Lieberman's Law (41 page)

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Authors: Stuart M. Kaminsky

BOOK: Lieberman's Law
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“Baseball's not about important things,” Barry said. “You learn that when you prepare for your Bar Mitzvah.”

“To me the Cubs are important. Not as important as you and your sister and your grandmother and your Bar Mitzvah, but important. I've spent half a century waiting for the Cubs to get to the World Series. I'm not even asking for that, just the division title. Good night.”

“They're losing twelve to one,” Melisa said with a yawn.

“It's just an experimental game,” Lieberman said. “Playing some new kids, resting the veterans.”

“Aren't the Braves doing the same thing?” Barry asked.

“We're better at losing than they are,” Lieberman said. “Enough philosophy. Go to bed.”

They went. Lieberman heard Bess putting them to bed. Abe considered changing the station, watching an old movie if he could find one. Maybe Bess would join him. They'd eat popcorn and she would observe inaccuracies of human nature from time to time. Bess was a realist. Like it or not, in spite of the horrors he had seen, Abe had remained a romantic. If his unshaken love of the Cubs was not evidence of this, what was?

And then the knock at the door came.

Lieberman checked his watch. It was nine, still reasonably early. He hit the mute button, got up slowly, pausing to scratch the bottom of his right foot through his wool sock, and headed across the living room to the door, wondering why the visitor hadn't rung the bell.

He opened the door and stood facing his daughter.

“You look very much like my daughter,” he said. “But you can't be. She's in California.”

“Abe,” she said. “I'm standing in the cold.”

“It's not cold. It's fall. The night is clear and cool. I'm watching the Cubs. I don't want to fight with my daughter who's not supposed to be here.”

“We won't fight,” said Lisa.

“A new world arrives,” Abe said, standing back to let Lisa in, knowing as she did that this was the beginning of the first round, the first gambit, and that he would never keep her out of the house, that a bed waited always for her upstairs.

Lisa came in and closed the door while Abe turned on more lights and considered turning off the game. He couldn't bring himself to do it. It would concede the loss of the evening to chaos.

“You look good,” he said, turning to face her.

“You always say that, Abe,” she said.

“You always look good,” he said. “You almost never look happy, but you always look good. From the second you were born you looked good.”

“You've told me that,” she said.

“I suffer from an as-yet-undetected variation on Alzheimer's,” he said. “I repeat myself endlessly and count on the kindness of my friends and family to hide my terrible secret.”

“It's not funny, Abe,” she said.

“Which is why I am a policeman and Don Rickles is a comedian.”

“The kids are in bed?” she asked, walking into the dining room and looking up the stairway.

“Which is why you knocked instead of ringing the bell,” Abe said. “Coffee?”

She sat at the dining room table and brushed her hair back with her hand. Lisa looked like Bess only darker. She was a pretty woman, still young at thirty-five. A bit on the thin side, but good features. Thank God none of the Lieberman looks had been passed down to her and she, in turn, had passed none of them to her two children.

Lieberman went into the kitchen and poured two cups of coffee from the pot that was on hot. Coffee, no coffee. It didn't matter. Abe was an insomniac. He had ceased fighting the situation decades earlier. He had learned to live with it, spending thousands of hours in hot tubs reading magazines and books, thousands more hours watching television till dawn with a sleepy-eyed Robert Mitchum or a wide-eyed Joan Crawford for company.

When Lieberman made his way through the kitchen door, careful not to spill, Bess was back downstairs and sitting across from Lisa.

“You want tea?” Abe asked his wife, placing one cup of coffee in front of his daughter and the other at his place at the head of the table.

Bess shook her head and looked at her daughter.

Abe decided to say nothing. It was the safest thing to do. He sipped and tried not to glance back into the living room at the television screen in the hope that the Cubs had miraculously overcome the Braves' overwhelming lead.

“Marvin wants a divorce,” Lisa said, hands folded in front of her on the table, voice striving to remain calm and even, to remain the Lisa her parents had always known.

“Why?” asked Bess, looking at Abe who sipped more coffee and knew that all chances of a movie were gone.

“I cheated on him,” Lisa replied.

