Then what?
I don't want to know.
What do you think?
If Savarese was a younger man, I'd say maybe he caught this guy hiding the salami in the wrong place. It's something personal like that, anyhow. If he had just caught him doing something, business, he shouldn't have been doing, he probably would have taken care of him himself.''
Maybe this guy is related to him or something, Victor said, and he doesn't want it to get out that he had a job done on him.
I don't want to know. He told me he went into business for himself with the niggers, that's what I believe. I wouldn't want Savarese to think I didn't believe him, or that I got nosy and started asking questions.
He loaded the shotgun. When it had taken three of the shotshells, it would take no more.
Damn, Charles said. He worked the action three times, to eject the shells, and then unscrewed the magazine cap and pulled the fore end off. He took a quarter and carefully pried the magazine spring retainer loose. He then raised the butt of the shotgun and shook the weapon until a plastic rod slipped out. This was the magazine plug required by federal law to be installed in shotguns used for hunting wild fowl; it restricted the magazine capacity to three rounds.
Charles then reassembled the shotgun and loaded it again. This time it took all five shells, four in the magazine and one in the chamber. He checked to make sure the safety was on, unzipped his carry-on bag, slid the shotgun inside, closed the zipper, and then put the carry-on bag in the backseat on top of Victor's.
Okay? Victor asked.
Go find a McDonald's, Charles said. They generally have pay phones outside.
You want to get a hamburger or something too?
If you want, Charles said without much enthusiasm.
Victor drove out of the parking lot, paid the attendant, who looked like he was on something, and drove to North Broad Street, where he turned right.
You know where you're going? Charles asked.
I've been here before, Victor said.
Eight or ten blocks up North Broad Street, Victor found a McDonald's. He carefully locked the carit looked like a rough neighborhoodand they went in. Charles dropped the plastic bag the shotshells had come in, and the magazine plug, into the garbage container by the door.
Now that you said it, I'm hungry, Charles said to Victor, and he took off his pigskin gloves. Get me a Big Mac and a small fries and a 7-Up. If they don't have 7-Up, get me Sprite or whatever. I'll make the call.
He was not on the phone long. He went to Victor and stood beside him and waited, and when their order was served, he carried it to a table while Victor paid for it.
2184 Delaware Avenue, he said when Victor came to the table. He's there now. He'll probably be there until half past five. You know where that is?
Down by the river. Are we going to do it there?
Anywhere we like, except there, Charles said. The guy on the phone said, 'Not here or near here.
Who was the guy on the phone?
It was whoever answered the number Savarese gave me to call. I didn't ask him who he was. He said hello, and I said I was looking for Mr. Smith, and he said Mr. Smith was at 2184 Delaware and would be until probably half past five, and I asked him if he thought I could do my business with him there, and he said, 'Not here or near here,' and I said, Thank you' and hung up.
If it wasn't Savarese, then somebody else knows about this.
That's not so surprising, if you think about it. He also said, 'Leave the shotgun.'
What did he think we were going to do, take it with us?
I think he wants to do something with it, Charles said.
Like what?
I don't know, Charles said, then smiled and asked, Shoot rabbits, maybe?
Shit!
How are we fixed
for time?
Take us maybe ten minutes to get there, fifteen tops, Victor said.
Then we don't have to hurry, Charles said. He looked down at the tray. I forgot to get napkins.
Get a handful, Victor said as Charles stood up. These Big Macs are sloppy.''
***
Officer Joe Magnella, who was twenty-four-years-old, five feet nine and one half inches tall, dark-haired, and weighed 156 pounds, opened the bathroom door, checked to make sure that neither his mother nor his sister was upstairs, and then ran naked down the upstairs corridor to the back bedroom he shared with his brother, Anthony, who was twenty-one.
He had just showered and shaved and an hour before had come out of Vinny's Barbershop, two blocks away at the corner of Bancroft and Warden Streets in South Philadelphia, freshly shorn and reeking of cologne.
The room he had shared with Anthony all of his life was small and dark and crowded. When they had been little kids, their father had bought them bunk beds, and when Joe was twelve or fourteen, he had insisted that the beds be separated and both placed on the floor, because bunk beds were for little kids. They had stayed that way until Joe came home from the Army, when he had restacked them. There was just not enough space in the room to have them side by side on the floor and for a desk too.