Micelli considered him. In a grudging tone, she said, âIt could, yes. But in my opinion, Marcie would then have had contre-coup brain injuries.'
Saul looked suddenly weary; the skin of his face looked dangerously pink, like that of a man who had overexerted, and he stopped to dab the sweat off his forehead with a white handkerchief.
Let it go
, Tony silently implored him.
You've done all you can
.
As if he had heard him, Saul said slowly, âCan we talk about the tuna sandwich?'
âOf course.'
âHow big was it?'
Micelli hesitated. âI don't know. An ordinary sandwich, I suppose.'
âKnow how much tuna Mr. Nixon put on the sandwich?'
âNo.'
Saul put away the handkerchief. âWouldn't those things affect how long it would take Marcie Calder's stomach to completely absorb the sandwich?'
âThey could. Not to any great degree, though.'
âBut you're not insisting that the tuna sandwich would empty from Marcie's stomach in two hours flat, are you?'
âOf course not. That's an approximate time.'
Saul inhaled, his large frame shuddering. âCould have taken longer?'
âSomewhat longer. Though, if you'll remember, there was a residue of tuna in her stomach. Indicating that the digestive process was interrupted by death.'
âBut she could have died at ten-oh-five. Or ten-ten. Or ten-fifteen.'
âYes.'
âOr at eleven?'
It was a bad question, Tony knew. âI'd consider that unlikely,' Micelli said. âAnd the reverse of what you're asking is that Marcie Calder could have died at nine-thirty. Or nine-forty. Or nine-fifty. During which time the defendant told the police she was with him.'
It stopped Saul for a moment. âBut Mr. Robb also told the police that as he left, he saw someone in another car.'
âThat was what he said, yes.'
âAnd it's possible that
this
person could have killed Marcie Calder before ten-oh-five, or ten-ten, or ten-fifteen.'
Micelli stared at Saul. âIn my opinion,' she said coolly, âMarcie Calder was killed by another between nine-thirty at the earliest and ten-thirty at the very latest. I can also tell you that Mr. Robb was the father of Marcie Calder's child and that it was Marcie Calder's blood on the steering wheel of his car. But I have no personal knowledge of the events Mr. Robb described to the police
or
of the time he left the park.'
This, Tony knew at once, was a devastating answer. He could see it on the faces of the jury.
âShit,' Sam murmured.
Saul drew himself up. âAll that blood,' he mused aloud. âAnd the only blood on Sam Robb's car on the steering wheel?'
âThat's all we found, yes.'
Saul slowly shook his head. âSo how do you know the blood came from Marcie Calder's fatal injuries? I mean, all you know from your medical procedures is it's her blood, right?'
Micelli gave him a brief look of incredulity, then irritation, then tolerance. âAs a matter of medical evidence, that's all I know.'
Saul, Tony knew, was looking for a way to end this. âBut that smear of blood,' Saul asked slowly, âis, to your knowledge, the only medical evidence that
may
link
Sam Robb
to Marcie Calder's injuries? However she may have died.'
Micelli paused to consider her answer. âYour question is limited to
medical
evidence?' she inquired pointedly.
âYes. That's right.'
âThen I would have to agree, with that qualification. The smear of blood is the only
medical evidence
which links Sam Robb to Marcie Calder's injuries.'
Saul paused, lost in thought, letting his fleshy chin rest on his chest. âThank you,' he said at last, and walked back to the defense table.
âNice job,' Tony murmured, and meant it â there was nothing more to be done with Kate Micelli. But it was Sam who, when the jury was excused for the day, and Saul had slumped wearily in his chair, went to Saul and, with simple graciousness, thanked him.
With that, the case for the prosecution was over.
Chapter 17
That night, Tony took Saul to the steakhouse for dinner. Saul seemed so pleased that Tony did not mind the orange glob of dressing that sat there on his half head of iceberg lettuce, not moving, while he watched it with a kind of fascination.
âThe record,' Saul told him, âis forty-four minutes, seven seconds.'
