Personal Injuries
She had been a psychology major, so she probably had. She’d figured she was going to learn to understand people that way. These days the thought of it made her laugh.
“You Know He’s Promised Me.” Somehow Evon was beginning to discern expression in the squawking from the computer speaker. It wasn’t possible, she realized, yet this dry adenoidal male voice corresponded more and more to the broken person now shaped like a question mark in the bed.
What was it he’d promised? Evon asked. She took Rainey’s hand and touched her brow.
“He’s Promised. He’ll Help Me. Whenever I Tell Him. He Swore To Me.”
Unconsciously, she had tightened her grip on Rainey’s fingers and barely had the presence of mind to release them. Lorraine was undeterred. She went on describing the arrangement she’d reached with Robbie long ago, when she learned about the disease’s inevitable progression. She’d made him reaffirm the agreement only recently when she’d begun to lose the last control of her limbs. It petrified Evon to listen to this. Rainey’s voice poured from the speakers at the same volume as before, words that should have been hushed. It was not the act or the idea that frightened Evon so much as contemplating the moment it would be for both of them. But Rainey seemed at ease. The certainty of a reprieve, an outlet, a way to end the suffering seemed a part of bearing it.
“Don’t Let Him Back Out. Don’t.”
“No,” Evon said, more as a reflex.
“Promise.”
God, she was a cluck, Evon thought of herself, never even to suspect this, particularly given Robbie’s long-standing desperation to be certain he was free throughout Lorraine’s decline. Robbie, she thought. Good or bad, you’d just never get to the end.
“You can’t ask me that, Rainey.”
“I Suppose I Can’t. But I Ask All His Friends.”
She slept again, and Evon herself drifted off, waking at the sudden sound of voices downstairs. Joan had returned, along with Mort’s mother, a stout woman with a white bun. Linda, one of Robbie’s cousins, wore a hairdo that looked harder than an insect shell and so much jewelry she glittered like a Christmas tree. The women had returned following the service to ready the house for the remainder of the crowd, which would begin arriving after the interment. There had been nearly nine hundred people at the mortuary, they told her, enough to fill a second chapel, where the ceremony was broadcast on closed-circuit TV. Center City must have been a ghost town with the exodus of Feaver’s friends—lawyers, clients, court personnel, the legion whom Robbie amused and aided. Joan worried that the house could be overrun.
Evon helped the women carry in a dozen heaping trays of cold cuts, which had been sent to Mort’s house by friends offering comfort. The new home care person, a grandmotherly Polish immigrant, came in at the same time. She had a heavy suitcase, and Joan, who knew the house, showed her where she would be staying.
Rainey was awake when Evon went back up.
“Cavalry’s arrived. I guess I’ll be going.”
“Come Back.”
She promised that.
“I’m Sorry. For Before. I Say Things Now. Sometimes I Don’t Believe I Even Thought The Words That Are Coming Out.”
Evon took her hand again. She didn’t mind, she said. What Rainey feared wasn’t true, and she was glad she could reassure her.
“It’s Your Loss Anyway,” Rainey said. “That’s What He Would Tell You.”
Humor. Evon smiled. She was sure he would, she thought. Rainey’s eyes darkened in the labor of a more serious effort.
“You Would Think I Wouldn’t Mind Now. Finally. Sick And Twisted As My Body Is. But I Still Want Him. All Ways Too. I Can Still Feel That. There. And Do It. Did You Know That?”
Hardly. The astonishment must have crept through her face.
“It’s The One Thing Left. I Think I’m Hornier Than Ever. It Probably Sounds Vulgar. Or Perverted. But It’s Not. It’s Wonderful. To Feel Him Around Me. To Think He Wants Me. Even Now. So Broken And Ugly. They Say It’s The Partner Who Loses Interest. But He Hasn’t. And I’m So Grateful. We Love Each Other You Know.”
“I know,” Evon said and found a tissue to blot Rainey’s tears, creeping to the pillow even while her hand clicked away on the mouse.
