by Scott Turow
Raymond asks to see me alone. We go into a dressing room, between the two bedrooms in the suite, nothing more than a large closet with a lavatory.
“How are you?” I ask.
“There’ve been things that hurt worse. Tomorrow will be bad. The day after. We’ll survive. Listen,” Raymond says. “About what I mentioned the other night: when I see Nico, I’m going to offer to resign. I don’t want any lame-duck crap. I don’t want to appear to be playing around with the office. I’d like to make a clean break. If Nico wants to run in the general election as an incumbent, let him. I’ll tell him he’s free to assume office, if the county executive approves.” This is humor. Bolcarro is the county executive. Party chairman. Mayor. The guy has more titles than the leader of a banana republic.
I tell Raymond he’s made a wise decision. We look at each other.
“I feel like I should apologize to you, Rusty,” Raymond says. “If there was any deputy I would have wanted to take over, you know it would be you. I should have tried to make that happen, instead of running. The guys just pushed me so damn hard to give it one more shot.”
I wave my hand, I shake my head. I prohibit his apology.
Larren sticks his head in.
“I was just telling Rusty,” Raymond tells him, “I never should have run again, I should have given him the shot. New face. Career prosecutor. Apolitical. Really could have revved things up. Wouldn’t you say?”
“Shit,” says the judge, “pretty soon you’ll have me believing it.”
We all laugh.
Larren reports on his conversation with Della Guardia’s people. He talked to Tommy Molto, who has emerged tonight as the primary aide-de-camp. They’d rather not have a face-to-face this evening. Instead, Molto and Nico want to see Raymond in the morning.
“Ten o’clock,” says Larren. “He told me, didn’t ask. And says, Please make sure it’s with Raymond alone. How do you like that? Bossy little shit. Larren takes a private moment with his discontent. “I said you’d call Nico to make a formal concession. When you’re ready.”
Raymond takes Larren’s bourbon from him and has a belt.
“I am ready,” he says.
Loyalty goes only so far. I do not want to listen. I head back to the ballroom.
Near the bar, I run into George Mason, an old friend of Raymond’s. He is already drunk. We both are being jostled.
“Pretty good crowd,” he tells me.
Only near the bar, I think. But I save the thought.
“He had a good run,” George says. “He did a good job. You guys should all be proud.”
“We are,” I say. “I am.”
“So what’s with you? Private practice?”
“For a while, I guess.”
“Gonna do criminal stuff?”
How many times have I had this conversation tonight? I tell George probably, I’ll see, who can tell. I’m going to go on a vacation, that’s for sure. George gives me his card and tells me to call. He may know some people I might want to talk to.
Horgan arrives in the ballroom twenty minutes later. The assholes from TV shove their way to the front, hold up their cameras and lights and boom mikes so that you cannot see much. Raymond is smiling and waving. Two of his daughters are with him on the platform. The band is playing an Irish jig. Raymond has said “Thank you” for the third time, about halfway along to quieting the crowd, when somebody grabs my arm. Lipranzer. He looks harried from having had to push his way through to reach me. There is too much noise in here to speak: stamping, hooting, whistling. Some folks in the back have even started to dance. Lipranzer motions me outside and I follow him beneath an exit sign. We end up, unexpectedly, in an alley outside the hotel, and Lip walks down toward a street lamp. When I see him now, I can tell that something’s wrong. He looks almost caved-in, compressed by some kind of worry. The sweat shines near his temple. From here, I can hear Raymond’s voice inside but not what he’s saying.
“This is too strange,” Lip says. “Something’s fucked-up over in the Hall. It’s way wrong.”
“Why?”
“I don’t know,” he says. “But I’m gettin vibes like I haven’t had in years. I got a message I’m supposed to be in Morano’s office, 8:00 tomorrow morning to be interviewed. By Molto. That’s the message. Not talk. Not discuss. Interview. Like they’re after me. And here’s another one. When I come back in tonight they tell me that Schmidt took all the receipts for the evidence I’ve inventoried on Polhemus. Any questions, see him.”
