Authors: Lincoln Child
“Are you forgetting, Mr. Piston, that Mr. Wyre here was convicted, and sentenced, for the murder of one person?”
Piston swore silently. This was true: Wyre had only been brought to trial for the murder of his final victim. There had been legal technicalities involved, some bungling of the evidence. Though it seemed foolish in hindsight, the DA had wanted to go for the one sure conviction rather than taking a chance on having Wyre walk on circumstantials. There’d been a hue and cry in the press at the time—didn’t these jokers remember that?
Aloud, he said, “I’m not forgetting, sir. I’m only asking that the circumstances of the murders, the nature of Wyre’s atrocities, be factored in—”
“
Mister
Piston. Are you telling the parole board how to do its job?”
Piston swallowed. “No, sir.”
Corso shook a sheaf of papers over the desk at him. “Do you have all the facts of this hearing? Are you in possession of this case summary?”
“No, sir.”
“Then sit down and bite your tongue, young man, until you have something of value to add.”
Wyre glanced back at Piston. It was a brief, almost casual look, but it chilled the lawyer to the bone. It was the kind of look a cat gave a canary. Then the convict turned back, smiling once again at the board.
Piston—shaken by the parole eligibility, unnerved by the eye contact with Wyre—tried to calm down, think straight. He had to remember who he was dealing with here. Everybody knew Wyre had killed those two cops. He’d set them up, stalked them, planned on killing an FBI agent as well. Old Corso wasn’t likely to forget that, either, and he was as close to being a hanging judge as any parole chief could be. Anyway, there would be all the details of the case summary to wade through. That’s where Wyre would get nailed, if nowhere else.
Corso seemed to read his mind. “Very well, Mr. Forster, let’s get to this summary of yours. The entire board has had a chance to look at it. I must say we were all a little surprised by your findings, none more than myself.”
“I understand that completely, sir. But I stand by both the evaluation and the pertinent data.”
“Oh, I’m not questioning anything, Mr. Forster. You’ve always proved yourself conscientious in your case work. We’re just . . . a little surprised, that’s all.” Corso leafed through the summary report. “These social profiles, the psychological batteries, Wyre’s history of institutional adjustment. I’ve never seen such scores.”
“Neither have I, sir,” said Forster.
Standing beside the parole officer, Wyre’s eyes glittered.
“And these testimonials you’ve procured are equally remarkable.”
“They were all in the database, sir.”
“Hmm.” Corso riffled through the final pages of the document, then pushed it aside. “Yet I don’t know
why
we are so surprised. After all, we’re here because we
believe
in the efficacy of our prison system—no? We’ve struggled to bring these services, these opportunities for rehabilitation, to our inmates. So why should we be so shocked when we come face to face with an instance where this rehabilitation
works
? With a success story?”
Oh, my God
, Piston thought. There was only one thing that could put Corso in a lenient mood. And that was the dangled carrot of advancement. Because Corso, the parole board head, was also Corso, would-be assemblyman. And transforming Edmund Wyre from sadistic murderer to reformed penitent would be a feather in his cap like no other . . .
But that couldn’t be, it simply wasn’t possible. Wyre was a puff adder, a malevolent nut case.
What was in that case summary? What had happened on the tests?
“Sir,” Wyre said, gazing meekly at Corso, “in light of all this, I would like to request the board now grant my application for parole, set a release date, and formulate a plan for parole supervision.”
Piston stared in growing disbelief as Wyre glanced down again at the sheet of paper in his hand.
He’s got this process nailed. Somebody’s coached him, shown him just what documents to read. But who?
Instinctively, he rose once again to his feet. “Mr. Corso!” he cried out.
The old man frowned at him. “What is it now?”
Piston’s mouth worked, but no words came. Wyre glanced casually over his shoulder. His eyes narrowed as he caught Piston’s gaze, and he licked his lips, slowly and deliberately: first the upper, then the lower.
Piston sat down abruptly. As the drone of conversation picked up again at the front of the room, he reached into his pocket, pulled out his cell phone, and dialed the office. It was, as he expected, answered by the service. He began to dial his boss’s private number, then stopped. The DA was out on the links right now, grabbing a quick eighteen, and he would have turned his phone off, as always.
