Everybody Kills Somebody Sometime

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Everybody Kills Somebody Sometime Page 16

by Robert J. Randisi


  “Go ahead. I’ll wait.”

  She picked up her phone, dialed three numbers, spoke to Jack’s girl and then got put through to him. They talked for only about a minute and then she hung up.

  “He says I’m to give you whatever you want.”

  “Why am I not surprised.”

  “And,” she added, “he says for you to get your ass into his office the minute you’re done here.”

  Still not surprised.

  Forty-three

  YOU WANT WHAT?”

  I hadn’t expected her reaction to be so violent.

  A list of—”

  “I know,” she said, cutting me off. “A list of all of the employees hired by the Sands in the past six months.”

  “How many could there be?” I asked.

  “Hundreds!” she said. “Do you have any idea how many people work in the casino and the hotel?”

  “Oh.” I hadn’t thought of that. “Okay, try this. How about a list of the hotel employees?”

  That calmed her slightly.

  “Well … the hotel doesn’t have as quick a turnover of personnel as the casino does. Mostly the dealers, you know? They come and go.”

  “I know.” As a pit boss I saw them come and go.

  “Not to mention the waitresses.”

  “So, can you do it?”

  “Oh, it was never a question of can I do it,” she said. “Just how long it will take.”

  “How long will it take?” I asked.

  “A few days.”

  “I need it faster than that, Marcia.”

  “Boy, you don’t ask for much, do you?”

  “I also need you to have it ready for Danny Bardini to pick up.”

  “Bardini?” she asked. “That good-looking private eye friend of yours?”

  “That’s the one.”

  “Hmm,” she said. “How about this? I’ll work late tonight and have the list ready by morning.”

  “So far, so good. What’s the catch?”

  “That he takes me to see the Rat Pack show, and then we go back stage to meet Frank Sinatra.”

  “Deal,” I said. Danny had never met Frank. He might enjoy that, and he might enjoy Marcia, too. They were two of my favorite people, why not put them together?

  “Then get out of here and let me get to work.”

  I was almost out the door when she shouted, “Wait!”

  “What?”

  “Maids, too?”

  “Oh, definitely,” I said. “Maids, too.”

  “What the fuck?” Entratter said when I walked into his office. He looked as if he was about to explode—literally. It wasn’t anger, really, more puzzlement, but his big shoulders and deep chest looked as if they were going to burst from his jacket, and his tie seemed to be strangling him. As if on cue he reached up to pull it away from his neck.

  “Sorry?”

  “Two girls are dead?”

  “And one man,” I added. “Mike Borraco.”

  “From the Riviera?”

  “That’s right.”

  “The fuck is goin’ on, Eddie.”

  “I wish I knew.”

  “Why the hell are you gettin’ involved in this when you have another job to do?”

  “Well,” I said, “I didn’t know it when I found the first girl, Jack, but it seems to be all the same job.”

  “What?”

  Briefly—quickly—I explained what was going on, and what had transpired out at the warehouse they were using for an Ocean’s 11 set.

  “So you’re tellin’ me that you’ve found out that the threats against Dino are real?”

  “With three people dead already, I would say so.” I left out the part about Jerry shooting Buzz Ravisi, and Ravisi accidentally killing his own partner.

  “And what do the police think?”

  “Apparently,” I said, “they’re lookin’ for Lou Terazzo.”

  “Unlucky Lou? They wanna pin this on him?”

  “You don’t think he could’ve done it, Jack?’ I asked.”Out of jealousy, maybe.”

  “Jealous of Mikey Borraco?” Entratter made a rude noise.

  “Jack,” I said, carefully, “do you know something I don’t know?”

  “About what?”

  “What the fuck, Jack—”

  “You know, Eddie,” he said, suddenly calm, “your Brooklyn comes and goes. Did you know that?”

  “Yeah, Jack,” I said, “I know that. Look, I’ve got to talk to everybody in the Rat Pack, and that includes hangers-on—”

  “Hangers-on?”

  “You know, Henry Silva, Richard Conte—”

  “Don’t let those guys hear you call them that,” Entratter warned.

