Thursday The Rabbi Walked Out - Thursday the Rabbi Walked Out Part 21
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Thursday the Rabbi Walked Out Part 21

They showered and toweled down and then went to the locker room to dress. Seeing they were alone, Barry Fisher asked, "How does it look for tomorrow?"

"In the bag," said Maltzman. "We've got eight votes, solid."

"So that's eight to six. I'd say that was pretty close."

"A margin of two votes. What do you want?"

"Yeah, Hank, but if one of ours decided to go the other way, that would make it a tie, seven to seven."

"So then it would be up to me to cast the tie-breaking vote. But those eight votes, believe me, they're solid."

"No chance of picking up any of the six? How about Jessica Berger or Linda Svolitch?"

Maltzman shook his head. "Allen Glick sounded out Jessica. No go. She was on some committee with the rabbi's wife and thinks the world of her. Now, I ask you, is she going to vote against renewing the rabbi's contract?"

"And Linda?"

"You mentioned her because she's Women's Lib. Right? Well, I figured her as a possible, too, in spite of their being like kind of Orthodox. So I talked to Mike Svolitch. Well, according to him, the sun rises and sets on Rabbi Small. Lucky I didn't come out and ask him point-blank, because I'm sure he would have gone running to the rabbi." He chuckled. "The way I put it to him, I said I'd heard a rumor that some of the board including Linda were planning to vote against renewing the rabbi's contract and whether there was any truth to it."

"Playing Mickey the Dunce," said Fisher admiringly.

"Right. So when he told me how he and Linda felt about the rabbi, I backed off and said something like, some wise guys got nothing better to do than pass around rumors. No, those six votes are as solid as my eight."

"I still think it's awfully close, Hank. Say, I got an idea. How about I make a motion, where it's a secret ballot and all, that the president be allowed to cast a vote just like anybody else. After all, the president of the United States does it. I mean, he votes in elections. Some of them go back to their hometown to do it. It shows them on TV all the time."

"Nothing doing, Barry," said Maltzman peremptorily.

"But why not? Then it would be nine to six and-"

"I'll tell you why not. Because then you make it an issue. You make it like important, and somebody is going to smell a rat. Then there'd be a discussion, and people would say things, and other people would react. I can see some of the diehards maybe even walking out so we don't have a quorum. No, I want it like a straight matter of business, just like any other piece of business, like the vote on the light bill, or on the insurance. The only reason for having it a secret ballot is so the members can be free to vote any way they want to. But that's all. Get it?"

"But what if there's a holler afterward? What if they ask for reconsideration?"

"How're they going to do that? The only one who can ask for reconsideration is someone who voted with the majority. That's parliamentary law. Okay, so let's say they get into a sweat and go around lining up people to call for a referendum. But before they can get something like that off the ground, we've already sent out a letter to the rabbi telling him we voted not to renew. And if I know the rabbi, we'll get a letter of resignation from him in the next mail. And I'll shoot a letter right back, expressing regrets and all that crap, but accepting his resignation."

45.

They had finished Sunday dinner, and Mrs. Mandell, in the absence of Molly, had put away the dishes as Herb relaxed in the living room over the Sunday paper. She appeared in the doorway, remarking, "It wasn't that way with your Pa and me, especially on a Sunday."

"Huh?" Herb looked up from his newspaper. "What did you say about Pa?"

"I said your Pa wouldn't think of going out without me any more than I'd think of going out without him on a social occasion. Some of our friends, the men used to go out once a week, regular, to a lodge meeting or bowling. At least, that's what they said. But not your Pa. If I couldn't go, or even if I just didn't want to go, he wouldn't go. And it was the same with me. A bridge or a Sisterhood luncheon, all right, I'd go alone so long as he was at the office. But in the evening or on a Sunday, when he was home, never. That's what I was brought up to think marriage was supposed to be, two people being together. But I guess things are different these days."

"Aw, cummon, Ma, knock it off. They're having a special showing of the Peter Archer silver at the museum, which her boss organized the whole thing. And which she helped with a lot. So if he invited all the employees of the bank, she naturally got to go. Like if the principal of the high school should run some kind of party for the faculty, I'd have to go, wouldn't I?"

She sniffed her disagreement and disapproval. "You think he would have fired her if She told him She couldn't go, or cut her salary? He seems like a very fine gentleman, her boss. And it seems to me, he would have thought a lot more of her if She had said, 'I'm sorry, Mr. Gore, but I never go anywhere socially without my husband, and he can't come on account he's got a very important meeting of the board of directors of the temple, which he is a member of.'"

"Oh, sure," he scoffed, "and I suppose a couple of Fridays ago when I was in charge of the Brotherhood service at the temple, I should have said I couldn't make it because Molly had to stay home."

"That was different. That wasn't social. That was religion."

"The Friday evening services are more social than religious. The point is she stayed-"

"Maybe She had reasons for staying behind while you went off."

"What do you mean by that?"

