818 lines
39 KiB
Plaintext
818 lines
39 KiB
Plaintext
COPYRIGHT 1987 by Bruce Drake
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CORCORAN
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Corcoran, indignant, waved a hand in the air as he spoke.
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"The kid was playing baseball, for Chrissakes," he said into the phone. He
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told this story: some kids had been playing baseball ("Nah, make that
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stickball") in a Bronx schoolyard when a gang of youths, drug-takers, drifted
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into the shadows of the building. They told the kids to get lost and chased
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the smaller ones off, but one stood his ground, got knifed for his trouble and
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died alone on the asphalt.
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Corcoran filled in the details with fervor ("The dead boy's little brother
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screamed and screamed but no one came") and commentary ("What's this city
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coming to, hah?") and more flourishes of the hand. But he failed to rouse a
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show of attention from the only other person in the room, a young reporter
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named Fischer who burrowed into his newspaper. Corcoran finished, hung up the
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phone (clack!) and fell silent.
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There was no sound: no rustle of cloth, no groan from Corcoran's old chair.
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The room was quite still. Fischer glanced up.
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Corcoran gave him a nod and a pleased wink. "Good little story," he said.
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Fischer quickly turned away. He ground his teeth and glared at the newsprint
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in his lap. The silence had been too long and unexpected and he had looked up
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to see what lurked in it. Set up and suckered, he found Corcoran waiting to
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take a bow.
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Corcoran pushed himself away from the desk and stood up. He nodded in no
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particular direction, then walked slowly through the door.
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Several minutes passed. Corcoran was gone. There was a brief commotion as
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reporters elsewhere on the floor, loud with quitting-time talk, rumbled down
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the one flight of steps to the street. Fischer relaxed. Towards evening, the
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small room in the reporter's shack near police headquarters was an almost
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restful place. The weak, late-day light threw a slipcover over the dirt and
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disarray of old papers on the metal desks and faded into shadow over a dull
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green row of lockers. Fischer could hear footsteps tap a rhythm somewhere
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outside, grow loud until they slapped pavement under the window, and then grow
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faint again.
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The phone rang. It was a reader on the copy desk, calling to ask about
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Corcoran's story. Fischer told him that Corcoran had gone for the day.
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"Well, listen: Corcoran says the cops reported that this kid got killed
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about ten at night."
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"What's the problem?"
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"Do they have lighted stickball courts up in the South Bronx these days?
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What was this kid doing there? What's the deal?"
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"Call Corcoran at home and ask him," Fischer said.
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"How would he know? Corcoran hasn't been out of the shack in 10 years,
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except to pick up his paycheck," the copy reader said.
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"That's not true," said Fischer. "I pick up his paycheck."
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The copy reader chuckled and said after a pause, "There's talk that they may
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bring Corcoran back uptown. Does he know that?" Fischer sat back and said
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nothing.
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"What should I do with this story?" asked the copy reader.
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"I don't know," Fischer said. "Why don't you just kill the line that has the
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time in it?"
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The copy reader sighed. He said "Good idea" and hung up.
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**********
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Patrick Corcoran's connection to the world was the thin line of a telephone.
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He was one of the old breed of police reporter who, except on the rarest of
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occasions, a plane crash or perhaps the brutal murder of a celebrity, never
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stirred from the little building behind headquarters. Gang wars, triple
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homicides, spectacular fires: Corcoran assessed these calamities by means of
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many whispered conversations into a black dial phone, after which he would make
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a final call to a rewriteman whom he had never seen and murmur vivid details of
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tragedy, gore and disaster.
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Corcoran had a lean face, the sandy look of an Irishman, and was in that
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limbo of middle age where he could claim any number between 40 and 55. He sat
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at his desk in jacket and tie. The paper, a tabloid, was always in front of
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him and, unless he felt like talking, he studied it with great concentration.
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It was hard to tell if he was actually reading. It was impossible to tell what
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Corcoran made of the events crowded into the pages, great debates in Congress,
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coups in foreign lands, medical discoveries, because he never commented on any
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of them.
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When Corcoran did talk, it was of the tales he had pursued by telephone or
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laments of daily life at the shack; stories of Corcoran overcoming great
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obstacles, stories of Corcoran wronged.
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"The kids they got on rewrite," he complained to three of his colleagues on
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the day Fischer first arrived at headquarters. "I had the cop on the phone.
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In his hospital bed. You think the kid would use a line from the cop. Look at
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this. Four graphs. Four graphs."
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They were standing on South Market Street under a huge model of a police
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revolver that hung above a gun shop. South Market was little more than an
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alley bypassed at both ends by the clamor of city life. The granite back of
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police headquarters loomed over one side of it and, the other side was lined by
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time-darkened two and three story tenements, most of which were now unoccupied.
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Hearing no sympathy, Corcoran thrust the newspaper forward, opened to the
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offending page.