Abe put down his cup and stared at his daughter, who met his eyes for an instant and then looked down into the dark liquid she hadn't tasted.

It was Lisa's second marriage. Her first husband, Todd, the father of Melisa and Barry, had remarried an older colleague at Northwestern University, where Todd Creswell taught classics and had the annoying habit of quoting morbid passages from Greek tragedies.

Now Marvin Alexander. The man was nearly perfect. An M.D., internationally respected pathologist, forty-nine. He had taught at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and spoke nearly perfect Hebrew. Lisa was a biochemist who had left her husband with her children and later left her children with Abe and Bess and moved to California to “put her life together.” Imagination had never been Lisa's strength. She had always been an outstanding scholar, a serious child and woman.

Todd had not been Jewish. Abe and Bess could live with that. He was, as far as they could tell, a good husband, a good father.

Marvin Alexander was an African American, which bothered Bess and Abe only insofar as knowing that if Lisa had another child he or she might be black and have to face the trials of growing up black in America. Both Abe and Bess liked Marvin and, frankly, in bed in the dark, on more than one occasion, they wondered what Dr. Marvin Alexander had seen in their daughter that made him decide she would be a good wife. Her history so far had indicated otherwise, and Marvin Alexander had seemed to them smart enough to see that.

“Cheated?” Bess repeated, looking at Abe for help that he was not yet ready to give. He was a cop. He believed in letting witnesses or suspects talk themselves out before he started asking questions.

“An intern at the hospital where Marvin works,” she said. “Where I work. I didn't know … Morris is so young. I just …”

“How young is this Morris?” asked Bess.

“Twenty-five.”

“He's Jewish?”

“Yes.”

“Married?”

“No.”

“How many times did you …?” Bess asked.

“Never,” said Lisa. “Close, but never. Marvin found out. Does it matter how many times?”

Bess looked at Abe. It clearly didn't matter to him.

“Marvin's a good man,” said Lisa. “I can be difficult. You know that. He knew that.”

“There's difficult and there's … never mind,” Bess said. “Go on.”

“I don't want to live with Morris. He doesn't want to live with me. I don't want to marry him. I want Marvin to forgive me, to take me back.”

“Did he hit you when he found out?” Bess asked, trying to keep her voice from cracking.

“Marvin? He'd never hurt me. I hurt him. This is the kind of person you've helped turn me into.”

The last was directed at Abe. He hoped he was not about to hear the list of charges against him once again. Lisa had the memory of an advanced computer and every error, every missed conference, every intended comic remark to a date, every absence because of a homicide, every … well, Lisa's failures were primarily the fault of Abraham Lieberman. He had come, in fact, to believe that she was probably right though there had to have been some point many years ago when Lisa should have taken responsibility for her own life.

“As I recall from reading the Bible in the bathtub, God even forgave Cain for killing Abel,” Lieberman said.

“There is no God,” Lisa said wearily. She had first said it when she was eleven. She had gone on saying it. Lieberman was not sure she was wrong though he was now, largely to please his wife but partly because it gave him some peace of mind, an active member of Temple Mir Shavot on Dempster Street who spent much of his nonworking time considering the question of God's existence or nonexistence and the meaning of whether He existed or did not exist.

“You want Marvin to take you back?” Bess asked.

“Yes,” Lisa said, and a miracle happened. Lisa wept. Lisa never wept. At least not before others. Abe had felt that his daughter had cried when her cousin David had been murdered, but she had kept it private and had done a far better job of comforting Abe's brother Maish and Maish's wife Yetta than Abe would have expected.

“He told you he wanted a divorce?” Abe asked. “He just said it like that?”

“No, he never said he wanted a divorce. I could tell from his voice, his … I could tell.”

“Call him, Abe,” Bess said.

“Me?”

“Call him, Abe,” Bess repeated. It wasn't an order. It was a plea. A necessity.

