Thieving Weasels (16 page)

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Authors: Billy Taylor

BOOK: Thieving Weasels
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32

I
SPENT
THE
NEXT
TWO
W
EEKS
LOOKING
OVER
MY
SHOULDER
and poring over the Long Island papers for news about my family. I didn't expect to find anything about my mother, but I figured there might be a piece about Uncle Wonderful and the FBI, or Roy getting nabbed in a high speed chase. There was nothing, and unlike the rest of the world where no news is good news, in the land of thieving weasels, no news means it's time to start checking for the knife in your back.

My fears were finally realized on the third Monday of January. Maybe it's just me, but if there's anything more nerve-racking than seeing the woman who'd tried to strangle you appear at your school's Martin Luther King Day Celebration I have yet to find it. But there she was, third row center, wearing a big smile and an even bigger hat, which—even I had to admit—looked terrific on her. In fact,
I couldn't remember another time when my mother looked so good, and if it was any other day, I would have been happy to see her. Sadly, this was also the day I was supposed to meet Claire's parents, and I didn't want my mother to do anything embarrassing, like stealing their wallets.

Once I was able to pry my eyes off my mother's hat I spotted two familiar faces sitting next to her: Roy and Uncle Wonderful. As flattered as I was that my entire family had come to watch our Senior Class Reading of Martin Luther King's letter from a Birmingham jail, something told me they weren't just there for the civil rights. I debated ducking out the back door or faking an epileptic seizure, but neither of these struck me as the kind of first impression I wanted to make on Claire's parents, who were sitting just three rows behind my family.

Any way you looked at it, I was trapped.

Claire was seated at the opposite side of the stage, and there was no way for me to signal her. I didn't think my family would do anything stupid as we stood and marched down the center aisle at the end of the reading, but I was forced to reevaluate this opinion when Roy sleazed up behind me and stuck either a gun or a roll of Mentos in my back. I was hoping it was the latter because my mouth had suddenly gone dry and I could have used something to freshen my breath.

“Meet us at that statue of the guy and the dwarf,” he whispered.

“It's not a dwarf,” I said. “It's a child.”

“Whatever. Just meet us there, or I'll shoot you in the ass.”

“With all these people around? You wouldn't dare.”

“Do you really want to risk it?”

“My entire life has been one endless risk. Why should today be any different?”

“Just meet us there.”

The statue in question was of Archibald Wheaton, our school's founder and first president. Old Archie, as everyone called the statue, was a popular spot for late night hookups and family introductions. To the best of my knowledge it had never been the site of a murder or shooting, and my goal was to keep it that way. And just my luck, it was also where I was supposed to meet Mr. and Mrs. Benson.

We filed out of the building, and as we gathered on the Great Lawn to light candles and sing “Amazing Grace” I rushed up to Claire.

“My family's here,” I whispered.

“You mean
here
here?” She turned to face the crowd coming out of the auditorium. “Where?”

“Stop looking around so much. I don't want them to see me talking to you. Can you pick me up behind the storage facility in fifteen minutes?”

“Of course.”

“What about your parents?”

“I'll tell them to meet us at the restaurant. Are you going to be okay?”

“I'm not sure, but I don't have much of a choice.”

I squeezed Claire's hand and raced toward the dorms. It took Roy less than a minute to catch up and guide me to the visitor's parking lot where we were joined by the rest of my family.

“I'm so proud of you,” my mother said, giving me the world's biggest hug. “That presentation was incredibly moving.”

“Thanks, Ma. Coming from you that really means a lot.”

I glanced past her and smiled at Uncle Wonderful.

“Hello, Skipper,” he said.

“Hi, Uncle Wonderful. Did the Feds give you the day off, or did you sneak out of jail in a laundry hamper?”

“The Feds never had me, you rube. I can't believe you actually fell for that.”

“Me neither,” I said with a sigh.

My mother let go of me, and I turned to face my cousin.

“So, Roy, was that cop who chased you down Ocean Parkway bogus, too?”