All week long she had wanted to tell him, but there had been no real opportunity. She had rehearsed her story over and over and had planned, when the occasion came, to speak quietly and calmly as if in sorrow and only out of duty, but now that the chance had suddenly presented itself, her eyes glittered and she spat out the words spitefully, "I mean She didn't stay very long after you left. She thought I was asleep. She thought I didn't hear her, but I did. I heard the car start and I got out of bed and watched through the window and saw her drive off."

"You dreamed it."

"Oh no, I didn't." And now she did speak quietly. She even managed a little smile. "I wasn't sleeping. I may have dozed off the way I do sometimes just sitting in my chair here. But I wasn't sleeping. I heard her talking on the phone. Then I heard footsteps on the stairs, and I could tell She was tiptoeing up. So I made believe I was asleep. Sure enough, She pushed the door back a little and looked in. Then She tiptoed downstairs again. Well, I can tell you I was wide awake then. And pretty soon I heard the back door open and close. Then I heard the car starting up and I got out of bed and peeked through the curtains down at the driveway and I saw her leave. It was just about the time you were starting the service at the temple, and She didn't get back until after nine. She came upstairs to have another look at me when She came back, and I made believe I was asleep again."

For no reason at all, it flashed across his mind that Henry Maltzman had come to the service late that night, a little after nine. "I still think you dreamed it," he said.

"Do you? Well, why don't you ask her? See what She says."

They had finished Sunday dinner, and Laura Maltzman had gone off to visit her mother at the convalescent home as her husband prepared to leave for the board meeting at the temple. He had just shrugged into his jacket when the doorbell rang. It was Lieutenant Jennings.

"I've come about the Jordon business, Mr. Maltzman. I'd like you to come with me to the stationhouse to answer a few questions that Chief Lanigan wants to ask you, and maybe make a statement."

"What if I'm not interested in the Jordon business?"

"You can tell that to the chief down at the stationhouse."

His eyes dancing with amusement, Maltzman asked, "You got a warrant, Lieutenant?"

"Yes."

Taken aback, Maltzman stammered, "You-you have?"

"Right here."

As Jennings reached into his breast pocket, Maltzman said hastily, "All right. I believe you. Look here, you want me to come down to the stationhouse to make a statement and answer a few questions. All right. But I've got an important meeting over at the temple in a few minutes. I'll come down right after it's over."

His Adam's apple bobbling nervously, Jennings shook his head. "No sir, my orders are to bring you down right now."

"Look here, you can't just barge in here and interfere with my plans and-"

"Oh yes I can, so long as I got a warrant."

"I'll talk to Lanigan. What's the number?"

"Won't do you no good. He's not there yet. His orders were for me to have you there when he gets there. So let's not have any trouble, Mr. Maltzman."

Maltzman bit his lips as he considered. Finally he said, "All right. I'll just leave a note for my wife telling her where I'm going." He went into the kitchen, and when the policeman followed, he said, "Don't worry, I'm not going through the back door." He thumbtacked the note to the bulletin board and reached for the phone on the shelf beneath it. "I've got to make a phone call."

"You calling your lawyer?" asked Jennings politely.

Maltzman bared his teeth in a tight little smile. "Not yet." He dialed Barry Fisher's number. "Barry? Hank. Look, something important has come up, and I won't be able to get to the meeting today ... I know, I know. You go right ahead with the meeting and proceed just the way we planned ... Look, Barry, we have eight solid votes. So with you in the chair, we'll have seven votes. Seven to six is just as good as eight to six ... Right ... Right ... Bye now."

He turned to the lieutenant and said, "Okay, let's go."

They had finished Sunday dinner, and Miriam had shooed the children upstairs to watch television so that they would not disturb Daddy who was trying to read. When the doorbell rang and she saw that it was Chief Lanigan, she said with a mischievous smile, "Just happen to be in the neighborhood, Chief? It's Chief Lanigan, David."

"No, Miriam," Lanigan said soberly, "this time I came on purpose." And he told the reason for his visit.

"Do you honestly think Maltzman shot him?" asked the rabbi.

Lanigan squirmed uncomfortably. "It's not for me to say whether he did or he didn't. That's for a judge and jury. I'm just conducting the investigation."

"Then do you honestly suspect him?"

"What's that mean? Do I think he's a born killer? Of course not. But which of the people involved is? All I know is that he threatened Jordon that same day. Said he'd put a bullet through his head. And that's how Jordon was killed. That's enough right there for us to act. But I didn't push it because I thought he was at the temple at the time that the murder was committed. Then I found that he wasn't. That made his stock as a suspect jump sky-high. And when we ask him to account for his movements that evening, he tells us it's none of our business. Well, I've got to see Clegg tomorrow, and if I tell him I didn't press Maltzman for an explanation because he said it was none of our business, he'll think I'm not up to my job, and he'll go ahead and charge him."

"So you're arresting him to get him to talk?"

"That's right." He glanced at his wristwatch. "Right about now, I'd say."

"And if he doesn't talk?"

