Page 10 of Judge & Jury


  "I'm okay with Agent Pellisante here. Get some coffee."

  "It's official business," I told Trevor. We walked some more, then stopped at the end of the corridor. Cavello's cell was cordoned off, at the very end of the long wing.

  "You're sure you want to do this?" Ellis looked at me.

  Nineteen people had died this afternoon. Seventeen jurors.

  My jurors. One victim was a kid on his tenth birthday. Some things you just have to do-- regardless of the risk or the consequences.

  "Official business," I repeated.

  "Yeah," he said. "You give him some official business for me."

  Cavello's electronic cell door clicked open.

  He was lying on a cot with his knees drawn up and an arm crooked behind his head. His eyes widened when he saw who it was.

  "Nicky," he said, barely hiding that same mocking grin I had seen so often in the courtroom. "Jesus, I just heard. What a mess!" He slowly raised himself up off the cot. "I want to tell you how sorry I . . ."

  I slugged him in the face, and he went down.

  "Jeez, Nicky." Cavello grunted, rubbing his jaw. He reached for the metal cot post and pulled himself back up, grinning. "Y'know, I heard of hung juries before, but this one takes on a whole new meaning."

  I hit him again. Harder. Cavello slammed back against the concrete wall. He still stared at me with a sort of laughing arrogance, an animal savagery behind his eyes. "Your fault, Nicky. What'd you expect? I was gonna roll over and die? You knew that. You know me, like nobody else does." He wiped away a trickle of blood with the back of his hand.

  I went over and yanked him off the floor by his collar. He was still wearing the same shirt he had on in the courtroom that day.

  "You may think you've won, you piece of shit, but I'm gonna dedicate my life to you going down. Nineteen people died. One of them was a ten-year-old kid."

  "There was a kid on that bus?" Cavello said, showing mock surprise. "Jesus, Pellisante, you oughta know better than that."

  I punched him with everything I had. Cavello crashed into the cell wall again. I couldn't control myself. I'd never hated one person so much.

  I heard Trevor Ellis behind me. "Okay, Nick, that's enough."

  I ignored him. I pulled Cavello up again and threw him to the other side of the cell. He went into a metal sink and fell to the floor. I went and pulled him up again. There was blood all over his shirt. "They were just doing their duty," I screamed in his face.

  "Go on," Cavello mocked. "Hit me. It doesn't hurt. But you got it wrong. I told you. No court can hold me. You say I'm going down." He spat out a glob of blood. "Maybe. But it won't be from you. You see those cameras up there? They got every second of this. You're through. I won't go down. But you will, Nicky Smiles."

  I hit him again, and Cavello spun backward against the concrete wall. Trevor Ellis and a cell-block guard rushed in behind me. One of them pinned my arms while the other got between me and Cavello. He struggled to his feet again. He was wobbly, holding his side.

  "Look at you." Cavello started to laugh. "You think you got me? You're the one who's through. You're the one gonna be seeing that kid every day for the rest of your life. Me, I'll sleep like a baby tonight."

  Trevor and the guard yanked me out of the cell, but Cavello called after me. His words and laughter echoed down the hall.

  "Like a baby, Pellisante. You hear that? First day in a month, I don't have to worry about a goddamn trial."

  Part Two

  RETRIAL

  Chapter 46

  ELBOWS ON MY DESK, I looked out at the class of twenty-two astonishingly smug and overconfident first-year law students.

  "Can anyone tell me why the law permits law enforcement agents to use deceit at the investigative stage, when they're not even sure of a suspect's guilt, but strictly forbids them from lying during the testimonial stage, when they're absolutely sure the suspect is a criminal?"

  Five months had passed. I had taken an extended leave from the Bureau, and I'd been teaching a course in criminal ethics at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice since January.

  Some leave. I was doing everything I knew just to hold it together. I wasn't sure I'd ever go back, at least not to C-10, not after the beating I had given Cavello in his cell. But who was I kidding? It was more than that. Lots more. The bastard had been right. Since that day, the image of Jarrod's face looking out the window of that juror bus hadn't left my mind.

