Michael placed telephone calls to other Families around the country, and all of them demanded to know what was going on. They were being badly hurt and no one knew where the leak was coming from. They all suspected it was coming from the Moretti Family.
Jimmy Guardino, in Las Vegas, gave him an ultimatum. “I’m calling on behalf of the Commission, Michael.” The National Commission was the supreme power that superseded the power of any individual Family when there was trouble. “The police are rounding up all the Families. Someone big is singing. The word we get is that it’s one of your boys. We’re giving you twenty-fours to find him and take care of him.”
In the past, police raids had always netted the small fry, the expendables. Now, for the first time, the men at the top were being pulled in. Someone big is singing. The word we get is that it’s one of your boys. They had to be right. Michael’s Family had been the hardest hit, and the police were looking for him. Someone had given them solid evidence, or they never would have mounted a campaign this big. But who could it be? Michael sat back, thinking.
Whoever was tipping off the authorities had inside information that was known only to Michael and his two top lieutenants, Salvatore Fiore and Joseph Colella. Only the three of them knew where the ledgers were hidden, and the FBI had found them. The only other person who would have had the information was Thomas Colfax, but Colfax was buried under a garbage dump in New Jersey.
Michael sat there and thought about Salvatore Fiore and Joseph Colella. It was difficult to believe that either one of them could have broken omertà and talked. They had been with him from the beginning; he had handpicked them. He had allowed them to have their own loan-sharking operation on the side and to run a small prostitution ring. Why would they betray him? The answer, of course, was simple: the chair he was sitting in. They wanted his chair. Once he was out, they could move in and take over. They were a team; they had to be in it together.
Michael was filled with a murderous rage. The stupid bastards were trying to pull him down, but they would not live long enough to enjoy it. The first thing he had to do was arrange bail for his men who had been arrested. He needed a lawyer he could trust—Colfax was dead, and Jennifer—Jennifer! Michael could feel the coldness creeping around his heart again. In his head he could hear himself saying, Get back as fast as you can. I’ll miss you. I love you, Jennifer. He had said that and she had betrayed him. She would pay for that.
Michael made a telephone call and sat back to wait, and fifteen minutes later Nick Vito hurried into the office.
“What’s happening?” Michael asked.
“The place is still buzzin’ with Feds, Mike. I drove around the block a couple of times, but I did like you said. I stayed away.”
“I’ve got a job for you, Nick.”
“Sure, boss. What can I do for you?”
“Take care of Salvatore and Joe.”
Nick Vito stared at him. “I—I don’t understand. When you say, take care of them, you don’t mean—”
Michael shouted, “I mean blow their fucking brains out! Do you need a blueprint?”
“N-no,” Nick Vito stammered. “It’s just that I-I-I mean—Sal and Joe are your top men!”
Michael Moretti moved to his feet, his eyes dangerous. “You want to tell me how to run my business, Nick?”
“No, Mike. I—sure. I’ll take care of them for you. When—?”
“Now. Right away. I don’t want them to live to see the moon tonight. Do you understand?”
“Yeah. I understand.”
Michael’s hands tightened into fists. “If I had time, I’d take care of them myself. I want them to hurt, Nick. Make it slow, you hear? Suppilu suppilu.”
“Sure. Okay.”
The door opened and Tony hurried in, his face gray. “There’s two FBI agents out there with a warrant for your arrest. I swear to God I don’t know how they knew you was here. They—”
Michael Moretti turned to Nick Vito and snapped, “Out the back way. Move!” He turned to Tony. “Tell them I’m in the can. I’ll be right with them.”
Michael picked up the telephone and dialed a number. One minute later he was talking to a judge of the Superior Court of New York.
“There are two Feds out here with a warrant for my arrest.”
“What are the charges, Mike?”
“I don’t know and I don’t give a shit. I’m calling you to set things up so that I’m bailed out. I can’t sit around in the slammer. I’ve got things to do.”
There was a silence and the judge’s voice said carefully, “I’m afraid I won’t be able to help you this time, Michael. The heat’s on all over and if I try to interfere—”
When Michael Moretti spoke, there was an ominous note in his voice. “Listen to me, you asshole, and listen good. If I spend one hour in jail, I’ll see to it that you’re behind bars for the rest of your life. I’ve been taking good care of you for a long time. You want me to tell the D.A. how many cases you fixed for me? Would you like me to give the IRS the number of your Swiss bank account? Would you—”
“For God’s sake, Michael!”
“Then move!”
“I’ll see what I can do,” Judge Lawrence Waldman said. “I’ll try to—”
“Try to, shit! Do it! Do you hear me, Larry? Do it!” Michael slammed down the receiver.
His mind was working swiftly and coolly. He was not concerned about being taken to jail. He knew that Judge Waldman would do as he was told, and he could trust Nick Vito to attend to Fiore and Colella. Without their testimony, the government could not prove a thing against him.