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Kindle County: Reversible Errors Part 4

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"The industry?"

"Air travel. See the world and get paid for it. That's downright hilarious, because all the airlines do big-time dope screening, they'd sooner hire an orangutan than a kid with a drug felony. But I know a lot of the big travel agencies after all this time. So I just about wear out my knees, but he gets hired on at Time To Travel, and G.o.d strike me dead, he does okay. Collins"that's his name, Collins"Collins gets his a.s.sociate's degree, and his agent's license. He likes wearing a coat and tie. He likes talking to people. He's good with the computers. He gets promoted to an actual agent, instead of a gofer. And for about five minutes I thought to myself, This might work, this kid might make it. And of course he gets f.u.c.ked up on drugs again and cracked for selling. That's a three-fer. The first conviction gets reinstated. He does eighteen months. And in this state, he loses his travel agent license.

"The last part, I swear, when he got out, that irritated him more than his time inside. I tell him to move, get away from the influences. There are thirty-six states where he's still certified as an agent. But you know the end by now. I got the call last week. He's over in County."

"The jail or the hospital?"

"Crossbars Motel."



"For?"

"Buy-bust."

"How much?"

"Six zones, as they say." Six ounces. "Cla.s.s X."

"That's tough."

"Terrible tough. This'll make him Triple X." Triple X, three felony convictions for narcotics, would mean life in prison, no parole, unless Erno's nephew offered something to prosecutors. Larry still couldn't see where this was going. Erno knew plenty of guys in Narcotics whose ring he could kiss.

"He'll have to find his tongue, I'd say," Larry told Erno.

"Yeah, well, those g.a.n.g.b.a.n.gers he did business with"he'll look like punchboard, that's what he figures, if he snitches out any of them. But he might have something else. You know, he calls me whenever he gets it in the wringer. I tell myself not to pick up the phone anymore, but what can you do? Yesterday he's crying and carrying on, and in the middle of it he says he heard something or saw something on your case."

"This case?"

"That's what he says. He says he saw a guy with jewelry. And he thinks the jewelry belonged to one of your vics."

"Which one?"

"Didn't ask. I heard you were coming, I promised I'd mention it. Truth is, knowing Collins like I do, it's probably jailhouse bulls.h.i.t"Rudy told Trudy who told Judy. But if it's actually something, Larry, if he hands it to you, you got to get him out from under."

"I don't have any problem with that," said Larry, "but he better hit the bull's-eye."

"It'd be a first," said Erno.

Larry took the name"Collins Farwell. The fight was fading when he left the building, and across the street another jet with the zigzag TN logo on the tail drove itself up into the sky with shuddering force. For no reason he could think of at first, Larry was happy. Then it came to him: he had to call Muriel Wynn.

Chapter 6.

May 15, 2001 Gillian's Letter COMING IN FROM THE RAIN, Gillian Sullivan looked as she always had to Arthur Raven, collected and serenely beautiful. She shook out her umbrella in the vast reception area of O' Grady, Steinberg, Marconi and Horgan and handed over her slick plastic raincoat. Her short, hedgehog hair had wilted a little in the damp air, but she was carefully dressed in a dark, tailored suit.

Arthur led her to a conference room dominated by a green granite table, veined in white. Through the steel-frame windows of the IBM Building, the River Kindle, three dozen floors below, was scaled in the dwindling light. Gillian had phoned yesterday, stating without elaboration that there was a matter to discuss, ending the conversation with one more apology for her rudeness the last time they'd met. Arthur had told her the incident was forgotten. It was his ingrained habit to shirk off the hurt arising from his dealings with women, and in this case, like many others, he might even have brought her reactions on himself. You couldn't really expect somebody to be polite, after you'd suggested they'd been too drunk or venal to care about another life.

He lifted a phone to summon Pamela. In the interval, he asked Gillian if she was working.

"I'm selling cosmetics at Morton's."

"How is that?"

"I spend the day delivering compliments of questionable sincerity. There's a check every two weeks, most of which, candidly, has gone to replenishing my wardrobe. But I feel competent. Makeup and clothing were probably the only other subjects I knew well besides law."

