Authors: Robert Knightly
I fished a business card out of my wallet and laid it on the table. Jarazelsky wasn't a large man and the jumpsuit made him appear even smaller. âAny time you wanna call me, Pete,' I told him, âI'm open for business. And I appreciate your talkin' to me when you didn't have to. I owe you one.'
Dr Vencel Nagy's interview room was neat as a pin. The tiled floor gleamed, the small wooden table and the chairs to either side had been polished to a frenzy; a bank of vertical filing cabinets against the far wall might have been resting on a showroom floor. The individual responsible stepped to one side when I entered the room, in deference to the uniformed guard escorting me. A small black man, he clutched a spray can of furniture polish and a soiled gray cloth to the breast of his orange jumpsuit as if fearing a robbery. But my escort never even glanced at the prisoner as he led me through a door to our right and into Nagy's windowless office.
The contrast between Nagy's office and his immaculate interview room could not have been greater. Not only did mismatched bookcases, crammed to capacity, stand against every wall, but the spaces between the bookcases were filled with dusty books stacked on top of each other. Towers of books sprouted from a threadbare Persian rug, as they did from Nagy's desk where he'd created a wall of books. If I sat down, I'd no longer be able to see him, which might have been all to the good. Dr Vencel Nagy's hands were jumping from his mouth to his ears to the fringe of snow-white hair along his scalp like cockroaches in search of a crevice. When he finally jammed them beneath his armpits, I was distinctly relieved.
âPlease, sit down,' Nagy said after I introduced myself. In his sixties, his powder-white skin was criss-crossed by hundreds of fine wrinkles.
âDo you think I might remove some of these books first?' I shifted one of the stacks to the floor before he could answer, then stepped around another pile and dropped into a metal chair. I could see Nagy from this position, although it was like peering through a window.
âSo, tell me what you are traveling all this way to find?' Nagy had a pronounced eastern-European accent. His vowels were thick, his consonants hard. His tone was that of a man used to having his questions answered.
âTo find out who killed David Lodge,' I replied without hesitation.
Nagy turned to his left, his gaze drifting to the ceiling, and laughed, a heh-heh-heh devoid of amusement. âWith this I cannot help you,' he eventually admitted. âDavid wasn't the sort of convict who made enemies. He was very quiet, very self-contained.' Suddenly, Nagy's hands were on the move again, bouncing over his chest and shoulders before settling at his waist. âYou don't know how much I miss David. This idiot they have sent me? You've seen him?'
âI have,' I admitted.
âDavid, for me, wrote up the charts, kept the files, answered the phones. This lunatic, he's all day with the vacuum cleaner and the rags and the bucket. From a medication chart, he knows nothing. From filing, he can't tell A from Z.' Nagy paused long enough to slide his hands beneath his thighs. âSo, other than identify Lodge's killers, how can I help you?'
âHow close were you to Lodge? Was he open with you?'
âWe spoke together often. David was very smart, but somewhat obsessed.'
âObsessed with what?'
âWith his innocence.'
Bang, a wild card, face up on the table. I saw it hit the top of Nagy's desk, watched it quiver for a moment before settling down. âWere you Lodge's therapist?' I asked.
Nagy's head made another left turn and he again laughed at the ceiling. âTherapy is not what I do here, detective. Here I treat . . .' He shook his head. âNo, no, no. Treat is too grand. What I do is control a population of psychotics with various medications.' He smiled, his nearly lashless eyes narrowing slightly. âLeft to their own devices, you see, my patients tend to disrupt the prison routine.'
âAnd the warden wouldn't like that?'
âNo, she wouldn't. But medications were not for David. He was under control.' Nagy's hands fluttered up to pat the sides of his face when he paused. âDo you know about the blackout? David's blackout? Do I have to explain it?'
âAre you talking about his claim that he didn't remember killing Spott? I always figured that was so much propaganda.'
âThere you are wrong, detective. David could not remember.' Nagy leaned forward. âThink of how this would be for you. Not remembering the event that turned your life on its head. Are you guilty? Are you innocent? How can you know? And how can you accept your punishment when you are not knowing?'