âNot anymore â that's my lettuce from the last time, I'm sure of it.' Tony shook his head in wonder. âYou'd think after a while the law of gravity would take over. Maybe you should give Kate Micelli a call â ask her what
she
thinks. “Tell me, Kate, if a head of iceberg lettuce were rolling down a hill . . .”'
Saul gave a short laugh, and then his face turned curious. âHow're you doing, Tony?'
Tony poured them both a glass of wine. âOh, all right,' he began, and then realized that more should be said. âYou were
good
, Saul. Except that the defendant would have been me, I'm sorry I missed watching you take on those two Lake City cops. Dana and McCain.'
Saul studied him, as if to ensure that this was not mere flattery. It must be hard, Tony thought, to wonder how far you've slipped, to question your ability to even know that much. âThat was a long time ago,' Saul said simply. âToo many years, too much booze. I'm not what I was.'
âThen you must have been something, Saul. You must really have been something.'
When Saul's smile reached his eyes, Tony knew that his friend believed him. âI was
you
,' Saul answered. âLife is strange, isn't it.'
âVery.'
Saul was quiet for a moment. âYou still in love with the missus? Is that what this is all about?'
Tony gazed at the table, trying to answer the question for himself. âIf Sam were married to someone else, I still would have come. I guess some experiences are so essential they're always part of who you are. Sam's friendship was one. Alison's death was another. And so was Sue.' He looked up. âYeah, Saul, I still love her. I can't let that become a problem for Stacey and me, but in one way it's even harder. Because I look at Sue's life â what it's been and where it's going â and there's not a damn thing I can do for her. Sam's the only one I can help, and if we get him off, Sue will still have to figure out who he is.'
âAnd you keep wondering.'
âAll the time.'
Saul nodded. âHe's a mixed bag, your friend. Sometimes when he acts decent, like he did today, it seems genuine and almost sweet-natured, if I can use that word about Sam Robb. At other times, it's the decency that feels like an act â like he's receiving instructions on an earphone, telling him how to behave, but something in his brain chemistry keeps him from getting it quite right.' He looked at Tony intently. âUnderstand what I'm saying?'
Saul's perception made Tony smile in recognition, though the point was very serious. âOh, yeah,' Tony answered. âI understand.'
Saul took a deep swallow of wine; he was drinking more than he had in a while, perhaps out of relief from the burden of self-doubt, and it seemed to have loosened his tongue. âIf I were you,' Saul said at length, âI wouldn't dwell on your feelings for Sue. Her life might be a lot simpler if you lost, and pretty snarled if Sam's still free. She'll have to make a choice then. Just like you, she'll always wonder if he's a murderer. But you can at least go back to your wife and son, knowing you've done your job.
She'll
have to decide whether to go or stay, and Sam won't make that easy, especially for a woman like I think Sue is. No matter what, he'll always be the father of her kids.'
It was true, Tony knew. âShe
did
ask me to defend him, Saul. To give her an innocent man.'
Saul emptied his glass. âThat was before the trial, Tony. I wonder how she feels now.'
The next day, the courtroom was dark. That afternoon, Sam challenged Tony to resume their game of basketball.
Grinning, Sam stood at half-court, the ball tucked beneath one arm. âFifteen-fifteen, right?'
âRight.'
Tony felt surprise that, despite the trial and all that was at stake, both of them recalled the score. There was the first touch of fall in the air; twenty-eight years had passed since this same crispness heralded the last season that had led Sam and Tony, friends and rivals, to the night of the Riverwood game. Yet the instinctive rhythms of that friendship, that rivalry, still seemed like second nature. It was just that Tony had been missing.
âLet's make a rule,' Sam said. âOne of us has to win by two buckets.' He smiled again. âI want to be fair to you.'
Tony rolled his eyes. âWe could be here forever.'
âSuits me. The trial's not that much fun.' Sam tossed the ball to Tony. âYour turn, pal. I'd just tied the score by turning your behind-the-back trick around on you.'
âAbsolutely pathological,' Tony said, and took the ball out of bounds. When Tony drove toward the basket, suddenly dribbling behind his back and leaving Sam frozen like a statue while he scored his sixteenth point, Sam whooped from the sheer joy of it.