He replaced the phone in his pocket and stared back at the parole board with slow, dreamlike movements. Because this felt like a dream: one of those nightmares where you witnessed something terrible unfolding—something you knew would lead to tragedy, disaster—yet you remained paralyzed somehow, powerless to change anything,
do
anything . . .
And that was where the similarity ended. Because, Piston knew, one always woke from nightmare. But from this there would be no awakening.
THIRTY-THREE
C
hange of plans,” Lash said, leaning forward to speak with the driver. “Just let me off here, please.”
He waited for the taxi to clear Columbus Circle and nose to the curb, then he paid the fare and got out. He watched the cab lose itself in a sea of identical yellow vehicles, then put his hands in his coat pockets and began walking slowly up Central Park West.
He wasn’t sure, exactly, why he’d decided to get out several blocks short of the restaurant. Something about not wanting to bump into her outside. And what exactly did that mean? It had to do with controlling the situation: he wanted to see her first, establish his own space before they met. It had to do with nervousness.
In a different mood, he might have smiled at this piece of self-analysis. But there was no mistaking his rapid breathing, his elevated heart rate. Here he was, Christopher Lash, eminent psychologist and veteran of a hundred crime scenes—nervous as a teenager on his first date.
It had begun slowly, that morning, when—instinctively—he’d picked up the phone to call Tavern on the Green. Eden had already made the reservation, but he wanted to choose the dining room personally. As quickly as he’d picked up the phone, he put it down again. What should it be: the Crystal Room, with its glittering array of chandeliers? Or the woodsy ambiance of the Rafters Room? It had taken him ten minutes to decide, then another fifteen on the phone, name-dropping and cajoling the best possible table out of the reservationist.
This wasn’t like him. He rarely ate out anymore, and when he did he was indifferent to seating. But it was equally unusual to pause beside a bus stop and scrutinize his image in the glass, as he was doing now. Or to worry that the tie he’d chosen was too passé, or too gauche, or maybe a little of both.
No doubt Eden had anticipated such reactions. No doubt, in the normal course of things, he’d have been briefed, given a reassuring pep talk. But this was not the normal course of things. Somehow, the company that never made a mistake had made one. And he was now walking up Central Park West, the time was 8 p.m. precisely, and for the first time in several days his thoughts were not preoccupied with the deaths of the Thorpes and the Wilners.
Ahead, where West Sixty-seventh Street emptied into Central Park, he could see countless white lights twinkling among the trees. He maneuvered his way past the clutter of limousines, then passed through the restaurant’s outer doors. He smoothed his jacket, making sure the small pin Eden had sent was still in place. Even that little detail had been fussed over for several minutes: adjusting its placement on his lapel, making sure it was clearly visible yet not too obvious. His mouth was dry, his palms sweaty. Annoyed, Lash wiped his hands against the back of his trousers and moved with determined strides toward the bar.
It all comes down to this
, he thought. Funny—all the time he’d spent undergoing his own evaluation, studying Eden and the two supercouples, he’d never stopped to think about what it must feel like: waiting, wondering how that perfect person would look. Until today. Today, he’d thought of little else. He’d learned, from painful experience, what his perfect woman
wasn’t
like. She wasn’t like Shirley, his ex-wife, with her inability to forgive human weakness, accept tragedy. Would his perfect woman be a blend of earlier girlfriends, some composite generated by his subconscious? Would she be an amalgam of the actresses he most admired: the poised limbs of Myrna Loy, the heart-shaped face of Claudette Colbert?
He stopped in the entrance of the bar, looking around. There were groups of twos and threes scattered around the tables, chatting boisterously. Other, single people were seated at the bar . . .
And there she was. At least, he thought it must be her. Because a small pin identical to his own was fixed to her dress; because she was looking directly at him; because she was rising from her seat and approaching with a smile.
And yet it could not be her. Because this woman looked nothing like what he expected. This was not willowy, slight, brunette Myrna Loy: this woman was tall and raven-haired. Mid-thirties, perhaps, with mischievous hazel eyes. Lash couldn’t remember ever going out with anybody almost a head taller than himself.