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"For crying out loud," he said. "For crying out loud."
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One of them, a squat balding man with a sheaf of doubled-up papers bulging in
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his shirt pocket, leaned against the doorway and stared stonily at nothing
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across the street. Next to him, a much younger man looked down at his nails
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with a smirk. Only the third man, tall and almost dapper, a sort of worn and
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stretched Adolphe Menjou, appeared to pay attention.
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"Corcoran, that story was a piece of crap anyway," he said.
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Corcoran's jaw worked back and forth.
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"I dumped it on some kid at the office," the tall man said. "The kid said it
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was a piece of crap. So, how come you had to do it?" He glanced at his
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companions, then looked at Corcoran.
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Corcoran waved his hand in disgust and walked off toward the tenement where
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the police reporters had their offices. He stepped inside quickly without
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looking back.
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The three men laughed and fell into an easy chatter. They did not notice
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Fischer slowly pass by and follow Corcoran up the steps.
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The door to Corcoran's office on the second floor was closed when Fischer got
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there. He knocked and leaned toward the door but couldn't hear anything. He
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knocked again. Then one of Corcoran's phones rang. The ringing stopped and
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there was the barely perceptible murmur of Corcoran's voice and the sound of a
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receiver being cradled. Finally, Corcoran called out, "Who is it?"
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"Corcoran, it's Fischer. I've talked to you on the phone. They sent me down
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from the office."
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"Hold on a minute."
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The door opened a crack.
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"Let me see your card."
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Fischer passed his press card through the crack in the door. The door
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closed, then opened again and Corcoran waved him inside. He sank into a swivel
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chair by the window and sat, shaking his head.
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"Did you see those guys downstairs?" he asked, looking down at his hand on
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the desk. "Bums. Bums. I'm sitting here on the phone. Working. These guys
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are standing by the door, listening, protecting themselves." He paused and
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added with vehemence, "These guys are ignorant. They don't know anything about
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this job."
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Corcoran spun the chair toward the window and waved a hand at the the gray
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stone of police headquarters.
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"Yesterday, I was talking to a D.I., that's a deputy inspector, and he was
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saying, 'Corcoran,' well, actually he said, `Pat,' he was saying, `Pat, you're
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the only guy left in this business who knows how to treat cops.' It's a shame,
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it's a shame."
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Fischer saw that the role of ally was open and considered it. It was a way
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of passing a term with Corcoran. Fischer said that a lot of new reporters
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tried to get out of doing police work; that most readers bought the paper for
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it; that perhaps all new reporters should have to put in time at headquarters.
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The lines rattled out tinny and false and, shivering with the shame of it,
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Fischer looked at Corcoran to see if he had noticed. But Corcoran had only
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glanced at him, barely more than a reaction to the simple sound of a voice. He
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looked down pensively at the desk.
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"Yeah, it's a goddam shame," said Corcoran.
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**********
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Corcoran did not claim Fischer as ally or colleague in the weeks that
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followed. Fischer was not surprised at being adrift in Corcorian no-man's
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land. He was an interloper, one in a succession of time-servers presumably on
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the way to better things. Corcoran's inner feelings about this, if he had any,
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were damped down beyond detection. It was clear only that he regarded himself
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as master of what he surveyed and allowed no one to think he was not content
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with it.
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Done with reading the paper, Fischer watched Corcoran work his phones.
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Corcoran peered over his finger at a number in the telephone book, dialed and
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waited for the connection. "This is Corcoran down at headquarters," he said
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sharply. There was no mention of the newspaper. His voice fell to a
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confidential whisper and, at intervals, he glanced suspiciously at the door.
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Corcoran dialed numbers and murmured short, clipped sentences into the phone,
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his lips brushing the mouthpiece as he talked. Occasionally, he picked up a
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pencil and made a note, usually of another phone number. Finally, without
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looking up, he announced, "Nothing doing" and turned his attention to the
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newspaper.
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The phone rang. Corcoran snatched the receiver from the cradle. "Corcoran,"
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he barked. "Yeah," he said, scribbling on a piece of scrap paper. "Yeah.
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Yeah. Yeah." He hung up the phone and went back to his paper. After several
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minutes, Corcoran pushed the note across his desk with a show of distaste.
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"Check this water main break, OK?" said Corcoran.
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Fischer grimaced and put the note aside. He considered the calls he would
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have to make to police, firemen, the Water Department. Then, more calls to the
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sodden victims whose numbers he would get from the special directory that
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listed phone customers by address. The prospect oppressed him. Fischer looked
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up at Corcoran.
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"Hey, Corcoran," he said. "What do you do outside of work?"
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Corcoran knit his brows and flared his nostrils as if he had sniffed
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something gone foul.
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"What're you talking about?"
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"What do you do when you get out of this place?"
