Well, you know that hes been writing letters for years from prison, raising all these side issues about witness statements and whether his lawyer was competent. . . .
Ever since hed left the doctors office this morning, Francis had been having a distracting little subband of dialogue crawling underneath his regular conversation, like a cable news report, but now it suddenly cut off.
Somebody mightve said something to me, he allowed.
So Judge Santiago had him brought down for a four-forty hearing on Rikers yesterday. And after he heard the arguments about the competency issues, he decided to grant the motion and vacate the conviction.
The waitress brought his coffee.
Wheres the fucking Sweet n Low? Francis said, looking around. Didnt these restaurants always used to have Sweet n Low on the tables?
All at once, it seemed very important to him for everything to be in its proper place.
Its right next to you, Francis. Paul pointed to the edge of the table, just outside his field of vision. Look, no one expects you to be happy.
No shit, Paulie. He snatched a pink packet. No one thought of giving me a heads-up?
What would you have said at the hearing? The issues didnt have anything to do with you. Almost everybody Ralph Figueroa represented is looking to get their case reopened, because he was a fucking degenerate drug addict who never told anyone they had the right to testify in their own defense. Theyve overturned four of his cases in the last three months.
And it never occurred to you that I might have a problem with this? Did you forget what happened in Auburn a few years ago?
The judge was made aware thered been an incident. I made sure to put a note about it in the case file.
An
incident?
Francis tore open the packet and poured saccharine on the smoldering black surface. That little cocksucker tried to take a swing at me in the corridor. Good thing the COs got between us, because I was fucking ready to have a go at him.
Thats some tough talk there, Helen Keller.
At the time, hed been caught totally off guard. Hurrying down the hall on a visit upstate to meet a potential CI when hed heard a voice just outside the lunchroom, calling out, Hey,
embustero.
He didnt see Hoolian stepping out of line and lunging at him until it was almost too late. Not that he would have recognized the kid anyway, after all those years.
I shouldve had a chance to testify about that at the hearing, Francis fumed, realizing the whole thing should have been an early-warning signal.
The judge took the position that Hoolian already did sixty days in solitary for it and thats enough. Paul turned his palms up as the waitress brought his tea and raw carrots. There was no physical contact, so I dont know what else you expected.
So, thats it? Hes off the hook? Somebody from the office buying him breakfast too?
Cmon, Francis, dont do this.
Dont do
what?
The waitress put down his eggs and bacon. Dont remind you? Is that what youre telling me?
No . . .
Do you even remember what this case was supposed to be about? Did you even look at the fucking file again?
Yes, I looked at the file, Francis. Paul picked up a carrot and bit it in half.
Then do you remember the kid with the bottle?
The what?
The kid with the fucking milk bottle tied around his neck.
Paul stopped chewing and shifted a load of half-masticated carrot from one side of his mouth to the other. What the hell are you talking about?
You dont remember.
Enlighten me.
Francis glanced around the restaurant, finding himself making wider arcs than usual to see if anyone was listening. You remember she worked at Bellevue, right? He dropped his voice.
Yes. She was in the pediatric ER.
Right.
Exactly.
So just before Christmas break the year before she dies, third-grade teacher from one of the fancy-ass uptown private schools walks into the ER with an eight-year-old boy. Dads a big lawyer at a white-shoe firm. But the teacher knows somethings up, because hes got bruises on both arms and severe stomach pains every day. Allison starts to examine him and sees hes got this big lump under his shirt. And when she lifts it, it turns out to be a baby bottle tied around his neck.
Im still not remembering, Paul sucked his molars.
So Allison does her thing, just the way we would, Francis said. She goes eye-to-eye with the kid. She works him, she talks to him. She plays Monopoly with him. She gets him to trust her. And then it all comes out that his father, Mr. Big Shit Corporate Hot Dog, says the kids been acting like a baby. Crying and wetting the bed. So if hes going to act like a baby, hes going to wear a baby bottle to school. A third-grader, Paulie. Isnt that nice?
He stirred his coffee again, not wanting to risk asking for milk when it could be right next to him.
All the nurses were right outside the room when she was trying to get him to take the bottle off. The poor kids in hysterics, begging her,
Please, please, nonononono, Daddy will be so mad. Please dont make me take it off.
Broke their hearts. And these are tough fucking women. Theyve seen everything. They make
you
look like a goddamn choirgirl.
Francis, come on . . .
So Allison called the father up and reamed him out. This nice girl, whose mother wrote childrens books.
You fuck-ING asshole, I am going to call Social Services, Im going to call Bureau of Child Welfare on you. . . .
With the Jamaican nurses in the background going, You tell him, girl.
She get him locked up?
He ended up with a desk appearance ticket. Francis stirred his coffee.
Fucker.
And, yeah, I looked at him for the murder at the time. But that scumbag was in Gstaad with his girlfriend.
Many moons ago, Francis. Seems like the Dark Ages. Everythings different now.
She was
one of us.
Francis stared at him, nothing wrong with his central vision yet. She was good people.
Hey, Francis. Dont make me the bad guy here. Its a complicated issue. The guy went in when he was seventeen and came out thirty-seven. A lot of people are going to say we already got our pound of flesh.
And Allison would be forty-six. . . .
All right, all right. Paul put his carrot down. No ones saying were throwing in the towel either. This was a heinous crime. No question about it. People remember. Its not in our interest to let murderers go free before theyve served their full sentence.