“No, the cop was real. Lucky for me, I lost him in the boat basin. Vinny had to come and rescue me.”

“How is the Vinster?” I asked.

“In rehab.”

“Glad to hear he's finally getting his act together.”

“Not even close. It was either that, or ninety days in County. Now he's dealing meth to the other patients and making more money than ever.”

“Enough catching up,” Uncle Wonderful shouted. “Tell us where your storage space is.”

I took a deep breath and said, “Storage space? What storage space?”

“The one you told me about in the ambulance,” my mother replied. “You remember, dear.”

“You mean right before you tried to strangle me?”

“That's right.”

I pretended to debate the pros and cons of telling them the location when Roy pulled out his gun and said, “C'mon, Skip. I have tickets to a Rangers game tonight.”

“Fine,” I said. “But I get to keep a quarter of the money.”

“You get nothing,” Uncle Wonderful hissed. “Now tell us where it is, or I'll have Roy shoot you right here and now.”

I made a move like I was going to knock the false teeth out of Uncle Wonderful's mouth, and Roy grabbed me from behind.

“Don't even think about it.”

I pulled myself free and said, “Fine. It's ten miles south of here in Rensselaer. Get on the Northway, and I'll show you from there.”

My mother and Uncle Wonderful climbed in the front of the car, and Roy and I got in the back. We pulled out of the parking lot, and I looked out the rear window to see my entire class singing “Amazing Grace.” I should have been there with them, and that's when it struck me that my family's biggest crime wasn't scamming welfare checks or stealing DVD collections. It was robbing me of a childhood.

Wheaton disappeared in the distance, and I turned to
face my mother. “So, did you really date Mr. DeNunsio, or was that a lie, too?”

“Really, Sonny. What kind of question is that?”

“I think it's pretty straightforward.”

“Maybe,” she said with a shrug. “But he wasn't the only man I was seeing at the time.”

“Let me guess. The other two were a diesel mechanic and an Irish tenor.”

“Am I the one telling this story, or are you?”

“Sorry.”

She brushed my apology away and said, “It doesn't matter anyway. The only thing that mattered was that Sal was living at Shady Oaks, and there was a possibility you could be his son.”

“Don't you mean Chaz?”

“Who's Chaz?” my mother asked.

“Nobody,” I replied. “Nobody at all.”

And that was the final piece of the puzzle. My mother had no idea who her old boyfriend really was which meant that Chaz had been running the show all along. He must have seen my mother's con coming from a mile away and came up with the story about killing Fat Nicky so my family wouldn't guess his true identity. My mother took the bait, Uncle Wonderful dragged me back to Long Island, and they set me up to kill a man.

Anger flared up inside me, and I debated jumping out of the car. We were going sixty miles an hour and I might have gotten killed, but it was better than spending another
moment with my family. I checked the sideview mirror, grabbed the door handle, and—

Nothing happened.

“Kiddie locks,” Uncle Wonderful announced. “They keep the little ones from falling onto the highway.”

My family had thought of everything.

Five minutes later we pulled off the Northway and I said, “See that big blue sign coming up on the right?”

“Yeah.”

“That's the place. Go around back. It's locker number seventeen.”

It was total overkill to rent a ten-by-twenty-foot storage locker to hide a pair of bags that could have easily fit under my bed, but the storage facility was only an eighth of a mile from Interstate 90. If things went south, I could make a run for it and be on the highway in less than two minutes.

“How much you paying for this thing?” Roy asked as we pulled up to the locker.

“One hundred and forty-three a month plus tax.”

“You're getting robbed. My friend Johnny Gillespie would have charged you less than a hundred.”

“I'll have to remember that next time I need to hide something from you.”

“Just open the damn thing already,” Uncle Wonderful growled.

I climbed out of the car, and Roy followed me with his gun at my back.

“Do you really need that?” I asked.

“Yes.”

“Don't do anything silly, Sonny,” my mother called out. “I'd hate for something bad to happen to you.”

