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I managed to get a look at my watch and saw it was a few minutes before midnight. I looked at Bellarosa's face and noticed that his skin was very white, which made his stubble look dark. But his breathing was still regular, and I could feel a good pulse. I also felt the puttanesca sauce rising in my stomach and up my oesophagus, but I got it down again.
I glanced back at his face and he was looking at me, although his eyes were unfocused. I said, "Hang in there, Frank. You're doing fine. You'll be okay. Just relax," and so forth. That's what you're supposed to do so they don't go into shock. Meanwhile, no one was giving me much encouragement, and my mouth was dry and my stomach was turning and my head felt light. Hang in there, Sutter. I heard a police siren and I looked out through the broken window and saw that a crowd had gathered, and apparently seeing Vi
Two cops burst through the door, guns drawn. They took stock of the situation and holstered their pistols. I said to one of them, "This man has a severed artery, so don't tell me to move back. Get the EMS guys in here quick." And they did.
The two EMS guys listened to me for a few seconds, then took charge, getting Bellarosa into a wheeled stretcher without puncturing his lungs with his ribs, while a cop kept the pressure on his neck.
I stepped aside and let the pros handle it. Somewhere along the line, the boys in blue discovered the identity of the injured citizen – probably from one of the waiters, not from me – so it was up to them to decide whether or not they wanted to keep don Bellarosa from bleeding to death on the way to St Vincent's. Not my problem anymore.
Well, I was ready to go home now, having had enough excitement for one night, but my car was gone and my driver, Le
Also, the detectives had arrived and they had this idea that I should go down to the station house and tell them all about it. "Tomorrow," I said. "I'm in shock." But they were positively insistent, so I worked out a deal whereby they would drive Susan back to Long Island and A
While all this was going on, Lucio, the owner of the ill-fated establishment, had brought me a nice hot towel, and I got Vi
And that reminded me of the press. They were undoubtedly on the way, and I didn't want to meet the press and be asked a lot of silly questions like, "Did you see the faces of the men who shot Frank Bellarosa?" and so forth. I might have hung around if I thought Je
"Okay. Let's go."
"One minute." Still holding my towel, I went to A
She looked at me as though she didn't recognize me, and in fact, her eyes were swollen nearly shut and blinded by tears. But then she put her hand out and touched my cheek. Her voice was very small. "John… oh, John…" "I'll try to see you later at the hospital."
I moved away from A
She nodded.
I said, "He may make it."
Again she nodded.
"Are you all right?"
"Yes."
I had the impression again that she was a
"Yes?"
"Did you save his life? Is that what you were doing there?"
"I suppose that's what I was trying to do. Yes."
"Why?"
"He owes me money."
She said, "Well, I wouldn't have done it if I were you." Interesting. I said, "I'll see you at home." I turned and walked toward the detective who was waiting for me. I heard Susan call out, "John." I turned and she smiled at me, then puckered those pouty lips in a kiss.
Mado
"Nice-looking lady."
"Thank you."
We walked toward an unmarked car and he asked me, "Aren't you the lawyer?
Sutter? Bellarosa's lawyer?"
"Right."
"Maybe that's why they didn't take you out, too. They don't do lawyers."
"Lucky me."
He opened the passenger-side door for me and said, "You ruined your suit, Mr Sutter."
"It's an old one." Though the tie was new.
So I spent the next few hours at Midtown south with two detectives, describing the events that had taken about ten minutes to happen. I really was being cooperative, though as an attorney, and especially as the victim's attorney, I could have blown them off and left anytime. In fact, when they started asking questions about who I thought had done the deed, I told them to stick to factual questions. One of the detectives, however, kept asking me about Sally Da-da, and I told him to go ask Sally Da-da about Sally Da-da. But Mr Da-da was in Florida as it turned out. How convenient.
So we went round and round, and this one detective, the bad-cop half of the team, asked me, "Why'd you save his life?"
"He owes me money."
The good cop said, "He owes you his life. Collect on that."
"How's he doing?"
Good cop replied, "Still alive."
I told them the joke about the Mafia guy who tried to blow up a police car, but they seemed sort of weary and barely chuckled. I was getting very yawny myself, but they kept pressing coffee on me.
Midtown South is not an ordinary station house, but is sort of like headquarters for that part of Manhattan, and the joint was bustling with detectives on the second floor where I was. There was also a big room on the second floor where they kept mug-shot books, and I sat in there for about an hour with a detective who was passing me these books labelled "Wiseguys", which I thought was fu
"Train stations?"
"Well, maybe the airports."
Anyway, we went from mug shots to a slide show of a few dozen paesanos caught by the candid camera in their natural habitats. The detective explained, "These men have never been arrested, so we don't have mug shots, but they're all wiseguys." So I looked at the slide screen until my eyes were about gone and I was yawning and my head ached. A detective said, "We really appreciate your cooperation." "No problem." But was I really going to finger the two gunmen if I saw their faces? Did I want to be a witness in a mob murder trial? No, I didn't, but I would. Beyond all the bullshit of the last several months, I was still a good citizen, and had I seen the faces of either of those two men, I would have said, "Stop! That's one of them." But so far, no one looked familiar. But then I started to see familiar faces and I blinked. The slides I was looking at now were unmistakably those shot from the DePauw residence with Alhambra in the background. It was, in fact, the Easter Sunday rotogravure, and the enlarged, grainy slides showed a lot of people in their Easter finery getting out of big black cars. I said, "Hey, I remember that day." And there was Sally Da-da with a woman who could well have been A