"It could be a lot more than that."
"Don't you think he could behave himself in prison? Don't you think he could convince the parole board that he's a changed man? Matt, the man's the most patient son of a bitch on God's earth. He's spent thirty years killing us and he's only a little more than halfway through. You think he won't be content to bide his time? They'll have him stamping out license plates and it'll just be another menial job, like working as a rent-a-cop in Queens. They'll stick him in a cell and it'll just be another in a long string of furnished rooms. What does he care how long he has to sit on his ass? He's been sitting on his ass for thirty years. Sooner or later they'll have to let him out, and do you think for one moment that he'll be magically rehabilitated?"
I looked at him.
"Well? Do you?"
"No, of course not."
"He'll start in where he left off. By the time he gets out, Mother Nature will have done some of his work for him. There'll have been some thinning of the ranks. But some of us will be left, and what do you bet he comes after us? What do you bet he tries to pick us off one by one?"
I opened my mouth, then closed it without saying anything.
"You know I'm right," he said.
"I know you've always opposed capital punishment."
"Absolutely," he said. "Unequivocally."
"That's not how you sound this morning."
"I think it's regrettable that a man like Severance could ever be released from prison. That doesn't mean I think the state should go into the business of official murder."
"I didn't think we were talking about the state."
"Oh?"
"You want to apprehend him without involving the media or the police. I get the feeling you'd like to see sentence passed and carried out in much the same manner."
"In other words?"
"You want me to find him and kill him for you," I said. "I won't do it."
"I wouldn't ask you to."
"I don't want to find him so you can kill him yourself, either. How would you do it? Draw straws to see who pulls the duty? Or string him up and have everybody pull on the rope?"
"What would you do?"
"Me?"
"In our position."
"I was in your position once," I said. "There was a man named… well, never mind what his name was. The point is that he had sworn to kill me. He'd already killed a lot of other people. I don't know if I could have got him sent to prison, but I know they wouldn't have kept him there forever. Sooner or later they'd have had to let him out."
"What did you do?"
"I did what I had to do."
"You killed him?"
"I did what I had to do."
"Do you regret it?"
"No."
"Do you feel guilty?"
"No."
"Would you do it again?"
"I suppose I would," I said. "If I had to."
"So would I," he said, "if I had to. But that's not what I have in mind. I don't really believe in capital punishment whether it's the state or an individual who imposes the sentence."
"I'm lost," I said. "You'll have to explain."
"I intend to." He drank some coffee. "I've given this some thought," he said, "and I've talked to several of the others. How does this sound to you?"
I heard him out. I had a lot of questions and raised a lot of objections, but he had prepared well. I had no choice but to give him the verdict he wanted.
"It sounds crazy," I said at length, "and the cost-"
"That's not a problem."
"Well, I don't have any moral objection to it," I said. "And it might work."
30
The first week in August I got a call around one in the afternoon. Joe Durkin said, "Matt, I'd like to talk to you. Why don't you come around the station house?"
"I'd be happy to," I said. "What would be a good time?"
"Now would be a good time," he said.
I went straight over there, stopping en route for a couple of containers of coffee. I gave one to Joe and he lifted the lid and sniffed the steam. "This'll spoil me," he said. "I've been getting used to squadroom coffee. What's this, French roast?"
"I don't know."
"It smells great, whatever it is."
He set it down, opened a drawer, took out one of the palm cards that had been circulating around town for a couple of weeks. It was on postcard stock and about the size of a standard postcard. One side was blank. The other showed James Severance as sketched by Ray Galindez. Beneath the sketch was a seven-digit telephone number.
"What's this?" he said, and flipped it across the desk to me.
"Looks like a postcard," I said. I turned it over. "Blank on the back. I guess you would write your message here and put the address over here on the right. The stamp would go in the corner."
"That's your phone number under the picture."
"So it is," I said. "But if the picture's supposed to be me, I'd have to say it's a lousy likeness."
He reached to take the card from me, looked at me, looked at it, looked at me again. "Somehow," he said, "I don't think it's you."
"Neither do I."
"Whoever it is," he said, "I got a snitch tells me the guy's picture's all over the street. Nobody knows who he is or why somebody's looking for him. So I figured I'd call the number and ask."
"And?"
"And I'm asking."
"Well," I said, "it's in connection with a case I'm working on."
"No kidding."
"And the subject of the sketch might be an important witness."
"Witness to what?"
"I can't say."
"What did you do, take holy orders? You're bound by the seal of the confessional?"
"I was hired by an attorney," I said, "and what was told to me comes under the umbrella of attorney-client privilege."
"Who hired you?"
"Raymond Gruliow."
"Raymond Gruliow."
"That's right."
"Hard-Way Ray."
"I've heard him called that, come to think of it."
He took another look at the sketch. "Guy looks familiar," he said.
"That's what everybody says."
"What's his name? That can't be confidential."
"If we knew his name," I said, "he'd be a lot easier to find."
"A witness saw him and sat down with an artist, and that's where the sketch came from."
"Something like that."
"I understand there's a reward."
I looked at the palm card. "Funny," I said. "It doesn't say anything here about a reward."
"I heard ten grand."
"That's a lot of money."
"It seems like a lot to me," he said, "when I think of what I've done for the price of a hat. What's funny is you never brought the sketch around here."
"I didn't think you'd recognize him. You don't, do you?"
"No."
"So there wouldn't have been much point in showing you the sketch."
He gave me a long look. He said, "When there's that much of a reward for somebody, it's generally somebody who doesn't want to be found."
"Oh, I don't know," I said. "What about that little boy who disappeared in SoHo? There were reward posters all over the place."
"That's a point. There aren't any posters with this fellow, are there?"
"I haven't seen any."
"Just cards you can tuck away out of sight. Nothing on the lampposts or mailboxes, nothing tacked up on bulletin boards. Just a lot of cards circulating quietly around the neighborhoods."
"It's a low-budget operation, Joe."
"With a five-figure reward."
"If you say so," I said, "but I still don't see anything here about a reward."
"No, neither do I. This is good coffee."
"I'm glad you like it."
"Last time we talked," he said, "you were looking into all these old cases. That painter and his wife, that gay guy who got more than he bargained for, that cabbie who picked up the wrong fare. Remember?"
"As if it were yesterday."
"I'll bet. This guy here tied in with them?"
"How could he be?"
"Why do you always answer a question with a question?"
"Do I have to have a reason?"
"Fucking smartass. What's the status of those old cases, anyway?"
"As far as I can tell," I said, "they're all still dead."