  “Angie Dickinson,” I went on. “But before I do that is there somethin’ you wanna tell me?”

  “No, Eddie,” Entratter said. “I don’t know what’s goin’ on anymore than you do. Go ahead and talk to everybody. Do your job.”

  “When did this become my job?” I asked. “And not a favor for a friend?”

  Before he could answer the phone rang. He picked it up, listened for the second, then said, “What the fuck do they want? They’re what? In my casino?”

  He slammed the phone down.

  “You know a guy named Jerry?”

  “Yeah,” I said. “Frank sent him to watch my back.”

  “Yeah well, Entratter said,”I guess somebody shoulda been watchin’ his.”

  “What are you talkin’ about?”

  “The cops are in the casino right now,” he said.

  “What for?”

  “Apparently,” he said, “they’re arrestin’ him.”

  Forty-four

  WHEN I GOT DOWN to the casino floor in front of the lounge the police had Jerry Epstein in handcuffs. Two uniformed officers were flanking him, while Detectives Hargrove and Smith were fronting him.

  When Hargrove saw me coming he turned my way and smiled. “Just the man I wanted to see,” he said. “We were comin’ to look for you next.”

  “What’s going on?” I demanded. “Why do you have this man handcuffed?”

  “Well, Mr. Gianelli,” Hargrove said, “he’s under arrest.”

  “For what?”

  “Suspicion of murder.”

  I looked at Jerry, who stared back at me with no expression. Just for a second I thought he gave me a head shake. Don’t say anything, he was warning me.

  “Who is he supposed to have murdered?”

  “A coupla guys in a flophouse off the strip,” Smith said. “Maybe you heard of them? Anthony ‘Buzzy’ Ravisi and Lenny Davis? They pretty much ran in your circle.”

  I looked at Smith for a moment and held my tongue, even though I knew what he meant. I didn’t know how long he’d been a detective but there was a time when, even though he was a police officer, he would not have been permitted to make an arrest because he was a Negro. Things were changing, but not that much. I didn’t know if he was looking down his nose at me and my Italian ancestry or if he was just an asshole.

  “Forgive me, Detective, but you don’t know what circle I run in. And I don’t know what circles these men ran in.”

  “Pretty much the same as this joker here,” Hargrove said. “You got imported New York muscle workin’ for you, and you expect us to believe you don’t run with the same company?”

  “Jerry doesn’t work for me, Detective,” I said.

  “Then what’s he doin’ here?”

  I could feel Jerry’s eyes on me, waiting to see if I was going to give Frank Sinatra up. I can’t say I wouldn’t have, if the cuffs had been on me, but I knew he’d cut out his tongue before he spoke Frank’s name. Or Mo Mo Giancana’s, for that matter.

  “He’s gambling, as far as I know. Spent some time playing horses yesterday.”

  “That’s not all he did, yesterday.”

  Hargrove turned and put his hand out. One of the uniforms handed him Jerry’s .45, holding it by the trigger guard.

  “He killed
two people with this gun.”

  Well, I knew that wasn’t true. Jerry had killed one man with that gun.

  “Once I prove it, he’ll be up for murder, and you,” he said, “will probably be locked up as an accessory.”

  “Accessory?”

  “That’s what we call people who are present when someone is murdered,” he explained, “and who help the murderer.”

  “Detective,” I said, “I really think you’ve got the wrong guys—”

  “We’ll see,” he replied, “once our witness gets a look at the two of you.”

  “Are you takin’ me in?” I asked.

  “Not yet,” Hargrove said. “First we’ll have him ID Big Jerry, here. Once that’s done, we’ll have you in for a lineup. Meanwhile, don’t even think about leavin’ town. That would sort of be the same as a confession, don’t you think?”

  “I’m not goin’ anywhere, Detective,” I assured him, with much more confidence than I was feeling at the moment. “I’m not guilty of anything.” There you go, I thought, a bold-faced lie.

  “We’ll see about that.” he turned to the two cops holding onto Jerry. “Take him out.”

