Tamanaka. Dad devoted his life to nurturing his inheritance. Ten hours a day, twelve, fourteen â he didnât run his business, or his life, by the clock. Shoulder to the wheel, nose to grindstone. Dad was a grab-your-bootstraps man. He loved Richard Nixonâs favorite saying, âWhen the going gets tough, the tough get going.â In his mind, hard work equated to success, one to one. Every failure in life was a failure of will.â
Angel rolls up to sit at the edge of the bed, her feet dangling, her back to Carter. She takes a moment before resuming her tale. âSo, what happens is that Home Depot opens a giant lumber yard twenty miles west of dadâs. Thatâs in 2001. Then in 2003, Loweâs opens a store fifteen miles to the north. Dad canât buy lumber at the prices they pay, but he doesnât need their margins to make a profit because he runs his operation more efficiently. So he stumbles along for a few years, holding on to whatever clients he can, until Loweâs and Home Depot decide to increase market share by cutting wholesale prices to the bone. Short-term, they donât care if they lose money at one particular store. Theyâve got a hundred other stores backing them up.
âMy father was a jerk, Carter. He couldnât admit that he was wrong, that you could work your ass off and still be crushed. When the business went into the red, he borrowed from the banks. When the banks cut him off, he refinanced his house. When that money ran out, he sold off his stocks and emptied the bank accounts. And when there was nothing left, he put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger. My mother was already a hopeless drunk by that time and I donât remember her crying at dadâs funeral, though she nearly fell into his grave. What I do remember is spending the next two years, until I graduated high school, with an aunt, then getting my little butt on the first plane out of town.â
Carter sits up and lays a hand on Angelâs shoulder. Itâs not the best story heâs ever heard, but itâs good enough for a rainy night in New York. âThereâs a moral here, a bottom line. I can smell it.â
âYeah, thereâs a moral. Forget the bullshit about hard work and personal responsibility. Thatâs just propaganda to keep the peasants on the farm. God blesses the child whoâs got her own and I intend to get mine.â
TWELVE
B obby Dittoâs thinking that it doesnât just pour when it rains. It shits all over your head. Ruby Amaroso was the most responsible of the young kids Bobby recruited two years ago. When you gave him a job, he got it done, plus he kept the rest of the jerks in place. Now heâs in the morgue with a tag on his toe, and yours truly, meaning Roberto Benedetti, is the chief suspect. The cops have been to visit twice, even though Bobby referred them to his mouthpiece when they first showed up.
And now this, the final insult, he has to turn for help to the goddamned Russians and they send him a slanty-eyed chink who doesnât weigh more than a hundred and fifty pounds. A little pussy-boy with a flat-nosed face carved from stone. Theyâre in the bunker and heâs offering the chink coffee, but the chinkâs not showing the slightest respect, for Bobby or for the Blade, whoâs standing with his back against the wall. No, the jerkâs actually refusing Bobbyâs hospitality.
âSee,â Bobby explains, âI need to know what you can do for me, if anything. This card?â He holds up Louis Chinâs business card: XAO INVESTIGATIONS. âIt wouldnât mean a thing to me, even if I could pronounce it.â
ââZow.â Itâs pronounced âZow.â But I understand that weâve been recommended by people you trust.â Chinâs thoroughly enjoying the gangsterâs obvious discomfort. Heâs worked with the guineas before. As self-centered as
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