Particularly if were up for a judgeship.
Thats a cheap shot, Francis. The bristly little troops arose on Pauls scalp. And you know it.
So obviously its true.
Of course, Francis had already heard the rumors. After this many years, men like Paul didnt sit around waiting for the DA to retire or die. They took their restless vaulting ambition and they went politicking. It was natural for Paul to want to be a judge. He didnt have the temperament or the social skills for the private sectorno wife to set off his intensity and give him the illusion of charm at corporate cocktail parties. On the bench, hed be free to glower and grow cantankerous without contradiction, indulging his vengeful streak well into his sunset years.
So where do we go from here?
Officially no decisions been made, Paul poured hot water into his teacup. We have the option of proceeding with the indictment as if its still 1983 or letting the whole thing drop. But theres another wrinkle I need to talk to you about.
Whats that?
Hoolian has Debbie Aaron representing him.
Are you shitting me?
I wish. Hoolian must have gone through half the lawyers in the New York bar before he got to her.
Fuckin Debbie A.
He pushed his suddenly foul-smelling eggs away, contemplating the ring the plate left on the table.
You knew her when she was doing drug cases at our office, didnt you? Paul fished the teabag out of his cup with a spoon.
Yeah, we called her Fuckin A because she was always trying to punch holes in our testimony before she put us on the stand.
Howd you know he was carrying a gun, Detective? Did you actually
see
the money change hands? Why didnt you recover more of the drugs in the apartment?
For about three seconds, hed thought of having a thing with her. He liked a woman who could give as good as she got. But then he realized she would wear him out with her ferocious demands for honesty and contempt for compromisethey would have been like two buzz saws going toward each other.
We gotta tread carefully here. Paul wrapped the string around his teabag. I dont know if youve been following this, but Debbies already suing the police department for malicious prosecution in a civil suit.
That fuckup with Marty Delblanco in the two-eight?
Francis had caught bits and pieces of the departmental gossip at various rackets. A junkie who got locked up in Harlem for raping and murdering an eighty-year-old grandmother recently freed after fifteen years on DNA evidence and recanted witness testimony. And now Debbie A. was suing on his behalf, saying the detective whod questioned the skell had beaten him into giving a full confession. What stunned everyone was not just that the department and the city were named in the $3.2 million suit but that the detective was being held personally liable to the tune of $750,000.
They say Debs got a hard-on for suing cops because she was married to that detective in the nine-oh who used to knock her around some, Paul explained. Theyre divorced now. She had him locked up for domestic abuse.
But no ones talking about making Marty pay, are they?
Indemnifications an open question. Hes supposed to have given that kid a pretty good tune-up to get the statement. Its not clear that anybody else should be responsible for that.
Francis touched his tongue to the roof of his mouth. Motherfucker, youre not worried about that in this case, are you?
Paul squeezed the remains of his tea bag into his cup. We gotta stick together here, Francis.
Whatre you talking about? I never laid a hand on Hoolian. He put himself on the scene.
Paul lowered his voice. Come on, Francis. We all know this was never the perfect investigation.
What the fuck is that supposed to mean?
Paul rested the spoon with the crushed bag on the side of the saucer, letting the silence speak for itself.
Francis noticed the way everything on the table seemed to get very large and then very small.
You know you werent so fucking perfect yourself,
Your Honor.
I didnt hear about the American Bar Association giving you any citation for the way you handled some of those early interviews.
Paul cupped the back of his head self-consciously. Well, can we just say there were certain things that both of us mightve done differently?
Francis threw his napkin down. Sure, why not? Lets just say the whole thing was just a practice run so we could get it right the second time.
Glad you think its funny.
So, what do you want to do?
I think we have to take the position that the indictment still stands and this is still an active investigation, Paul said, adopting the sagacious furrow and dignified chin of a man running for public office. Nothing in the four-forty motion contradicts the underlying facts of the case itself. If Debbie A. wants to come after us, shell have to prove there was a deliberate intent to ignore specific evidence.
Right, said Francis, the subband of commentary beginning to crawl through his head again.
And shes going to have a hard time proving that. Its been twenty years. I dont know where shes going to find any witnesses. . . .
Arroyo. Hernandez.
Francis was already dipping into the slipstream, trying to remember the names that came up in the original investigation. He wondered if he even had any of his old notebooks around at home.
Francis . . . , Paul interrupted him.
Wha?
Paul leaned across the table, peering out from under the mask of jurisprudence one last time. Were sure we got the right guy, arent we?
Julian Vega killed her, Francis said firmly. The front door of that building was locked after midnight. Nobody else couldve gotten into her apartment unless they had a key, like he did. His fingerprints were all over the murder weapon. No one else was seen leaving. Her blood was on his tool. . . .
But he noticed the litany had a certain hollowness after all this time, like an agnostics prayer.
So has anybody talked to the family yet, let them know whats going on? he asked.
I made some calls to try to track them down through Victims Services, Paul said vaguely. But the last number I had is disconnected. Theyve moved around a lot since 83.
So Hoolians out and they dont know it yet?
Paul looked abashed, reminding Francis that even the most calculating people in the world sometimes got the basic math wrong.
Whats going to happen if they read it in the paper first?
I was hoping youd try and smooth it over with them a little, Francis. The eyebrows rose and the bristles bent back. We want them on our side. The last thing we need is them bad-mouthing us in the press while were going through this again. We dont want to look callous.
Then why didnt you reach out before the hearing?