“Sounds to me like you’re off this case.”
“Sure,” he says. “Fine. But figure this in. I’m out in the North Branch before 5:00. All of this hits by 6:00, 6:30. And look at what I picked up out there.”
He reaches inside his windbreaker to his shirt pocket. He has four or five sheets of foolscap, xeroxes, I see, of court documents. The case number I recognize: it matches the complaint number missing from the 32nd District. The first sheet is a copy of the case jacket. People versus Leon Wells. A public-indecency complaint. Dismissed by court order a day in July nine years ago.
“Bingo,” I say out loud.
“This page,” Lip tells me. It is the bond order. In our state, a defendant is permitted to satisfy bail in minor cases merely with his signature on a promissory note, promising to pay a sum—by law less than $5,000—in the event of his default. The only conditions are that he refrain from other crimes and report once weekly by phone to a member of the court’s probation department. Leon’s assigned probation officer according to his bond slip was Carolyn Polhemus. Her name and telephone number are right there.
“Wait. Here’s the best.” He pulls the last sheet out. It is a copy of the court half-sheet, a form dismissing the case. Motion to Dismiss Without Prejudice, it is captioned. The attorney presenting the motion is the prosecutor. “Raymond Horgan, Kindle County Prosecuting Attorney, By” is printed at the bottom of the form. The deputy handling the case is supposed to sign the blank. I cannot read the signature at first. Then I get it.
“Molto?”
Lipranzer and I stand a moment in the street lamps, looking at the papers again. Neither one of us says much. From inside there’s an enormous roar; then you can hear the band striking up again, “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.” Raymond, I take it, has admitted defeat.
I try to pacify Lipranzer. Hang tight, I tell him. We’re not sure of anything.
“You take this.” He gives me the copies from the court file.
I move back toward the ballroom. Lip heads off alone, past the dumpsters and debris, into the darkness of the alley.
16
“So we ended,” I told Robinson, “and we ended badly. One week she saw me less. The next week not at all. No lunches, no calls, no visits to my office. No ‘drinks,’ as we so quaintly put it. She was gone.”
I knew she valued independence. And at first I tried to stanch my panic by telling myself it was only that: a show of freedom. Best not to resist. But each day the silence worked on me—and my pathetic longing. I knew she was only one floor down. I wanted nothing so much as simply to be in the same room. I went three days running to Morton’s Third Floor, where I knew she liked to go for lunch. On the third day, she appeared—with Raymond. I thought nothing of that. I was blind then. I did not imagine rivals. I sat for half an hour, by myself, shifting lettuce leaves across my salad bowl and gazing at a table two hundred feet away. Her coloring! Her hair! When the feel of her skin came over me, I sat alone in a public dining room and groaned.
By the third week, I had passed the edge. I did not have to gather strength; I merely let myself go to impulse. I walked directly to her office, eleven o’clock one morning. I did not bring a file, a memo, any item for excuse.
She was not in.
I stood there on her threshold with my eyes closed, burning in humiliation and sadness, feeling I would die from being thwarted.
While I stood there, in that pose, she returned.
Rusty, she said brightly.
A chipper greeting. She pushed past me. I watched her bend to pull a file from her drawer. A parched arrow of sensation ran through me, at the way her tweed skirt pulled across her bottom, the smoothness of her calves flexing in her hose. She was busy. She stood over her desk, reading the notations on the jacket, tapping a pencil on a pad.
I’d like to see you again, I said.
She looked up. Her face was solemn. She stepped around her desk and reached past me with one hand to close the door.
She spoke immediately.
I don’t think that’s a very good idea. Not now. It’s not right for me now, Rusty. Then she opened up the door.
She went back behind her desk. She worked. She turned to flip on the radio. She did not glance toward the place where I remained another moment.
