Nick shot a quick look at Hugh, smelled gin, felt his blood begin to roar in his head.
“We hear you’ve been extremely cooperative,” said Kelso. “That’s wonderful. That’s a big plus on your behalf. Right now, Nick, we’re in the zone of attitude. Attitude is everything, Nick. We need great attitude from you.”
“Well, I always try and do my best,” said Nick, swallowing hard, somehow not wanting to look at Meachum.
“That’s Nick,” said Howard. “Nick tries real hard. Nick’s a worker, a plugger, a scrapper. You could see it seven years ago in Tulsa and you can see it now.”
“An extraordinary young man,” said the elderly gentleman.
“Now, Nick, guess what day this is? Can you guess?”
Howard was effusive and charismatic today; Nick only saw him like this when he wanted something big.
“No, Howard.”
“Nick, it’s the first day of the rest of your life. Nick, it’s your lucky day. You can walk out of here in an hour. In ten minutes, a free man, Nick. No questions asked. Nick, the only thing you have to do is your duty, that’s all.”
But Nick was hardly listening. He could only think of Meachum on the cover letter that sent Annex B to the general and set the whole thing in motion.
He kept trying to keep his eyes off the old man, but he could not control himself. He saw some sort of benevolence on the pink face, pleasurable anticipation that Nick was turning into such a team player, such a smashing young man.
“Nick, you can have more than your life back,” Howard was saying when Nick tuned back in. “You can have it
Nick just watched Howard.
“Okay,” he finally said. “What’s the deal?”
Nick caught Kelso firing a little what-the-fuck? glance at Howard.
Howard sailed on.
“Nick, listen to me. It can play one of two ways.
“Sure,” said Nick. “What way?”
Now Kelso and Howard exchanged glances. They took a pause, then both looked back to Hugh, who smiled, his pale blue eyes aglitter.
Finally, Kelso spoke.
“Nick, it’s Murder One on Bob Lee Swagger. We’re going for the chair.”
“Are you all right?” Bob asked her.
“I’m fine.”
“You just answer their questions. You just tell the truth, that’s all.”
Behind the glass wall of the visiting room, he looked sallow and grim. His voice was reedy through the distorting sound of the telephone. She put her hand on the glass, aware that before her thousands of women had put their hands on the glass, and left a residue of wanting and sorrow as they peered at their men.
“Bob,” Julie said, “that’s just it. They haven’t asked me
“Julie, he gave you good advice. We don’t have a thing to worry about. This is just some sort of preliminary investigation, and they can’t have me running around. It doesn’t matter. This is the FBI. They’re going to be fair.”
“Bob, I – ”
“Once Sam gets it all explained to them, I’ll be out of here in seconds. All our troubles are over. I’m hoping we can get back to Arizona. I liked the feeling of that desert. Arkansas is getting too crowded. Think I’d like to settle down out there in the Southwest.”
“Bob, I – ”
But he winked at her, still looking imposing in prison denims. He was manacled to the chair.
“Honey,” he said. “We don’t have a thing to worry about. We can trust the U.S. government.”
Nick swallowed. He had a little difficulty understanding.
“I – I – I don’t – ”
“Nick, for one reason and one reason only. Nick, he’s guilty,” said Howard. “Nick, he took the shot that nailed Archbishop Jorge Roberto Lopez. He’s got to pay. He – ”
“No!” said Nick. “Listen, I
“Nick, the cathedral is fourteen hundred yards away. Fourteen hundred fifty-one yards, we measured,” said Howard. “Nobody can hit a target at fourteen hundred yards with a.308.”
“It wasn’t a.308! It was a 200-grain Sierra bullet that Bob had already fired. They loaded it into a Holland and Holland.300 Magnum case with a ton of powder, saboted it in plastic or paper, and blew it down a barrel that had been bored out to.318 or so! Check! Check with the experts! You’ll see it’s possible. Also, I bet you could find that special barrel at Lon Scott’s house. Did you think of that? Did you check that?”
“Lon Scott died in 1965; we have his death certificate. That dead man on that mountain ridge was named James Thomas Albright, born Robert Parrish Albright.”
“No, we traced it back. The real Robert Parrish Albright died in 1939, when he was a child. That was – ”
“Nick,” said Hugh Meachum calmly, “it’s not unusual for a young man who is interested in heroes to bond to an older man, particularly a man of Bob Swagger’s courage and cunning. But Nick, the bottom line is that Bob Lee Swagger took that shot. What happened later – well, maybe he was extraordinarily heroic in this war against RamDyne. Still, it was a war among gangsters. Bob took the shot, then Leon Timmons shot
“He had millions – ”
“Not that we can find,” said Howard. “What we find is a disgraced war hero who had a great run with Agency contracts in the seventies who had lost his way and was facing financial ruin. That’s all. It was a narcotics war or something. The official explanation will be that he died in a hunting accident on the first day of deer season. It doesn’t concern us. What concerns us is the immediate: Bob Lee Swagger took that shot from four hundred yards at the president of the United States from the house on St. Ann Street in the Quarter outside Louis Armstrong Park. He missed and hit Archbishop Jorge Roberto Lopez, a great man who only wanted justice for the atrocities in his native country, and was mourned the world over. It’s Murder One for Swagger. It’s the chair. That’s all.”
“No,” said Nick, desperate in his urgency to explain the obvious to these idiots, “no, you see – ”
“Nick, the evidence is simply overwhelming. His rifle, identifiable fragments of his bullet, his prints, his empty shell. He was there, he had motive, he had opportunity, he had – ”