“Christopher, right?” she said, shaking his hand. She nodded toward his pin. “I recognize the fashion accessory.”
“Yes,” he replied. “And you’re Diana.”
“Diana Mirren.” Her accent was unexpected, too: a smooth contralto with a distinct Southern lilt.
Lash had always felt a completely unreasonable scorn for the intellect of Southern women; something about the accent set his teeth on edge. He began to wonder if, perhaps, the same mistake that had sent his avatar into the Tank had carried over to the matchmaking process itself.
“Shall we go in?” he said.
Diana slung her purse over her shoulder and together they approached the reservationist.
“Lash and Mirren, eight o’clock,” Lash said.
The woman behind the desk consulted an oversized book. “Ah, yes. In the Terrace Room. This way, please.”
Lash had chosen the Terrace Room because it seemed the most intimate setting, with its hand-carved ceiling and tall windows giving out onto a private garden. A waiter seated them, then filled their water glasses and slipped two menus onto the table before stepping back with a bow.
For a moment, there was silence. Lash glanced at the woman, noticed she was looking back at him. And then, Diana laughed.
“What?” he asked.
She shook her head, reached for her water glass. “I don’t know. You—you’re not what I expected.”
“I’m probably older, and thinner, and paler.”
She laughed again, and flushed slightly.
“Sorry about that,” he added.
“Well, they told us not to have preconceptions. Right?”
Lash, who hadn’t been told anything, simply nodded.
The sommelier approached, silver
tastevin
dangling around his neck. “Something from the wine list, sir?”
Lash glanced at Diana, who nodded enthusiastically. “Go on. I love French wine but know practically nothing about it.”
“Bordeaux okay?”
“Naturelement.”
Lash picked up the list, scanned it. “We’ll have the Pichon– Longueville, please.”
“Pichon-Longueville?” Diana asked as the sommelier walked away. “The Pauillac super-second? Should be fantastic.”
“Super-second?”
“You know. All the qualities of a
premier cru
without the price.”
Lash put the list to one side. “I thought you didn’t know anything about wine.”
Diana took another sip of water. “Well, I don’t know nearly as much as I should.”
“And how’s that?”
“Last year I went with a group on a six-week tour of France. Spent an entire week in the wine country.”
Lash whistled.
“But it’s embarrassing, what I retained and what I didn’t. For example, I remember that Château Beychevelle was the prettiest of the châteaux. But ask me for the best vintages and I’m hopeless.”
“Still, I think maybe you should be the official taster for this table.”
“No objections.” And Diana laughed again.
Normally, Lash disliked people who laughed out loud frequently. Too often it substituted for punctuation, or something that could be better expressed in words. But Diana’s laugh was infectious. Lash found himself smiling as he heard it.
When the sommelier returned with the bottle, Lash directed him to Diana. She peered at the label, swirled the wine, brought the glass to her mouth, all with a great show of mock gravity. Their waiter came by again and recited a long list of the evening’s special dishes. The sommelier filled the glasses and departed. Now Diana raised hers in Lash’s direction.
“What shall we drink to?” Lash asked.
She’ll say, “To us.” That’s the way these things always work
.
“How about transvestites?” Diana replied in a buttery drawl.
Lash almost dropped his glass. “Huh?”
“You mean, you didn’t look into it?”
“Into what?”
“Into that statue. You know, in the fountain, outside the Eden building. That ancient, ancient figure, surrounded by birds and angels? When I first saw it, it seemed the strangest thing in the world. Couldn’t tell if it was male or female.”
Lash shook his head.
“Well, it’s a good thing one of us did. It’s Tiresias.”
“Who?”
“From Greek mythology. See, Tiresias was this man who got turned into a woman. And then turned back into a man.”
“What?
Why?
”
“Why? You don’t ask why. This was Thebes. Stuff happens. Anyway, Zeus and Hera were having an argument about who enjoyed sex more: men or women. Since this Tiresias was the only person who’d tried it both ways, they called him in to settle the argument.”