"And how did you figure all of this out, Dad?"
"Slowly. That's what took a day."
"Ah." He sits again. Then runs his hand forward for me to go on.
"When I woke up, the sheets were wet with her perspiration. And your mom was dead. My first thought was that it was heart failure. I did CPR, and then when I went for the phone on her nightstand, I saw a stack of papers which she'd left under the water glass she'd brought for me to take the pills."
"What kind of papers?"
"The ones she'd gotten from the bank. The receipt from Dana's firm. Copies of the cashier's checks that paid my legal bills and the STD clinic. Monthly statements with the deposit amounts circled. She'd obviously put them there after I went to sleep."
"Because?"
"It was the equivalent of a note. She wanted me to know she knew."
"Ah," says my son.
"I was shocked, of course. And not especially happy with myself. But I realized how angry she must have been. And that this clearly wasn't an accident. It didn't take me long to think about the pills and to wonder what she'd taken that she'd intended to give me. So I went to her medicine cabinet. And the bottle of phenelzine was right inside in front. I picked it up and opened it, looked down to be certain those were the tablets. That's where the rest of my fingerprints came from.
"Then I went to my computer to find out about the stuff. And you know how the browser finishes your search term if you've used it before? 'Phenelzine' came right up. That's when I realized she'd been on the PC. I was scared immediately that she had been through my e-mail. When I looked, she'd gone in there and deleted those messages."
"From that woman? Pretty stupid to have left them there, Dad."
I shrug. "I never thought your mother would nose around like that. She would have gone postal if I'd ever glanced at her e-mail."
The truth, of course, is that I knew I was taking some chance, but that I could not bear to erase those messages, the lone memento I had of a time I still often longed for. But I cannot say that to my son.
"Why would she bother deleting them? Or the e-mails from Dana?"
"Because of you."
"Me?"
"That's my best guess. If things worked out as she intended, if my death was taken as one by natural causes, there was still a good chance you'd want to look through my e-mail, not to investigate, but just to remember your father, the same way mourners like to look through old letters. By sanitizing the account, she'd leave your memory of me in peace.
"But on the rare chance there was an investigation, it would have suited her purposes for those e-mails to be gone."
"Because?"
"Because it ensured there would be nobody to contradict whatever story your mother was going to tell. She'd have to account for the papers from the bank and acknowledge knowing I'd had an affair the year before. But she could say she never knew with who. It would have come off that I was thinking of divorce, but couldn't face it for unclear reasons. Maybe the girl dumped me when I told her I was going to leave my marriage. With all the corroboration of my suicide, there would never have been any further investigation."
He takes his time again.
"Where did those papers go, anyway? The ones from the bank on the nightstand?"
I laugh. "You're smarter than Tommy and Brand. Once we put the banker on to testify she gave your mother those documents, I kept waiting for the prosecutors to ask where the hell her copies went. They searched the house several times. But things were happening too fast, and besides, it was just as reasonable for them to think that she had destroyed them."
"But you did, right?"
"I did. Tore them into bits and flushed them down the toilet. That day. Once I figured it all out."
"Thereby committing obstruction of justice."
"Thereby," I reply. "My testimony in the trial was not a model of candor. There was a lot I didn't say I should have said if I was telling the whole truth. But I don't think I committed perjury. I certainly didn't want to-it would have rendered my whole professional life a joke. But the day your mother died? I destroyed evidence. I misled the police. I committed obstruction of justice."
"Because?"
"I already told you. I didn't want you to know how your mother died, or what role my own stupid behavior had played in that. Once I read about phenelzine, I thought the odds were overwhelming that the coroner would just take it as heart failure. I knew that Molto would be the biggest hurdle, so I would have been happiest if we could have avoided the police and the coroner, but you wouldn't let me. The funeral home probably wouldn't have, either, but I was going to try."
Nat looks at length into his coffee cup, then gets up without a word to refill it. He adds milk, then sits again and assumes the same pose. I know what he is weighing. Whether to believe me.
"I'm sorry, Nat. I'm sorry to tell you this. I wish there were some other conclusion to be drawn. It is what it is. You can never really anticipate what's going to happen once things start to go wrong."
"Why didn't you say all this stuff at trial, Dad?"
"It still wasn't a story I was eager for you to hear about your mother, Nat. But the biggest problem would have been admitting that I messed with the police and destroyed your mother's papers. As the law says, 'False in one thing, false in all.' The jury wouldn't have had much sympathy for a judge screwing around that way. I told as much of the truth as I could, Nat. And I didn't lie."
He looks at me at length, the same question still circulating, and I say to him, "I got myself into quite a mess, Nat."
"I'd say." He closes his eyes and works his neck for a second. "What are you going to do, Dad? With yourself?"
"Sandy has the agreements for me to sign this afternoon."
"How is he?"
I wrap my knuckles on the wooden table.
"And what's the deal he cut?" Nat asks.
"I resign from the bench, because of what I did with Harnason. But I get to keep my pension. It's ninety percent of my three best years, so I'll be fine financially. Your mother left a decent bequest for me, too. There's already talk about who will replace me on the court of appeals, by the way. Want to guess the name Sandy is hearing most often?"
"N. J. Koll?"
"Tommy Molto."
He smiles but doesn't laugh. "And what happens with BAD?" Bar Admissions and Discipline. "What happens with your law license?"
"Nothing. I keep it. The obstruction conviction is a nullity. Purely judicial misbehavior is not in their bailiwick traditionally."
"And what will you do?"
"I had some talk with the state defender's office up in Skageon. They always need an extra pair of hands. I thought that would be interesting after being a prosecutor and a judge. I don't know if I'll stay up there permanently, or try to come back eventually. I'll let things cool down for a year or two. Give people time to forget the details."
My son looks at me and turns it all over again. His eyes well.
"I just feel so bad for Mom. I mean, think about this, Dad. She scarfs down those pills, and knows what she's done to herself. And instead of going to the emergency room, she takes a sleeping pill and crawls into bed next to you to die."
"I know," I answer.
Nat blows his nose again, then rises and heads to the back door. I stand three steps above, watching him with his fingers on the knob.
"I hope you don't mind me saying this, but I still don't think you've told me everything, Dad."
I lift my hands as if to say, What more? He stares, then comes back up and raises his arms to me. We cling to each other a second.
"I love you, Nat," I tell him, with my face close to his ear.
"I love you, too," he answers.
"Hi to Anna," I say.
He nods and goes. From the kitchen window, I watch him walking down the driveway to Anna's little car. We filled him with our troubles, Barbara and I, but he will be okay. He is a good man. He is with a good person. He will be okay. We did our best for him, both of us, even if we tried too hard at times, like lots of parents of our generation.