“He Hurt Me. Too Much. And I Hurt Him Back. We Hurt Each Other Every Way You Can. But I Love Him. And He Loves Me. I Never Knew It The Way I Did After This Happened. But That’s Why I’m Living. Isn’t That Strictly Amazing? I’m Not Alive Really. And I’m Still Living For Love.”
The new nurse’s assistant entered energetically, talking in an accent that Evon could barely decode, but she greeted Rainey lovingly and clearly knew her business. She propped up Rainey and straightened the sheets, transforming the bed in such short order that Evon was predictably embarrassed by her relative incompetence. After an uncertain moment, she leaned over the bed and embraced Rainey quickly.
Downstairs a short time later, through the large living room windows, Evon saw Robbie arrive in a long limo. His mother’s younger sister from Cleveland was with him and he held tight to the older woman’s arm as she wedged herself out of the car. Evon caught them in the foyer. Robbie was pale and his features appeared loosened by a bleary uncertainty. His elderly aunt, humpbacked from age, seemed temperamental and largely unmoved by the day’s proceedings. Somewhat crossly, she asked for directions to the powder room. When he returned, Robbie offered to walk Evon out. He was on automatic pilot again, talking as they drifted down the drive.
Once, he said, when he was eight or nine, his mother had taken him fishing during the white bass run up near Skageon. He’d been getting in trouble, lifting stuff from the five-and-dime, and his mother was convinced the problem was a lack of manly activity and attention. In the retelling, Robbie marveled over the sight of Estelle, who would never leave the house with so much as a wrinkle in her nylons, appearing that morning in a flannel shirt and old hat. She later told him that after two hours rocking in the river she’d become seasick to a point where suicide seemed sensible, yet she’d given him no clue that day.
They were near Evon’s car, parked at the foot of the property. The neighbor’s lilacs, white and soft purple, were open and as sweet on the air as cologne. His mother had been laid to rest on a glorious day. Evon turned her face up to the perfect sky and found him watching her when she looked back.
“This was spectacular of you,” he said. “I can’t even tell you what it means to me, I really can’t. This is one of the nicest things anybody’s ever done for me in my life.”
She answered with the thought that had been circulating unvoiced most of the morning. “You’d have done it for me,” she told him and that harp string in her center sang out, plucked by the truth. You could never count on him for honesty, assuming he even knew what it was. He was unruly and incorrigible. But if she stumbled, he’d come running. She couldn’t even say for sure she’d be able to reach out when he extended a hand. But he’d be there. She wasn’t going to forgive him, really. But she had to stop pretending with herself. Nine hundred people had just turned out, all there to buoy Robbie Feaver in his grief, nearly every one a friend who’d experienced his openness and the soothing warmth of his care. And she was one, too. You couldn’t fight facts.
She asked how he was holding up.
“Eh,” he answered, and let feeling swirl him off elsewhere for a moment.
“Losing my dad was something,” she said, “but my mom, being last and my mom—I can’t even imagine.”
“Yeah,” he said. “But I read something once and I keep thinking about it now. ‘Every little boy loses his mother the first time, the day he realizes he’s a man.’”
Evon didn’t understand and Robbie said he hadn’t either. Not originally. But the idea seemed to be that boys had to come to terms with the fact that they couldn’t be like their mothers, they had to be somebody else. He was still and his face was heavy in the light. He didn’t seem entirely happy with these thoughts.
She had decided
long ago she wasn’t going to be like her mother, probably because her mother had let Evon know she was nothing like her. But the notion of her mother actually disappearing from her life still seemed to suck the center out of the world. It would be as if the force of gravity, which was down there at the midpoint of the earth and which kept it from flying apart, was suddenly missing. Her mother, past seventy, still hung out her wash every day, except in blizzards, preferring the touch of mountain air to the hot breath of the dryer. In her mind’s eye, Evon saw her there, with the clothespins in her mouth, securing a tattersall shirt or a sheet to the line, standing her ground, asserting her intentions, while the wash gave in and snapped on the wind.
He asked if Evon got along with her.