I nodded, wanting nothing more, at this point, than for Nagy to continue. But the only things I encouraged were Nagy's hands which did a ten-second dance, graceful as an aerial ballet, before he shoved them into his pockets.
âFor David,' he finally continued, âthe issue settled on the murder weapon, the blackjack. The blackjack belonged to him, true, but it had been sitting in his locker for months. Now, did he go to his locker that night, retrieve the weapon, then return to Spott's cell? This is the question David asks.'
âAnd what was his answer?'
âFirst, David considered motive. Why did he want to kill Spott? Because Spott hit him? If this is the case, then killing is motivated by rage. But this is also very strange because if David was enraged, he could have killed Spott much earlier. David was not only having his gun and his nightstick with him, he is big enough to kill with his bare hands.'
I smiled and leaned back. âI see what you're getting at. Lodge murdering Spott in a moment of rage is inconsistent with his going to his locker for a specific weapon. Inconsistent, but not impossible.'
âAnd there you are seeing David's dilemma. Logic can never bring certainty.'
âNo, it can't. But tell me, doctor, did anybody else at the precinct know about the blackjack?'
Nagy's lower jaw was large enough to produce a pronounced underbite. He thrust that jaw at me and raised a remarkably still finger. âThis blackjack, it was a Kluugmann. It was collectible.'
âSay that again?'
âKluugmann was a company that manufactured very high quality blackjacks and saps. They went out of business many decades ago and their products are collected. You can buy them at auction.'
âSo, Lodge showed his Kluugmann to all his buddies, then stuck it in his locker and forgot he even had it.' Which was just what I would have done.
âNow you are getting the deal. Would he even have remembered the weapon's existence in the midst of a towering rage? A
killing
rage? This is what it boils down to with David.'
I shifted to Lodge's stay in Cayuga at that point, but the good doctor professed ignorance, again insisting that Lodge was generally reticent except when discussing the Spott murder. And Nagy merely shrugged when I told him that Lodge was a suspect in a prison homicide.
âThis does not surprise me. In here, they are saying you must learn to walk the yard like a man. This is the first task, to walk through the yard without projecting fear. David was able to do this.'
âAnd that makes him a killer?'
âI am only saying, detective, that I am not surprised by what you are telling me.'
Nagy didn't like being challenged, that was obvious. His head again turned to the left as his hands went into their little dance, touching, patting, pulling. By now it had become clear, even to me, that Nagy was suffering from an illness. Whether physical or psychological in nature was still up in the air.
âTell me,' I finally said, âabout Lodge's thinking right before his release. Did he have specific plans? What was he looking forward to?'
âSometime in the last few months of his incarceration, David finally recovered a memory of the night Spott was killed. That was when he became convinced of his innocence.'
âDid he say what it was that he remembered?'
âNo, only that it was a fragment, a piece of the puzzle. But this I will tell you. If he had other concerns, he did not discuss them with me.'
âHe never mentioned a man named DuWayne Spott?'
âNever.'
âWhat about a job, his wife, his old friends?'
Nagy's face twisted to the right, then the left, both motions so exaggerated it took me a moment to realize he was merely shaking his head. âDavid was an obsessive type. You can see this in his body-building. Six days every week, never missing a day. It was how his mind worked.'
As I waited for Nagy to slow down, I played with the facts as I now understood them. A cold and sober David Lodge emerged, a Lodge obsessed with his innocence, a Lodge capable of murder. Without doubt, if Lodge was truly innocent, he'd present a formidable challenge to those who'd framed him. Killing Lodge was a rational response to that challenge, despite the risks.
Suddenly, Nagy jumped to his feet and pointed a trembling finger at the door behind me. I was startled enough to reach for my weapon (which I'd surrendered in the reception area), but when I turned it was only Nagy's assistant. He was standing motionless in the doorway, still clutching his can of polish and his rag.
âI have told you twenty times already to stay out my office,' Nagy shouted. âNever you are to come in here. Are you hearing me? Never.' Nagy's donkey jaw had risen almost to his nose and his glittery blue eyes were circles of indignation. âIf you were not my patient, I would hit you with a chair.'