  A female student in the second row raised her hand. "It's the means to an end," she said. "Mapp, and United States versus Russell allow the police to use deceptive procedures to obtain evidence. Without it, they might never make a case. It's deception for the greater good."

  "Okay." I nodded, then got up and started to stroll around. "But what if the police have to lie about those procedures during testimony--in order to protect their case?"

  In the back row I spotted something that annoyed me. Some kid seemed a lot more interested in a newspaper folded in his textbook than he was in me. I raised my voice. "Mr. Pearlman, you care to weigh in on this?"

  The student fumbled with his textbook. "Yeah. Sure thing. Not a problem."

  I went up to him, removing the newspaper from his desk. "Mr. Pearlman here is busy checking his stocks while the Fourth Amendment is under siege. I hope for your future clients' sake you've got a nice family practice in entertainment law to go into."

  There were a few laughs around the room. Typical suck-up snickers.

  I felt a little ashamed, though. Like one of those professorial bullies who gets his rocks off from a big show of power over his class. And that wasn't me. A few months ago I was pushing around one of the most notorious criminals in the country. Now it was just some kid, in law school. Jeez, Nick.

  "So, Mr. Pearlman," I said, offering the kid an olive branch, "the Supreme Court case that held that the exclusionary law of evidence was binding is . . ."

  "Mapp versus Ohio, sir. U.S. 643. 1961."

  "Nice guess." I grinned. I tucked the newspaper under my arm. "I have stocks, too."

  The bell rang shortly afterward. A couple of students came up to go over an assignment or question a grade. Then I just sat alone in the empty classroom.

  You're lying to yourself again, Nick. You're trying to run, but you're not fast enough. It wasn't about some kid catching up on the box scores in my class. Or the Fourth Amendment, or police methodology. It wasn't even about this closed, dark corner of the universe I had let myself drift to, pretending I was building a new life.

  No. I flipped the paper over on my desk. I stared at the headline. The very one I'd been waiting these past five months to see.

  GODFATHER, PARTII. In big bold letters.

  Unfinished business-- that's all it was. Cavello's retrial was scheduled to begin next week.

  Chapter 47

  SHE WAS DOING her best to recover, but it was hard and lonely. And long. And basically impossible. Yet she was starting to come through it.

  For a while her sister, Rita, stayed with her. Andie had suffered a ruptured spleen, a collapsed lung, a lot of internal bleeding, and burns on her legs and arms. But those were the wounds that healed. What hurt a lot more was the pain inside. Every time she looked into Jarrod's room, caught his scent on his books and things, his pajamas, his pillows.

  Then there was the anger she felt every single day. Anger that his killers had never been brought to justice. That everyone knew who was behind it--Cavello! And the bastard wasn't even being charged. She even had dreams of finding him in his jail cell and killing him herself.

  Then one day she was finally able to put some of Jarrod's things away, pack them into boxes, without crying. Without being too ashamed. She had asked the coroner to cut off a piece of the Knicks uniform shirt Jarrod was wearing that day. She kept it in her purse.

  MARBURY

  3

  She started back toward having a life with the simplest things. Doing her proofreading, seeing a flick. It was like relearning th
e steps of life all over again. Telling herself it was okay. To live was okay.

  Over time, she found herself reading the papers again, watching the news. Laughing at a joke on Letterman. One day, she even picked up a copy of Variety. A few weeks later, she called her agent.

  Then, five months after it happened, Andie found herself standing in front of the doors to a casting studio on West 57th Street

  . The call was for some Cialis commercial. All it took was looking fortyish and a little sexy--pretty much herself. Her agent said, Go. See how it feels.

  Standing in front of the studio, Andie had never felt so terrified in her life. It was like the first time she ever went on a casting call. It was too new. It wasn't right. Way too soon.

  A pretty blond woman stepped out of the elevator behind her. "You goin' in?"

  "No, you go ahead." Andie shook her head. A wave of panic swept over her. A tightness pounded in her chest. She needed air.