“Some. She judges. You’re always being weighed on her scales. But you know, she’s strong.” Her arms went out. “She’s big. You know what I mean?”
He drifted down the curb line with her. They were interrupted by a neighbor who had awaited his return before bringing another huge tray, piled up like the others with pale mounds of foods Evon had never really seen and suspected she couldn’t stomach. The woman paid her respects and then proceeded up the driveway.
He hugged Evon then, before she could withdraw. That was apparently going to be standard now. She only hoped he had the good sense not to do this in front of McManis or Sennett. When he was halfway to the house, he turned and shouted as he walked backwards, just before he disappeared into shadow, “You’re great. I love you, I really do.”
She realized that somewhere nearby there was probably a surveillance agent, covering her. God knows what he’d seen. Or heard. That’d be some 302. ‘The cooperating individual then stated to UCA Miller, I love you.’ Great. She’d recognize the agent by the size of the shit-eating grin he’d throw her through the driver’s window. And what was she to respond? ‘We’re just friends’?
But when she settled in the Chevette she caught a glimpse of herself in the rearview mirror and spied traces of a cheerful look. How could that be, amid all this anguish and misfortune and flat-out confusion? She took herself to task, then gave up. What the hell, she thought suddenly. Really. What the hell. She put the car into gear, and felt the spry, lively wind of spring as soon as she lowered the window.
32
THE NEXT MORNING WHEN I CAME IN, Danny, my receptionist, had taken a message from the U.S. Attorney, Stan Sennett, asking if I could arrange to see him in my office at 12:30, with my colleague, which was how he referred to Robbie. Feaver, who was at the nursing home to begin the dismal business of sorting through his mother’s effects, was cranky about being summoned, but he arrived on time, still with bleared eyes and appearing vaguely disheveled, as he’d been when I’d made a condolence call the prior evening.
“What’s this about?” he asked.
I hadn’t a clue.
Stan’s mood, when Danny showed him in, was quite formal. He was in his usual immaculate blue suit and he took the trouble to shake Robbie’s hand, which I didn’t recall him bothering with before. He expressed his sympathies and, finding them tepidly received, put himself down in the maroon chair Robbie usually occupied. Sennett spent a moment arranging himself, reaching down to straighten the crease on his trouser leg, before beginning.
“I wanted to advise you both of a very unusual meeting I had the afternoon before last. I would have done this sooner, but for Robbie’s circumstances. It was with an old friend of ours. Of all of ours. Magda Medzyk.” Stan looked into his lap at that point, his expression taut.
“She had consulted an attorney that morning, Sandy Stern.” Stan nodded toward me. Stern, who reviles Stan for reasons I have never fully understood, is my best friend in practice. “That was our good fortune. Mr. Stern declined to represent her, telling her he had an undisclosed conflict, but he suggested she approach me, rather than the P.A.’s office, where political allegiances could occasionally become problematic. She waited more than an hour before I got back, and when she came in, she told me a long, somewhat tawdry story about her relationship with a personal injury attorney named Robert Feaver.
“Mr. Feaver, she said, had asked her to throw a case the night before. He actually seemed to be offering her money to do it. She wasn’t quite certain of that, because she was so upset, so alarmed, she didn’t follow every word. But there was no mistake that he wanted her to alter the outcome of the case. The judge told me that she will enter an order recusing herself from the matter. But she wanted to inform me first because she was willing, if need be, to wear a wire against Mr. Feaver, prior to that.” Trying to be grave, Stan still could not stifle a smile at the irony.
He said that Magda had willingly accepted his guidance. Aside from withdrawing from the case, she would undertake no action or alert any other party in order to allow the government to investigate. She’d await further word from Stan.
Sennett waved his chin around to loosen his neck from the grip of his shirt collar, before turning to Feaver beside him.
“She’s quite an extraordinary person,” Stan said.
Robbie did not move. His shadowed eyes remained on Sennett, who, to his credit, declined to look away.