"You were always glamorous," said Arthur.

"I never felt glamorous."

"Oh, you were regal up there. You were. Really. I had a crush on you," Arthur offered. He felt like a schoolboy standing at the corner of the teacher's desk, but his embarra.s.sment actually evoked a pa.s.sing smile from her. Of course, 'crush' was not quite the right word. Arthur's attractions were seldom that innocuous. His fantasies were vivid, pa.s.sionate, and utterly consuming. Every six months or so for most of his life since the age of twelve or thirteen he had fallen desperately for some glorious, unattainable female, who lingered in his mind like a mirage. Gillian Sullivan, the courthouse glamour girl, physically striking, intellectually formidable, had been a natural for this role, and he was smitten not long after he had been a.s.signed to her courtroom. At sidebars or in an instruction conference, when he was close to the judge, always fastidiously a.s.sembled and powerfully scented, he had often been obliged to position his yellow pad strategically to hide an oncoming erection. He was hardly the only Deputy P.A. intensely aware of Gillian's carnal appeal. Mick Goya, in his cups at a tavern near the courthouse, had once watched Gillian pa.s.s by, cool and elegant as a palm. 'I would f.u.c.k a wall,' he'd said, 'if I thought she was behind it.'

Even after Gillian's long fall from her pinnacle, she continued to have an effect on Arthur. Her troubles had left her thin enough to be called skinny, but she looked far better than when he'd last seen her years ago, pale and addled by drink. Being himself, he had actually been excited by the notion of her visit.

Pamela arrived and shook hands quite formally without really managing a smile. Sentencing Rommy to death would have been enough to win Gillian a place on Pamela's enemies list, but the young woman had been appalled when Arthur had explained Gillian's circ.u.mstances. A judge taking bribes! Observing Pamela's frosty demeanor, Arthur realized that Gillian must have frequently encountered such reactions, especially when she wandered into the sanctuaries of the law. It was brave of her to come.

The three sat together at the end of the granite table where the coppery light fell. To Pamela, Arthur had speculated that his meeting with Judge Sullivan ten days ago had probably dislodged some detail from her memory. Instead Gillian opened the clasp on her handbag.

"I have something I think you should see." She held a white business envelope. Even before she slid it toward Arthur, he recognized its markings. In the upper left corner, the return address of the Rudyard penitentiary was printed, with the inmate's pen number handwritten below.

Inside was a letter dated in March of this year, carefully printed by hand on two yellow sheets. As Arthur read, Pamela stood over his shoulder.

Dear Judge, My name is Erno Erdai. I am an inmate at the Maximum Security Facility at Rudyard, doing ten on an agg battery, for shooting a man in self-defense. My out-date is in 4/02, but I don't expect to see it, as I've had some cancer and am not in the best of health. You probably wouldn't remember, but I used to be a.s.sociate Chief of Security at TN Air in charge at DuSable Field and came into your courtroom a couple of times when we filed complaints about stuff at the airport, mostly unruly pa.s.sengers. Anyway, I'm not trying to stroll down memory lane, although I have plenty of time for such things, if you ever care to. (That's a joke.) Why I am writing is because I have some information concerning a case that was before you where you sentenced a man to death. He is on the Condemned Unit down here, and is actually the next one scheduled to take The Walk, so this is kind of urgent because I expect what I have to say will make a big difference in whether that happens.

This is not the kind of thing I want to talk to just anybody about, and frankly I'm having a h.e.l.l of a time getting the right people to pay any attention. A couple years back, I wrote to the Detective on the case, Larry Starczek, but he's not interested in me now that I can't do him any good. I also wrote the State Defender's Office, but those people don't answer their clients' letters, let alone from some con they never heard of. Maybe it's just because I spent all these years being half a cop, but I never met a defense lawyer I liked or trusted all that much. You might have had better experiences. But I'm off the subject.

If you hadn't of had your problem, I probably would have contacted you a while ago. I heard you were out and from my way of thinking I'm probably happier to talk to you now. Cons don't judge. I'm hoping you're willing to take the trouble to straighten out something where you didn't have all the right information. The mail I send from here gets screened"you probably know that yourself"so I'd rather not put any more in writing. You can never tell how people around here are going to react to stuff. It's a distance, but you should come down to hear this yourself. If you look me in the eye, you'll know I'm not fooling around.