âToo good,' he said. But when Sam tried the same drive and Tony stole the ball, Sam stopped laughing. He tied the score after throwing a sharp elbow and knocking Tony aside. After that, they barely spoke.
Now time was marked by the sounds of panting and quick footsteps, the feel of sweat and two bodies shoving, the taut split seconds before Sam and Tony shot or drove the basket, when they simply watched each other. At twenty-three all, Tony shot and missed; when the ball fell toward an empty space beneath the basket, neither man gave way. Their bodies cracked into each other; Tony reeled to the side, crashing into the concrete post of the backboard; Sam fell to the asphalt.
There was a sickening pain in Tony's head and elbow, a momentary whiteness of vision. Then he saw Sam, rising from the asphalt to retrieve the ball. âEnough,' Tony said.
Sam frowned. âHow much time you need?'
âFive minutes,' Tony answered, and realized that these were their first words in what seemed a very long time.
They sat in the middle of the asphalt, a few feet apart.
âYou all right?' Sam finally asked.
âI'll live.' Tony realized that he did not want to talk. He flexed his elbow, wincing at the way his temple throbbed.
Sam gazed out at Taylor Park and the lake beyond. âSo how was Sue the other night?'
His voice was so emotionless, so studiedly devoid of feeling, that Tony turned to him. âI hope that question doesn't mean what it did two days ago.'
Sam shrugged. âI was only asking how she was.'
âThen maybe we should get something straight, once and for all â I don't know
how
Sue is, or what she'll do. My charm for Sue is that I'm not you or the kids, and that I don't live at your house. We're hardly “fucking,” as you so elegantly phrased it.'
Sam's gaze was probing, silent. âNot even before?'
Quite deliberately, Tony met his eyes. The best lies, as Sam had remarked, are based on truth; failing that, Tony told himself, they are accompanied by an unwavering stare. âBack in 1968,' Tony said evenly, âI was too much of a mess to care for anyone. But you might not know that â seeing as how we stopped talking for a while. As I recall, it was something about whether I'd strangled Alison.'
Sam's gaze broke, and then he looked down, leaving Tony with the sour aftertaste of his own manipulation. But he would not, could not, betray Sue Robb, any more than he could betray a client. âSo let's play basketball,' Tony said.
Silent, they got up and commenced the game again.
It was tense, as before. The only difference was a certain courtesy â tense and silent, punctuated by a nod or glance â and the careful way they held their shoulders and elbows in, as if the next blow would start something they could not stop. Tony felt this difference in the effort to make Sam what he tried to make any other opponent â a cipher for whom he felt neither love nor hate nor fear. For his strength in sport or as a lawyer, Tony had always known, was not to feel too much; in this he was the opposite of Sam, who, in his visceral immediacy, was like a copper wire exposed to heat. But with Sam, Tony felt the heat as well.
When he drove the basket, scoring his thirtieth point, Tony's head was pounding.
One point ahead. One to go.
Sam faced him now. The ragged sound of their breathing was like that of a single organism, united by sweat and desire and the fierce compulsive passion they could only create together. Tony watched Sam's eyes.
âFuck you,' Sam said softly, and drove toward the basket with a sudden propulsion, startling in its fury.
Desperately, Tony scrambled sideways, trying to block Sam as if this were all that had ever mattered to him. Sam stopped, face contorted with rage and need, then drove past, hip thrusting sideways to knock Tony from his path. Tony held his ground; they collided, Tony reeling backward, but not before he jolted the ball from Sam's hand. Desperate, Sam dived for it, landing chest-first on the asphalt as the ball dribbled out of bounds. When he looked up at Tony, his face was an opaque, unfeeling mask.
Silent, Tony reached out his hand.
âBreak?' he asked.
Sam's eyes became veiled, thoughtful. âBreak,' he said.
Together, they walked to the side of the court. The breeze from the lake had picked up, cooling their skin; silent, they looked once more at Taylor Park in the distance, with its hedgerows, its oak trees, its profound and terrible memories.