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Authors: John Lutz

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“You’re right,” Nudger told her, “I can’t. But I don’t think legally proving it is necessary, Candy Ann. You said it: our thoughts are actually tiny electrical impulses in the brain. Curtis Colt rode the lightning all at once. With you, it will take years, but the destination is the same. I think you’ll come to agree that his ride was easier.”

She sat very still. She didn’t answer. Wasn’t going to.

Nudger stood up and wiped his damp forehead with the back of his hand. He felt sticky, dirty, confined by the low ceiling and near walls of the tiny, stifling trailer. He had to get out of there fast to escape the sensation that he was trapped.

He didn’t say good-bye to Candy Ann when he walked out. She didn’t say good-bye to him.

The last sound Nudger heard as he stepped down from the trailer was the clink of the bottle on the glass.

XXXII
I

t was December, and frost had softly webbed the corners of Nudger’s office window, when Hammersmith phoned

and told him Candy Ann Adams had committed suicide.

All of Nudger’s breath left him for an instant; something icy whispered in his ear. It hadn’t taken as long as he’d thought; he could imagine Candy Ann old and guilt-rav
aged, but it was difficult to imagine her dead.

“She was found in her bathtub with her radio,” Hammersmith said. “The radio was on, she was off.” Beneath his flipness lay an almost unfathomable sadness. Nudger knew Hammersmith as probably no one else did, knew how sarcasm and irony hid the real man, protected him from pain. But this time it wasn’t enough protection.

“Maybe it was an accident,” Nudger suggested, knowing better, knowing what had saddened Hammersmith.

“She left a note, Nudge. She admitted killing the old woman, and she admitted using you, and then Gantner, to try to make sure Curtis Colt burned for what she did. It was all the way you figured it last summer.”

“What about Gantner?” Nudger asked, fastening a few more buttons on his sweater. The office was cold.

“He was telling the truth,” Hammersmith said. “Candy Ann told him Colt had put her up to trying to get the wit
nesses to change their stories, that he’d shot the old woman and she was afraid of him and knew he’d kill her if he escaped execution and somehow got out of prison. That’s how she talked Gantner and his strong-arm buddy into trying to scare you off the case when it looked as if you might get to the truth. I think Gantner only realized Colt was innocent, and Candy Ann was the killer, when he followed you around after the funeral and guessed what you’d figured out.”

That was how Nudger had seen it. Hammersmith had questioned Gantner in July, trying to find out if Candy Ann had admitted the liquor-store killings. But Gantner was smart enough not to implicate himself as an accessory to murder and had denied knowing of Candy Ann’s guilt. He’d been telling it straight, and there hadn’t been enough evidence to bring charges against him.

Nudger could feel Hammersmith’s grief and frustration flowing through the phone connection. Hammersmith was a cop, not a killer. But he’d helped to build a case against an innocent man, helped to send him out on the lightning.

“It’s over,” Nudger said. “Don’t let it haunt you.”

“It’s over for Curtis Colt, too,” Hammersmith said.

“He was driving the car,” Nudger reminded Hammer-smith. “He was involved.”

“But he didn’t pull the trigger,” Hammersmith said. “He didn’t kill anyone. The law did. And I’m the law.” He fired up a cigar; Nudger could hear him slurping and puffing furiously on it. Hammersmith was getting mad, feeling the corrosiveness of what had happened eating into him, gnawing. “I don’t buy that vigilante bullshit, Nudge. The man didn’t deserve to die.”

“He didn’t,” Nudger agreed. “But he wasn’t perfect. Neither is the law, and neither are we.”

Hammersmith was quiet for a moment. Then he said, “I better get busy, Nudge. Crime never takes time out. And I’m so popular. Every damn line on my phone is blinking. Every one.”

Nudger wondered if that was true. He told Hammer-smith not to be hard on himself and hung up.

He knew how Hammersmith would take this. He wouldn’t go home and beat his wife or kick his dog or get drunk. He’d brood a while, then plunge ahead into his work, stay hard at it until time dulled memory and he reached some sort of acceptance of the past, a perspective he could live with rather than put his gun in his mouth and follow Candy Ann. Eating the gun, going out like Billy Abraham. Hammersmith wouldn’t do that. He’d be all right, but it wouldn’t be easy.

When word of Curtis Colt’s innocence became public, Scott Scalla began to maneuver. He was no statesman, but when it came to raw politics, he could shuck and jive with the best. He was terribly upset over Colt’s execution, his press secretary said, over and over. God only knew how much the governor had agonized over this. Scalla himself, interviewed after a Friends of God Christmas assembly, implied that there had been police incompetence, then a cover-up, in the Colt case. That’s where the mistake had occurred, at a lower level, so that by the time the matter reached the governor’s office, there was little Scalla could do but follow the letter of the law and not intercede in the execution. An innocent man was dead, and the governor of a great state had been made an unwitting accomplice, helplessly bound by law. The law had been subverted, perverted. Scalla promised an investigation. This mess in the legal process would be cleaned up.

But Scalla didn’t really want an investigation. Not one that involved him. What he wanted was to leave the least damaging impression possible on voter consciousness, which he managed to do with the right succession of statements and images.

The investigation soon was shuffled from the state level down to the St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners conducting an interdepartmental investigation. Media attention had been usurped by bigger news, some of it manufactured for just that purpose, and the voting public had other things on its collective mind. And as the governor had promised, there
was
an investigation taking place.

