A Bullet for Carlos (7 page)

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Authors: Giacomo Giammatteo

BOOK: A Bullet for Carlos
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My response was automatic. “
Buongiorno, Zio Zeppe.”

He gave me a big hug, and then we made our way to the stairs. The door at the top was open. Music was playing. I think it was an Al Martino song. The door opened near the end of the kitchen. Dominic was waiting.


Buongiorno, Concetta. Come va?

“I’m fine.” I laughed. “I mean,
va bene
.” It had been so long since I’d been to Dominic’s house I’d forgotten the rules. Uncle Dominic insisted on greetings and goodbyes being said in Italian. I hugged him, whispering apologies. “
Mi dispiace, Zio Domenico. Mi dispiace.

“Sorry is for strangers.” Dominic waved his hand as if it were nothing. He made his way to the sink, hard leather heels clicking on the tile floors. He rinsed out the espresso pot, lit the stove, then waited.

“Uncle Dominic, I don’t need espresso. I’ve had plenty of coffee already.”

“Nonsense.” He opened the cabinet, grabbed a few biscotti. “Sit. Relax.”

“I can’t wait to see the kids again,” I said to Zeppe, and sat at the kitchen table, a round one with a glass top and six chairs.

Dominic pulled his chair close and held my hand in his. “So tell your uncle what brings you here today. I know it’s not to rub my balding head or see Zeppe’s handsome face.”

“I went back to work yesterday.”

“And?”

“It wasn’t what I expected. People were nice, really nice…”

Dominic said nothing. It was his silence that spurred me on. I sighed. “The captain wants me to do things I don’t want to do.”

Dominic patted my hand. “You must understand, Concetta, there is a lot of dirt to hide.”

I shook my head. “How could another cop betray Sean or Jerry. Or me?”

Something in his internal clock must have alerted him and Dominic got up to fix the espresso. “Sweet Connie. They can betray you the same way people betrayed Jesus. You are naïve when it comes to your fellow cops.” He walked back to the table, and handed me the cup on a saucer. A biscotto sat on the plate next to it. “Always remember what I taught you when you were little—
si puo’ solo fidare famiglia
.”

Zeppe got up from the table and went toward the stove. “Yeah, you can only trust family, but not to fix you an espresso.”

Dominic laughed. “I have fixed your espresso since you were a baby. It’s time you did it yourself.”

You can only trust family.
Dominic had drummed that into my head since I was six. Sometimes I believed him; sometimes I didn’t. I nibbled on the biscotto, then looked at Dominic. “These guys were like family. We did…”

Dominic turned, like a snake ready to strike, the spoon he held pointing at me. “Only
family
is family.”

“I’m going to stick it out, Uncle Dominic. They’re not getting rid of me so easily.”

Dominic nodded as if he knew something all along. “So they want you to leave?”

My cheeks blushed. “The captain suggested I retire, with full benefits, but I convinced him to let me stay.”

“Where are you going?”

“I’ll be close to Bensonhurst. Don’t worry.”

Dominic nodded again. “They’re afraid to have you around. Too much publicity with you being a woman.” He lit his pipe, then took another sip of espresso. “If they don’t get what they want, though, they
will
kill you.” A few billows of smoke rose from his pipe. “Perhaps you
should
retire. I can always…”

Dominic had a way of making me do what I didn’t want, but on some things I stood firm. “No! I’ve got to find out who killed Sean and Jerry.”


Concetta, mia bambina,
that is exactly what they
don’t
want you finding out. My guess is at least one of your partners was dirty and someone in the department is covering.”

“Bullshit.” My response was instinctive, but something told me Dominic was right. A lot of things didn’t add up about that night in the alley and, as much as I didn’t want to admit it, the facts pointed to either Sean or Jerry being dirty. Maybe both of them.

He tapped his pipe on the ashtray, knocking out the dead tobacco. “You can curse me all you want. It won’t change things.”

I strengthened my resolve. “I’ve got to find out. They were my partners.”

