The button lit up on his ivory telephone's private line. Relief spread across his broad Swedish features. He snatched the telephone to his ear. «Johnson here,» he said.
«Good to catch you there, Matt,» came the familiar voice over the phone.
Where the hell did you think I'd be, Johnson thought. He said: «Good to hear from you, Governor. You don't know how good.»
«I'm sorry, Matt. There isn't going to be a pardon. Not even a stay.»
«Oh,» Johnson said; his free hand crumpled the newspaper.
«I'm calling for a favor, Matt.»
«Sure, Governor, sure,» Johnson said. He pushed the newspaper from the edge of the desk toward the waste basket.
«In a few minutes, a Capuchin monk and his escort will be at the prison. He may be on his way to your office now. Let him talk to this what's-his-name, Williams, the one who's going to die. Let the other man witness the execution from the control panel.»
«But there's very little visibility from the control panel,» Johnson said.
«What the hell. Let him stay there anyhow.»
«It's against regulations to allow…»
«Matt. C'mon. We're not kids anymore. Let him stay there.» The Governor was no longer asking; he was telling. Johnson's eyes strayed toward the picture of his wife and children.
«And one more thing. This observer's from some kind of a private hospital. The State Department of Institutions has given them permission to have this Williams' body. Some kind of criminal-mind research, Doctor Frankenstein stuff. They'll have an ambulance there to pick it up. Leave word at the gate. They'll have written authorization from me.»
Weariness settled over Warden Johnson.
«Okay, Governor. I'll see that it's done.»
«Good, Matt. How're Mary and the kids?»
«Fine, Governor. Just fine.»
«Well, give them my best. I'll be stopping down one of these days.»
«Fine, Governor, fine.»
The Governor hung up. Johnson looked at the phone in his hand. «Go to hell,» he snarled and slammed it onto the cradle.
His profanity startled his secretary who had just slithered quietly into the office with the walk she usually reserved for walking past groups of prisoners.
«There's a priest and another man here,» she said. «Should I bring them in?»
«No,» Johnson said. «Have the priest taken down to see the prisoner, Williams. Have the other man escorted to the death house. I don't want to see them.»
«What about our chaplain, warden? Isn't it strange to…?»
Johnson interrupted. «This whole damn business of being the state's executioner is strange, Miss Scanlon. Just do what I say.»
He spun around in his chair to look at the air conditioner pumping cool, fresh, clean air into his office.
CHAPTER THREE
Remo Williams lay on his back, his eyes shut, his fingers drumming silently on his stomach. What was death anyway? Like sleep? He liked to sleep. Most people liked to sleep. Why fear death?
If he opened his eyes, he would see the cell. But in his personal darkness, he was free for a moment, free from the jail and the men who would kill him, free from the gray bars and the harsh overhead light. Darkness was peaceful.
He heard the soft rhythm of feet padding along the corridor, louder, louder, louder. Then they stopped. Voices mumbled, clothes rustled, keys tingled and then with a clack, the cell door opened. Remo blinked in the yellow light. A brown-robed monk clutching a black cross with a silver Christ stood inside the cell door waiting. The dark cowl shaded the monk's eyes. He held the crucifix in his right hand, the left apparently tucked beneath the folds of his robe.
The guard, stepping back from the cell door, said to Remo: «The priest.»
Remo sat up on the cot, bringing his legs in front of him. His back was to the wall. The monk stood motionless.
«You've got five minutes, Father,» the guard said. The key clicked again in the lock.
The monk nodded. Remo motioned to the empty space beside him on the cot.
«Thank you,» the monk said. Holding the crucifix like a test tube he was afraid to spill, he sat down. His face was hard and lined. His blue eyes seemed to be judging Remo for a punch instead of salvation. Droplets of perspiration on bis upper lip caught the light from the bulb.
«Do you want to be saved, my son?» he asked. It was rather loud for such a personal question.
«Sure,» Remo said. «Who doesn't?»
«Good. Do you know how to examine your conscience, make an act of contrition?»
«Vaguely, Father. I…»
«I know, my son. God will help you.»
«Yeah,» Remo said without enthusiasm. If he got this over fast, maybe there'd be time for another cigarette.
«What are your sins?»
«I really don't know.»
«We can start with violation of the Lord's commandment not to kill.».
«I've not killed.»
«How many men?»
«Including Vietnam?»
«No, Vietnam doesn't count.»
«That wasn't killing, huh?»
«In war, killing is not a mortal sin.»
«How about peace, when the State says you did, but you didn't? How about that?»
«Are you talking about your conviction?»
«Yes.» Remo stared at his knees. This might go on all night.
«Well, in that case…»
«All right, Father. I confess it. I killed the man,» Remo lied. His trousers, fresh gray twill, hadn't even had a chance to get worn at the knees.
Remo noticed that the monk's cowl was perfectly clean, spotlessly new too. Was that a smile on his face?
«Coveted anyone's property?»
«No.»
«Stolen?»
«No.»
«Impure actions?»
«Sex?»
«Yes.»
«Sure. In thought and deed.»
«How many times?»
Remo almost attempted an estimate. «I don't know. Enough.»
The monk nodded. «Blasphemy, anger, pride, jealousy, gluttony?»
«No,» Remo said, rather loudly.
The monk leaned forward. Remo could see tobacco stains on his teeth. The light subtle smell of expensive aftershave lotion wafted into his nostrils. The monk whispered: «You're a goddam liar.»
Remo jumped back. His legs hit the floor. His hands moved up almost as if to ward off a blow. The priest remained leaning forward, motionless. And he was grinning. The priest was grinning. The guards couldn't see it because of the cowl, but Remo could. The state was playing its final joke on him: a tobacco-stained, grinning, swearing monk.
«Shhh,» said the brown-robed man.
«You're no priest,» Remo said.
«And you're not Dick Tracy. Keep your voice down. You want to save your soul or your ass?»
Remo stared at the crucifix, the silver Christ on the black cross and the black button at the feet.
A black button?
«Listen. We don't have much time,» the man in the robe said. «You want to live?»
The word seemed to float from Remo's soul. «Sure.»
«Get on your knees.»
Remo went to the floor in one smooth motion. The cot level was at his chest, his chin before the robe's angular folds that indicated knees.
The crucifix came toward his head. He looked up at the silvery feet pierced by a silver nail. The man's hand was around Christ's gut.
«Pretend to kiss the feet. Yes. Closer. There's a black pill. Ease it off with your teeth. Go ahead, but don't bite into it.»
Remo opened his mouth and closed his teeth around the black button beneath the silver feet. He saw the robes swirl as the man got up to block the guard's view. The pill came off. It was hard, probably plastic.
«Don't break the shell. Don't break the shell,» the man hissed. «Stick it in the corner of your mouth. When they strap the helmet around your head so you can't move, bite into the pill hard and swallow the whole thing. Not before. Do you hear?»
Remo held the pill on his tongue. The man was no longer smiling.
Remo glared at him. Why were all the big decisions in his life forced on him when he didn't have time to think? He tongued the pill. Poison? No point in that. Spit it out? Then what?