Laura Wilkie, who had been my secretary for seven years, anticipated my return from the trial part. She was standing in my doorway, steno pad in hand, brewing a fresh pot of coffee to jump-start me for the evening ahead.

Clipped to my In box was a wad of telephone messages. 'Those you can ignore. Friends, lovers, bill collectors, snake oil salesmen. This one you can't.'

She gave me the yellow paper with the message she had taken from the district attorney. See me as soon as you finish in court.

It meant Battaglia had heard about the escape and wanted an explanation.

I walked into my office and dropped the files on top of my desk. Mercer was standing against the window, the dark outline of his six-foot-four-inch frame silhouetted against the granite gargoyles on the building ledge behind him. He was on the phone.

'Find out what you can. Alex is gonna tank on this one.'

'I think it's already happened,' I said to Mercer as he turned and saw me, then hung up. 'I'm about to hit bottom. Battaglia wants the story. Any news on how this happened?'

'Bessemer's a predicate. Facing the rest of his natural days behind bars for a five-kilo sale of cocaine. Brooklyn Narcotics made the arrest. Their lieutenant insisted that they be the ones to transport him here instead of our squad. Everybody there's playing dumb.'

'Sounds like they have the credentials for it. Any sightings of him yet?'

'I've called anyone who owes me. I'll get you an answer before the night is out.'

'If it comes back in little pieces, even if the information is too late to save my tail, you know I'd be grateful.'

I scanned my security pass to get into the executive wing. Battaglia's executive assistant, Rose Malone, looked relieved to see me. 'Go right in, Alex.'

Rose was my early warning system. Completely loyal to the district attorney, she had a superb ability to read his moods and transmit the data to me just as the most accurate barometer at Cape Canaveral could do for Mission Control.

'Do I get a hint about who ratted me out to the Boss?'

'It's not who you think.'

I thought McKinney. The chief of the trial division, Pat McKinney was my direct supervisor. His eagle eye scoured my actions for every misstep and mistake, and he seemed never to weary of reporting them to Battaglia.

'Who then?'

'The commissioner. Don't worry, the Boss isn't angry. He just wants to know some background before he takes the call.' She had intercepted the message and was giving me the opportunity to explain the situation to the DA, so he could be in the driver's seat during his conversation with the police commissioner.

The boss wasn't upset yet, because the screw-up was the doing of the NYPD. He just wanted to know the extent of our complicity before he pointed his finger at the cops.

Battaglia exhaled as I entered the room, the smoke from his Cohiba obscuring the expression on his face. 'Why don't you sit down and bring me up to speed, Alex?'

Unless I was in his office to deliver good news-a DNA databank cold hit, the sentencing of a serial rapist, a bit of personal gossip he could deposit in his limitless storehouse of information-I preferred to stand and answer the questions he had ready for me, leaving as rapidly as I had arrived.

He glanced at the paper on his desk. 'This-this Bessemer character. Why'd you need him brought down here?'

'I'm about to start a trial, Paul. The defendant is a guy-'

'Yeah, Andrew Tripping. That military nut who was disciplining his kid.'

There were more than six hundred assistant district attorneys in Battaglia's office, the best training ground for litigators in the entire country. No detail was too small to engage Battaglia's attention, and there was no fact that I had ever briefed him on that he couldn't call up from memory unless it had to do with money I asked for to fund a special sex crimes project.

'It's a tough case, Boss. And last week Mercer Wallace got a call that one of Tripping's cellmates from the time he was in Rikers had some useful admissions to give me. Something that might put my rape victim over the top.'

'Like what?'

'That's what I was supposed to find out, right about now.'

The left side of Battaglia's mouth pulled back as he talked around the large cigar stub that hung between his lips. 'You're losing your charm, Alex. Who thought a prisoner would prefer his freedom to tea and crumpets with you? How unusual was this arrangement?'

'Not very. The routine dance. He refused to tell the cops exactly what he had to offer until he eyeballed me to see what I was willing and able to do for him. I wouldn't talk possibilities till I knew what he was putting on the table.'

'Promises?'

'Of course not. I was fairly skeptical.' Snitches like Bessemer usually did more harm than good in a case like this. He had waited too long to make his offer seem sincere, and he was just as likely to be jerking me around as to have any tidbits of value. I couldn't refuse to see him without knowing what he might be sitting on, but I wasn't prepared to waste a great deal of time playing with him. CIs were the bottom feeders of the prison population.

'Worth the embarrassment of putting him back on the street while he's on his way to keep a date with you?' Battaglia asked.

'Not for a second. But, Boss, in more than a decade here, I've never heard of anything like this happening. I've had prisoners produced here scores of time-we all have. This was completely unpredictable.'

'You had a loser of a case before Bessemer's phone call to the cops. So you still got a loser.'

Now both sides of his mouth pulled back around the cigar into a broad smile. He went on to explain how he knew. 'I just heard from Judge Moffett. Wants me to lean on you to be more reasonable.'

I smiled back. That was one thing Paul Battaglia would never do. If my judgment call was a belief that the defendant was guilty as charged, and I thought I could prove it, then the district attorney's only rule was for me to do the right thing. It was one reason I loved working for the man.

'Is that why he called you?'

'In part. He wants to know what's in this case for Peter Robelon. How can Tripping afford his rates?'

Robelon was a partner in a small firm, a well-regarded boutique that specialized in white-collar litigation. His fees were among the highest in the New York bar-$450 an hour.

'I think there's some family money. Tripping's mother died about a year ago, several months before these events occurred. She had been raising her grandson until that point. She left everything she had to the defendant.' I hadn't been able to discover anything unusual from the bank records.

'Interesting, but only if she had enough to cover the retainer and trial costs.' Battaglia paused. 'Robelon's dirty, Alex. I've got good reason to know. Watch your back.'

'You want to tell me what you mean?' I asked. Peter Robelon had often been mentioned as a possible candidate to oppose Battaglia in the next election.

'Not for the time being.' Battaglia protected his hoard of information like an eagle on its nest. The fact that I had spent the last year in a serious relationship with a television news reporter made him far less likely to trust me with something sensitive that could play into his political future. 'Did Peter know about this Bessemer guy? Is his escape anything Peter could have had a hand in engineering?'

I was caught completely off-guard by his question. 'That never crossed my mind.'

'Well, keep it open, Alex. And if you're going to go belly-up on this case, do it fast. We've got a busy fall lineup and I'd like your help drafting some of the legislative proposals for the next session.'

I returned to my office to find Mercer sitting at my desk, still working the phone. I motioned to him to stay put and sat facing him, waiting for him to finish his conversation. From over my shoulder I heard a knock on my office door, which was ajar. Detective Mike Chapman braced himself against the jamb, smiled at me broadly as he ran the fingers of his right hand through his thick black hair.

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