Reasonable Doubts (7 page)

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Authors: Gianrico Carofiglio

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I looked in my mobile’s phonebook and found his number. For a few minutes I stared at the coloured screen. How long was it since Colaianni and I had last spoken? It must have been years. We’d run into each other once in the street in Bari when he was visiting his parents. We’d exchanged a few words and I’d had the impression that our friendship, like so many others, was over. Now I was phoning him - assuming the number was still valid. What would he think? What should I say to him? Should I chat for a while to observe the social conventions before I asked him for help?
I’ve always had major problems with telephones and telephone calls. What if he was annoyed? He might be in the middle of interrogating someone, or busy in some other way. Besides, magistrates - even if they’re your friends - are unpredictable creatures.
OK. That’s enough.
I pressed the button. Colaianni replied after two rings.
“Guido Guerrieri!” I was surprised he had my number in his phonebook.
“Hi, Andrea. How’s it going?”
“Fine. And you?”
We started chatting. We chatted for at least ten minutes about various things. Family - well, his, at least - work, mutual friends neither of us had seen or heard from for ages. Sport. Did I still box? You’re crazy as ever, Guerrieri.
Finally I told him the reason for my call. I explained everything, briefly. I told him I was groping in the dark, that
I didn’t know what to do or what to tell my client. That I needed some information to help me see more clearly. Even if in the end it meant telling my client that the only serious prospect was to plea-bargain.
Colaianni told me he’d never heard of Macrì, though in a place like Rome that didn’t mean anything. But he would ask around, and get back to me in a few days.
“But don’t build up your hopes. The likeliest hypothesis is that your client really was transporting those drugs, but hadn’t told his wife. The reason he denies it, despite all the evidence, is because he’s ashamed and doesn’t have the courage to admit it to her.”
Right. I knew that and almost hoped that things really were like that.
It would all be so much simpler.
10
It had to happen sooner or later. I mean: that I would ask myself that question again. It happened quite naturally as I sat waiting for Paolicelli in the lawyers’ room at the prison.
Were the rumours that had circulated in those days true? Was he really one of the people responsible for the death of that young man? Or at the very least, did he belong to the same gang as the killers?
For many months after that murder, I had been haunted by the image, created in my own troubled imagination, of Paolicelli watching that young man die with the same thin, evil smile I’d seen on his face while his Fascist friend had been beating me up.
At times it had occurred to me that I’d been lucky, because those guys were really crazy. I could easily have been stabbed to death myself, that evening I’d been beaten up because of my anorak.
For a long time I was obsessed with the idea of revenge. When I was older, stronger and, above all, knew how to fight - I’d already started learning to box-I would go and get them one by one and we’d settle our scores. The short, muscular one first, then the others, even though I didn’t remember their faces very well, but that was a mere detail. Last but not least, the blond guy with the face like David Bowie, who’d smiled as he watched the show. And maybe while I beat him to a pulp, I’d also get him to tell me what
had really happened on the evening of November the 28th, who the killers were and if he was one of them.
“Good morning, Avvocato.”
I was so lost in thought that I hadn’t even heard the door open. I nearly jumped, but managed to control it. I replied, with a slight change of facial expression. That was as friendly as I was prepared to be to Paolicelli after that flood of memories.
“I’m very pleased you’ve taken on my case. It gives me the feeling there’s a real possibility now. My wife also told me you inspire confidence.”
I felt ill at ease when he mentioned his wife. And the other thing that made me ill at ease was that he was so different from the evil-faced young man I’d hated all through my teenage years. He was a normal person, almost likeable.
But I didn’t want him to be likeable.
“Signor Paolicelli, I think we should be clear about something right from the start. So that you don’t have any unrealistic expectations. I’ve decided to accept your case and I’ll do whatever I can for you. We’ll decide together on our strategy and on what we choose to do in court, but what you have to know, what you have to be absolutely aware of, is that you’re still in a very difficult situation.”
It was a good way of approaching things. The technical tone I was adopting helped to dispel the embarrassment I had felt a few moments earlier. And behind my front of professional efficiency, I was actually being pretty nasty to him. I’d immediately deprived him of even that momentary relief, that comfort felt by anyone who, after months of prison and gloomy forebodings about the future, meets someone who is on his side and can help him.
The very reason, basically, for the existence of lawyers.
You’re really an arsehole, Guerrieri, I told myself.
I opened my briefcase to take out the papers, and started speaking again without even looking at him. “I’ve been through all the documents, made a few notes, and now I’m here to discuss what line we take. There are basically two options. Both very different.”
I looked up to make sure he was following me. It was the first time I’d looked him in the face and seen it the way it really was: the lined face of a man in his forties with curiously gentle blue eyes, not the face that had been embedded in my memory all these years, the face of a teenage Fascist with an evil smile.
It was a very strange, very confusing feeling. Things weren’t right, weren’t as I’d expected.
Paolicelli nodded, because I’d stopped speaking and he wanted to know which two options we had,
basically
.
“As I was saying, there are two options. The first is damage limitation. That means we go to the appeal court, hope we have an assistant prosecutor who’s flexible, and we plea-bargain and try to get the largest reduction we can in your sentence ...”
He was about to interrupt me but I raised my hand to stop him, as if to say, wait, let me finish.
“I know what you’re going to say. The drugs weren’t yours. I know, but right now I have to present you with the different options, and what each entails. Then you’ll decide what to do. So, as I was saying, that’s the first option. With a little luck we could bring the sentence down to ten years, perhaps even less, which means—”
“My wife said you thought we could make some inquiries. To find out who put the cocaine in the car.”
Why did it bother me that he was constantly mentioning
