The two men returned with a woman
in a chef’s hat, white shirt and pants and an apron. She seemed somewhat
surprised. “You want to see me Mr. Gardino?”
“Sure, Gladys.”
He put his feet on the desk again. “Meet Mr. Campbell here. He is going to
volunteer to get your husband out of prison.”
Colon
nodded at the woman, who, he guessed, was in her middle fifties and said,
“Pleased to meet you.” His gaze toward Gardino was not pleasant. “Okay, sir, you have the floor.
Let’s have it straight.”
Gardino
waived his cigar at Gladys. “Go back to the kitchen, honey. I will let you know
how all this turns out after I straighten this punk out.’ His careful influence
on the word “straighten” was too sarcastic for Colon’s
nature, but he held his tongue and waited for Gardino’s
next move.
Gardino
placed both feet on the floor and turned his chair so that he could direct his
stern attention to the young man in front of him. His voice was the angry growl
of a man who could blow a hole in your head instantly if he so chose. “You came
to me to get something from me. After working for Joseph Lorelli
you know that we operate under strict beliefs that one favor deserves the
return of equal favor. Nod your head if you understand.”
Colon
nodded. He did not like it, but he did anyway.
Gardino
continued, “Our financial wizard has been sent to Waupun for income tax
evasion. We want him out. We cannot even get him a hearing with the parole
board, because, they say, he plea bargained and got a money laundering charge
dismissed, which would have given him more years than he got.” He paused and
winked at Colon. “Now, you get your
three thousand bucks and a job in the Waupun prison and get Gordon Wycliff out and I will clean up Janesville.”
Colon
rubbed his left hand on the back of his neck and leaned forward, eyes on the
floor, then sat back, raising his eyes into those Gardino
was consciously deploying to rattle a younger man. “I want the Constantine
Furnace Company to leave Janesville
permanently. And----,” he paused, raising the index finger of his right hand
toward Gardino, thereby halting any response from the
man. “I want full restitution made to the people who have registered complaints
against the company to the Attorney General’s office.”
******************
“Good old Atlas.”
. “He must be very strong. The
guard said that Atlas grabbed the guy from behind and killed him after he got
stabbed. He broke the man’s neck.”
“Atlas could do that. How bad was
he stabbed?”
“He was stabbed in the arm. A
guard and another inmate were also stabbed.”
“I am sorry to hear that. How bad
is my back?”
“No ribs are broken, but they had
to make 52 stitches.”
“That was nice of them.”
Colon
closed his eyes and he was fast asleep again, still holding on to his wife’s
hand. The doctor came in, looked at the chart hanging on the foot of the bed,
nodded at Chris and left. The nurse came in right after that, checked the
intravenous tubes, took blood pressure and answered Chris’ question.
The nurse said, “He is doing just fine.” She left.
Chris kept looking sadly at a
husband who had experienced a lot of bad luck the past week and a half. Of
course, she thought, maybe he brings some of it on himself. His left hand
quivered for a moment in her grasp and she looked at it lovingly, a tear slowly
running down the side of her nose. She whispered, “I would not want you any
different.”
It was an hour before he woke up.
Chris was sitting in a chair beside the bed. He said, “Go home and take care of
the boys. I am going to be just fine.”
“That is what the nurse told me
an hour ago.”
“Take her word for it and go
home. Thanks for being here. Johnny may understand that something bad is going
on. If so, he needs you to be there for him.”
“I want to be here with you.”
“I will probably be getting other
visitors. I was supposed to see the Attorney General when he came to get Sheffield
before noon. What time is it?”
“Just after
four.”
“Damn. I must have been out for a
long time.”
“They said you lost a lot of
blood.”
“I feel fine. I am going to leave
here tomorrow.”
“I don’t think so.”
He released his hand from her
grasp and patted her arm. “Please go. You’ve got the Plymouth,
right?”