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Onbekend
Angelo's line of work, and he'd said as much to Cerino. But it didn't matter. Angelo might as well have been talking to the wall. Cerino said that the kid's asset was that he had no fear; he was wild and ambitious and had no qualms and little conscience. Cerino said that he needed more people like Tony. Angelo wasn't so sure.
Tony was short at five-foot-seven and wiry. What he lacked in intimidation through stature, he tried to make up for in muscle. He worked out regularly at the American Gym in Jackson Heights. He told Angelo he took protein supplements and occasionally steroids. Tony's features were rounded, ethnic, southern Italian, and his hair was shiny, black, and thick. His nose was slightly flattened and angled to the right thanks to some amateur boxing. He'd grown up in Woodside and never finished high school, where he'd had frequent fights over his stature as well as his sister, Mary, who was, in his vernacular, a "looker." He'd always been protective of his sister, thinking that all males had the same goals as himself when it came to females.
"I can't sit here any longer," Tony said. "I've got to get out of the car." He reached for the door latch.
Angelo put his hand on Tony's arm. "Relax!" Angelo said with enough threat in his voice to restrain Tony. Cerino had been right to pair them up, in a way. Angelo, the "dude," made an excellent foil for brash Tony. He looked older than his thirty-four years. Where Tony was short, Angelo was tall and gaunt, his features sharp and hatchetlike. If Tony was sensitive about his height, Angelo was sensitive about his skin. His face bore the scars of a near-lethal case of chicken pox at age six and severe acne from thirteen to twenty-one. Where Tony was wild and impulsive, Angelo was cautious and calculating: a seemingly calm sociopath whose character had been molded by an endless series of foster homes and a final stint of hard time in a maximum security prison. Both men were rather vain when it came to their wardrobes. Yet Tony never quite cut the figure for which he aimed; his suits, no matter how expensive, were always ill-fitting on his disproportionately muscled body. On the other hand Angelo gave even Dapper John Gotti a run for his money where sartorial elegance was concerned. He wasn't flashy, just meticulous. He wore exclusively Brioni suits, shirts, ties, and shoes. As Tony's muscle building was in response to his short stature, Angelo's fastidious attire was in response to his complexion, a subject about which he did not brook any reference. Tony leaned back in his seat. He glanced in Angelo's direction. Angelo was one of the few people Tony feared and respected, even envied. Angelo was connected, a made man whose reputation was legendary.
"Paulie told me that Frankie DePasquale would show up at this grocery store," Angelo said. "So we're going to spend the next month waiting here if need be." "Christ!" Tony muttered. Instead of getting out of the car, he reached into his baggy jacket and extracted his.25 caliber Beretta Bantam. Releasing the spring-loaded catch in the butt, he slid out the magazine and counted the bullets as if one of the eight shells could have disappeared since he last counted them half an hour ago.
When Tony pulled the empty gun's trigger, Angelo rolled his eyes. "Put the gun away," he said. "What's the matter with you?"
"All right, all right!" Tony said, pushing the magazine home and returning the pistol to its shoulder holster. "Take it easy, will you." He glanced at Angelo, who stared back at him for a moment. Tony held up his hands. He knew Angelo well enough to know he was irritated. "The gun's away. Relax already." Angelo didn't say anything. He resumed looking toward the entrance of D'Agostino's, watching the people coming and going.
Tony sighed heavily. "It's been a freaking month since the mothers threw the acid in Paulie's face. Maybe the bums have split, skipped town. That's what I would have done. The next day I would have been