“I told you, finding out is what your department doesn’t want; in fact, that’s the worst thing you can do. If cops killed your partners, they’ll be waiting for you to make a mistake. Just one.”

“Guess I’ll have to be perfect.”

Dominic moved over and wrapped his arms around me. He brought my head to his chest and patted my back. “
Tu sei sempre stata perfetto
. You have always been perfect.” He held me for a moment, then stepped back. “Do you even
want
to be a cop, or did you do it because of me?”

Dominic pushed hard to get his way. He knew his words would upset me, and he was right. I seethed inside. He had a way of doing that to me, but I swore I wasn’t going to let him. Not today. I wasn’t going to start another rift between us. “I like being a cop.”

“You
like
being a cop. But are you happy?” Dominic sprinkled a pinch of cinnamon in his espresso and glanced at me from the corner of his eye. “You have to think of what you want from life. Life has rules. If you want to be happy, you have to follow those rules.”

“I know all about rules. Trust me, I stick to them.”

Dominic laughed. “I’m not talking about your police rules, I’m talking about
your
rules. Your own personal rules of life.
That
is what will make you happy—or not.”

Damn him. But two can play at this game.
“What about you, Uncle Dominic? Are you happy?”

He sipped his espresso. Nibbled on a biscotto, then he stared, as if he would find the answer in the espresso. “I never followed my heart. I broke my own rules.”

“You didn’t answer my question.”

Uncle Dominic’s head moved side to side, as if it were in slow motion. “I have days when I love life, like when you come to visit, or when I spend time with Zeppe’s kids, but…no, Concetta, I am
not
happy. I haven’t been happy since your mother died.”

My heart sunk when he mentioned my mother. I had tried luring him into a conversation where I knew he couldn’t win—and it backfired. Uncle Dominic got up from the table and walked out of the kitchen, but not before I saw the tears in his eyes.

It was several minutes before he returned, composed, a smile on his face. He rinsed his espresso cup, placed the last biscotto in a jar on the counter, then came to hug me.

“It seems as if your mind is made up. So the only thing I can tell you is, be careful.”

I fidgeted, wanting to say something but not knowing what, so I grabbed my purse from the table. “Thanks. I appreciate everything.”

“If you must do this, get help. There is a man you can talk to within your own new department. His name is Donovan.”

The hairs on the back of my neck rose. “Do you mean Frankie Donovan, the hero cop who broke Tito Martelli in Brooklyn?” I stepped closer to Dominic, suspicion digging deeper in my soul. “Did you have something to do with that?”

“Nothing,” he said.

“I don’t want anything to do with your puppets. I know you mean well, but I’ve got to live my own life, and the last thing I need is to be seen hanging around with a dirty cop. For years I risked everything coming here to see you.”

“I know you did, and there is nothing I treasure more than your visits, but I don’t have Donovan in my pocket. Trust me. Trust
him
. He can help you.”

“Promise?”

“I wouldn’t lie to you,
bambina
.”

“All right. I’m trusting you.”

“Thank you, and remember:
La famiglia é tutto.

I kissed Dominic’s cheek. “I know it is. I never forget.”

***

Dominic showed her to
the basement door, watched her walk down the steps, then closed the door as soon as she left his sight. The smile he wore vanished. “Fabrizio!”

A man with the look of a tiger came into the kitchen seconds later.

“Fabrizio, find out everything you can about these animals who almost killed my Concetta. I want to know who they are and who gave the orders.”

“Si, Signore.”

Chapter 8: New Job

Chapter 8

New Job

T
he next day I got up earlier than normal, grabbed a bottle of water and headed to the car. It was a longer drive to get to work but the time seemed to fly. I put the top down on the convertible and let the wind blow my hair into tangles. Tangled hair didn’t matter today; I was starting a new job in homicide. God liked me after all.

