Authors: Robert Tanenbaum
When Bello entered the room, Vinnie said, “What the fuck do you want, pig?”
Harry said, “Get up, Vinnie. Let's go.”
“I'm not goin' no fuckin' where with you,” said Vinnie, his eyes moving to the shotgun.
“Look at me, Vinnie, not at the gun. You're not going to go for the gun.” His voice was calm, as if instructing a dull child.
Vinnie looked at Bello's face, at his eyes. It was a revelation. Vinnie had never looked at a face that held no fear, even when he looked in a mirror, and he was an expert; people were afraid of Vinnie Boguluso. This man didn't care whether he lived or died, and certainly didn't care whether Vinnie lived or died. Vinnie saw his own death written on this face.
He licked dry lips. “Hey, what's this about?”
Harry said, “Get up, Vinnie. Don't fuck me around anymore.”
“I wanna get dressed.”
“Make it quick.”
Vinnie hesitated, then rose clumsily to his feet, using the blanket to cover his crotch, and uncovering the girl, who shrieked and cursed him. Vinnie kicked out at her and told her to shut the fuck up, exposing himself in the process.
Vinnie went into the corner and put on jeans, a T-shirt, and boots, and Harry then cuffed him and led him out.
Bello put them in cells in the Fifth Precinct and read them their rights. Neither asked for a lawyer. He talked to Vinnie a while, but Vinnie had regained some of his bravado and was uncooperative. That didn't matter. It was Eric Ritter who was going to crack. Ritter's toughness went about as deep as his many tattoos. Harry explained to him that he was going to do time, but the kind of timeâwhere and how longâdepended on whether he cooperated or not. He pointed out the various things that might happen to a skinny white boy in Attica after hours, especially one who had a big iron cross and swastika tattooed on his chest. He asked Eric to think about fifteen years of that.
In the afternoon, Marlene came down to the precinct. “How's it going? I see you're still in one piece.”
Harry said, “The Monkey's about ready to go.”
“Get a stenographer.” Marlene had decided that she wasn't going to prosecute the homicide. She hadn't the time; one of Karp's people could do it. But she wanted to take the initial Q. & A. to round out her investigation. And she wanted to get a crack at Vinnie.
They went with a police stenographer to the interrogation room, where Eric Ritter was sitting. He seemed startled when Marlene walked in and sat down across from him. She introduced herself, explained what was happening, identified everyone for the steno, and offered to provide Ritter an attorney.
He said, “I don't need no lawyer. I didn't do nothin'.”
“Okay, Eric, let's start with what happened on the night of March 13, this year. You were sitting with some of your friends on the stoop at 525 Fifth Street.”
“Yeah. We like saw this chick walking down the street, toward us. And Vinnie, he goesâ”
“Excuse me, this is Vincent Boguluso?”
“Yeah, Vinnie the Guinea. So Vinnie, he goes, âI'm gonna fuck that.' So we all, we go, âThe fuck you are,' and like saying he doesn't have the balls and all. So when she comes by, he grabs her and drags her into the place.”
“What happened then?”
“Well, he gets her in the apartment; he's got her in this choke hold, and she musta passed out or something. We all go in there to see what he's gonna do.
“We're all crowded in the door of Vinnie's room. I was, like, in the back. Vinnie was pissed everybody wanted to watch. Even the bitches. Evelyn, she was yelling at Vinnie, and he raps her a couple and slams the door.”
“Who's Evelyn?”
“Evelyn. Vinnie's main squeeze. Or was. That's why she took the stuff and split. She was fuckin' pissed. Drunk too, or stoned, or she never woulda done it.”
“This is the woman who was beaten up last week?”
Ritter giggled. “Yeah. She took the chick's bag offa the street. Fuckin' bitch sent Vinnie a postcard from Disneyland. He went fuckin' crazy, man. About the credit card. And the ticket. Then the crazy bitch comes back, if you can believe that.”
“Okay, let's go back to the night of the thirteenth. Vinnie's in the room with the woman he abducted. What happened then?”
“Well, after a while he comes out and asks if anybody wants sloppy seconds. He had her tied down by then. He stuffed his shorts in her mouth. So, like, everybody did her.”
“Including you?”
A pause. “Yeah, well, everybody was in on it.”