I do not think I believed at any time that Carolyn Polhemus loved me. I thought only that I pleased her. My passion, my obsession flattered and enlarged her. And so I did not suffer rejection; I was not ravaged by grief. When it finally occurred to me that I might have a successor, I did not have fantasies of his destruction. I would have agreed to share. I was devastated by denial, by longing. I wanted, simply, what it was I’d had. I craved Carolyn and my release in her in a way that did not end.
For me it never ended. There was nothing to make it end. Her willingness had always been only secondary, convenient. I wanted my passion, in its great exultant moments, the burning achievement of my worship, of my thrall. To be without it was to be in some way dead. I longed. I longed! I sat up nights in my rocking chair, imagining Carolyn, overcome by pity for myself.
In those weeks, my life seemed to have exploded. My sense of proportion left me; my judgment took on the grotesque exaggerations of a cruel cartoon. A fourteen-year-old girl was abducted, stored like merchandise in the defendant’s trunk, sodomized in one manner or another every hour or two for three days, and then was beaten by him, blinded (so she could make no identification), and left for dead. I read reports about this case, attended meetings where the evidence was discussed. To myself I thought, I hurt for Carolyn.
At home I made my absurd confession to Barbara, weeping at the dinner table, crying in my highball. Do I have the guts to say it? I wanted her sympathy. That mad egoistic instant naturally went to make my suffering worse. Barbara would not endure the sight of me in any visible pain. Now there was no place left. At work, I did nothing. I watched the hallways for some glimpse of Carolyn passing by. At home, my wife was now my warden, daring me, with the threat of the imminent end of family life, to wear any sign of any neediness. I took to walks. December turned to January. The temperature sunk near zero and stayed that way for weeks. I trudged hours through our little town, with my scarf across my face, the fur trimming of my parka burning when it touched the exposed portion of my forehead and my cheeks. My own tundra. My Siberia. When would it end? I wanted simply to have—or if not to have, to find some peace.
Carolyn avoided me. She was as artful at that as at so many other things. She sent me memos, left Eugenia phone messages. She did not go to meetings I was scheduled to attend. I’m sure I drove her to it, that in the moments when we caught sight of each other, she could see my pathetic, hungering expression.
In March, I called her from home. It happened a few times. She had drafted an indictment in a recidivist case, complex charges with allegations going back to the 1960s. I told myself it would be easier to discuss involved legal problems without the interruptions of the office. I waited until Nat was asleep and Barbara was stowed in the closed womb of her study, from where I knew she could never hear me calling downstairs. Then I paged to Carolyn’s listing in the little mimeographed directory Mac put out, containing all the deputies’ home phones. I hardly needed to look to recall the number, but I suppose that in those moments of compulsion I took some strange satisfaction from seeing her name in print. It prolonged, in a way, the communication; it meant my fantasy was real. As soon as I heard Carolyn’s voice, I knew how false my excuses had been. I could not bring myself to utter a sound. “Hello? Hello?” I melted when I heard her speak in a tone without reproach. Who was it she was awaiting now?
Each time I did it, I was sure that pride would bear my saying a word or two. I intricately plotted the conversations beforehand. Humorous cracks to dislodge her from indifference or chagrin. Sincere declarations for the instant when I was given half a chance. I could not make any of it take place. She answered, and I waited in a fiery pit of shame. Tears came to my eyes. My heart felt squeezed. “Hello? Hello?” I was relieved when she slammed down the phone, when I quickly tucked the office directory into the hallway bureau.
She knew, of course, that it was me. There was probably something forlorn and beseeching in my breathing. One Friday night, late in March, I sat in Gil’s, finishing a drink I had started with Lipranzer before he headed home. I saw her staring at me in the long beveled mirror behind the bar. Her face was there above the whiskey bottles; her hair was newly done, shining and stiff beneath the spray. The anger in her look was cruel.
