“Well, enjoy yourself.
Â
Shabbat shalom
, Hiram,” Abe said as the couple nodded at them and walked on.
Smiling, the blonde man put his arm back around his “uncle” and led him into the elevator.
Â
“Nice work, Mister Rabinowitz.
Â
You handled that real good.”
Â
The elevator stopped at the third floor and the two men walked out.
Â
Rabinowitz was shaking so badly that he could barely stand.
Â
The man with the eye patch had to help him.
Â
“You can make it,” the blonde man said.
Â
“Just a little further.”
Â
When they were in front of apartment 3G, he commanded, “There.
Â
Now, the keys.”
Rabinowitz struggled with the key ring and couldn't manage to insert the appropriate one into the lock.
Â
The man with the eye patch took the keys and did it himself.
Â
The door opened and the blonde man shoved Rabinowitz inside.
Â
The old man fell to the floor as the door slammed shut.
“Who⦠who are you?” Rabinowitz whispered.
“Call me Emo.”
“What do you want?”
“Information.
Â
About some diamonds you've been selling.
Â
Do you recognize this?”
Â
Emo Tuff reached into his pocket and stooped by the old man.
Â
Tuff brought out a small, black velvet bag and opened it.
Â
Inside was a large, sparkling diamond.
Â
Rabinowitz saw the gem and winced.
Â
“Well?” Emo Tuff asked.
Â
“You sold one like this recently, correct?”
The old man nodded.
Â
“How many like this have you sold?”
Rabinowitz whispered something.
“I can't hear you.
Â
Speak louder.”
“I don't remember,” the old man coughed.
Â
“Ten⦠twelve⦔
“Oh, really?”
Â
Emo Tuff grabbed the man by his jacket, pulled him off the floor, and slung him into an easy chair.
Â
“Here, get comfortable.”
The old man began to whimper.
Â
“Now then.”
Â
Emo Tuff stood over him.
Â
“How long has this been going on?
Â
The diamonds.
Â
Selling these stones.
Â
How long?”
Rabinowitz shook his head.
Â
“Listen, old man, I'll circumcise you a second time if you don't talk.”
Â
As he spoke, Tuff slipped on a pair of Sap glovesâblack leather gloves that were lined with metal.
Â
A blow by a man wearing Sap gloves was tantamount to receiving a punch with brass knuckles.
Â
“Please⦠I don't⦠know⦔ Rabinowitz said.
The first blow broke the old man's jaw and sent his glasses flying across the room.
Â
Rabinowitz cried out in pain.
Â
“That's just to show you I mean business,” Emo Tuff said.
Â
“Now, how long have you been selling these diamonds?”
Â
Tuff allowed Rabinowitz a few minutes to regain his composure.
Â
He handed the old man several tissues from a box on the coffee table so that his victim could sop up the blood.
Â
“Ten years, I think,” Rabinowitz finally struggled to say, as his mouth was swollen and his jaw had ceased to work.
Â
“I really⦠don't remember.
Â
It might be twelve years.
Â
Not more than fifteen.”
“So that means you've sold a lot more than ten or twelve, doesn't it?”
The old man nodded.
Â
“What was it?” Tuff asked.
Â
“One a month.
Â
More?”
Rabinowitz nodded again.
Â
“On the average.
Â
One a month.”
“That's a lot of fucking diamonds.
Â
All right, next question.
Â
And this is the real important one, so you better do real good on this one.
Â
Where do you get them?”
Rabinowitz desperately wanted to keep his brother out of this.
Â
Whoever this maniac was, Rabinowitz knew then and there that the monster would never let him live.
Â
It was best to stay silent.
Â
If he were going to die anyway, then why should he expose Moses?
Â
“They come from an unknown source,” Rabinowitz said after coughing more blood out of his mouth.
Â
He spoke slowly and deliberately.
Â
“There's a black man who comes in to the shop.
Â
He sells them to me.
Â
I don't know who he is or where he lives.
Â
I swear.”
Tuff considered this and said, “I'm not sure I believe that, Mister Rabinowitz.
Â
You say a
black man
comes into your shop and sells you these diamonds?
Â
And you do business with him but you don't know his
name
?”
Rabinowitz nodded.
Â
“It's the truth.
Â
I swear it!”
The knife appeared in Tuff's hand the same way a wand might materialize in a stage magician's palm.
Â
It was actually a seven-inch stiletto that he must have had sheathed under a trouser leg.
Â
Rabinowitz had no idea where it had come from.
Â
Tuff grabbed the old man's right wrist and held it down firmly on the arm of the chair.
Â
“Think again, Mister Rabinowitz.
Â
Where do you get them?” Tuff asked calmly.
“I told you!” the old man whimpered.
Â
“I swear, a black manâ”
The stiletto sliced through Hiram Rabinowitz's little finger, cutting it off at the second joint.