“Then what?”
“Urn, Vinnie was getting into the wine pretty good by then. This was a couple hours later. So he goes, âHey, let's fuckin' throw the cunt off the roof.' So he did.”
“All alone?”
“Yeah, well, I think Duane helped him out. I don't remember that part too good. I was wasted myself.”
âThat's Duane Womrath you're referring to, right? Do you know where we could find him?”
Shrug. “He's around. I heard he was shackin' up with some chick over on C.”
“Right. Up on the roof. Vinnie and Duane take the woman up there. Was there anyone else around?”
A sideways look. “Yeah, we was all up there.”
“You all watched him do it?”
“Yeah, I guess.”
“And she was alive at the time?”
“I guess. She was pretty beat up. But she was movin' when he dropped her over that little wall they got up there. Then Vinnie and Duane and some guys went out on the fire escape and pissed down on the street, seeing could they hit her or not.”
A few more questions about the beating of the biker woman, which Ritter had also observed at close range, and the interview was over. He was taken back to the cells, and Vinnie Boguluso was brought in. Marlene did the usual formalities in a hurried monotone. She was not that interested in Boguluso anymore. She had him.
Vinnie looked at Harry Bello and then looked quickly away. He looked at Marlene and grinned. He had large, widely spaced greenish-yellow teeth. Marlene couldn't help thinking about the bite marks on the two victims and what an easy job it would be to present a convincing match-up as evidence. She thought about this in preference to thinking about what the last hours of Gabrielle Avanian had been like.
“What the fuck you lookin' at, cunt?”
Marlene saw Harry start to move and held up her hand, shouting, “No, Harry!”
The stenographer looked up from her machine, startled. “Do you want that in?”
“No,” said Marlene, “and I think you can go now. Tell them we're done with him. Unless Vinnie wants to make a statement. Do you want to make a statement, Vinnie? Like about how you kidnapped, raped, tortured, and killed Gabrielle Avanian on the night of March 13 at 525 East Fifth Street?”
“I ain't done nothin' and I ain't gonna say nothin'.”
The stenographer left. Marlene said, “That's too bad, because your buddy Eric gave us an earful. According to him, it was your show from start to finish.”
“He's a lyin' fuck, then.”
Marlene gathered up her files and rose. Two big cops appeared at the door. “Okay, Harry, back to the pens with this one. Charges are murder two, rape one, assault one, kidnapping, on the Avanian. We'll charge him later on the girlfriend.”
She looked Vinnie in the eye and took a deep breath. He was smirking at her. “You're gonna die in prison, Vinnie,” she said matter-of-factly. “You will never, ever walk on the street again, ride a motorcycle, touch a woman, have a beer. What're you, thirty? You could live another forty years. That's almost sixteen thousand days. And that's because I'm gonna make sure you never get out. Every parole hearing you get, until you're dead or I'm dead, I'm gonna be up there telling them exactly how Gabrielle Avanian died.”
Vinnie stood up quickly, his face pale. Bello and the two cops tensed. “Fuck you, cunt!” he screamed. Then he gripped his crotch and thrust his hips back and forth. “I'll get you, bitch. I'll fuck you in half, you dried-up cunt!”
The cops moved forward and grabbed him. Foamy spittle flecked his lips as he continued to roar vengeful obscenities.
In the uproar it was remarkable that Harry's voice could be heard clearly. He said, “Marlene, the reason he talks that way is that he has a very, very tiny little dick.”
Marlene snorted, then giggled, then burst out in a belly laugh, helplessly. “No kidding, Harry? How little?” she snorted. The cops were laughing too, even as they cuffed the struggling and roaring Vinnie.
Bello held up his thumb and index finger, separated by an inch and a half. Everyone laughed some more, except Vinnie.
They dragged him away. He didn't seem to be fighting that hard, considering how big he was. He seemed to have lost considerable steam. Marlene watched him go and said to Harry, “It's funny. He's probably going to do just fine in Attica. He'll have a little gang, and respect, and plenty of terrified skinny kids to rape and torture. Three hots and a cot. Drugs. It doesn't seem fair. What seems fair is if we just took him out right now, this minute, to an air shaft full of rotting garbage and rats and just shot him in the head and left him there for the dogs and the rats.” She shuddered. “Christ, what am I saying?”