Pretense was so much easier. I moved my glance from hers and told the bartender to give her an Old-Fashioned. She said no, but he did not hear her, and she waited until he brought the drink. She was standing. I was sitting. The burly Friday-evening tumult of Gil’s went on around us. The juke was screaming and the laughter was wild. The atmosphere had the beefy smell of Fridays, the musk of sexuality unlimbering from the week’s restraint. I finished my beer, and finally, thank God, found the strength to speak.
I’m like a kid, I told her. I was talking without looking her way. I’m so uncomfortable right now, just sitting here, I want to walk away. And most of the time, the only thing I think I want in life is to talk to you.
I looked up to see how she was taking this and found her expression largely abstracted.
That’s what I’ve been doing for months now, walking past you. That’s not cool, is it?
It’s safe, she said.
It’s not cool, I repeated. But I’m inexperienced. I mean, I want to have this war-weary, so-what thing about it all, but I’m not making it, Carolyn. I got engaged when I was twenty-two years old. And right before the wedding I did my time in the Reserves, and I got drunk and screwed some woman in a station wagon behind a bar. That’s it, I said, that’s the history of my infidelities, my life of wild amours. I’m dying, I said. Right this minute. Sitting on this fucking bar stool, I am just about dead. You like that? I’m shaking. My heart is hammering. In a minute, I’ll need air. That’s not very cool, is it?
And what do you want from me, Rusty? It was her turn now, looking dead into the mirror.
Something, I said.
Advice?
If that’s all I can get.
She put her drink down on the bar. She put her hand down on my shoulder. She looked straight at me for the first time.
Grow up, she said, and walked away.
“And for a minute then,” I said to Robinson, “I felt the most desperate wish that she were dead.”
17
Around the office, Tommy Molto was nicknamed the Mad Monk. He is a former seminarian; five foot six inches if he is lucky, forty or fifty pounds overweight, badly pockmarked, nails bitten to the quick. A driven personality. The kind to stay up all night working on a brief, to go three months without taking off a weekend. A capable attorney, but he is burdened by a zealot’s poverty of judgment. As a prosecutor, he always seemed to me to be trying to make facts rather than to understand them. He burns at too high a temperature to be worth much before a jury, but he made a good assistant to Nico—he has qualities of discipline that Della Guardia lacks. He and Delay go all the way back to grade school at St. Joe’s. Dago society. Molto’s one of the guys who were included before they were old enough to worry about who was cool. Tommy’s personal life is a cipher. He is single and I’ve never seen him with a woman, which inspires the usual conjecture, but if I were to guess, I’d imagine he’s still celibate. That singular intensity seems to have a subt
erranean source.
Tommy, as usual, is whispering to Nico hotly when I come through the reception room. There’s been a lot of rubbernecking in the office, file clerks and secretaries rushing to the receptionist’s window to see what the new boss looks like. As if they could have forgotten in nine months. The TV crews followed Nico up here and did their takes of Nico and Tommy sitting in hard wooden chairs, waiting to meet with Horgan, but that is over now. The reporters have dispersed, and the two of them actually look somewhat forlorn when I come by. Nico does not even have his flower. I cannot resist giving it to Molto.
“Tommy Molto,” I say. “We once had a guy of that name who worked here, but we think he might be dead. Keep those calls and letters coming, Tom.”
This joshing, which I intend in all good humor, seems not merely to fall flat but to inspire a look of horror. Molto’s heavy brows knit and he actually appears to recoil when I offer my hand. I try to ease the moment by turning to Delay. He takes my hand, although he, too, seems somewhat reluctant to accept my congratulations.
“I will never say you did not tell me so,” I admit.
Nico does not smile. In fact, he looks the other way. He is extremely ill at ease. I do not know if the campaign has left a wake of bitterness or if Delay, like so many of us, is simply scared to death now that he finally has what he so long wanted.
One thing I am certain of after this encounter: Nico will not be bidding to retain my services. I go so far as to call the file room and ask them to begin putting together some boxes. Late in the morning, I call Lipranzer’s number at McGrath Hall. His phone, which is never answered when he’s out, is picked up by someone whose voice I do not recognize.