Abe held back his sigh, finished his coffee, and reached for the telephone that Bess was now placing in front of him. Lisa reached out and almost touched her father's hand. This, he decided, was a Lisa who needed help. The former Lisa would never have shown her weakness, her need, and would not have accepted help from Abe Lieberman. The two had been nourished and exhausted by years of debate, argument, and resignation. Abe had, almost 100 percent of the time, been able to keep from getting angry, or at least showing it. In fact, he seldom felt anger toward Lisa. Whatever guilt he felt came from the relief he experienced when Lisa was not living at home.

Lisa was giving him the phone number when the doorbell rang.

Bess got up to answer while Abe continued dialing. He had almost finished dialing when two men pushed a third through the door Bess had just opened. The two pushers were talking Spanish so quickly that Abe could barely follow their conversation, which, he decided immediately, was not worth following.

The man they pushed in past Bess stumbled forward and almost fell. He was young, younger than Lisa. He was Korean. He had only one arm, his left, and he looked angry. The Korean wore jeans and a dark brown shirt. The two members of the Tentaculos wore black slacks and tight-fitting long-sleeved black shirts.

Lieberman stopped dialing and put down the phone. Bess closed the door.

“In English,” Lieberman said.

“Viejo,”
the leaner of the two Tentaculos said. “We found him outside. He had a gun.”

The lean Guatemalan was named Fernandez. He was known as Chuculo, the Knife. He had more than earned his nickname. The bigger of the two Tentaculos was an almost feebleminded enforcer known as Piedras, the Stone. Ironically, his last name was, indeed, Piedras. He simply lived up to it. Piedras held up the gun they had taken from the Korean, a black Glock.

The Tentaculos were a gang of Mexicans, Panamanians, and Guatemalans led by the nearly legendary El Perro, Emiliano Del Sol. Emiliano was generally conceded to be mad and extremely violent and dangerous. He was also known to have a symbiotic and almost friendly relationship with Lieberman. To the degree that he could, Lieberman provided protection for all but the worst of El Perro's crimes. In turn, El Perro provided information. They also shared a passion for the Cubs though El Perro's extended only as far as the team's Hispanic players.

“¿Que quiere, Viejo?”
said Fernandez.

“Nada ahora,”
Lieberman replied. “In English.”

Lieberman knew that all he had to do was tell the two Tentaculos to get rid of the Korean, whose name was Kim, and it would be done. Only once had Lieberman condoned El Perro's killing of a criminal. It had been pure vengeance, and Lieberman could have pretended that he didn't know the murder would take place. But he did know and he accepted.

“El Perro found out that this
chinga tu madre
was coming for you tonight,” Fernandez said. “One of the guys he used to have in his gang told him.”

“Tell Emiliano I said thanks,” said Lieberman. “You want coffee?”

“No, gracias,”
Fernandez said. “You want us to just leave him here?”

“Sí,” Lieberman replied.

El Chuculo shrugged.

“Bueno, pero cuidado Viejo. Este hombre es muy loco.”

“Voy a recuerdo,”
said Lieberman, looking at the tottering Korean.

“Hasta luego,”
said Chuculo, and then to Kim, “You a lucky gook, you know that? El Viejo should let me cut your heart out.”

With that Chuculo turned to Bess and Lisa and said,
“Dispensa me, mujeres.”

“He said ‘excuse me,' ” Lieberman translated. Then to the men:
“Gracias, hombres.”

Chuculo and Piedras left. The blank look on the face of the hulking Piedras didn't change. They closed the door behind them and the one-armed Kim stood wobbly and defiant in the living room.

“Coffee?” Lieberman asked.

Kim didn't answer.

“See what I mean?” said Lisa, looking at her mother, her voice raising. “This was my life. Murderers, drug dealers, gang members. In our own living room. I don't want this for my children.”

“You left them here, Lisa,” Bess reminded her. “Your father and I didn't let anything happen to you. We won't let anything happen to Barry and Melisa. I think it would be a good idea if you went up and said good night to your children. You can sleep with Melisa.”

“What about the call to Marvin?” Lisa said, standing and looking at Kim, whose eyes glistened with hatred.

“After Kim and I have a talk,” Lieberman said.

Bess led a reluctant Lisa toward the stairs and up. The two women whispered, but there was an angry near whimper in Lisa's voice.

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