  She didn't even wait for the elevator, just hurried down the back staircase and onto 57th Street

  . Her legs felt weak and wobbly. She sucked a deep, grateful breath into her lungs.

  This isn't going to go away, Andie. It's always going to be with you. Survivors pull it together. You have to do that, too. A few people passing by on the street glanced at her. She realized how foolish she felt, and probably looked.

  Andie pressed herself against the cold concrete of the building and took another breath. She reached into her purse and felt for the little piece from Jarrod's uniform. You're always going to be with me.

  Andie went back into the building, taking the elevator this time, back up to the third floor. She stood outside the studio again. Clutching her portfolio, she sucked in a breath. This was hard. This was so damn hard.

  A woman stepped out just as she entered, and the woman had that look of disappointment Andie knew so well. Andie pushed through the doors and walked up to the receptionist.

  "Andie DeGrasse. I'm here to read for the part."

  Chapter 48

  FROM A STAIRCASE across 183rd Street

  , I bit my lower lip as I watched her coming back home. I don't think she ever saw me, and I wanted to keep it that way. The alternative was too crazy to spend time thinking about.

  Andie DeGrasse looked good. She was dressed up and clutching a large black portfolio. On the outside it looked as if she had it all back together. But I thought I knew what must be going on inside her.

  I came up this way from time to time, and I wasn't even really sure why.

  Maybe I just felt good that someone had come out of this thing alive. A couple of times I even went up and knocked on her door. I'd say hi, or bring something-- a little news about the investigation. Basically, stand around a few moments, as though it was an official visit and I had something to say that I couldn't quite put into words. It felt good being connected to somebody. I didn't reach out to people much since the trial.

  Maybe I was just kidding myself again. Maybe it was simply Andie DeGrasse. How she was pulling her life back together after what had happened. I envied that. That she never once accused me, though she had every right to--that she never looked at me with blame in her eyes.

  Maybe it was simply the knowledge that we shared something-- neither of our lives would ever be whole again. That's what I believed, anyway.

  So I watched her as she climbed the stairs to her building and unlocked the inside door. She checked her mail and tucked a few envelopes and magazines under her arm, then disappeared from sight. A short while later, the lights went on in her apartment. What am I, a stalker? But I knew that wasn't it.

  I finally walked across the street. Another tenant stepped out, and I fumbled in my pockets for a second, as if I'd lost my keys, catching the door before it closed.

  Her apartment was 2B, on the second floor, facing the street. I climbed the stairs. I remembered the night we took the jury in. For a few seconds, I just stood in front of her door. What was I here to say? I had started to knock when it hit me, the feeling of total foolishness, stupidity.

  I backed away quickly, heading to the stairs.

  That's when the door opened. And I was facing Andie.

  Chapter 49

  SHE WAS STANDING THERE in a powder-blue sweater over jeans, barefoot, holding a black trash bag in her hand. When she saw me she did a double take. "Hey."

  I tried to act just as surprised-- because I was. "I was dropping something off," I said, holding out the book I'd brought along. "I read this book. I was going to give it to you. I mean, I am giving it to you."

  "The Four Agreements." She removed it from the manila envelope, nodding. "‘Don't take anything personally,' ‘be impeccable with your word.' My sister gave it to me. Good choice, Agent Pellisante."

  "I'm evolving. And it's Nick." I shrugged.

  "Which is it?" she asked. "Evolving, or Nick?"

  I smiled. "So, how's it going?"

  "I went to an audition today. A Cialis commercial. You know, when the moment hits."

  "And how'd it go?"

  She smiled. "Dunno, exactly. All I had to do was look fortyish and sexy. Right up my alley, right? But I read the part. It's the first time. . . . Have to pay the bills, right?"

  I gave her a knowing look. Sometimes, I just wanted to reach out and hold her, hoping she would rest her head on my chest awhile. I just wanted to show I cared.

  "I don't know-- for forty, I think you look great. Honestly."

