Authors: Stuart M. Kaminsky
Green, the old man from the corridor, stood next to Morrie, who smiled at him. The Lieberman boys stood on the other side of the old man. Green gave a tentative smile back and the services began.
They didn’t last long. Maybe five minutes. Maybe ten.
They were stopped by a loud, high-pitched raspy voice behind them. Not a shout but a high-pitched insistent demand.
“Hold it,” the man said.
Rabbi Wass stopped and looked up through the narrow aisle that separated the cluster of ten men.
All heads turned to the man who had entered. They saw a tall young man in dark pants and a black T-shirt. He was about twenty with long uncombed dark hair and bad teeth. He was carrying a gun.
He didn’t look like an Arab. Morrie concluded that he was a drugged-out wanderer who was there to rob them. Just so he wasn’t an Arab terrorist.
“We are at prayer,” said Rabbi Wass guiding his son, who had run to his side, behind him.
“You think I’m fucking blind,” said the man, pointing his gun at the rabbi. “I can see what you’re doing. I know where I’m at. I didn’t think I was at the damned Dominick’s supermarket or some shit.”
The gunman shook his head and looked around at the men who had turned to face him. There was no doubt that the intruder was drunk, on drugs, or insane, possibly all three.
“You can have our money,” Rabbi Wass said calmly.
“I know I can have your money,” the tall man said, closing the door behind him. “I can have your money, your shirts, your shoes. I can have your goddamn lives.”
He looked into each face before him growing more agitated.
“I don’t want your goddamn money,” he said willing himself, without success, to be calm. “Maybe I just want to come in here and let you know Jesus is coming and your asses are not getting into heaven. Don’t matter how much you pray. You’re going to hell.”
“We shall take your opinion for what it is,” said the rabbi, who had now completely shielded his son with his body.
“You’re boning me,” said the man with the gun.
“Boning you?” asked the rabbi.
“Making fun of me.”
“I’m not in a position to make fun of you,” said the rabbi.
“You’re goddamn straight not in a position,” the man said. “You are not in a position. Which one of you is Lee-burr-man?”
“Why?” asked the rabbi.
“I don’t have to tell you why,” the man said, stepping down the aisle. “I’ve got the gun. Just which one of you is Lieberman?”
“What do you want with Mr. Lieberman?” asked the rabbi.
The man with the gun shook his head.
“What do I want with him? I want to blow his damn head off. That’s what I want with him. Now let’s get it down and done and I’ll get out of here.”
“Why?” asked Rabbi Wass.
Someone was praying softly. Cal Schwartz. Cal was over eighty. His eyes were closed and he was gently swaying.
“What’s he saying?” the gunman demanded.
“It’s Hebrew,” said Morrie. “He is saying that God is Almighty. That there is but one God and that His will
will
be done.”
“Jesus, you people,” said the gunman. “Lieberman, which one are you?”
“Why do you want to kill Mr. Lieberman?” asked Rabbi Wass again.
“Okay,” said the man. “I got out of prison last week. I went home. I found out my little brother was dead. Over a year dead. A cop named Lieberman had shot him when Lance was just minding his own business. They kept it from me, told me Lance was away or some shit. Then I find out. I ask my mom where’s Lance and she says, ‘Connie, he was killed by some Jew in a uniform, killed for doing nothing, for being in the wrong place minding his own business.’”
“What makes you think Lieberman is here?” asked the rabbi.
“Because I’m no fucking dummy,” said the man, tapping the barrel of his gun against the side of his head. “He’s right in the phone book. I went to his apartment, brushed my hair back, smiled, and said to the woman who opened the door that I was an old friend of Lieberman. Little girl was standing next to her. The woman told me Lieberman was here. Short walk. Big gun.”
“I’m Lieberman,” Abe said.
“I’m Lieberman,” Maish said.
And, not to be outdone and having seen
Spartacus
twice, Morrie said, “I’m Lieberman.”
Then, one by one, each of them, even Mr. Green, who had been brought in as a stray from the hall, identified himself as Lieberman. The only ones who didn’t were the rabbi and his son.
“All right then,” the man with the gun said, “I can shoot all of you.”
“You ever shoot anyone, Connie?” asked Abe.
The man looked at him, cocked his head to one side, and leveled the gun toward the thin young man who had asked the question.
“If there’s got to be a first time,” the man said, “it should be for good reason. I’ve got good reason.”
“To kill eight, ten people?” asked Maish.