“It could be arranged,” said Harry.
She gave him a sharp look and then slapped his sleeve playfully. “You old thing! You're so bad for me, Harry. You trigger all my worst Sicilian instincts.”
“Go for coffee?”
“No, thanks, I need to get back to Centre Street and wind this up and then pick up Lucyâand then!âI want a long, slow, hot bath. Not that I'll probably get one until fucking midnight.”
Karp limped on his crutches down a dank hallway in the Tombs. The Manhattan House of Detention, to give it its official name, is attached to the Criminal Courts; it is essentially the same building, joined by many corridors and passageways, so that the accused can be expeditiously transferred from cell to court and back again.
Karp was going to take a shower in the guards' locker room. He did so every evening after work, after first wrapping his cast carefully in a dry-cleaning bag. Then he hung his suit and shirt and tie on a hanger and put his shoes in a sports bag and dressed in sweatshirt and sweatpants and one sneaker and clumped back to his office, gripping the hook of the hanger in his teeth and the strap of the bag by a thumb.
He looked and felt ridiculous. It was a stupid idea, living in his office, but having decided on it, he felt bound to continue. It was only another couple of weeks until the trial.
He took his shower, alone in the steamy room. The shower was used only when shifts changed, and Karp was careful not to use it at those times. He was just pulling on his sweatpants, sitting on a locker room bench, when he heard a clanking sound behind him.
It was one of the trustees on the clean-up crew. Karp pulled up his pants and knotted the cord. He slipped into his sneaker and got his crutches under his arms. When he tried to stand, one of his crutches slipped on a wet spot and skittered away across the floor. Karp sat back down on the bench heavily, cursing.
The trustee left his bucket and got the crutch and brought it over to Karp. He looked up, and his smile froze on his face. It was Hosie Russell.
Karp cleared his throat and said, “Thanks.”
Russell nodded. It was silent for a while there in the locker room, except from the gurgle of water in pipes and, far off, the continuous murmur of thousands of confined men.
Russell wasn't wearing his glasses. He was dressed in an orange jail uniform with TRUSTEE stenciled across the chest and back. Karp wondered for a moment why they had let Russell be a trustee, and then it struck him that no one was better suited than this man, who had spent two thirds of his adult life behind bars, who understood the routines of jail and prison perfectly, who had never given his various warders a lick of trouble.
Russell broke the silence, “You got a cigarette?” “No, I don't smoke.” Then, to his own surprise, he added, “I could bring you some. I'm here every night about this time.”
R
oland,” said Karp the next morning, “even you have to admit that this U.N. thing is looking less and less like a terrorist crime.” They were in Karp's office, trying to have a professional conversation about late developments connected to
Tomasian.
They were doing fairly well at it, considering. Karp was snappish and Hrcany was sulky, but they were avoiding actual violence.
“Why? I don't see how all this shit that you and Nancy Drew have dredged up affects the basic case against Tomasian in the slightest.”
“Roland, it's the context. It's reasonable doubt,” explained Karp wearily. “Look, let's review the bidding here. First, we find out that Gabrielle Avanian was killed the night of the murder day in a random act. That shuts down the theory that she was involved in some kind of Armenian plot.”
“She was. Tomasian admits it.”
“What?”
“When we went in there and told him his girlfriend was dead, he said she'd been going out to northern California to raise money for the cause. A lot of Armenians around there.”
“What 'cause'?”
“How do I know?” Hrcany replied in a tone of annoyance. “Some business connected with his secret army. He didn't expand on it, and I didn't press him.”
“How did he take his girl getting killed?” Karp asked.
“Pretty broken up. Of course, it could've been because there went his alibi.”
“In any case,” Karp continued, “you're still looking for the other guy on the hit, who seems to have vanished into thin air. That's another weakness. You assumed Tomasian would crack in jail and give up his partner, but he hasn't. That makes me think he didn't have one, because he wasn't there. And a jury will too. No, wait, let me finish.
“There's still the money. The Turk from the U.N. says it was a slush fund to buy back antiquities. But Rodriguez, the art cop, says the Turks aren't likely to do that, and he never heard of Ersoy buying art on the shady market.