
'Uncle, please,' Fox said.
The Don waved his hand. 'A young man wanting to make an extra buck I understand, but sometimes you're greedy. There's nothing I don't know. Your dealings with the IRA in Ireland, for instance, that underground dump they have for the weapons they won't hand over. The weapons you supply them. Your trips to London to the Colosseum.'
'That's our flagship casino, Uncle.'
'Sure, but while you're there, you organize armed robberies with our London connection. Over a million pounds cash two months ago from a security van.' The Don waved him back. 'Don't annoy me by denying it, Jack.'
'Uncle.' Fox tried to sound contrite.
'Just remember your true purpose. The drug business is no longer growing in America. You have to encourage its rise in Russia and the Eastern European countries. That's where growth lies. Prostitution, leave to our Russian and Chinese friends. Just take a percentage.'
As you say, Uncle.'
'Anything else is okay, but Jack, no more doing things behind my back.'
'Yes, Uncle.'
And this reporter, this Johnson. Have you gone to bed with her? The truth, now.'
Fox hesitated. 'No, it hasn't been like that.'
'Then like what? Why should she be interested in making You look good? She's in it for more. I'm telling you, she's hiding something. This piece, it's not so bad, all right, but what's next? What's behind the front?' The Don shook his head. 'She flattered you, Jack, and you fell for it. You better find out what she really wants.'
'What would you advise, Uncle?'
'Turn over her apartment. See what you can find.' He reached for a pitcher. 'Have a martini and then we'll eat.'
Terry Mount was very ordinary-looking, small and wiry, the kind of youngster who could have been a delivery boy for some deli. He was, in fact, a highly accomplished burglar and boasted that there was no lock he couldn't open. He'd served time only once, and that was as a juvenile. His very ordinariness had saved his hide on many occasions.