All that was needed now was a scapegoat, someone to shoulder the entire burden of Colt’s wrongful conviction and execution. A sacrificial name and face that would appease the public and close the case forever.

Someone expendable.

Who better than the officer who’d been in charge of the murder investigation? Homicide Lieutenant John Edward “Jack” Hammersmith.

Nudger wasn’t as concerned as he might have been when he heard about the investigation of Hammersmith, and the lieutenant’s suspension with pay. The Board of Commissioners knew the game; its members were under the gun themselves. And Nudger knew Hammersmith better than Scott Scalla did.

“It’s okay, Nudge,” Hammersmith said, when Nudger dropped by to see him at his house in Webster Groves. Though the temperature was in the forties, Hammersmith was sitting in a lawn chair under a leafless hundred-year-old oak in his backyard. He was wearing paint-spattered work pants and a red-and-black mack-inaw and looked more sloppy-fat than he did in uniform. “I’m gonna be okay.”

Nudger believed him. Hammersmith was, in the narrow range of his profession, as skilled and wily a politician as Scott Scalla. He could fade and feint with departmental bureaucracy, with the media, and with the Board of Police Commissioners, about whom Hammersmith knew more than they suspected.

Hammersmith got one of his horrendous cigars from his shirt pocket and lit it with a book match. “Wife won’t let me smoke these in the house,” he said.

“She probably doesn’t want green drapes.”

“By the way,” Hammersmith said, “I got myself a good lawyer. Charles Siberling.”

Nudger thought about Siberling fiercely chewing and spitting his way through the police-department legal process. He smiled. Hammersmith would indeed be okay. “Siberling’s a good choice,” he said. “You’re hardly playing fair with the department.”

Hammersmith beamed around his cigar, his blue eyes piercing through the putrid haze. “Boy, he’s a slippery little bastard,” he said in admiration. “Just like a goddamned barracuda with a brief-case. What a future he has.”

“Pneumonia will be in my future,” Nudger said, “if I don’t get in out of this cold.” The fog of his breath rose before his face.

Nudger had never seen Hammersmith do what he did then; he snubbed out a cigar half-smoked. “Come on into the house, Nudge. We’ll have a few beers and bitch about the world in general.”

An hour later, reassured about Hammersmith and sated by a ham sandwich and two Budweisers, Nudger returned to his apartment.

In his mail was his voter-registration confirmation, informing him of the date of the next election and the location of his polling place. The state was asking for a sales-tax increase to help fund highway maintenance. The bill’s opponents claimed that the additional tax money actually would free other state money, which would be used to pay some of Scott Scalla’s campaign obligations. “Money for pockets instead of potholes,” their literature stated. The state-paid TV spot that was played repeatedly was a scene in which a young family’s station wagon hit a pothole, flew out of control, and burst into flames. Only the father, who’d been driving, survived, though not very happily. It was a gloomy situation anyone born of woman would vote to prevent.

The bill was expected to pass by a wide margin.

Nudger tossed the registration card and campaign literature into the wastebasket and decided not to vote.

Then he walked to the living room window, stood staring out at the murky, snow-pregnant winter sky, and changed his mind. That was what people like Scott Scalla relied on, people like Nudger not voting. Nudger would vote this time, and he’d keep on voting.

Maybe someday it would make a difference.

Maybe Charles Siberling would run for governor.

XXXI
V

udger lay with Claudia in the morning light in her bedroom. He was on his back, beneath the blanket and sheet, while she lay on top of the covers, still breathing deeply. Everything had become good between them again, Nudger thought, though not as good as it had been before their newly defined relationship. He wasn’t sure if Claudia was seeing other men. He never asked, fearful of the answer.

She sighed, propped herself up on one elbow, then swiveled to sit on the edge of the mattress. Nudger watched her with the familiar awe. Her lean body was breathtaking in the soft light. Half an hour ago his groin had ached for her, and now it was his heart. A compartmentalization the women’s liberation movement would frown upon with unplucked brows. Maybe they were right; sometimes Nudger felt as extinct as one of those dinosaurs with two brains, each of which provided disastrously poor judgment.

Claudia stood up and turned to look down at him. “I don’t see how you can bear to stay beneath those covers,”
she said. “The radiator keeps it at two thousand degrees in here.”

“I’m cold,” he told her. “Cold’s a subjective thing, even at two thousand degrees.”

She shook her head, and he watched her walk away, into the bathroom. Some walk.

The shower hissed and gurgled for a while, then Claudia returned, still toweling herself dry. There were goose bumps on her arms and thighs, and her flesh was reddened where she’d rubbed too hard with the rough towel.

As she began to dress, she asked, “How’s Hammersmith doing?” She’d always liked Hammersmith, and she knew how what had happened worked on him.

“Things have returned to his idea of normal,” Nudger said.

“He must know some important people.”

“Better yet, he knows
about
some important people.”

The Board of Police Commissioners, after an appropriate length of time, had exonerated Hammersmith. They had become so incensed at Siberling that they suggested it was the judicial system that had been at fault in the Colt convic
tion and execution. Siberling blamed police procedures, politics, the sun, the moon, and the stars, everything and everyone other than Hammersmith. The buck that had stopped at Hammersmith had been broken down into small change that no one cared about.

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