Very Truly Yours, Erno Erdai Pamela had gripped Arthur's shoulder"probably when she reached the line about this prisoner having information that would make a big difference in whether the next execution occurred"and as a result he felt the need to preach caution to her again. This letter didn't even mention Rommy. And there was no end to the attention-seeking antics of inmates who were, literally, the worst people around.

Gillian was awaiting their reactions. Arthur asked if she had any memory of this Erno Erdai, but she shook her head.

"And why are you sure he's talking about my client?" he added.

"I only issued two death sentences, Arthur, and Texas executed the other man, McKesson Wingo, a long time ago. Besides, Starczek wasn't the detective on that case."

He turned to Pamela, expecting jubilation, but she was examining the envelope Erdai's letter had come in, focused, it appeared, on the postmark.

"So you got this in March?" She was facing Gillian. "You just sat on it for two months?" Her confrontational tone surprised Arthur. Pamela generally maintained the outward manner familiar to her entire generation, a vague amiability suggesting that nothing in life was worth the strain of a disagreement.

"We're all here now," Arthur said mildly. Clearly, though, Pamela had this right. Gillian had taken her time, deliberating about what to do, or whether she wanted to do anything at all.

"I thought more about it after our meeting," Gillian told Arthur.

Pamela wasn't satisfied.

"But you still haven't gone down there to see this man?"

Gillian frowned. "That's not my job, miss."

"And watching them execute someone who shouldn't be"that is?"

"Oh, for G.o.d's sake!" Arthur shot his hand toward Pamela like a traffic cop. She went silent, but still cast a baleful glance Gillian's way. He asked Gillian if Pamela could copy the letter and Gillian, whose face was masked by a slender freckled hand, nodded. As Pamela s.n.a.t.c.hed up the pages, Arthur had no doubt Gillian Sullivan was wondering why she had bothered to come. During the time Gillian had been in the law, both as a prosecutor and a judge, it had been an article of faith never to surrender her composure. No matter how rascally the defendant or lawyer, she would not provide them with the pleasure of an emotional response. As Arthur's young a.s.sociate, in ankle boots and a leather skirt with on-seam detailing, strode from the room, Gillian's first instinct was to offer advice. Contain yourself, Gillian wanted to tell her. But Pamela, of course, would have answered, justifiably, that she wanted to be nothing like her.

"What do you feed her, Arthur?" Gillian asked when the door slammed. "High octane?"

"She's going to be a great lawyer," he answered. His tone suggested he recognized that was not fully a compliment.

"I still get mail forwarded from inmates all the time, Arthur. I don't even know how they find me. And all of it's crazy." There were the predictable p.o.r.nographic fantasies that the memory of an attractive woman in power inspired in bad men locked away, and several other messages, not all that different from Erdai's, sent in the implausible hope that she might rethink certain situations and repair them now that she knew what imprisonment was like. "I can't take any of it seriously," Gillian said. "You know what this is, Arthur, this letter. I know you do. The g.a.n.g.b.a.n.gers are always up to something."

"'Erno Erdai'? Sounds white. Rommy's black. And too weird for any gang to hook up. There's nothing about gangs in his record."

"They have all kinds of alliances in there. It's like the War of the Roses."

Arthur shrugged and said the only way to find out was to go speak to Erdai.

"I think you should," she answered. "That's why I brought the letter."

"The letter says he wants to talk to you."

"Oh, please," Gillian said. She reached into her purse. "May I smoke in here?"

Smoke-free environment, said Raven. There was a lounge, but the air was so rank she might as well just breathe in ash. Gillian closed the purse again, resolved, as ever, to contain her cravings.

"It's not even appropriate for me to go down there," she said.

Arthur made a face, perhaps out of an effort not to smile. And she quickly understood. There was no authority left to punish her for an ethical lapse, no one to banish her from the bench or revoke her law license. They'd done all that already. Anything they couldn't jail her for was all right at this stage.

