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Authors: Harold Robbins

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—Bill Morris played both football and basketball, though he was not the star that Dave and Cole were. He spent most of his time on the bench. Even so, he “went out” for sports and was considered a jock. All of these four were. He was not the scholar his two friends were, either; and his parents had been squirreling away money for years, in anticipation of his college tuition. Bill would not win a scholarship.

He was a solid young man, not heavy enough for football and not tall enough for basketball. On the basketball floor he wore plastic-rimmed eyeglasses held in place by a rubber strap behind his head. On the football field he wore no glasses and relied on a slightly blurry vision of the developing play. Since he was a guard and all but invariably was blocked after he did or did not block
his
man, it made little difference. He was dark-haired, and oddly was already showing, on his forehead, the initial evidence of baldness.

—Of the four, many would have called Tony DeFelice the most interesting. They were all jocks, but Tony was a jock in a very different sense. He was a Golden Gloves boxer.

He was a welterweight, knife-thin, with muscles as hard as the steel of a knife. Many were afraid of him, but he had been trained to restrain himself and never use his boxing skills outside the ring. His ambition was to turn professional.

He was an extremely intense young man, with hard eyes. People who knew him well were aware that he had a ready sense of humor and found amusement in all manner of things and people.

His family owned a score of packer trucks and collected trash and garbage over a wide area of Bergen County. They were said to be “connected.” It was not true. They were a family of shrewd, hard-working Italian immigrants, who had hauled first in a single mule-drawn wagon and had gradually worked their way up to the considerable business they now owned.

*   *   *

On this April night it was the same old thing: nothing to do. The four boys had bought six-packs of beer and drunk twenty bottles among them. The remaining four bottles were on the floor of the backseat of Cole’s car. A little after ten Cole drove into the parking lot of Pizza Palace on the edge of Wyckoff.

The Palace might more realistically have been called the shack. It had only four small tables. Customers were expected to take delivery of their pizzas, ordered earlier, and drive them home. The boys ordered two pizzas and returned to the car to wait the twenty minutes until their pizzas would be ready. They opened their last four bottles of beer and talked about whether or not they should drive off during the twenty minutes and buy another six-pack or two.

They had sat there, drinking their last beers and talking aimlessly when Jim Amos came alongside the car.

“Well, if it ain’t Slaw,” he said in a beer-slurred voice. Slaw was a nickname sometimes fastened on Cole. He didn’t like it, but he didn’t make an issue of it.

Amos was twenty-four years old and had served four years in the United States Navy. He was known in the town and area as a drunk and a bully. He would walk up to a smaller and younger boy on the street and ask him what was the finest service in the United States armed forces. The boy might not know that Amos had been in the navy and might say United States Marines or something else. If he didn’t say navy, Amos might deck him.

Or he might say, “You’re wrong, and I’ll let you buy me a few drinks to make up for it.”

In any case, Jim Amos was a swaggering bully. He’d been beaten up two or three times, for having taken a swing at the wrong young man; but that had not discouraged him, and he remained a blustering punk.

Tonight he was feeling aggressive.

“Slaw and his Three Musketeers. Nice car,” he said as he hopped up on the fender and sat.

Dave came out of the passenger side, fast, and rushed around the car. “Get your ass down from there, Amos,” he yelled.

“Y’ gonna make me?”

“I’m gonna make you.”

Cole was out of the car now, followed by Bill and Tony from the backseat.

“Oh. All four of you. Fine. Suits me. Who’s first?”

Dave grabbed Amos by the legs and threw him off the fender, onto the gravel of the parking lot. Amos was drunk, but he was quick and strong. He scrambled up and charged Dave, throwing a shoulder against his chest and knocking him back against the car, where he was vulnerable to the punch to the chin that Amos threw.

Amos set himself to throw more punches to Dave’s face and down one of his opponents. But Cole grabbed him from behind and wrestled him away. He punched him hard on the kidneys.

Amos broke out of Cole’s grip, turned, and punched him in the stomach. Cole doubled over and vomited beer.

Bill stunned Amos with a hard punch to the ear.