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"Eat and sleep for one," Corcoran said. He set his elbow on its spot on the
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desk and stared at the newspaper from under the visor of his hand.
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"That's two."
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"Hah?"
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"Eating and sleeping. That's two."
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"Big joke," said Corcoran, getting up, walking to the door and walking back
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to look out the window. Then he sat down again. "What is this, a talk show?"
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Fischer searched for a sentence to keep Corcoran going but could not find it.
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"Hey, I got calls to make," said Corcoran.
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He settled down to another phone sweep of the city, eyes riveted to a point
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on the desk.
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Fischer tried to conjure a vision of Corcoran at home but, while the
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furnishings changed, Corcoran remained the same. (In the home is a wife;
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Fischer knew this from one of the older shack reporters who did not remember
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how he knew it). Corcoran sits in the living room, in a stuffed chair, hat on,
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reading the paper. He wants to know what's for dinner. Corcoran wages an
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almost physical struggle, trying to summon the will and energy not only to ask
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the question but to deal with the uncharted chatter that will follow. He lays
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the paper on the armrest and goes into the bedroom. Sitting on the bed, he
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dials the telephone and hears the extension ring in the kitchen. "This is
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Corcoran from the other room," he says, "What can you tell me about dinner?"
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**********
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"My guest tonight is Patrick Corcoran, who has covered crime in this city for
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more than 30 years."
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Fischer, sitting on his bed, froze in the act of getting undressed and stared
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at the television set. There in fact was Corcoran in the guest's chair, hat in
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his lap, looking stiff and wary. The host sat behind a desk to Corcoran's
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left, in front of a big black-and-white photo of Broadway at night.
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It was a midnight talk show on one of the smaller stations. From the joyless
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and pale peripheries of Hollywood and Broadway came gossip columnists, agents,
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bartenders and hangers-on bathed in the time-warped glow of evenings spent at
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Sardis' or Toots Shor's or Jack Dempsey's. Occasionally there were characters
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in their own right, home-grown, a category into which Corcoran fell.
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Corcoran relaxed as he was led through tales of great crimes in the city.
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Then the host, a smiling little man with slick black hair parted almost in the
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middle, leaned towards Corcoran, rubbing his hands. Corcoran tilted back
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slightly and eyed him with suspicion.
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"Now Pat, I've got to ask you a tough one, one that gets a lot of people in
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this city riled up on both sides. Now you've watched criminals in this
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city..."
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"I've observed criminals in this city for more than 30 years."
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"Right, for more than 30 years, Pat, and I want to know what you think of the
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death penalty. What if we brought back the death penalty?"
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Corcoran nodded gravely and said, "This is a very controversial subject." He
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paused and seemed pleased with that statement. Then he went on: "I'm a
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newspaperman, Frank, so I won't express a personal opinion on this show whether
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capital punishment is right or wrong.
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"But you know, 20 years ago in this state, when you had the death penalty,
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they would have the condemned man up at Sing Sing and they would have all the
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press there at the execution chamber.
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"There would be a great silence," Corcoran said, almost in a whisper. "The
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man would walk the last mile, as they liked to call it, and all you heard was
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the footsteps."
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The camera closed in on Corcoran. His face filled the screen and brought
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Fischer to the edge of the bed.
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"They would strap the condemned man into the chair," Corcoran said, his voice
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quickening and growing louder. "They would put the electrodes on him, and all
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the reporters could see the sweat dripping off his face, they could see the
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fear in his eyes.
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"And then, Frank," said Corcoran, half-rising from his chair, "THEY SHOT THE
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VOLTS THROUGH HIM." His hands, thrust out in front of him, quaked rigidly as if
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electricity had surged through his own body.
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There were several long seconds of silence. "The condemned man would lose
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control of his bowels, Frank. His eyeballs bulged. His face was a death mask.
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The press was right there and everybody would read all about it the next day."
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Corcoran leaned back comfortably in the chair and turned to the host who was
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watching him without expression.
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"So, Frank," he said. "if you don't think that would deter crime in this
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state. Then. Well." He held out his hands in a gesture of reasonableness.
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"Yes," said the host, rubbing his chin. "Yes. Pat Corcoran. Patrick
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Corcoran. When we come back, we'll be talking to a man who I can only describe
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as chauffeur to the stars. He has driven for everyone from Sugar Ray Robinson
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to Frank Sinatra. When we come back."
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Fischer turned off the set.
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**********
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Fischer had gone uptown to get the paychecks at the main office and, when he
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returned, found Corcoran hunched over his phone. Corcoran looked up with an
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exaggerated show of annoyance. "Hell's breaking loose," he said.
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During the lunch hour, on a crowded street in a poor neighborhood, a car had
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swerved to the curb near a bookie parlor, there had been gunshots, and a man
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named Ramirez fell to the sidewalk, blood pouring from a wound in his head.