I glanced back at my family and could almost see the saliva dribbling down their chins. They'd been waiting for this moment for years, and each of them thought they deserved what was inside that locker.

And you know what? They were right.

I pulled up the door and a shaft of sunlight revealed two duffel bags sitting in the middle of the room. “There they are,” I said. “Knock yourselves out.”

Uncle Wonderful stepped forward. “No, you open them.”

“Suit yourself.”

I unzipped the first bag to reveal the money, and a couple of feathers floated out.

“Holy macaroni,” my mother said. “There must be a million bucks in there.”

“One point two, to be precise.”

My family stood there speechless, and for a moment I thought they were going to dive in the bag and start rubbing the money all over themselves. I took advantage of their distraction to take a step closer to the second bag. Two more steps, and I could grab it and be on Interstate 90 before they knew what hit them.

“Let's split it up now,” Roy said.

“No,” my mother and Uncle Wonderful said simultaneously. “Back at home.”

“Then at least give me one stack,” Roy said. “I'm going to the city tonight.”

My mother shook her head. “Not until we count it and decide how to divvy it up.”

“What's to decide?” Roy asked. “One point two divided three ways is four hundred grand each. Subtract ten Gs for the stack I'm taking to the city, and that's four hundred for you two, and three hundred and ninety for me.”

“Who said we were splitting it evenly?” Uncle Wonderful said.

“Wait a minute!” Roy shouted. “I'm entitled to just as much as you are.”

This was my opening, and I grabbed the second bag. I turned to run, and the next thing I knew I was lying on the ground with blood pouring from my nose. I looked up, and my mother was rubbing her fist.

“You shouldn't have done that, dear.”

“Why not?” I asked. “It's what you would have done.”

“Do as I say, and not as I do,” she said, and took the bag from my hand. She opened it and pulled out two Ziploc bags. One contained Uncle Wonderful's gun and Mr. DeNunsio's glass, and the other contained her good name.

“You should really take better care of your things,” she said, handing the Ziploc with the gun to her brother.

Uncle Wonderful stared at the bloody Walther with a combination of fear and awe. “Damn,” he said. “You really killed that guy. I didn't think you had it in you.”

“At least somebody in this family does.”

“We'll see about that,” he said, and pulled the gun from the Ziploc bag. He checked to make sure it was loaded and turned to my mother.

“Get in the car, Sheila. Put the money in the trunk and wait for me.”

Roy and my mother did as they were told, and Uncle Wonderful aimed the Walther at my chipped tooth. I stared down the barrel and wondered if there was another way I could have played my hand, if there was something else I could have done to escape from my family without stealing Grandpa Patsy's money.

“Just out of curiosity,” I asked. “Do you think we would have ended up like this if I had stayed on Long Island?”

“Woulda, shoulda, coulda,” he replied. “Besides, you were never really one of us.”

I didn't think Uncle Wonderful had the guts to shoot me, which was why I was almost as surprised as he was when he pulled the trigger. Lucky for me, the gun was still loaded with the blanks I'd put in it on the night I went to “kill” Fat Nicky. As Uncle Wonderful stood there dumbfounded, I reached into a darkened corner of the storage locker for my lacrosse stick. This time it was right where it was supposed to be, and I knocked him to the ground with one swing. I heard a car door open and spun around to see Roy racing toward me with his pistol. I took a step to the right, and as he raised his arm to fire, I swung my lacrosse stick and caught the gun in the net.

“Okay,” I said, grabbing the gun and pointing it at him. “Get in the locker with your father.”

“Look, Skip, I—”

“Save it, Roy. I shot Louie Jingo, and I'll shoot you, too.” Then I turned to my mother and said, “Get out of the car and get inside the locker.”

“Thank God you're all right, Sonny. I don't know what I would have done if something bad happened to you.”

“Just get in the locker.”

After they were all inside, I grabbed the door handle and said, “A guard comes by every ninety minutes. Bang loud and he'll find you.”

“What about the money?” Roy asked.

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