“I’m not playing,” the old man says in a whisper that only I can hear.
“Who are you?”
“Lester Cole,” he says, still low. “Thief and part-time murderer.”
“How?” I ask. “How can you do it?”
“They like me here,” he says. “They trust me. I fix everything. They get a jammed-up pipe and they need a man to go down into the catwalk and wade through the shit, Lester will do it. Anytime. Day or night. Just ask Lester.
“According to the warden, the job of the prisoners is to serve their time and maintain these buildings. I’m good at it. Plumbing. Electric. Air ducts. So I have… opportunities.”
“How?”
“Patience,” he says. “We have time.”
“Forty more years?”
“A lot sooner than that, kid,” he says. “Sooner than you think.”
20
CENTRE STREET. North of Wall Street. South of Chinatown. A powerful street, but relatively unknown outside the legal profession in New York City. Foley Square, and in the middle of it all, a neoclassical monster. Broad stone steps leading to massive fluted columns and justice. Beyond the façade, nearly two dozen men and women. Federal court judges for the Southern District of the Second Circuit. Appointed for life. The best and brightest, insulated from the political system to ensure their unbiased interpretations.
Villay didn’t have the nicest chambers, but he didn’t have the worst either. The crown molding needed refinishing, but the ceilings were twelve feet high and he had a high-backed leather chair. His clerk was Harvard. Third in his class. Thin, bookish, and blond like the judge himself had once been. Judge Villay ran the tip of a pocketknife under his thumbnail as he listened to the upcoming docket of cases. His broad forehead furrowed.
“What was that?” he said, putting his little feet down on the floor and looking up at his clerk over the silver reading glasses perched on his elfin nose.
“An appeal,” he said. “Raymond White v. the State of New York?”
“On what grounds?”
“Racial discrimination. Native American. Not a representative jury.”
“Ha!” Villay said, smiling and wagging his head. “I’ll be damned. Can’t take it. Total bullshit, though. Who’s the attorney? Not Dan Parsons still?”
The clerk looked down and nodded. “Yeah. How’d you know?”
“It was my case,” Villay said, straightening his back and widening his eyes so that the clerk would stare into their torn pupils. “Murder one. Life without parole. Guy was about to get the Republican Party nomination for an empty congressional seat. Would have won. Big deal back then, part Native American and all that. But discrimination? Parsons was his partner. Must have run out of good ideas. What a fucking joke. Send it to Kim Mezzalingua. She’ll get a kick out of it and send Parsons packing as fast as you can say ‘summary judgment.’
“What else?” Villay said, returning to his nails.
The clerk cleared his throat and continued to read the upcoming docket until he reached the end.
“Make sure I’ve got time for that drug trafficking trial,” Villay said, opening the cabinet for his coat with one hand and pointing at his clerk with the other. “Schedule a good ten days. I don’t want it rushed. I’m sick of those bastards poisoning our kids.”
He picked up his briefcase just as his secretary stuck her head inside the door.
“It’s Ivan Lindgren,” she said in an urgent whisper.
“Shit,” Villay said. “Tell him I’m gone. Pain in the ass.”
He turned and scuttled out the door that led to the back corridor. The way was longer, but worth it if he didn’t have to see Lindgren. Outside, there was a light gray rain in the air, and Villay hurried to the curb with his briefcase over his head. He slid into the back of his Town Car, lifted the Post from the seat, and told his driver, Jack, to go.
Jack started, then lurched to a stop. Villay crackled the paper down.
“What the hell?”
Through the swish of the wipers he saw Lindgren, his thick brown mustache dripping, his lined forehead beaded with rain, standing tall directly in front of the car. Villay cursed under his breath.
“Go, Jack. He’ll move.”
The driver’s shoulders were hunched over and he clutched the wheel, trembling.
“I… can’t.”
Villay slapped down his paper, huffed, and rolled down the window several inches.
“Get out of the way, you lunatic!” he shouted.
“You talk to me, damn it!” Lindgren shouted back.
Villay looked up and down the sidewalk. Despite the rain, people were stopping to stare.
“What?” he said through his teeth.
Lindgren circled the car, keeping his hands on its shiny waxed surface until his face was in the open space of the window and his fingers were clutching its edge.
“Five years,” Lindgren said in a hiss. “They built that case for five years and you ruled that wiretap inadmissible?”
Villay stabbed his finger at Lindgren and said, “You be careful. You don’t talk to a judge that way. I don’t care who your father is. I’m a federal judge. You’re a government attorney. I’ll blackball you twenty ways to Sunday.”
“I’ll have you…”
“What?” Villay said, moving his face closer to Lindgren, smiling.
Lindgren’s face started to crumple at the edges.
“They killed three people,” he said, his voice broken and his fingertips white. “They admitted it.”
“Thugs. Killers themselves. In case you weren’t aware,” Villay said, “we have a constitution in this country. We have laws. I suggest you go read them.”
“You could have ruled either way,” Lindgren said, his hands dropping to his sides.
“I’m a judge,” Villay said. “I answer to a higher power than my willie. Maybe one day, if you grow up, you will too. Jack. Go.”
Jack screeched the tires as he pulled away from the curb, then he jammed on the brakes before cruising away.
“Jesus,” Villay said, shaking his head. “Go uptown, Jack. Gino’s. And try not to kill anyone.”
Gino’s was already busy, and Villay pushed through the tiny, crowded bar area to the red half-door at the coat check. He turned, and the maître d’ smiled and patted the judge on the shoulders before showing him the way to his table. There were no booths or private areas. Gino’s was wide open. Well lit, with people crammed into small tables sitting back to back. The red wallpaper was adorned with zebras on carousel poles.
Villay sat down across from a stocky gray-haired man with pale green eyes and a diamond pinky ring and said, “Could you find a place that’s a little more obvious next time? Jesus.”
“I’m a lawyer. You’re a judge,” the man said in a heavy New Jersey accent. He wore a dark brown suit and a yellow tie. “What’s the fucking difference? We got nothing to hide. Besides, this is one of the few places where you can sling around a briefcase full of cash without anyone taking notice. Place is a fucking gold mine, and cash only. You believe that?”
The waiter appeared in his gray waistcoat and black tie. He set down some breadsticks and gave them a bow.
“Pellegrino with lime,” Villay said.
“You ain’t going to eat?” the lawyer said, raising his thick gray eyebrows. “I’m getting a sautéed kidney.”
“Just Pellegrino,” Villay said to the waiter, before leaning over the table. “Stop playing games. Ivan Lindgren practically attacked me just now. Let’s get this over with.”
The bullnecked lawyer leaned back with a grin and took something from the outside pocket of his suit coat.
“Nervous. Nervous,” he said. “But not too nervous to take a little something for the missus.”
On the table he set a six-karat pink diamond engagement ring. Villay covered it quickly with his hand and looked around before slipping it into the pocket of his charcoal gray pants.