minutes to talk to my friend!' Frank shouted. âGet the fuck out!'
One by one the men filed out. Rudin went last, pulling the door closed.
Frank turned to me, a haunted look in his eyes. I'd never seen him so distraught.
âThey took my boy, Eddie,' he said. âThey took Frankie.'
â
F
rank,' I said, because I didn't know what else to say.
âI went back to Palm Springs for the weekend and got the call there. They took him from Harrah's in Tahoe last night. He was performing with Tommy Dorsey.'
âWhat do they want?'
âThey haven't said, yet. They did say they'd call me here.'
âDid they tell you not to call the police? Or the FBI?'
âNo, they never said a word about that. I called Mickey, and he insisted we call the FBI.'
âSo they're gonna call here and tell you how much they want,' I said. âFrank . . . how much can you cover?'
âI'd give them a million if they give me Frankie back.'
âCan you get that much?'
âI already talked to my banker, Al Hart. He's President of City National Bank of Beverly Hills. He'll let me have whatever I need.'
âWell, you've got the FBI, your manager, and your lawyerâ'
âJilly and Jack will be here soon.'
Jilly Rizzo was one of Frank's best friends, as was Jack Entratter. It made sense they'd be there.
âOK, so with all those guys here,' I asked, âwhy am I here?'
Frank stood up. He switched the roll of dimes to his left hand, and put his right on my arm.
âWhen they make their demand I want you to make the drop, Eddie.'
âMe? Make the pay off? But . . . why?'
âBecause I trust you,' Frank said. âYou've proven to me time and again that I can trust you. You get things done.'
âFrank . . . don't you think this is somethin' the cops or FBI should handle?'
âNo.' He slapped me on the arm, then flipped the dimes back to his right hand. âIt's your kind of job, Eddie.'
He sat back down by the phone.
The door opened and Mickey Rudin stuck his head in.
âThey're here, Frank.'
âBring 'em in,' Frank said.
âAnd the FBI?'
âNo,' Frank said, âall you guys stay out in the hall a little longer.'
Rudin nodded, backed out. The room was significantly larger with the other men out in the hall, but this was hardly the caliber of place Frank Sinatra usually stayed in. This was a weekend warrior's room, the folks who came to Reno to make a killing at the casinos during their vacation. Double bed, end table with phone, dresser, ice bucket and glasses, one cheap armchair and a TV. Not much more.
The door opened and Jack Entratter entered, followed by Jilly Rizzo. Jack filled the room with his bulk, but Jilly hardly took up any. They both rushed to Frank, who barely had time to stand before they were hugging him.
âAnythin' you want done, Frank, just say the word,' Jack told him.
âSame here, buddy,' Jilly said.
âI know I can count on you guys,' Frank said. âIt's those clowns in the hall I ain't so sure about.'
âAre we keepin' this quiet, Frank?'
âWe're not lettin' it out,' Frank said, âbut it'll get out. It's too damn big not to.'
âBiggest kidnapping since the Lindbergh baby,' Jack said.
I thought about that for a minute, then figured he just might be right.
Jack looked at me, âThanks for comin', Eddie.'
âI figured you knew.'
âFrank asked for you, but he didn't tell me why.'
He and Jilly both looked at Frank.
âHe wants me to make the pay-off,' I said.
Jack thought a moment, then said, âWell, why not? He knows he can trust you.'
I had expected Jack to maybe get upset that Frank hadn't asked him to deliver the money, so his reaction surprised â and pleased â me.
âDo we know how much they want?' Jilly asked.
âNo,' Frank said. âThey haven't made that call yet.'
âHow did this happen?' Jack asked.
âWe heard from Joe Foss, one of Dorsey's musicians. He was in the room with Frankie when the kidnappers knocked on the door, pretending to be from room service. They tied Foss up at gunpoint and took Frankie out. Foss got loose and called the cops. They put up road blocks right away, but they came up empty. I heard from Tino â' That was Tino Barzie, Frank's manager who was also handling Frankie â âin Palm Springs. Then I got a call and a guy told me they had Frankie, and I was to come here and wait for their call.'
âThat's it?' Jack asked.
âThat's it.'
The door opened again and this time it was Bill Raggio who came in.
âMr Sinatra, we need to talk.'
âYeah, yeah, OK, come on in,' Frank said. He looked at all three of us and said, âI got you rooms on this floor. These bozos will show you where.'