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Corcoran had learned these things from a cop who liked seeing his name in the
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paper. The cop called Corcoran from a street phone and told him of the
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shooting, out in the open, in front of shocked pedestrians, and he described
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Ramirez motionless on the sidewalk as an ambulance and a wailing pack of squad
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cars arrived.
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"We've got a mob-style shooting here, lieutenant," Corcoran said into the
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phone. He listened to the lieutenant for a while, an absent look on his face.
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Then he said again, "Sounds to me like a mob-style shooting." Corcoran looked
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impatient. "Thanks, thanks," he said. He replaced the receiver momentarily,
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then picked it up again and dialed another number. He coaxed Ramirez's address
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from a sergeant and thumbed through the phone book for a telephone number. He
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turned to his black phone and dialed.
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Fischer found it difficult to describe the expression on Corcoran's face
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during this kind of call. He wanted to say "impassive" because the face
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betrayed no obvious emotion. But Corcoran's eyes roamed the desk with wide and
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rapid sweeps and Fischer could almost feel in his own spine the arched and
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rigid posture in which Corcoran was sitting. The room was still and the soft
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burr from the phone was faintly audible.
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"Mrs. Ramirez? This is Corcoran down at Manhattan Headquarters," Corcoran
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said, his writing hand pushing about scraps of paper and then resting on them.
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"I have to tell you that your husband has been shot." He paused. "This is
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Corcoran at Manhattan Headquarters," he repeated. "I'm afraid it looked pretty
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bad." He said again, slowly and with irritation, "It looked bad."
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His voice fell as he began to ask questions. Every few moments his jaw
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tightened and the muscles on the sides of the face bunched into a knot.
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Fischer felt sorry for the woman on the other end. All she had to do was moan,
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"What is this city coming to?" or some satisfactory detail about her husband
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and Corcoran would be satisfied. Abruptly, there was a menacing edge in
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Corcoran's voice. "Listen, miss, I'm trying to spare you a trip down here," he
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said.
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There was no telling from Corcoran's face the effect of this veiled threat.
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But after a few moments it was clear that the gambit had not produced what he
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wanted and Corcoran said harshly, "I'll tell you the hospital when you tell me
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what I want to know." Fischer thought he could hear a cry of grief come from
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the phone. Corcoran's jaw tightened and, without another word, he hung up.
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"Puerto Ricans," he said.
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Fischer saw an unpleasant afternoon open before him. He suspected Corcoran
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had sold the story hard as his best prospect of the day and it was not
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measuring up. Corcoran would be worried, and worried, he would rail against
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the expectations of the people for whom he worked, complain about the low state
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of crime, curse the undistinguished victims, and then lapse into a tense
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silence.
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Corcoran scowled and said, "Keep an eye on this thing, huh?"
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Fischer made many more calls than necessary, trying to beat back the moment
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when the thrum of Corcoran's nerves would fill the room, making it impossible
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to sit easy. He found that Ramirez had arrived at the hospital alive, if
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barely so, his head wound severe but not fatal. The police were considering
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the possibility that the gunmen had mistaken Ramirez for someone else.
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Fischer looked at the clock. Less than an hour had gone by. He told
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Corcoran what he had found out and Corcoran, after thinking about it, exercised
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his prerogative of calling the piece into the office.
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"This woman probably thought her husband was as good as dead after talking to
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you," Fischer said when Corcoran finished with the rewriteman.
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Corcoran stared at him as if there had been an breach of decorum that defied
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human understanding. Then he picked up a newspaper and swivelled with it to
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his left, so that Fischer was out of his view.
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"Maybe we should call, or something."
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"The cops'll be there soon enough to tell her what's what, if they haven't
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been already," Corcoran said.
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"I think we should make sure," Fischer said.
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Corcoran did not turn from his paper.
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"I think we should make sure," Fischer said again.
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Corcoran's eyes moved to a different part of the page.
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"I don't care what you think," he said, almost casually.
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Fischer sat back, speechless. Only a few seconds had gone by, but it seemed
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too late to say anything more. It was too late. A shake went through his
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body. He raised his paper to crop out Corcoran. The type on the page told him
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nothing. Fischer's back sweated and he leaned forward to let it dry. But that
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made him stiff and uncomfortable and he eased back in the chair so that
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Corcoran would not notice.
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He tried to think of Ramirez, Ramirez stepping out into the sunshine from the
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gloom of some Second Ave. tenement thinking over his bet and his hopes for it.
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But Ramirez refused to assume any shape: young, old; in work clothes,
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duded-up; smiling, worried. Mrs. Ramirez was also elusive, even more so. He
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tried to imagine what shape these two had taken in Corcoran's mind, and
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couldn't do that either.
