She measured that one, believed me, and we took the Chris Craft back to the marina. Mission bungled. I still had no idea why Melanie was at Roger's house last night or on the bay with Sergio today. But I was starting to get the idea that the lady had a plan for everything and everybody. Inviting me to her house had to be part of the plan. I wished I knew what part.

Susan and I headed to Coconut Grove, the Olds 442 purring in third gear. I pulled into the shade of a gumbo- limbo tree in front of my house, and she turned to me.

'Jake, we have to talk.'

'Uh-huh.'

'About the other night.'

'The other night?'

'Don't be dense! At your Granny's. And last night, in your shoebox there behind the weeds. Have you forgotten?'

I put the stick into neutral and turned off the ignition. The engine groaned and died. 'I haven't forgotten. I remember every parry and thrust.'

'That's not what I mean. Don't you think we should talk about how we feel about each other?'

Uh-oh. I should have known. Somehow I assumed that Susan Corrigan was different from other women. Which she was, of course, in certain respects. She cared less about clothes than whether to pass or run on third- and-four. But she was still a woman… and women want to talk about relationships. I went into my big, dumb guy routine. It comes naturally.

'I'm not too good at postcoital conversation,' I said.

'I know,' she said compassionately. 'Like most men, you have trouble expressing your emotions.'

'Not all of them. Anger I'm good at.'

She scowled and waited. I had one hand on the door handle, but she wasn't stirring. Trapped.

'Jake, if it helps, I'm not too good at this either. But here goes. I want you to know I wouldn't have crawled into your bed unless I felt something for you. Something more than a physical attraction. I don't know how much or where it's going. But it's real, and I wanted you to know.'

She waited some more.

I was silent. Overhead, a snowy egret headed toward the Everglades. Free to roam. I fidgeted, and the old leather upholstery squeaked underneath me.

'The ball is in your court, Counselor,' Susan Corrigan said.

'I appreciate what you said. Thank you.'

'Thank you? You big lummox! Are there any feelings inside that block of granite that sits on your shoulders? I am so tired of commitment-phobic men who panic when things get too good. Are you afraid of love, Jake? Is that it, are you one of those guys who sabotages a relationship when it gets too close?'

I looked down and noticed I was stomping on the brake pedal. My right hand had the gearshift in a death grip. The car seemed to shrink around me, caught in one of those machines that pulverizes a two-ton sedan into a block of scrap metal the size of a sofa. 'Don't you think you're overreacting to my limited ability to express myself?' I asked.

'Is that code for inaccessibility and lack of emotional depth?'

'No. You're important to me, Susan. There's so much going on right now that I haven't had a chance to figure it all out. But you've gotten to me, right through the granite. You challenge me. You make me think about the way I live, my work, everything. You turn me on, and you light me up. But it's not even halftime. Let's go into the locker room, then see what happens in the second half.'

She smiled. 'Not a bad speech. Not a great speech, but it'll do. ..'

Then I leaned down and kissed her, and she grabbed a handful of my hair and yanked my head back. '… For now,' she said, pushing me toward the door.

A ringing phone greeted us in the little house. Charlie Riggs was on the line, breathing hard. 'Thank God you're there. There's trouble, Jake, and his name's Abe Socolow.'

Oh no, Socolow.

'They must have followed me here,' Charlie said. 'Two investigators from the State Attorney's Office plus Socolow. It's his case.'

'What, a lousy grave theft?'

'No Jake, the murder of Philip Corrigan.'

That took the air out of me. 'Where are you, Charlie?'

'At Jane's house.'

'Jane?'

'Jane! Jane Lassiter, your granny, for pete's sake.'

'Oh.' The last time Granny was called Jane, the Wright Brothers were still tuning pianos.

'Don't worry, Jake. I'm buying her out and I won't give you up.'

'Slow down, Charlie. What happened? Who's there?'

'Socolow and two of his investigators are on the front porch. This is my one phone call, just like in the movies. Best I can figure, MacKenzie heard I was in the lab after hours. Lord knows how, he never works past five. Anyway, he busted balls on the toxicology staff. They gave him the liver and brain samples, all tested positive for succinic acid and choline. So Socolow put a tail on me. They figured I had the body. I'm giving it to them. We would have done it sooner or later anyway, and they promise no charges for the grave robbery.'

'Does Socolow know you're calling me?'

'Yeah, but just as a lawyer. He doesn't know you were in the cemetery. Like I said, I won't give you up. He can't flip me.'

'Relax, Charlie. You sound like Jimmy Cagney.'

'I'm so sorry, Jake. This couldn't have happened ten years ago. Fugaces labuntur anni. You wake up one morning and you're old.'

I thought Charlie was about to cry, then through the phone, I heard the unmistakable sound of Granny's screen door slamming shut. Then a voice, raspy and disagreeable, a voice from the past.

'You're one rockin' rollin' mouthpiece, Jake, but you got your dick on the chopping block this time.'

'Hello, Abe,' I said. 'Long time.'

I pictured him on the other end of the line, smirking malevolently. Abraham Socolow was lean and balding, sallow of face and unpleasant of disposition. He was born mad at the world, and nothing had happened in the next forty-four years to change his mind. He believed that his fellow man was a miscreant until proven innocent. As chief of major crimes in the State Attorney's Office, he also believed it was his mission in life to personally convict and send away the worst of the low-life slimeballs who committed felonies in the twenty-seven municipalities of Dade County, Florida.

Every prosecutor's office has one Abe Socolow but could use ten. He viewed the job as a calling, not as a stepping stone to a cushy life defending drug dealers. Abe Socolow was smart, tough, mean, and unforgiving. And messianic. He considered plea-bargaining a sacrilege, probation unthinkable, and second chances were for basketball players at the free throw line.

As much as Socolow detested robbers, rapists, and druggies, he had a special contempt for murderers. On a chart above his green metal desk in a tiny office that smelled of stale coffee and cigarettes was a poster with mug shots of fifty-eight men and three women. Sixty-one buckets of slime, Socolow liked to say. A diagonal slash cut across five of the faces and a caricature of Socolow's beakish face peeked over the top of each slash. 'Slimebusters,' the poster said in red ink, drawn to look like drops of blood.

The greatest anguish in Socolow's life was that he had convicted sixty-one slimeballs of first degree murder but only thirty-eight had been sentenced to death, and of those, only five had been executed. The rest were tied up in endless appeals. When I was a public defender, Socolow confided to me that he sometimes dreamed he would die before his murderers, a vision that left him frightened and alone. It was the only time I knew him to confess weakness of any kind.

'You gonna defend him, Jake?'

'Defend who?'

'Hey, don't jerk me off. Roger Salisbury. Dr. X, the 201 great white defendant, purveyor of poison, seducer of women…'

Вы читаете To speak for the dead
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