Dave was furiously angry. As Amos momentarily disoriented, Dave shot a hard fist against his nose, which collapsed in a spray of blood. Amos shook his head and moaned. His knees began to buckle. He was finished.

But Dave’s anger was not assuaged. He stepped up to the staggering Amos and put every ounce of his weight and strength into a crushing blow to Amos’s jaw. Amos dropped backward to the gravel. His head hit with a sickening crunch.

The police arrived a moment later. One of the officers knelt beside Amos and examined him.

“This man is dead.”

*   *   *

The families gathered at the Bergen County Jail.

The Sheas were frightened. Dave’s mother was weeping, and his father’s lips trembled. “That poor boy! That
poor
boy!” Mrs. Shea kept murmuring through her tears. She meant Jim Amos.

The Jennings family was grimly composed. Stuart Jennings was prepared to confront trouble and had summoned his lawyer.

The Morrises seemed not to comprehend what was going on. Their faces were blank, as though they were in shock, which in fact they were.

Anthony DeFelice glowered. He was not connected, but sometimes it was shrewd to allow some people to imagine he was.

Witnesses from Pizza Palace assembled to give statements. None of the witnesses was quite sure what had happened, except that all agreed Tony DeFelice had not hit Amos.

From that point, all was confusion.

“Those three there, they all hit him. I seen ’em,” an old man with a three-day stubble of white whiskers declared.

“It was self-defense,” Dave asserted angrily.

“Three of you? Self-defense against
one feller
?”

A fat girl spoke. “Jim Amos was a drunken bully. He was always starting fights.”

“We know that,” said the chief of police. He was a muscular, middle-aged man in a suntan uniform. “On the other hand … Well—”

“He’s dead,” said the old man. “An’ three of ’em were beaten’ up on ’im.”

“Which one of you swung the punch that broke his neck?” asked the chief of police.

“Uh … Just a moment,” said a white-haired man with a flushed face. “I’m going to advise these boys not to answer that question. Or any others, until they’ve had a chance to consult with counsel.”

The white-haired man was Lloyd Paul Strecker. He was attorney for the Jenningses and had arrived at the police station before they did He had a formidable reputation in Bergen County, not just for being a tough lawyer but for his political connections.

An assistant district attorney arrived. Her name was Lela Goldish, and she was about thirty years old, an attractive young woman, though with broad hips and a priminent butt. She was also hyper, moved in jerks and spoke in clipped sentences.

“What’ve we got here?” she asked.

The chief of police gave her a brief statement.

“Manslaughter,” she said. “Maybe involuntary manslaughter. Sure as hell not murder.”

“Okay,” said Strecker. “I think these boys should be given a chance to confer among themselves. They are all involved. They should sing from the same sheet.”

No one disagreed. Dave, Cole, Bill, and Tony went into a little conference room to talk.

Dave put his elbows on the table and his face in his hands. “Well…” he said. “It’s the end for me. Manslaughter charge. There goes my scholarship. There goes my friggin’ life. If I don’t go to the slammer, anyway Rutgers won’t want me. It’s the end!” He sobbed.

“You didn’t have to hit him that last time,” said Cole. “We had him. He was finished.”

“I was … mad,” Dave sobbed. “The
son of a bitch
…”

“We’re the witnesses,” said Tony calmly. “Whatever we say happened, happened. Self-defense.”

“They won’t buy that,” Dave muttered. “Four of us…”

“Only the guy that shot the last punch,” said Bill Morris. “He was out. The guy that—”

“Yeah, sure,” said Dave. “
I
killed him.”

“Jesus, man,” said Cole. “I guess it’s gonna go tough for you. I don’t think you’ll get a big sentence, but—”

“But goombye scholarship, goombye chances, goombye future,” Dave sobbed. “I’ll wind up like my old man.”

“We oughta talk to the lawyer,” said Tony.

They asked Strecker to come in.

“Here’s where it stands,” he told them immediately. “We can make it voluntary manslaughter. The man who threw the last punch can plead guilty to that. He’ll get probation.”

“But he’ll have a felony record,” said Dave despondently.