"Gillian, n.o.body's going to criticize me"or you, for that matter"for doing what we have to in order to hear his story. He didn't make any bones about what he thinks of defense lawyers."

"He may well speak to you anyway."

"Or hate me and refuse to talk to either one of us after that. Gillian, I have six weeks left until the Court of Appeals decides whether to turn out the lights on this man. At this stage, I can't waste time or take chances."

"I cannot go to Rudyard, Arthur." The thought constricted her stomach. She did not want to feel that deadened air again, or deal with the perverted reality of convicts. She had spent most of her time in seg, separated from most inmates, because it was too hard for the Bureau of Prisons to figure out who was the sister or daughter of someone she'd prosecuted or sentenced and who, as a result, might be carrying a murderous grudge. And that was just as well. She was seldom at ease with the other prisoners with whom she was housed, women who were pregnant when they entered the facility, or who had been removed from general population for one infraction or another. They were all victims to the core, certainly in their own minds and often in fact. Most had had nothing to start and went down from there. Some were bright. Several were actually entertaining company. But when you got to know them, sooner or later you crashed against character defects the size of Gibraltar: lying, a temper like Vesuvius, a misperception of the world that resembled color-blindness in the sense that there was some aspect of normality they simply couldn't see. She kept to herself, helped out with legal problems, and was referred to, despite her efforts to discourage it, as 'Judge.' It seemed to please everyone there"prisoners and, even, staff"to know that one of the mighty had fallen.

Raven, however, was not about to give up.

"Look, I don't want to preach," he said, "but this Erdai, he has a point, doesn't he? You made the decisions. You found this man guilty, you sentenced him to death. Don't you have some responsibility, if my guy doesn't deserve that?"

"Arthur, to be blunt, I've done more than I had to already." She had wrestled it through for several days before deciding to bring him the letter. It was foolish, she knew, to risk any further contact with Raven, who might become more precise with his questions about her past. And she felt no allegiance to the law, whose stratagems and puzzles had once delighted her, but which, like a sovereign, had expelled her from its kingdom. But she smarted at the memory of that one cruel remark to Arthur. It was not the law but the rules she had set down for herself, with the avuncular a.s.sistance of Duffy, her sponsor and landlord, that required her to be here. No more messes, no more casual destruction of others or herself. When necessary, make amends.

Still yearning for nicotine, she stood and wandered to a corner of the room. She had not been in a law office in the months she had been out of the penitentiary, and the plummy atmosphere seemed somehow hilarious. Everyone had grown so much richer in the time she was away. It was unimaginable that normal people lived with this luxury"the rich woods, the granite, a silver coffee service of Swedish design, and rolling armchairs of b.u.t.tery calfskin. She had never yearned for any of this. But it was still difficult to see Arthur Raven, able and driven, but perhaps not gifted, so comforted by fortune.

As he watched her, Raven was unconsciously stroking the fried-up hair that stood straight on his scalp at the few points where it still resided. Arthur, as always, appeared to have been working hard"his tie was dragged down, and there were ink spots on his hand, and on his shirt cuff. Intuitively, she sought some way to deflect him.

"How is your sister, Arthur? Is my memory right? Is that who was ill?"

"Schizophrenic. I got her into an a.s.sisted living arrangement, but I'm over there all the time. The last words my father said to me were, 'Take care of Susan.' Which wasn't very surprising. He'd been telling me that since I was twelve."

"Other sibs?"

"It's just Susan and me."

"And when did your mother die?"

"My mother's hale and hearty. She just washed her hands of all of us thirty years ago when Susan got sick. She went to Mexico for a long time, then wandered back here. She was kind of a free spirit. And she and my father were a strange match. She's got a little place here in Center City and supports herself as a model for life-drawing cla.s.ses at the Museum Art School."

"A nude model?"

"Oh sure. 'The human body is a beautiful thing at all ages, Arthur.' I guess it's more of a challenge to draw wrinkles. I really don't know." Raven was smiling somewhat tentatively, a bit bewildered by what he was confessing.

"You see her?"