"Then I'll put him in a cell for the night," said Lanigan promptly. "And the next morning, I'll confer with Clegg, and it's my guess that he'll haul him up before the nearest judge and charge him. And then make an announcement to the press. And since it's murder, there'll be no bail and he'll stay in jail. I'm sorry, David, but that's the way it's going to be."

The rabbi nodded.

"I'm sorry."

"Thanks for telling me."

46.

If Mrs. Mandell had hoped that her son would confront his wife when she got home, she was disappointed. When Molly returned, she called out, "H'lo, Mother. Manage with dinner all right?" gave her husband a wifely peck, and flounced up the stairs to the bedroom, saying, "I've got to change, I promised one of the girls I'd help her with her bridge."

She came down a few minutes later, having changed from the dress that she had worn to Boston to the comfortable slacks and sweater she thought more suitable to Barnard's Crossing.

"Who is it?" Herb asked, as she headed for the door.

"Oh, no one you know," she said vaguely. "One of the girls in the office."

No sooner had the door closed behind her than he got up, stretched lazily and announced, "Well, I better get going, too. You'll be all right, Ma?"

"I'll be all right. But what's your hurry? You've got plenty of time yet."

He had a good half hour in fact, but just then he did not want to spend it with his mother, defending Molly against her insinuations.

"Yeah, but there's like a caucus before the meeting that they asked me to come to. Some of the men want to talk over something important we're going to take up."

He drove to the public beach and parked. The food stand had remained open because the weather had held fine, and people continued to come, to walk along the edge of the water or to sit and watch the surf. He bought a cup of coffee and took it back to the car.

There were several cars parked, one with a couple in a close embrace, which unaccountably annoyed him. He sipped at his coffee and puffed on a cigarette and rationalized Molly's behavior. He admitted that his mother had probably not been dreaming and had indeed seen what she said she had. But what of it? The phone call she had heard must have been the one that Gore had made. And then she had gone out for a half an hour or so. Well, she had been working hard all evening on the report and wanted a bit of fresh air. Of course, she shouldn't have left Ma all alone, but she did first go up to see if she was all right. And Molly had insisted right along that Ma wasn't as helpless at night as she claimed. And, of course, she wasn't. He knew that his mother had a tendency to exaggerate and dramatize her condition-for sympathy, and maybe because she was lonely. But still ...

He set the car in motion and started for the meeting. He decided not to mention the matter to Molly. There was tension enough between the two women, maybe normal between a girl and her mother-in-law living in the same house. But if Molly got the idea that his mother was spying on her and, what is more, tattling to him, then it could start an unholy row. And who knows where that could lead?

The board members were shuffling into seats around the table when Herb arrived. He nodded to those who caught his eye and slid shyly into the nearest chair. Barry Fisher got up and closed the door of the room. Then taking the place at the head of the table, he announced, "Henry called me to say something important had come up and that he wouldn't be able to make it today. So let's come to order and get on with the meeting. If I remember right, we agreed to devote this meeting to the budget and nothing else, so I think we can dispense with the reading of the minutes and committee reports. Let's see, you wanted time to study the budget, Herb. That's why we postponed consideration until today. Right. Well, have you had a chance to go over it?"

"Uh-huh."

"Okay, then let's get started. The first section is housekeeping expenses. You want to say anything about the figures, Mike?"

"I thought we were going to take it item by item, Mr. Chairman."

"That's right."

"So why don't we take the first item, the first line item, I mean?"

"Okay."

"Well, the first item is heat. You notice we increased that item over what we allotted last year. Now, I could have just added our supplementary allocations for heat last year to the original budget figure and let it go at that. But I thought we ought to increase that figure by about ten percent on account of we got to figure on a possible price increase in oil."

"On the other hand, Mike, last winter was exceptionally cold. It's not likely we're going to get another winter like last year."

"Well, I heard a guy on TV claim that the climate might be getting colder. According to him, there's a good chance that we're getting into another Ice Age. Something to do with the ozone layer."

"Aw, that's just science fiction. We can't have another winter like last year. The country couldn't stand it."

"So you think Congress will pass a law against it, Bill?"

They wrangled about it, gnawing at it like a dog with a bone, and then finally accepted the original figure. They proceeded to do the same with the next item, and the next. On the whole, the women members tended to be more businesslike and more inclined to stick to the point, but they were also given to whispering together and sometimes lost the thread of the argument and demanded to have it restated.

"Okay, the next item is salaries. You want to say something on that, Doris?"

"Yes, I do," said Doris Melnick, who was chairman of the school committee. "When Mike asked me for the figures on individual teacher's salaries, I told him I couldn't give it to him and that I'd have to give him just the lump sum for the whole faculty. I'd like to explain the reason for that. We on the school committee negotiate each teacher's salary with the individual teacher, separately and confidentially. That's been our policy from the beginning, and it has worked well. No teacher knows what any other teacher is getting, unless he tells him. That way, negotiating each one separately, I mean, we can give the better teacher a little extra if it should be necessary, and you don't get jealousy and disgruntlement-"