his wife? Why did it bother me that his wife had talked to him about our conversations? I asked myself these questions and didn’t wait for the answers. They were too obvious to need putting into words.
“We could try.”
“In order to get an acquittal?”
“In order to get an acquittal. But we have to be clear about this. There’s no guarantee we’ll find anything. In fact it’s very unlikely. We’ll talk now and see if we come up with anything useful. But even if we can construct a specific hypothesis as to how those drugs ended up in your car, our real problem is convincing the court of appeal. And we certainly won’t do that if all we have is conjecture.”
“What do you want to know?”
I repeated the lesson Tancredi had taught me. “Did you meet anyone during your holiday? I mean, someone who was very friendly, maybe even too friendly. Someone who asked questions, tried to find out where you were from, when you were leaving.”
He waited a moment before replying. “No. We did meet people, of course, but we didn’t make any friends. We didn’t hang around with the people we happened to meet.”
“No one asked you when you were leaving?”
Once again he didn’t reply immediately. He was making an effort to see if he could remember anything useful, but in the end had to give up.
“All right, it doesn’t matter. Let’s talk about the hotel car park.”
“As I told you, we gave the keys to the porter because the car park was small and always full. A lot of cars were double parked and they needed the keys to move them.”
“And did that happen the night before you left, too?”
“Yes, every night we left the keys in the porter’s lodge. In the morning, if we wanted to go for a drive, we’d pick them up. If not they stayed there all day.”
“Was there only one porter?”
“No, there were three of them on shifts, day and night.”
“Do you remember which of the three was on duty the last night you were there?”
No, he didn’t remember. He’d already thought about this, he said, and had never managed to pin down which man he had left his keys with the last time.
It was a blind alley. Both of us fell silent.
In my mind, I worked out what might have happened, always supposing that Paolicelli wasn’t having me and his wife on.
During the night, these people had taken the car to a safe place somewhere. A machine shop, a garage, or maybe just an isolated spot in the country. There, they had filled it with drugs and then had brought it back to the hotel car park. Easy and safe, with very few risks.
In any case, we wouldn’t get very far pursuing the business of the porters, since we had no evidence as to which of the three - supposing one of the three was really involved - had been part of the operation.
And even if we could, what then? What would I do? Call Interpol and ask them to launch an international investigation to clear my client? I told myself we were just wasting time. Innocent or guilty, Paolicelli was in it up to his neck. The only sensible thing I could do as a professional was limit the damage as much as possible.
I asked him if he had noticed anyone on the ferry who he’d already seen in Montenegro, either in the hotel or anywhere else.
“Yes, there was someone on the ferry who’d been in our hotel. He’s the only one I remember.”
“Do you remember where he was from, what his name was?”
Paolicelli shook his head firmly. “It’s not that I don’t remember. I just don’t know. I’d seen him a few times in the hotel. Then I saw him again for a moment on the ferry and we waved at each other. That was it. The only thing I know is that he was Italian.”
“But would you recognize him if you saw him again?”
“Yes, I think so. I remember him quite well. But how do we trace him?”
I replied with a gesture of the hand which was supposed to mean: don’t worry. I know what to do, this is my job. When the moment comes, we’ll manage. Which was mostly nonsense, of course. It wasn’t my job at all - it was the police who traced people, not lawyers - and anyway, I had no idea what to do. Apart from going back to Tancredi and asking for his help.
To Paolicelli, though, that gesture of mine seemed to be all he needed. If you know what to do and this is your job, then I’m calm. I chose the right lawyer, the one who’ll get me out of this. The Perry Mason of the Murgia.
That would do for this morning, I thought.
He realized the interview was over. I was about to leave and he was about to go back to his cell. But I could tell from his face that he didn’t want to be alone again.
“I’m sorry, Avvocato, I have another question. You said we could either plea-bargain or decide to appeal. When do we have to decide? I mean, what’s the last moment we can leave it till?”
“The day of the hearing. That’s when we have to say if we
intend to plea-bargain, which would bring proceedings to an end, or if we want to carry on. It’s a few weeks yet before the hearing, so we have time to think about it, and to see if we can find out anything useful. If we don’t, then any option other than plea-bargaining would be suicidal.”
There wasn’t much to add, and we both knew it. He looked away from me and fixed his gaze on the floor. After a while he started to wring his hands methodically, so hard that he seemed about to dislocate them.
I was about to stand up, say goodbye and leave. I could feel my leg muscles impelling me to get to my feet and get away from the chair, away from that place.
But I didn’t move. I thought he was entitled to a few minutes’ silence. To give free rein to his despair, in his own time. To wring his hands without having me interrupt him to say that we’d finished for the day, that I was leaving - leaving a place he couldn’t leave - and that we’d meet again soon.
When I decide, of course, not when you decide.
Because I’m free and you’re not.
He was entitled to those few minutes of silence in my company, to go off in pursuit of his own thoughts.
To fill the time, I also gave myself up to my thoughts. Once again, I thought about the situation we were in. I was aware of it, and he wasn’t. I knew we’d met all those years before, he didn’t. In a sense he’d never known it, because in all probability he hadn’t even looked properly at the face of the boy his friend had beaten up. Besides, he’d almost certainly forgotten all about it.
So he had no idea he had been an obsession of mine all through my teenage years.
He had no idea that, in my waking dreams of revenge, I’d often smashed his friend’s face in first, and then his. He had
no idea, and now I was his lawyer, in other words his only hope.
He continued wringing his hands. I recalled the speech I had imagined myself making when the moment came.
Do you remember when you and your friends beat and humiliated that young boy who didn’t want to take off his anorak? Do you remember? That bastard friend of yours smashed his face in and you watched and smiled smugly. Well, I was that boy and now I’m here to smash your face in. You won’t look like a David Bowie of the suburbs any more and our account will finally be settled.

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