Â
The old man screamed bloody murder.
Â
Tuff left the man in the chair and went into the kitchen.
Â
He found a cloth that was used to dry dishes and then walked back into the living room.
Â
Rabinowitz was on the floor, crawling toward the door and leaving a trail of blood on the carpet.
Â
Tuff stepped over the man, wrapped the towel around his victim's head, covering the mouth, and tugged it tightly.
Â
“You're not going anywhere, my friend,” Tuff said.
Â
He kneed the man in the back and forced him down.
Â
“It's no use protecting whoever it is.
Â
I'll get it out of you eventually.
Â
You may as well save yourself a lot of grief.”
The towel muffled Rabinowitz's cries.
Â
Tuff placed the stiletto over the fourth finger of the old man's right hand.
Â
“You have anything to say before I relieve you of another finger?”
Rabinowitz nodded his head furiously.
Â
Tuff pulled down the towel just enough for the old man to speak.
Rabinowitz told him everything.
Â
His brother Moses in Chicago got them from someone and sent them on to him.
Â
Since he had the better black market connections, they brought in a better profit out of New York.
Â
Moses supplied them from the Chicago store and they were sold out of the New York store.
Â
Where Moses got the diamonds he didn't know and didn't care to know.
Â
Emo Tuff believed the story.
Â
He got up, went back into the kitchen, and rummaged around until he found a bottle of kosher red wine and a glass.
Â
“Hiram, where do you keep your corkscrew?” he called.
Â
There was no answer.
Â
“Never mind, I'll find it.”
Â
He opened drawers until he found the silverware.
Â
The corkscrew was there.
Â
Tuff opened the bottle of wine and poured some into the glass.
Â
He returned to the living room and found Rabinowitz sobbing in his blood.
Â
“Here's to you, Mister Rabinowitz,” Tuff said.
Â
He drank a little and spit it out.
Â
“Peeewww!
Â
What the hell is this shit?
Â
It's way too sweet.
Â
Don't you have any
real
wine?”
Â
He took another sip and rolled it around in his mouth.
Â
He swallowed it and said, “I guess it's not so bad.
Â
I'll drink it.”
Â
He downed the glass and put it on the coffee table.
Â
“Well, Mister Rabinowitz,” Tuff said.
Â
“You've been very helpful.
Â
I thank you for your hospitality.
Â
It's been a pleasure meeting you.”
Â
He got the stiletto ready and squatted beside Rabinowitz's face.
Â
“Now it's time to say goodbye.”
T
he first period bell rang as Diane rushed into the classroom.
Â
The students were being rowdy and most of them were not in their seats.
I don't want to deal with this today
, she thought.
“Sit down and shut up!”
 Â
As their teacher had never used that sort of language or tone of voice before, the teens looked up in surprise and froze.
Â
After a moment they slowly moved to their seats and settled down.
Â
Diane moved into the room and shook her head.
Â
“Sorry.
Â
Forgive me, I didn't mean to shout.
Â
I have a lot on my mind this morning.”
“It's okay, Miz Boston,” said Jeffrey, one of the African-American students whom she thought was one of her brighter pupils.
Â
“Thanks, Jeffrey.
Â
Okay, class, let's forget it and get started with your oral reports.
Â
We have a lot to get through today.”
Â
She gathered some materials from her desk and moved to the rear of the room.
Â
She was thankful that all she had to do that period was listen.
Â
As each student went to the front of the class, however, Diane found that her mind wandered.
Â
She just couldn't concentrate on the reports no matter how hard she tried.
Â
Halfway through the period she realized that she hadn't written a single note on two of the students' presentations.
Â
What had they spoken about?
Â
Diane sighed to herself and decided to give them A's.
Â
The two pupils were smart but timid boys who might be called bookworms.
Â
They probably
did
make A's but their presentation skills were sorely lacking.
Â
Miraculously, she made it through the first hour.
Â
At the beginning of the ten-minute break she ran to the office to check her mailbox.
Â
She subscribed to the
Chicago Sun-Times
but the office staff didn't get around to stuffing mailboxes until sometime during first period.
Â
As expected, the paper was there along with other assorted flyers and school announcements.
She stood and flipped through the newspaper but found nothing that might remotely pertain to her.
Â
She wasn't sure why she thought there might be.
Â
That reporter's phone call the other day had unnerved her.
Â
I'm becoming paranoid
, she thought.
Â
But there was no reason to be, was there?
Â
It was all a big mistake.
Â
Had to be.
Second period was more of a challenge since it was Sociology and she actually had to get up in front of the class and lecture.
Â
As she spoke, Diane could see that she wasn't reaching the students.
Â
They were completely zoned out.
Â
She knew she was normally an engaging speaker and could hold the attentions of a classroom full of antsy teenagers.
Â
Today, though, she chokedâbig timeâand had to do her best to cover for it.