“If need be,” said the gunman. “If need be.”
“And if we rush you?” asked Kornpelt. “We get you. You shoot one, maybe two of us and you probably don’t get Lieberman. You get the electric chair or life in jail is what you’ll get.”
“You’re Lieberman,” the gunman said to Joshua Kornpelt.
“I already told you I was,” said Joshua.
The gunman was looking decidedly nervous now, his fingers clasping and unclasping the weapon in his head.
“I’ll start with you,” he said to Maish. “I shoot you. Odds are I’ve got the right guy. If not, Lieberman can let me know now who he is. How about them apples, Lieberman? I’m going to shoot big mouth now unless you step up like a man.”
Maish tried to move past his brother to the gunman. Abe barred his way with his hand and stepped past Mr. Green and Morrie into the narrow aisle between the chairs.
“If you shoot any one of us,” Abe said, “we’ll all tell you that you shot Abe Lieberman. And we may be telling you the truth. Odds are eight to one you’re wrong. Or maybe you’re right. You kill another one of us and you still won’t know. You said we’re all going to hell. What about you? You kill innocent people and Jesus’ll take you to heaven on a big white bird?”
“I’ll repent,” the gunman said.
“You’ll be lying,” said Lieberman. “You think Jesus won’t know you’re lying?”
“Shut up,” shouted the gunman, pushing the gun inches from Abe’s nose. “I’m starting with you. Right now.”
“I’m Lieberman,” Abe said.
“You’re a smart-ass Jew, probably a lawyer.”
“I’m Lieberman,” Abe repeated.
“You armed?” the man answered.
“We don’t wear guns in the synagogue,” said the rabbi.
“You have a last name, Connie?” asked Lieberman. “If you’re going to shoot me, I think I’ve got the right to know your name.”
“You have the right? And what right did Lance have? Lance Gower. Remember him? You’re Lieberman? Prove it.”
The solution to this confused man’s problem was evident to Morrie. Just tell everyone to pull out his wallet and show his driver’s license. But Connie the gunman, Connie the intruder was clearly not operating within the realm of reason.
The gun was now aimed at Lieberman’s right eye. Lieberman blinked wearily.
“Your brother Lance had just beaten a pharmacist nearly to death. Your brother Lance had a Kmart bagful of money and drugs in one hand and a gun bigger than yours in the other. The pharmacist hit the alarm before he passed out. My partner and I got there as your brother was coming out of the store. He shot at us. We shot back.”
“Bullshit and a half,” the gunman sputtered, his face turning crimson. “Bullshit and a half. Lance was a good kid.”
“The pharmacist nearly died. He still can’t talk so you can understand him,” said Lieberman.
“I will have my revenge. A life for a life.”
“I prefer ‘Live and let live,’” said Lieberman. “Or “Vengeance is mine saith the Lord.’”
“I know the Good Book from cover to cover and back again,” the gunman said. “I had seven years behind the walls. I read it. Now I’ve made a promise to myself, to Jesus, to my dead brother. I made a vow. Moses said, ‘If a man vow a vow unto the Lord, or swear an oath to bind his soul with a bond, he shall not break his word, he shall do all that proceedeth out of his mouth.’”
The gunman looked around the men proudly. He could outdo these Jews with his eyes closed, outdo them with their own Bible.
“I took an oath,” he said. “And I mean to keep it.”
“‘But if any man hate his neighbor, and lie in wait for him and rise up against him, and smite him mortally that he die, and fleeth into one of these cities,” said Rabbi Wass. “Then the elders of his city shall send and fetch him thence, and deliver him into the hand of the avenger of blood, that he may die.’”
“Amen,” said Morrie.
“Connie, let’s go outside,” Lieberman said to the gunman.
“Here suits me just fine,” the man said. “I’m going to blow your head off right here. Mess up your walls and all of your memories the way I’m messed up about Lance.”
Lieberman was in the aisle facing the man. Something touched Lieberman’s back. He reached back slowly, keeping his sad eyes on those of the man with the gun whose bad breath wasn’t overridden by the smell of alcohol.
“Mortal sin going down here,” said Lieberman, taking from Maish’s hand whatever it was he had poked Lieberman with.
“Maybe. Maybe not. That’s the future,” the man spat. “This is now. I’ll be here tomorrow. You won’t. I saw on the TV we’re putting a man on the moon in a couple of days. Going to be right there live on television. Let me ask you. Are they sending NB-fucking-C TV up there to the moon? What the hell will you care? You’ll be dead like my brother.”