I parked in the lot, walked the half a block it took to get to the front door, then up three steps into the station. It looked much the same as the old place—big room with worn linoleum floors, and cops who mingled in groups drinking coffee and chatting before the day started. A desk sergeant I didn’t know barked orders amidst the gossip that bounced around the room. Quite a different reception than the one I got at the old station. No cheers. No congratulations. I liked this better.

I noticed a young-looking cop standing by herself. “You know where to find Lieutenant Morreau?” I asked.

She tilted her head toward the stairs—old wooden ones which showed the wear in the middle. A few had marks from carpet tacks, but they didn’t creak, and that surprised me. I followed a narrow hallway to a door that said “homicide” and pushed it open. It was the old swinging type door. The place looked like the set of a television show: small metal desks; chairs with the wheels worn down; and a bunch of detectives with worn-out looks, like they were trying to make it until the end of the day, and the day had just begun.

I announced myself to the receptionist, a young lady named Carol according to the nameplate on her desk. She had short blonde hair and sported Prada glasses. Judging by the rest of her outfit, it appeared to be the only thing she spoiled herself with. I had no room to talk; I wouldn’t think of splurging on Prada.

I took a seat while waiting for Morreau, and made chit-chat with several of the detectives. Before long an older man walked in, bald, but with a smile on his face as big as the morning. He spoke with Carol then headed in my direction. A younger guy with intense greenish/gray eyes followed him. He made me want to lick my lips.

The older one extended his hand. “Lou Mazzetti,” he said, “and this smart ass behind me is Frankie Donovan. Some people call him Bugs because he bugs the shit out of them.”

I stood, shook Lou’s hand. He reminded me a little of Dominic; perhaps it was the starched shirt, or the bald head. But the resemblance stopped there. Lou had eyes that made me want to smile, not cower.

“Connie Gianelli,” I said, then turned to Frankie. The crease in his trousers looked as if he just came from a tailor, and I would have sworn I saw his Italian knit shirt on a fashion model. The top two buttons were undone, exposing more hair than Mazzetti had on his head. I silently thanked Uncle Dominic for suggesting I look up Frankie Donovan. This guy might even make me reconsider my vow not to date cops. “So you’re the great Frankie Donovan, the one who took Tito Martelli down.”

“Lou did most of the work.” Frankie paused. His shiny white teeth lit up against golden skin and dark hair, but his eyes are what got me—they sparkled and took things in with one glance. And his smile looked as if it was created for the sole purpose of charming the pants off a woman.

Just as I was about to say something, he started up again. “Gianelli, we’re getting ahead of ourselves here. Before you go inviting me to lunch or asking me home to see your mother, I need to tell you that I’m working your case.”

A pain started in my chest. “What do you mean
working
my case? What’s there to work?”

Donovan raised his eyes and sighed. “I know you don’t like it, and I don’t either, but we got eight dead drug dealers and two dead cops. We can’t brush that under the rug.”

“So you’re investigating my…incident, and you’re charged with getting to the bottom of it. That it, Donovan?”

“Pretty much. Yeah.”

I got a pissed-off feeling in me. I don’t know why; I knew they’d investigate. In any case I decided to test Frankie. “I don’t know if I like you, Donovan.”

“If you’re clean, you’ll love me. If not…” He shrugged. “Right now you’re just another suspect in a homicide, and if I find out you stink, you’ll wish you had taken the retirement the captain tried forcing on you.”

I didn’t know if I wanted to hit him or take him home, but I managed to compose myself. I even managed a smile. “I didn’t do anything wrong.”

“I hope you didn’t, but I’ll let you know when Lou and I finish.”

Lou Mazzetti held up his hands in surrender. “Count me out. I don’t investigate cops.”

I found my focus shifting to the birthmark on Frankie’s neck, a dark blotch below his jawline.

“Looks like Sicily doesn’t it?” Mazzetti said.

I turned to Mazzetti. “What?”

“Frankie’s birthmark. It looks like a map of Sicily. He denies it, but it does.”

I smiled. It
did
look like Sicily.

“Enough with Sicily,” Frankie said, then, “I’ll let you know when I get something, Gianelli.”

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