“Well … Actually, that can be expunged from the records in a few years. It won’t prevent a man from getting into law school, for example—because the record won’t exist.”

“But right now—” Dave muttered disconsolately.

“For a while it will be an impediment,” said Strecker.

“An impediment that—”

“Can ruin his whole life,” said Cole sadly.

“I see where this is going,” said the lawyer. “I’m going to leave you boys to talk together.”

With the lawyer out of the room, the four boys sat silent for a full minute. Then—

“I’m the one with the most to lose,” said Dave. “You guys are going to college because your families can pay for it. Mine can’t. My scholarship is the only way I’m going to get a college education. The only goddam way.”

“What you’re saying,” said Tony, “is that one of
us
should confess he shot the last punch.”

Dave closed his eyes and nodded. “I’m the only one whose life is on the line.”

“I’ll go this far,” said Tony coldly. “If one of these guys wants to take it, I won’t screw it up. I won’t tell the truth.”

Dave looked at Cole. “You’ve got the
least
to lose. You’re going to whatever university you choose, because your family will pay for it. You’ve got a first-class lawyer. Your family and your lawyer have got political connections. You can come out of this smelling like roses.
I
come out smelling like shit.”

Cole drew a deep breath. “Except for you, Tony, we all hit him. All of us. Dave couldn’t have—Well, he couldn’t have if Bill and I hadn’t done what we did. I mean, I figure we
share
the responsibility. And—Dave’s right. He’s got the most to lose. I’ve got the least.” He stood and opened the door. “Mr. Strecker—

The lawyer listened gravely to what Cole told him. He shook his head. “Alright. I don’t buy it, but if that’s what you want to do. I know what you have in mind.”

*   *   *

The newspapers were angry—

TEENS BEAT NAVY VET TO DEATH!

Rampaging Wyckoff teenagers, drunk on beer, beat a navy veteran to death in the parking lot of Pizza Palace Saturday night.

What began as a Saturday-night rumble, arising from the fact that the veteran sat on the fender of a car belonging to Cole Jennings, 18, resulted, after a savage beating, in the death of James Amos, 24, a veteran of four years service in the United States Navy.

Cole Jennings has entered a guilty plea to involuntary manslaughter. His companions, David Shea, William Morris, and Anthony DeFelice, have not been charged.

James Amos, Senior, father of the slain young man, says that his son had an exemplary record in the Navy and had never been in any kind of trouble at home.

“Half the town believes that,” said Bill Morris.

“And the other half knows what a prick Amos was,” said Dave.

“Anyway … it’s all settled,” said Cole. “Three years probation, after which the record will be erased. I’m accepted at Princeton. And—” He turned to Dave. “Your scholarship is intact, and you’ll be going to Rutgers. All’s well that ends well, huh?”

Dave nodded. “All’s well that ends well.”

 

Forge Books by Harold Robbins

The Predators

The Secret

Never Enough
*

 

*
forthcoming

 

“Robbins has the ability to hold his readers absorbed.”


The Chicago Tribune

 

“Hi Cooper.”

I stiffened and turned. The voice was that of a man I recognized as soon as I saw him: Lou Chieppa, the greaseball hood who had held a knife to my throat in Philly and told me the big man was Napolitano, Ice Cream, not the Chef. This morning he was dressed in cutoff shorts and a blue Izod shirt.

He stood, legs apart, menacing me with that ugly switchblade I had seen before.

“Careful Lou. He’s no pushover,” muttered Filly.

“Heh-heh, heh-heh. Pushover. Yeah, push him over is exactly what I’m going to do. Just stand clear, Fil.”

Filly. She’d set me up. My God, how long had they been planning this?

I looked at her and shook my head. I’d been
stupid!

The bitch smirked.

Chieppa moved forward, cautiously, on the balls of his feet.

They’d made a fatal mistake.…

 

“His characters are compelling, his dialogue is dramatic, and his style is simple and straightforward.”


The Los Angeles Times

This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

THE SECRET

Copyright © 2000 by the Estate of Harold Robbins

All rights reserved.

A Forge Book

Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

175 Fifth Avenue

New York, NY 10010

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