“‘An extraordinary person’?” Robbie finally asked. “Stan, do you know how Magda Medzyk spent the night after I left there? Have you got a clue? Because I do. I was sitting there burying my mother yesterday and I saw Magda, like a vision, like it was on TV. I saw her at that little kitchen table all night long. She barely moved. She only got up once. To get her rosary. She just sat there begging the Mother of God to help her find some little piece of herself that could go on with whatever was left of her life, only some sliver of her soul, because the rest of it had been swallowed up by shame.” He stood up then. “‘An extraordinary person,’” he repeated. He directed one last harsh look at Sennett, kicked over my wastebasket, picked it up, and left.
Stan took just an instant to recover. At my door, he tipped an imaginary hat.
I found his behavior oddly consistent with my lifetime experience of Stan. Just when I was ready to give up on him, he’d redeem himself. As a line prosecutor he’d shown all the tenderness of a blunt instrument, but when he became Chief Deputy P.A. under Raymond Horgan, he exhibited monumental strength in reforming the office and especially in loosening the grip of the Police Force, with its political crosscurrents, over prosecutions. Shortly before he’d married Nora Flinn, her mother, expecting the couple to have children, chose to reveal the fact that she was not Portuguese, as Nora and her brother had always been told, but black. Stan, so far as I could tell, had never flinched. Instead, he had been an admirable support, even an example, in helping Nora come to terms not only with her anger at her mother but with the uglier stuff that would seep out of the hearts of most white Americans in the same situation. And when, as luck would have it, age later prevented them from being able to conceive, it was Stan who first suggested adopting a child of mixed race.
Today, he had arrived here, the Mountain to Mohammed, with the clear intent to be what was once referred to as A Man, knowing Feaver would dish out exactly what he had gotten. He’d come anyway, not merely to concede an error, not only to apologize to Robbie or to grant that my anger had been well placed, but to acknowledge that Feaver, disingenuous and compromised as he was, remained an able judge of character. Being as coolly objective as Stan, one could say that he was better with principles than with personalities. But as he went on his way, doing his best to look uncrimped, he left behind the saving information that he remained subject to the discipline of his own beliefs.
THE FOLLOWING THURSDAY, the week before Memorial Day, Robbie resumed his activities. With Evon, he returned to Judith’s to deliver the money Sherm had demanded. Judith, who’d plainly had a merciless ruction with her brother, refused even to look at Robbie, but the envelope went in the register drawer. Amari and his watchers had better luck this time in trailing the funds. Crowthers himself arrived for a late lunch and casually took the small white envelope from Judith,
his hand lowered to his side while he was joshing with the kitchen staff. His first stop in the courthouse, even before his own chambers, had been at Kosic’s small office, adjoining Tuohey’s.
The wiretap, briefly activated, revealed little more than greetings. Something hit the desk, but no one could say for certain it was money. Somehow Kosie knew the source of the payment already or perhaps, out of extreme caution, sources were never identified, because nothing about that had been said.
But there was no question Rollo had received a share. No more than two hours later, Kosic paid for steak dinners for Brendan and himself at Shaver’s, an old-fashioned joint not far from their home. One of the surveillance agents, seated only two tables away, had watched Rollo lay a $100 bill in the plastic folder in which the tab was presented. The agent jumped up and asked if Kosic minded exchanging five twenties for the C-note, claiming he wanted to till a graduation card for his nephew. Not only did the serial number match one of the bills Robbie had dropped to Judith earlier but lifts raised a thumbprint so large the agents were all convinced—correctly, as it turned out—that it was Sherm’s. Kosic was now a long way to being cooked. And Crowthers was fully grilled. There would be no argument that anything Sherm had said to Robbie was merely a rambunctious jest. Despite the middling results with the wiretap, Stan was confident that Judge Winchell would agree to a full thirty-day overhear in Kosie’s office. Something on Brendan was bound to turn up.
Sennett reported this information to the UCAs that night, clearly aiming to inspire everybody as they moved into the critical stage. Evon had come back to the Center City to attend the meeting, then returned to her apartment.