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The sun had hours ago put in its brief appearance at the foot of South Market
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Street and now moved behind the massive block of police headquarters. The
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office darkened and, for a moment, almost fell into one of its restful lulls.
|
||
Corcoran tilted forward in his chair and snapped on the overhead fluorescent
|
||
light. The room fluttered into sharp relief. The lockers against the wall,
|
||
the ridges of dust and the old papers looked as they must have looked to 30
|
||
years of police shack detailees. Corcoran went back to his newspaper, not
|
||
looking up until it was quitting time.
|
||
|
||
**********
|
||
|
||
Soon after, as if it were Fischer's revenge, the phone began to turn on
|
||
Corcoran. Several times, Fischer heard Corcoran answer in his usual way
|
||
("Headquarters! Corcoran!"), only to slam down the receiver. But he did not
|
||
watch closely until one of the calls jangled through the calm of a Friday
|
||
afternoon.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran picked it up and barked his name. Then his eyes widened. He looked
|
||
at Fischer as though both of them could hear what was being said. Corcoran
|
||
swayed slightly in his seat. Then anger pushed through his surprise and he
|
||
shouted, "Just get off my back. Get off my back!" He hung up.
|
||
|
||
Fischer almost laughed at the spectacle of Corcoran's discomfort. He
|
||
squelched the urge to ask Corcoran about the call. A truce had been
|
||
painstakingly reached, nurtured by long silences and broken only by the most
|
||
functional of sentences. Fischer did not want it disturbed, so he turned his
|
||
attention to other things.
|
||
|
||
"Hey," Corcoran said, his voice dense with irritation, "do you ever answer
|
||
the phone around here?"
|
||
|
||
**********
|
||
|
||
It was obvious Corcoran planned to eat in. Sitting in his chair, he leaned
|
||
over to turn on the hot plate on the window sill. Then he took a brown paper
|
||
bag from the bottom drawer of his desk and pulled from it a take-out a carton
|
||
of fried dumplings from a Chinese restaurant. He laid the dumplings carefully
|
||
into a pan on the warming hot plate and prodded each with a fork to make sure
|
||
they would not stick and tear. Corcoran conducted these preparations as if
|
||
they were an intensely private affair and Fischer got ready to leave as soon as
|
||
he heard the first sounds of frying.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran and Fischer had struck a delicate balance that required few words.
|
||
In the morning, they nodded their greetings before disappearing into the
|
||
newspapers. When the desk called for one, the other silently passed the phone.
|
||
Few stories required consultation since Corcoran had undisputed claim on any
|
||
important ones. At the end of the day, they nodded good-night, and on rare
|
||
occasions, the first to leave actually said "Good night" if the other didn't
|
||
happen to be looking.
|
||
|
||
"I'm going to Gilchrist's," Fischer said. There was a surprise party at the
|
||
main office for Gilchrist the city editor, who was about Corcoran's age.
|
||
Fischer announced his departure as a formality, like punching the clock for the
|
||
day. He hooked his jacket from the back of a chair and started out the door.
|
||
|
||
"We started as copy boys together," Corcoran said.
|
||
|
||
Fischer stopped, waiting to hear what followed. There had been something
|
||
off-key about Corcoran lately. He viewed with great amusement Corcoran's
|
||
growing estrangement from the telephone. He guessed there was some scene
|
||
Corcoran wanted to play. He knew most of the scenes by their openings but did
|
||
not recognize this one.
|
||
|
||
"You want to go, let's go," Fischer said.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran grimaced. "Aaaaaah, I tell you, going into that office makes me
|
||
sick."
|
||
|
||
"Fine, I'll see you tomorrow."
|
||
|
||
Corcoran shifted in his chair. He hunched his shoulders, then relaxed them
|
||
and pursed his lips.
|
||
|
||
"I haven't seen these people so long, I don't know what to say to them,"
|
||
Corcoran said.
|
||
|
||
He gazed out the window then swivelled toward his desk and drummed his
|
||
fingers on it. "Do you think I should go?" he asked.
|
||
|
||
Fischer leaned against the doorway and studied Corcoran. He had been
|
||
impatient to leave, but for a moment he saw a different Corcoran, a young and
|
||
eager Corcoran in a busy, roomful of people. There was also a young Gilchrist,
|
||
his eyebrows black and gray and heavy even then, seated next to Corcoran on the
|
||
copy boys' bench, crowding him, shaking his shoulder to make a point, jamming
|
||
an elbow into Corcoran's side and nodding at some old codger ripe for the
|
||
ridicule of young men.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran saw him staring and stiffened. "What's wrong with you, hah?" he
|
||
asked.
|
||
|
||
"When was the last time you saw Gilchrist?" Fischer asked.
|
||
|
||
"I don't keep a calendar," Corcoran snapped.
|
||
|
||
He snatched the newspaper off his desk and swung around to the window, his
|
||
back was to Fischer. Propping his feet on the sill, Corcoran spread the paper
|
||
open in his lap and said nothing more.