TEN
I
t was eight o'clock by the time I got back to Queens and the One-Sixteen. Jack Petro, a squad detective and a good friend, was standing fifteen feet away when I entered. He nodded sympathetically as I walked over.
âThis one a keeper, Harry?'
Jack was asking me if the case would be transferred to Homicide or a task force at Borough Command. In the normal course of events, high-profile cases were routinely taken away from precinct detectives, a development I would have welcomed.
âIf that's the plan, no one's told me about it.'
I looked over his shoulder and saw Adele seated at her desk thirty feet away. She was staring directly at me, her gaze sharp and contemptuous. She'd been awaiting my return for hours and now I was bullshitting with my buddy. How predictable.
âMy partner's giving me the evil eye.'
Jack's smile dropped away and his expression became grave as he tossed me a snappy salute. âTime to report, soldier.'
Like many of my peers, Jack professed not to know why I continued to partner with Adele Bentibi when I had more than enough seniority to demand a change. He knew that I'd once been on the verge of marching into Sarney's office to do just that, even though it was clear that Adele was my perfect complement. Her strengths were crime scenes and physical evidence, while mine were interviews and interrogations. But partnering is about more than solving crimes and there's no hell quite like spending all of your working hours with someone whose company you'd rather avoid, even if you're physically attracted to her.
Simply put, like everybody else, I found Adele insufferably opinionated, and the fact that her judgments were usually right meant next to nothing. Plus, I'd only agreed to work with her as a favor to Bill Sarney. Adele had come to the 116th Precinct with a reputation. âDifficult to get along with,' that was how Sarney explained it, a little character flaw that I should overlook, at least temporarily.
I don't remember my attitude on the day I agreed to work with Adele. Perhaps I was resentful, the fair-haired boy imposed upon. Or maybe I took the assignment with good grace â I was definitely out to please at the time. But after three months, I was certain that I'd had enough. Adele was very abrupt, seeming to dismiss my opinions before I managed to state them. More to the point, she was blind to a number of deficiencies related to her poor communication skills. I could not convince her that an interview is not an assault, an interrogation not a cavalry charge.
Eight hours a day? Day after day? I didn't think so.
âMartha Stewart with a badge' was the way Nydia Santiago had described my partner, and I could see where Nydia was coming from. But she'd gotten it wrong. I found this out when Adele told me her story over dinner.
I remember that it was the perfect night for a confidence. Adele and I had spent the prior ten hours in pursuit of a rapist named Joey Garglia, running from friend to relative to friend, sometimes threatening, sometimes cajoling. Finally, at six-thirty, Joey's mother had called. Her son was sitting in her living room and he was ready to surrender.
By any standard, it'd been a very good day, a day of hard work and real accomplishment which we were capping with a decent Italian meal and a couple of drinks. Though I wasn't expecting much, the alcohol made me bold enough to ask an impertinent question.
âSo, tell me, Adele, what's your story? How'd you become a cop?'
My partner never did answer the second question, not directly, but her response to the first part was enough to change the way I understood her. Permanently.
Adele could trace her family of Sephardic Jews back to the twelfth century when they lived in an area of northwestern Africa called the Maghreb. For centuries, she explained, their lives were reasonably stable, as were their relations with their Christian neighbors and Muslim rulers. Then the Almohad Dynasty had emerged at the head of a puritanical movement that tore the region apart. The aim was to purify Islam, a deed accomplished by the forced conversion of Christians and Jews; by the sale of Christians and Jews into slavery; by the slaughter of whole villages. Adele's family had fled, ironically enough, to Spain, from which they were expelled by Queen Isabella in 1492, the year Columbus sailed his little fleet in search of India.
I was munching on a crispy slice of bruschetta, and well into my second drink, when I finally realized that Adele wasn't talking about a succession of parents and grandparents stretching back nine hundred years. Her ancestral legends were tribal. Still, I was completely absorbed. My concept of family was so far removed from Adele's that we might have been different species.