“One of the other astronauts, Collins, Murphy, something,” said Morrie. “He’ll have a camera.”
The gunman’s face was inches from Abe’s now. He whispered, “Won’t that be something to miss?”
The gunman saw a movement over Lieberman’s shoulder. He stepped to the side just in time to see the rabbi’s son duck through a door behind his father and slam it shut.
“Shit. Shit,” said the gunman, shaking his head. “Now I gotta hurry. I didn’t want to hurry. I wanted to stretch this, make you sweat, beg.”
“We don’t beg,” said Maish.
“Give me the gun, Connie,” said Abe wearily. “We’ve got a service to finish. We all have to get to work or to our families.”
The gunman stepped back, shaking his head and smiling. Then he started to laugh.
“You got balls for a Jew. I give you that. But you’ll be making ’em laugh in hell in a minute.”
Lieberman pulled his hand from behind his back holding the gun that Maish had pressed into it. The gun was small. Abe hoped it was loaded.
“Give me the gun,” Abe repeated.
The gunman’s mouth dropped open. He looked from the gun to the sad face of the thin policeman.
“Like hell,” he said leveling his own weapon at Abe Lieberman. “Looks like we’re in for stormy weather.”
“I’m not waiting for it,” said Lieberman. “Give me the gun.”
“Can you beat that?” Connie the gunman asked, looking around at the frightened faces of the men about him. “Can you beat that? Hell, I might as well shoot. Maybe we’ll both die. No way I’m going back inside the walls, back inside and no evening-up for my brother.”
“Suit yourself,” said Abe, unsure of the weapon in his hand, concerned that a wild bullet might kill someone else in the small sanctuary.
“A suggestion,” said Rabbi Wass, behind Abe.
“It better be a goddamn good one,” said the gunman, looking into Lieberman’s eyes. “We got ourselves one hell of a situation here and running out of time.”
“You put down your gun,” Rabbi Wass said. “And Detective Lieberman lets you walk out. We all pretend you were never here. We thank God for having saved us and we pray to him to have mercy on you.”
“And he’ll have mercy on me, your God?”
Rabbi Wass shrugged.
“Our God will do whatever he wants to do. We ask. He does what he wants to do.”
“Very damn reassuring,” the gunman said. “Makes me feel all safe and comfortable. The hell with it.”
He raised his weapon at Abe, who did the same to him.
“Let’s get it on,” the gunman said.
“You’re
shickered,”
said Marv. “Drunk.”
“If I wasn’t, I couldn’t be doing this,” the man shouted.
“I’m going to shoot you in the eye,” said Lieberman. “The right eye. That should be very painful, but it should work. You’re shaking. You can’t shoot straight and I’d say you haven’t spent any time on the range. I’ve got a good chance of living and you’ve got a sure chance of dying. Think about it.”
The gun wavered in the man’s hand. He chewed on his lower lip and considered his fate.
“Hell,” he said with a sigh. “I can’t see Lance coming in here and doing this for me. He was always a selfish little prick, but don’t tell my mom I said it.”
He backed toward the door.
“Stop,” said Lieberman. “Drop the gun.”
The man turned his weapon quickly away from Abe, aiming it at Rabbi Wass.
“I’m going,” he said. “Or I’m going to kill a priest.”
“I’m a rabbi,” said Rabbi Wass. “We haven’t had priests for almost two thousand years.”
Odds were, Lieberman calculated, that at this distance and shaking drunk the man with the gun might not hit Rabbi Wass. But then again, he might.
Abe watched as the man stepped back to the door through which he had come, fumbled at the handle and opened it.
“Forget I was here,” he said. “I’ll find a better time.” He was looking at Abe now. “I’ll come back sober. I’ll come to your apartment. Your wife’s got a baby growing in her. I’ll come and pay your family a visit. Think about that. Lance wasn’t much but he was my brother and I got to live with myself.”
“Who says?” said Morrie.
The man with the gun went through the door and slammed it behind him.
Abe ran to the door hearing the voices behind him, hearing his brother shout, “Abe, wait.”
Abe didn’t wait. He went through the door. The gunman was running awkwardly down the synagogue’s hallway toward the front door. Across the hall, the door to the main sanctuary was open. A group of men and women were talking in front of the small platform, the
bimah,
setting up flowers. One of the women turned and looked at Lieberman and the gun in his hand.