The bozos in question were the FBI agents. One of them told the other three to show us to our rooms, as Raggio, Rudin and Mahoney once again surrounded Frank.
Jack, Jilly and I walked down the hall with the three FBI men. We each had a room, identical to Frank's.
âCan we get room service?' Jack asked.
âTell me what you want,' one FBI man said, âand I'll have it brought up.'
âA bottle of bourbon, and some ice.'
âComin' up.'
âYou guys join me in my room in a few minutes,' Jack said.
Jilly and I both nodded, and went into our rooms. I had only brought one change of clothes, so I didn't bother unpacking. I went to the bathroom, ran some cold water, washed my face, then left and went to Jack's room.
T
he two FBI agents eyed me in the hall but didn't stop me from knocking on Jack's door. He opened it and let me in. I was surprised that the bottle and the ice were already there.
âDrink?' he asked.
âI could use one.'
He poured and handed me one. Jilly wasn't there, yet.
âThis is insane, Eddie.'
âI know it.'
âI don't know if Frank can handle this.'
âHe looks pretty rattled, but he seems OK.'
âHe's right on the edge,' Jack said. âBelieve me, I know.'
There was a knock. He let Jilly in and handed him a drink. We shook hands, which we hadn't had a chance to do earlier.
âBeen a while, Eddie,' he said. âSorry it's under these circumstances.'
âAgreed.'
âI was just tellin' Eddie how close to the edge Frank looks,' Jack said.
âYou might be right,' Jilly said, âbut Frank's pretty tough.'
âYeah, but this is Frankie,' Jack said. âThis is his kid, you know?'
âJesus,' Jilly said, âNancy must be a wreck over this.'
âYou think he called her?' Jack asked.
âI'm damn sure of it,' Jilly said. âNancy and Dolly, both.'
I knew Nancy was Frank's ex and Dolly was his mother, but I had never met either.
Jack was sitting on his bed. Jilly sat next to him. I pulled a chair over and sat down.
âTo Frankie,' Jack said, lifting his glass.
âAnd his safe return,' Jilly said.
I raised my glass and said, âAmen.'
âFrank called me this morning,' I explained, âtold me to get my ass here fast, but didn't tell me what it was about. You guys know more than I do. Fill me in.'
âWell, he told me Frankie got snatched, but not the particulars,' Jack said. âI only know what he told all of us a few minutes ago.'
âPoor Frank,' Jilly said. âHe still hasn't gotten over JFK's death, and now this.'
âAnd the funeral snub,' Jack said. âYou'd think they could've at least let him attend the funeral. After all, he did help get JFK elected.'
âHelp?' Jilly said. âHe got Kennedy elected, plain and simple.'
âI've spoken to him since the twenty-second, but he insisted he was fine.'
âThat sure don't look like fine to me,' Jilly said.
âHey, I didn't ask, Eddie,' Jack said. âDid you agree to make the drop for Frank?'
âWell, yeah,' I said. âI was kind of surprised, but how could I say no?'
âI don't know how much they're gonna ask for,' Jack said, âbut the Sands will stand for it. I got to tell him that.'
âI'm sure he'll appreciate it,' Jilly said.
Entratter leaned forward and filled our glasses again. We all grabbed some more ice.
âYou gonna make the drop alone?' Jack asked.
âI guess . . .'
âI mean,' he went on, âI suppose they'll want someone to make it alone, but it would probably be smart to have some back-up. Know what I mean?'
âYeah you're probably right.'
âWhat about Bardini? He in town?'
I shook my head.
âHe left a few days ago on a case.'
âWell,' Jack said, âthat leaves Jerry.'
I hadn't thought of that, and wondered why. I guess I simply wasn't thinking straight since the moment Frank woke me.
I stood up.
âI'm going to go to my room and make a call.'
âWe'll meet you in Frank's room,' Jack said.
âOK. I'll only be a few minutes.'
I
went to my room and called Jerry. He didn't answer. Damn, if I was going to use him as back-up he'd have to catch a plane fast. I'd need to talk to Frank about what was bound to be a heavy airfare on account of the short notice. I was sure he'd cover it.
Since Jack had brought up Jerry I realized I'd automatically agreed to make the drop for Frank without even considering what I was agreeing to. Drops of this kind don't always go smoothly. The kidnappers could kill me and take the money. I needed somebody to back me up and keep me alive, and if it couldn't be Danny, it had to be Jerry. I wouldn't have trusted anyone else.