|
||
|
||
Fischer flushed with anger at the curt dismissal but after weeks at the shack
|
||
he still did not know the words he could use to get to Corcoran. He thought of
|
||
stepping forward, bending down, taking hold of Corcoran's desk and, with a
|
||
great bellow, heaving it over on him. He shuddered with satisfaction at the
|
||
imaginary crash.
|
||
|
||
The satisfaction, illusory, lasted only the length of the stairway. Walking
|
||
down South Market Street to the subway, he felt his face redden when he
|
||
remembered how he had given himself to the gentle thought of Corcoran's youth.
|
||
|
||
**********
|
||
|
||
Fischer began answering Corcoran's phone. Corcoran had not actually asked
|
||
Fischer to do it, but there was no question what he wanted. When the phone
|
||
rang, Corcoran would fidget in his seat, study his notes and try to look busy.
|
||
Around the fifth ring, Fischer felt the tension and irritation boiling off
|
||
Corcoran, saw his glare, and took these as the equivalent of a request to pick
|
||
up the phone. After a day, Fischer answered sooner but not too soon: he
|
||
passed on the first ring, allowed the second to send a small rattle of warning
|
||
through Corcoran's nervous system, and picked up on the third with a deliberate
|
||
air that drew a palpable rumble of aggravation from across the desk.
|
||
|
||
The calls he took provided no clue to what was going on with Corcoran. Once,
|
||
when Corcoran was out, a woman called and asked for Mr. Corcoran, but hung up
|
||
when Fischer said he was not in.
|
||
|
||
When Corcoran was not in the office, Fischer picked up the phone right away.
|
||
|
||
"Who's this? Did Corcoran die?"
|
||
|
||
It was Gilchrist. Gilchrist rarely made his own calls, but sometimes did so
|
||
when his assistant had gone for lunch.
|
||
|
||
"He stepped out for a minute," Fischer said.
|
||
|
||
"Listen," said Gilchrist, "this may be garbage, but we had a tip that some
|
||
guy who the police want for two murders is going to give himself up at the
|
||
precinct out in Coney Island. Maybe Corcoran could make some calls on it.
|
||
It's a long way out."
|
||
|
||
"I'll tell him when he gets back."
|
||
|
||
"What the hell. Why don't you head out there? It can't hurt."
|
||
|
||
"Sure," Fischer said, masking his lack of enthusiasm. This was what he hated
|
||
most. There would be a long ride on the subway in chase of slim possibilities,
|
||
and worse, the prospect of a longer stake-out in the drab-green of the
|
||
precinct. He checked a subway map, considered taking a cab, then decided not
|
||
to risk the cost since there had been no urgency in Gilchrist's voice. He
|
||
wrote a note for Corcoran and left.
|
||
|
||
The subway cars on the line to Coney Island were old and dimly lit by weak
|
||
yellow fixtures. They banged back and forth on the ancient track. Fischer
|
||
bitterly blamed Corcoran for not saving him from this trip by being in the
|
||
office when Gilchrist called. He kicked himself for not taking along a
|
||
newspaper to read. He surveyed the car in the unlikely hope that a woman,
|
||
young or attractive, might be riding the line at this hour. There was not. An
|
||
old couple, both in cocoons of heavy clothes, bunched together on a seat and
|
||
stared rigidly ahead without speaking. Several seats down the car, a fat black
|
||
lady was asleep with three shopping bags on the floor in front of her. At the
|
||
far end, he could see a man's legs splayed out into the aisle.
|
||
|
||
The train finally broke above ground on its final leg and a cold, dank sea
|
||
wind blew in through the open windows. Fischer shivered and, with distaste,
|
||
rubbed his hands to rid them of a sudden clamminess.
|
||
|
||
The precinct sank to his expectations. The main room, just big and bare
|
||
enough to feel desolate, had pale green walls. Although the sun was shining
|
||
outside, the day looked gray through the grimed windows. Inside, the light was
|
||
the same bleak yellow of the subway car. There were a few wooden benches
|
||
against two of the walls and near each was a big metal ashtray topped by heaps
|
||
of butts and crumpled paper cups. Across the room, the sergeant on duty
|
||
presided over a raised solid counter.
|
||
|
||
Fischer had a dread of such rooms and, because he knew there were so many of
|
||
them in a reporter's life, wondered again whether he was in the right business.
|
||
These were rooms where minutes refused to die and where the bleak furniture of
|
||
daily life provided nothing to leapfrog them. Fischer's brief exchange with
|
||
the desk sergeant offered little hope for quick escape.
|
||
|
||
"I don't know anything," he said. "Ask the detectives."
|
||
|
||
"Where are they?"
|
||
|
||
"Out."
|
||
|
||
Fischer sat down to wait. He was rereading a yellowed postal crimes notice
|
||
on the wall when he felt a stir in the precinct, which had been quiet all day.
