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“I heard what he said.”

“He’s nothin’ like I thought he’d be.”

“Who could be, Billy?”

“How could he tell me to rat on a friend?”

“He doesn’t understand your situation. He knows better. When he got in trouble in the trolley strike. . you know about that?”

“He killed a guy.”

“Not too many knew, and it never got in the papers who did it. Three of us helped him look for round stones that morning. Patsy McCall, your Uncle Chick, and myself. We were twelve, fourteen, like that, and your father was seven or eight years older and on strike. But we hated the scabs as much as he did and we all had stones of our own. Any one of us might have done what he did, but your father had that ballplayer’s arm. He had the fastest throw from third to first I ever saw, and I include Heine Groh. We were down on Broadway in front of the Railroad Y, standing at the back of the crowd. People collected there because they thought the strike talks were going on in the Traction Company building across the street.

“Just then the scabs and the soldiers came along with a trolley and tried to drive it straight through that crowd. It was a bad mistake. There were hundreds ready for them, women too. The women were warriors in the street during that strike. Well, the crowd trapped the trolley between two fires and it couldn’t move either way, and that’s when the stones flew. Everybody was throwing them, and then Francis threw his. It flew out of his fist like a bullet and caught the scab driver on the head. People turned to see who threw it, but your father was already on the run down Broadway and around the corner of Columbia toward the tracks. The soldiers fired on the crowd, and I saw two men hit. We ran then, too, nobody chasing us, and we saw Francis way off and followed him, and when he saw it was us, he waited. We all thought somebody must’ve seen him make the throw, so we started running again and went up to the filtration plant in North Albany, about three miles. Your grandfather, Iron Joe Farrell, was caretaker up there then, and he hid Francis in a room full of sinks and test tubes for two hours.

“We all hung around the place while Iron Joe went back up to Broadway and hitched a ride downtown to find out what was up. He learned from a cop he knew that the soldiers were looking for a young man wearing a cap. The cops didn’t care about catching your father, of course. They were all with the strikers. But the Traction Company bosses forced them into a manhunt, and so we all knew your father couldn’t go back to Colonie Street for a while. Chick went home and packed your father a suitcase and brought it back. Francis said he might head west to play ball somewhere, and if he got a job in a few months, he’d write and tell us.

“He cried then. We all did, over the way he had to go, especially Chick, who worshipped your father. Even Patsy cried a little bit. I remember he wiped his eyes dry with a trainman’s blue handkerchief. And then your father walked across the tracks and hopped a slow freight going north to Troy, which was the wrong direction, but that’s what he did. And Iron Joe said solemnly that none of us should ever say what we knew, and he told us to go home.

“On the way home, Chick said we should take a blood oath not to talk. Patsy and I said that was okay with us but we didn’t know where to get the blood. Patsy wanted to steal a kid from old man Bailey’s herd, but Chick said that was against the Seventh Commandment and he suggested Bid Finnerty’s one-eyed cat, which everybody on Colonie Street hated as a hoodoo anyway. It took us an hour to find the cat, and then Patsy coaxed it with a fish head and brained it with a billy club so it’d lay still. Chick sliced it open and pulled out its heart and made the sign of the cross in blood on the palms of each of our hands. And I made the oath. We swear by the heart of Bid Finnerty’s cat that we won’t say what we know about Francis Phelan as long as we live, and that we won’t wash this sacrificial blood off our hands until it’s time to eat supper.

“The blood was all gone in half an hour, the way we sweated that day As far as I know, none of us ever said anything until your father came back to town by himself months later, when the baseball season was over in Dayton. He called my father from out there to find out whether it was safe for him to come home to Colonie Street. And it was. And he came home and stayed fifteen years.”

“Yeah,” Billy said. “He stayed until he killed somebody else.”

Sixteen

When Martin reached the paper, he found that Patsy McCall had left three messages since noontime. Martin called immediately and Patsy said he didn’t want to go near the newspaper but would pick Martin up by the post office dock on Dean Street in ten minutes. His tone admitted of no other possibility for Martin.

Patsy showed up alone, driving his Packard, and when Martin got in, Patsy gunned the car northward on Quay Street and into Erie Boulevard, a little-traveled dirt road that paralleled the old Erie Canal bed, long since filled in. Patsy said nothing. The road bumped along toward the old filtration plant and led Martin to the vision of Francis running, and to echoes of long-dead voices of old North End canalers and lumber handlers. Immigrants looked out forlornly from the canal boats as they headed west, refused entrance to Albany in the cholera days.

Patsy pulled the car to the side of the road in a desolate spot near the Albany Paper Works. Along the flats in the distance Martin could see the tar-paper shacks hoboes had built. Did Francis have a reservation in one?

“They picked Berman as go-between,” Patsy said.

During the morning, Morrie had sent word to Bindy through Lemon Lewis that a letter had been left for him at Nick Levine’s haberdashery. “We got Charlie Boy and we want you to negotiate,” it said. “If you agree to do this, go to State and Broadway at one o’clock today and buy a bag of peanuts at Coulson’s. Cross the street and sit on a bench in the Plaza facing Broadway and feed the pigeons for fifteen minutes.” The letter was signed “Nero” and also bore Charlie McCall’s signature.

Almost simultaneously Patsy received a letter in his mailbox at the main post office on Broadway, the third letter since the kidnapping. “We want the cash pronto and we are treating your boy nice but we can end that if you don’t get the cash pronto. We know all about you people and we don’t care about your kind so don’t be funny about this.” It was also signed “Nero” and countersigned by Charlie.

“You’re not surprised they picked Berman?” Martin said.

“Not a bit,” said Patsy. “I always thought the son of a bitch was in it.”

“But why suspect him out of everybody else?”

“It’s an Albany bunch did this, I’ll bet my tailbone on that and so will Bindy. They know too much about the whole scene. Berman’s always been tied in with the worst of the local hoodlums — Maloy, the Curry brothers, Mickey Fink, Joe the Polack. We know them all, and they’d need Morrie because he’s smarter than any of them.”

“Me, Patsy. What am I doing here?”

“Morrie’s playing cute. He says he really doesn’t want to do this thing but he will as a favor. He wants somebody there when they deliver Charlie, a witness who’ll take some of the weight off his story. He asked me to pick somebody and when I gave him four or five names, he picked yours. He thinks you’re straight.”

“What do I do?”

“Go with him. Do what he says and what they tell you to do. If he’s their man, you’re ours. And take care of Charlie when you get to him.”

“When does this happen?”

“Now. Morrie’s waiting for me up in the Washington Park lake house. Can you do it?”

“You’ll have to tell Mary something to put her mind at ease. And clue Emory in somehow.”

“Here’s a couple of hundred for lunch money. And put this in your pocket, too.” And Patsy handed Martin a snub-nosed thirty-eight with a fold of money.