  "Forty-ish." She raised an eye with a sharp smile. "Come back in eight years and I'll give you credit for a compliment. In the meantime . . ." Andie leaned against the door frame. "So how's the class you're teaching?"

  A couple months back, I had written to her to let her know I'd left the Bureau and started teaching again. I just stood there with my hands in my coat and shrugged. "The highs aren't quite the same as my old job. So far, no one's shooting at me, though."

  Andie smiled again. "How about I give you a choice, Nick? You can take the trash down behind the staircase on your way out. Or, if you want, you can come in."

  "I'd like to," I said.

  "You'd like to which?"

  I stayed where I was. "You know, the retrial's starting. Jury selection's coming up. Next week."

  "I read the papers," Andie said.

  "I'm still a witness. The case is strong. They're going to put him away this time."

  She stared at me awhile. Her mouth was full and her eyes sharp. Brown. "That's what you came by to tell me?"

  "No." What promises could I make that I hadn't already broken? We'd never caught the men who killed her son. We had nothing to tie it to Cavello. "I thought maybe you'd want to come to the trial with me."

  She took a step back. "I don't know. I don't know if I can be close to that man."

  "I understand." I lifted the trash bag out of her hand. I guess that was a decision. She smiled as if she could see right through me.

  "Still the public servant, huh, Nick?"

  I gave her a self-deprecating smile. "Evolving."

  She smiled.

  "Hey, Pellisante," she called, catching me halfway down the stairs. "Next time, you really should think about coming in."

  Chapter 50

  THE FOLLOWING MORNING I was at my desk. In my office. At home.

  I was doing what I always did on the days I didn't teach. What I'd been doing every free day for the past five months: sifting through every piece of information I could find on the case. Every document. Every sliver of evidence.

  Looking for some way I could tie the bus blast to Dominic Cavello.

  If anyone saw my study, my disheveled desk, they'd probably think they'd stepped into the lair of some obsessive, pathological nutcase. Good God, I had photos taped everywhere. The blast site. The van. The juror bus. Thick binders of FBI reports on the explosive device stacked high. Interviews with people on the street who might've seen the two men in work clothes running away.

  More than once I thought I had caught a break. Lik
e when the stolen New Jersey plates led back to some horse trainer in Freehold who had links to the Lucchese crime family. But that turned out to be coincidence. None of it led anywhere. None of it directly tied to Dominic Cavello or his people.

  I was sipping my morning coffee, having to admit that my mind was drifting back to Andie DeGrasse, when the phone rang.

  "Pellisante," I answered.

  It was Ray Hughes, the agent who'd taken my place at C-10."Nick"--he sounded happy to catch me-- “any chance you're free?"

  Sometimes we'd have lunch, and Ray would pick my brain, or I'd pick his. I figured all he wanted was to go over my testimony for the upcoming trial. "I'd hate to miss out on Ellen, Ray, but I think I could find my way down to see you."

  "Not here. There's a government jet waiting for us. At Teterboro."

  If Ray wanted to grab my interest, he had it. The offer of a crummy sandwich at his desk in the Javits Building would have done the trick, too.

  "A plane to take us where, Ray?"

  The acting head of the Organized Crime Unit paused. "Marion."

  I stood up quickly from my desk, coffee spilling over my work notes.

  Marion was the federal prison where Cavello was being held.

  Chapter 51

  ABOUT FOUR HOURS LATER, the government Lockheed touched down at the airport in Carbondale, Illinois. A car was waiting for us and drove us to Marion Federal Prison. Marion was a vast, depressing-looking redbrick fortress stuck in the middle of a marshland in rural southern Illinois. It was also one of the most secure federal prisons in the United States. Although Cavello had yet to be convicted, after what happened in New York, the government wasn't taking any chances.

  Warden Richard Bennifer was waiting for us. He escorted us out to the special control units, where Cavello was being held. The only visiting station was a glass-paneled room, with a guard standing by with a Taser and a surveillance camera running at all times. The prisoners here were lifers, level sixes, lost to the outside world for all time. I rejoiced. I was looking forward to seeing Cavello spend the rest of his life in a place like this.