  “Jerry,” I said, “the Sands will get a lawyer for you.”

  “I’m not worried,” Jerry said to me. “I’ll be out before the end of the day.”

  “I seriously doubt that,” Hargrove said. “Get him out of here.”

  “Detective,” a voice behind me said.

  I turned and saw Jack Entratter standing there. He’d straightened his suit and combed his hair, and he looked calm and collected. Still looked like he was going to burst out of his clothes, though.

  “Mr. Entratter.”

  “Can we talk? Privately?”

  “Sure.”

  I don’t know what surprised me more, that they knew each other, or that Hargrove was so willing to talk to Jack.

  He took the Detective into the lounge, up to the bar where they could both sit on stools. I turned and looked at Jerry. The two cops had started to hustle him away, but now they were waiting for further instructions.

  “What are you waiting for?” Detective Smith demanded. “Get him out of here!”

  Both of the cops were white and they simply stared at Smith and didn’t move. They were obviously going to take their cue from Hargrove.

  Smith turned and glared at me. He seemed angry that I had witnessed the lack of respect he commanded from the white cops. Not my problem, I thought, and looked away.

  The conversation between Entratter and Hargrove was fairly animated, went on for a few minutes, and did not turn out the way I expected. I figured with Jack being all calm and charming he’d get his way, even if he had to pull out Frank Costello’s name to do it. However, when they came back Jack was not looking happy.

  “Let’s go,” Hargrove said to the cops.

  “Uh, are we takin’ him in?” one of them asked.

  “Of course we’re taking him in,” Hargrove said. He turned to Entratter. “Have your lawyer ask for me.”

  “I’ll do that, Detective.”

  Hargrove gave me a look, then turned and followed the other cops out. Jerry went along as meek as a kitten.

  “He’s fucked,” I said to Jack. “When they run that gun he’s screwed, and so am I.”

  “I don’t think so.”

  “Why not?”

  Entratter looked at me.

  “That’s not the same gun.”

  “What?” I asked. “How do you know?”

  He smiled and said, “Because he got rid of it. I got him one just like it.”

  Forty-five

  I WANTED TO GO the police station to help Jerry get released. Entratter vetoed the idea.

  “What can you do that our lawyers can’t?” he asked. “Besides, if they decide they want to lock you up too, let them come lookin’ for you.”

  “So what do I do?”

  “What you’ve been doin’,” he said. “What you planned to do. Let me worry about gettin’ Jerry out.”

  I have to admit, part of me was wondering who would watch my back while Jerry was in custody. It was selfish, I know, but I’d already been around more violence in the past few days than all of my life—including a couple of years on the streets in Brooklyn.

  The other part of me just wanted to get Jerry out. After all, I knew he’d killed Buzzy Ravisi in self-defense, and had saved my life in the process. I already owed him a lot.

  “I’m goin’ back to my office,” he said. “What was all that about with Marcia?”

  “Just a few things I needed,” I assured him. “Nothing to worry about.”

  Jack pointed a big index finger at me.

  “That’s good,” he said, “because I have enough to worry about. Fix this Dean Martin thing, Eddie. I’m countin’ on you, and so is Frank.”

  “I won’t let you down.”

  Another bold-faced lie? That remained to be seen.

  I got to a phone and called Danny Bardini. I told him he could pick the list up from Marcia in the morning and, oh yeah, he had a date with her.

  “This the Marcia you went out with a few times?” he asked. “Frizzy hair, sexy mouth, whole eyeglasses thing goin’ on?”

  “That’s the one,” I said. “She’s kinda special, Danny.”

  “I’m hip,” he said.

  “Then you’ll do it?” I asked.

  “I’ll answer that after you tell me what it is I have to do.”

  “Easy,” I said. “Just escort her to a Rat Pack show and then take her back stage to meet Sinatra.”

  There was a moment of silence, and then Danny said, “That means I get to meet Frank, too?”

  “Yes.”

  “And Dean Martin?”

  “Yes.”

  “And Angie Dickinson?”

