
“What is this?” said Mr. Carl, direct and calm, looking at the armed white man with the gray hair.
Frank up-jerked the. 38. “Raise your hands and shut your mouth.”
Carl Lewin raised his arms very slowly, careful not to let his sport jacket spread open and reveal the. 32 Davis he carried wedged against his right hip on pickup day.
“Against the wall,” said Frank.
Greene and Mr. Carl moved back. Frank holstered the. 22, stepped over to the duffel bag, and opened it. He had a quick look inside at the stacks of green: tens, twenties, and hundreds, loosely banded. He ran the zipper back up its neck and nodded at Otis.
“Okay, pizza man,” said Otis. “Who we got in the front of the house?”
Charles Greene licked his dry lips. “The bartender. And the day waiter’s out in the dining room, setting up.”
“Go out there and bring the waiter back with you,” said Otis. “Don’t be funny, neither.” Greene hesitated, and Otis said, “Go on, boy. Let’s get this over with so we can all be on our way.”
Greene had a look at Mr. Carl before hurrying from the kitchen. Mr. Carl stared at the gray-haired white man without speaking. Then they heard footsteps returning to the kitchen and a chiding young voice saying, “What could be so important, Charlie? I’ve got side work.”
The waiter, who was named Vance Walters, entered the kitchen with Greene behind him. At the sight of the men and their guns, Walters nearly turned to run, then swallowed and breathed out slowly. The moment had passed, and now it was too late. He wondered, as he always did, what his father would have done in a situation such as this one. He raised his hands without a prompt. If he’d just cooperate, they wouldn’t hurt him, whoever they were.
“What’s your name?” said Frank.