|
||
The entrance door swung open and a pale and thin young man was rushed through
|
||
in a cordon of plainclothesmen followed by two uniformed officers. By the time
|
||
Fischer was on his feet, they were through another door to the inner rooms of
|
||
the stationhouse.
|
||
|
||
Fischer walked to the desk to speak to the sergeant. But the phone started
|
||
to ring and the sergeant reached for it with one hand and held up the other
|
||
like a stop sign. Fischer waited while the sergeant took several more calls.
|
||
He was still talking when the relief man showed up at the desk. Finally, the
|
||
day sergeant finished with the call in which he appeared to be answering the
|
||
questions of a superior.
|
||
|
||
"What are they going to do with the guy they brought in?" the relief sergeant
|
||
asked.
|
||
|
||
"They're going to book him here and then take him out."
|
||
|
||
The day man gathered some papers and turned to the other sergeant.
|
||
|
||
"That was Corcoran from downtown," he said, nodding curtly at the phone. "I
|
||
told him what I knew." Almost as an afterthought, he gestured at Fischer.
|
||
|
||
"He said not to talk to any press."
|
||
|
||
Fischer's stomach churned. He waited until the day man left and said to the
|
||
new sergeant, "Listen, I've been here nearly all afternoon."
|
||
|
||
"Tough," the relief man said.
|
||
|
||
**********
|
||
|
||
Corcoran walked into the room in the morning and, without looking at Fischer,
|
||
slipped his hat into the space above the lockers and started for his chair.
|
||
|
||
"Why did you do that yesterday?" Fischer said evenly. He had rushed back to
|
||
the shack the day before, when he was at the high pitch of his anger, but got
|
||
there too late to catch Corcoran.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran looked at him with raised eyebrows but didn't answer. He sat down
|
||
and unrolled the newspaper which had been tucked under his arm.
|
||
|
||
"What's wrong with you, Corcoran?" Fischer asked.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran shrugged. He looked up briefly, with a pained show of patience, and
|
||
said, "Listen, just do your work, will you?"
|
||
|
||
"What was on your mind, Corcoran?" Fischer asked. "I want to know this one
|
||
time what the hell you were thinking."
|
||
|
||
Corcoran read the newspaper.
|
||
|
||
Fischer sat for a moment in disbelief. Then he whacked the desk hard with
|
||
his open palm, his body rising with the forward motion across the inviolate
|
||
boundary of Corcoran's desk.
|
||
|
||
"Answer me!," Fischer hollered.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran seemed to shrink back for a moment. But he said nothing and, after
|
||
eyeing Fischer with distaste and shaking his head, he took up the newspaper
|
||
again.
|
||
|
||
Fischer pressed forward again, saying with venom, "This is the only room in
|
||
the world where anyone has to put up with you, Corcoran, and when the day comes
|
||
that they yank you out of here, and they're going to, no one will have to put
|
||
up with you."
|
||
|
||
He took a sharp breath and suddenly his anger ran out on him. A truck
|
||
rumbled past under the window. Fischer felt the vibration from it in his feet.
|
||
There were no sounds from the other rooms on the floor. The clock showed that
|
||
the workday was not yet an hour old. The police wire clicked slowly out in the
|
||
hallway. Fischer closed his eyes and listened for a rhythm in it.
|
||
|
||
When he opened them again, something in the room seemed different, as if
|
||
hidden lights had shaded its mood. Fischer felt like he was looking into the
|
||
room, rather than sitting in it. For him, room was another gray outpost on the
|
||
way to somewhere else. But Corcoran had put himself here by choice, if not by
|
||
fate, and this was his place. Fischer, like an explorer who has been bitten by
|
||
a hideous aborigine he discovered in some remote jungle, found himself wavering
|
||
once more between the satisfaction of inflicting hurt and the insane feeling
|
||
that the man deserved his compassion.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran sat up straight behind the desk, one hand on the phone, ready to
|
||
lift the receiver. He looked at Fischer and Fischer said nothing, offering his
|
||
silence as a truce and an assurance to himself that no damage had been done to
|
||
the occupant of this place. Corcoran also said nothing and began to dial.
|
||
|
||
**********
|
||
|
||
It was Corcoran's last day. When they had asked him to come and work in the
|
||
main office, he said he would take his pension and leave. The day went on like
|
||
most days, with the time passed in silence except for short conversations to
|
||
conduct business. Fischer was waiting for the end of the day; he did not know
|
||
what he would say to Corcoran when the time arrived but knew he would grope for
|
||
something. He had no idea what Corcoran might say to him.
|
||
|
||
Near evening, Fischer walked down the hall to wash his hands. When he came
|
||
back, Corcoran had gone. It was difficult to tell at first, because Corcoran's
|
||
desk looked exactly as it always had. Corcoran had added no personal effects.