  “I don’t know,” I said. “If she’s there … maybe.” I still hadn’t gotten to meet Angie Dickinson, myself. “I’ll arrange for you to get back stage. Will you do it?”

  “It’s a sacrifice,” he said, “but somebody has to do it.”

  With that done I told him how Jerry had been arrested.

  “If he goes down he’ll take you with him, ol’ buddy,” he warned.

  “I don’t think so, Danny,” I said, “but I’m not all that sure he’ll go down. Apparently, he’s already dumped the gun, so their ballistics test is not gonna come up with a match. Our only problem is the witness.”

  “What witness?”

  “That’s the problem,” I said. “I don’t know.”

  “Eddie, if there’s a witness that can ID you and him …”

  “I know,” I said. “It won’t even matter that it was self-defense. They’ll wonder why we didn’t report it in the first place.”

  “Wait until they get a sheet on Jerry,” he added. “I’ll bet he’s been a bad boy in New York.”

  “Entratter’s gonna get him an attorney.”

  “Probably a mob attorney,” Danny said. “That’ll seal the deal.”

  “I guess we’ll have to wait and see.”

  “Might as well get on with what you have to do while you’re waitin’,” he suggested.

  “I know,” I said. “Jack already told me that. I’ll talk to you tomorrow.”

  “You gonna be there when I pick up the list?”

  “Of course,” I said. “I have to introduce you to Marcia.”

  “Was this date her idea, or yours?”

  “Why would a date with you be my idea?” I asked.

  After we hung up I wondered if Jerry’d had time to arrange for me to see Frank. The only way I was going to find that out was to find Joey Bishop, or have Entratter call down to the steam room for me.

  Or, I could just go down to the steam room myself and see if I’d made the A-list all on my own.

  Forty-six

  WHEN I GOT DOWN TO THE steam room I was surprised to see that all of the bathrobes were missing from the pegs. Apparently, every one of the Rat Packers were having a steam after the da
y’s shooting. There were plain bathrobes in a closet. I debated for a moment whether or not I should go in, then decided, what the hell? It was as good a time as any to be properly introduced to the ones I hadn’t met yet, and it was a good test to see how welcome I’d be.

  I got undressed, donned a robe and entered the steam room.

  “Whoa!” Sammy Davis said. “Who’s the strange cat?”

  “Take it easy, Smokey,” Frank said. “This is Eddie G. He’s a pit boss in the casino, and a new friend. Come on in, pally. Have a seat and I’ll introduce you.”

  It occurred to me that this could get awkward. Sammy, Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop didn’t know about the threats against Dino. Also, Peter and Sammy didn’t know that Joey had brought me to Frank. So the only one who knew everything that was going on were me, Frank and Dean.

  Frank made the introductions around the room, as if I didn’t know anyone, except when he got to Dean he added, “And, of course, you know Dino.”

  “Yes,” I said, “of course.”

  “I say,” Peter said to me, “I think I saw you on the set today.”

  “That’s right, Charlie,” Frank said. “I gave the okay for Eddie to come and watch some of the shoot.”

  “Welcome to the club, Clyde,” Sammy said. “Take in a steam with the cool cats.”

  “Thanks.”

  “Eddie,” Frank said, “Sammy just asked me to be his best man. He’s asked May Britt to marry him.”

  I looked at Sammy, who today was wearing his eye patch. I assumed the glass eye, which he wore on stage and in the movie, was not behind it.

  “Really? That’s great. Congratulations.”

  “Thanks, man,” Sammy said. “I know there’s gonna be some cats out there who are gonna get all bent out of shape, but we love each other. I don’t care how many threats I get, I’m gonna marry ’er.”

  “Threats?” I looked at Frank.

  “The usual things,” Frank said. “that is, usual for Sammy.”

  “’Die nigger,’” Sammy said, “’die Jew.’ I’m used to it, but it upsets May.”

  “Fuck ’em,” I said. “Bunch of ignorant bastards.”

  “Hey, Frank,” Sammy said, “I like this boy.”

  “Hey, Eddie,” Dean said, “I might feel like dealin’ some blackjack tonight. You gonna be in the pit?”

 

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