Page 65 of Jersey Boy


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We rounded a corner near the rear gate. Indigo and Medusa were posted up there again—shotgun and bat, same as yesterday, different weight to their shoulders now.

I gave them both a chin lift. They returned it.

We kept going.

“So,” she said. “You actually think he might not come back?”

I thought of 8-Ball’s voice. His hand on my shoulder. The way Blackjack had sounded on the phone, half laughing, fully serious.

“No,” I said. “I think if Roman wanted him dead, we’d already be hearing about a sudden gas leak at some casino. But I also think wanting isn’t the same as knowing.”

“Spoken like a man who’s had more than enough surprises in his life,” she said.

“Haven’t you?” I asked.

“More than my share,” she replied.

We walked a few more yards in silence. There was a spot near the old loading dock where the fence buckled out slightly, pushed by some old crash or pressure. She stopped there, pressed her fingers to the metal, testing.

“Loose?” I asked.

“Not loose enough,” she said. “But it makes me itch.”

“You ever not itching?” I asked.

“For the twenty minutes after a really good fight,” she said. “Or a really good orgasm.”

I choked on a laugh. “Jesus.”

“I said what I said,” she replied easily.

“Modest,” I said. “Saintly, even.”

“Oh, absolutely,” she said. “Ask anyone. I’m a fucking nun.”

We started walking again.

“Turnpike likes your book girl,” I said after a second.

“India?” she asked. “He does?”

“He watched her walk past like his brain fell out of his ears,” I said. “He’ll deny it.”

“I like India,” she said. “If he hurts her feelings, I’ll castrate him.”

“You go straight to the classics,” I said. “No warning shots.”

“Waste of ammo,” she said.

I shook my head, but the grin wouldn’t stay down.

“You’re different than I thought you’d be,” she said suddenly.

“How’d you think I’d be?” I asked. “Be honest. I cantake it.”

She thought about it.

“Louder,” she said. “More bark. Less… spine.”