|
||
But Fischer knew he had left.
|
||
|
||
Fischer stepped out on South Market Street just in time to see Corcoran do a
|
||
curious dance. He had taken a step toward the corner, froze with his knee
|
||
flexed, taken a step back again and then squared his shoulders and moved slowly
|
||
down the sidewalk, close in to the buildings. Something down the street had
|
||
caught Corcoran's eye. A small, Hispanic woman, dressed in Sunday clothes, her
|
||
hair neatly up in a bun, was talking to an officer who stooped down and pointed
|
||
in Corcoran's general direction. She craned upwards, almost on her toes and
|
||
looked down the trajectory of the officer's finger.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran gave no sign that he had noticed her. When she was within hailing
|
||
distance, she called out, "Mr. Corcoran? Do you know where I can find Mr.
|
||
Corcoran?"
|
||
|
||
Someone sitting close to the open window on the second floor of the shack
|
||
shouted, "Corcoran, this one of your babes?"
|
||
|
||
There was a chorus of guffaws.
|
||
|
||
Corcoran acknowledged none of this. He shuffled forward uncomfortably as if
|
||
heading down the street, then stopped.
|
||
|
||
"Mr. Corcoran? You're Corcoran?" she demanded. Her voice was sharp and the
|
||
trembling of anger added to its timbre.
|
||
|
||
He looked at her but said nothing.
|
||
|
||
"You know who I am?" she asked, satisfied she had found the man she wanted.
|
||
"My name is Ramirez. You know my voice from the phone?"
|
||
|
||
Caught, Corcoran stood frozen.
|
||
|
||
"You call me up the day my husband is shot and you talk to me like an
|
||
animal," she said, closing the distance between them with each word. "My
|
||
husband is shot and you make threats to me."
|
||
|
||
Corcoran said nothing. He faced her, but Fischer couldn't tell if he was
|
||
looking at her.
|
||
|
||
"And you, (ital) not even a cop! (end ital)," she shouted. "I see the story
|
||
in the paper the next day and I see your name! You son of a bitch!"
|
||
|
||
Faces appeared at the window on the second floor. Fischer started to edge
|
||
over so he could see Corcoran's face.
|
||
|
||
"When I find out and call you on the phone, you hang up on me. It's all
|
||
over, huh? You don't want to talk no more."
|
||
|
||
She began to shriek, "Son of a bitch! Son of a bitch!" and suddenly lunged
|
||
at Corcoran. He moved for the first time, stepping back and putting his hands
|
||
up defensively in front of him. She grappled with him, screaming more epithets
|
||
when he wouldn't answer and then catching her breath with great sobs.
|
||
Reporters from the shack hurried out to the street and two patrolmen, who had
|
||
been walking down the block, strode over quickly. One knew Corcoran and nodded
|
||
at him as he and his partner took the woman by her shoulders and pulled her
|
||
away.
|
||
|
||
"What's the problem, Mr. Corcoran?" one of the patrolmen asked. "She put
|
||
her hands on me," he muttered.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Ramirez shook with sobs and had no more to say. The cops gently walked
|
||
her down the street and she let herself be led away with no further notice of
|
||
Corcoran.
|
||
|
||
"What the hell was that about?" someone asked.
|
||
|
||
"How the hell should I know?" Corcoran said.
|
||
|
||
The other reporters returned to the shack. After they left, it was quiet for
|
||
a street, even a small street, in the city. There was no one else on South
|
||
Market, although pedestrians bustled back and forth at the corner.
|
||
|
||
The street darkened as Fischer and Corcoran stood under the hanging gun.
|
||
Fischer felt like it had been quiet for a very long time. Corcoran said
|
||
matter-of-factly:
|
||
|
||
"City's fulla lunatics."
|
||
|
||
Fischer knew he was looking at one of them. Corcoran was like a crazed
|
||
Shakespearean actor, beyond human dialogue and declaiming out of control on a
|
||
stage where the only characters he recognized were himself and the stock
|
||
figures of his stories. When Mrs. Ramirez made her energetic entrance,
|
||
Fischer had believed once again he would see a revealing scene; that, at the
|
||
least, a true Corcoran improvisation was at hand. But Corcoran revealed
|
||
nothing.
|
||
|
||
"I haven't been right about you yet, Corcoran," said Fischer, wondering
|
||
almost immediately if he meant to say that aloud.
|
||
|
||
"Yeah. I'm not such a bad guy after all, am I?" said Corcoran.
|
||
|
||
Before Fischer could say he was, (ital) that he was a bad guy (end ital),
|
||
Corcoran had turned and was walking down the narrow street. At the corner, he
|
||
was visible for one more moment as he emerged from the shadows of South Market
|
||
Street before disappearing for good into the busy traffic of people on their
|
||
way home.
|
||
|
||
[THE END]
|
||
|
||
|