"Now and then. But it's like visiting a distant aunt. I mean in high school, I had a couple of friends, black guys actually, who'd been raised by their grandmothers. They knew their moms the way I did"like having a much older pal. It was how I grew up. What else do you know?"

He smiled the same way. Mrs. Raven, clearly, was the other pole from May Sullivan, who had demanded preeminence in the lives of all family members. She was brilliant and a savage wit, but the bottle of Triple Sec was open on the kitchen counter by the time Gillian came home every afternoon from St. Margaret's. The evening always proceeded in the same sick suspense. Who would Ma go after? Would she scream or, as was often the case in her fights with Gillian's father, resort to violence? Her rages could bring a house with ten occupants to a freighted silence that lasted hours.

Arthur, who had appeared to welcome Gillian's interest in him, nonetheless reverted to his effort to get her to visit Erdai. Discipline, she recalled, was always one of his professional strengths.

"I don't know how to talk you into this," he said. "I won't ask much. Just smooth the way with the guy." Arthur promised she would not even have to listen to Erdai's story, if she chose, and that he would drive her down himself to be certain she made it back and forth from the inst.i.tution in one day. "Look, Gillian. I never wanted this case. The court just threw it on me, like a saddle. And now I haven't had a day off in four weeks. But I'm doing it, you know, my duty. And I have to ask you to help."

Openly plaintive and disarmingly humble, Arthur extended his short arms toward her. He smiled as he had when he spoke of his mother: this was all he knew, and there was no choice but to accept it. He was a nice man, Gillian realized. He'd grown up to be a nice man, someone who'd come to know more of himself than she would have predicted. He knew he was one of life's ardent eager beavers, a do-right afraid to do wrong, and he knew, as he'd said last time, there were persons, such as she, who judged the likes of him boring. Yet that, she suddenly saw, had been her mistake. Not her only mistake. But one of them. She had always owed Arthur and those like him a great deal more respect. Realizing that was a step in her rehabilitation. Because it came to her now that rehabilitation was in fact her plan. In some secret part, she had intended all along, when her strength returned, to reform and remake herself, to refill with stronger stuff the fathomless crater she'd blown through her life.

"I'll go," she said. As soon as the words were uttered, they seemed like precious china knocked from a shelf. She watched their fall and impact"the light that spread on Raven's face"suspecting at once that she'd made a dreadful mistake. All she desired was a safely anesthetized life. She had been living out a daily plan"take her Paxil and minimize significant contact with what had gone before. She felt an ex-addict's natural panic to think her resolve had broken down.

Showing her to the handsome reception area, Raven offered a variety of inept expressions of grat.i.tude, then retrieved her wet umbrella and her coat. A giant rug, a bright design by a modern master who'd branched from paintings to textiles, covered the polished hardwood and Gillian, still deeply shaken, stared at the abstract figures. Twice with Arthur Raven in as many weeks, some spirit, like a woodland elf haunting a tree, had spoken for her.

She said goodbye abruptly and descended in the highspeed elevator, fully baffled by herself and, especially, the brief fluttery sensation in her chest, which seemed like a small flame in the corner of a cage. It would not last long and so she did not have to decide if it might be hope.

Chapter 7.

October 4, 1991 The Jail IN THE HOUSE of corrections, most inmates had several names. If the Laws found out you had a record, there was less chance to walk a beef, or get bail. So when perps were arrested, they tended to forget what Momma had called them. Usually guys had been cooling for weeks before the Identification Division in McGrath Hall compared ten-card fingerprint records from booking with what was on file and figured out who was who.

Unfortunately for Collins Farwell, he had matched early. Although he'd checked in as Congo Fanon, by the time Muriel got Larry's call, the jail had Collins's given name. She was trying a bank robbery case, but she agreed to meet Larry at the jail after court, and when she arrived, he was waiting for her on one of the granite blocks that served as a bench in the lobby. His large blue eyes lingered as she approached.

"Lookin pretty spiffy," Larry told her.

She was dressed for trial in a red suit, wearing a little more makeup than when she was in the office pushing files. Always a little too familiar, Larry reached up to touch one of her large loop earrings.

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Kindle County: Reversible Errors Part 4 summary

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