Joe said, thinking, Is it?
"How naive can you be before it becomes unforgivable?" His father's breath exited through his nostrils. "If they give you the name of a man in police custody, then they want that man found hanging in his cell or shot in the back 'trying to escape.' So, Joseph, given the degree of ignorance you seem willfully to cling to in such matters, I need you to hear exactly what I have to say."
Joe met his father's stare, surprised by the depths of love and loss he saw there. His father, it seemed quite clear, now sat at the culmination of a life's journey, and the words about to leave his mouth were a summation of it.
"I will not take the life of another without cause."
"Even a killer?" Joe said.
"Even a killer."
"And the man responsible for the death of a woman I loved."
"You told me you think she's alive."
"That's not the point," Joe said.
"No," his father agreed, "it's not. The point is that I don't engage in murder. Not for anyone. Certainly not for that dago devil you've sworn your allegiance to."
"I've got to survive in here," Joe said. "In here."
"And you do what you have to." His father nodded, his green eyes brighter than usual. "And I'll never judge you for it. But I won't commit homicide."
"Even for me?"
"Especially for you."
"Then I'll die in here, Dad."
"That's possible, yes."
Joe looked down at the table, the wood blurring, everything blurring. "Soon."
"And if that happens" - his father's voice was a whisper - "I'll die soon after of a broken heart. But I won't murder for you, son. Kill for you? Yes. But murder? Never."
Joe looked up. He was ashamed how wet his voice sounded when he said, "Please."
His father shook his head. Softly. Slowly.
Well, then. There was nothing left to say.
Joe went to stand.
His father said, "Wait."
"What?"
His father looked at the guard standing by the door behind Joe. "That screw, is he in Maso's pocket?"
"Yeah. Why?"
His father removed his watch from his vest. He removed the chain from the watch.
"No, Dad. No."
Thomas dropped the chain back into his pocket and slid the watch across the table.
Joe tried to keep the tears in his eyes from falling. "I can't."
"You can. You will." His father stared through the screen at him like something on fire, all the exhaustion swept from his face, all the hopelessness too. "It's worth a fortune, that piece of metal. But that's all it is - a piece of metal. You buy your life with it. You hear me? You give it to that dago devil and buy your life."
Joe closed his hand over the watch and it was still warm from his father's pocket, ticking against his palm like a heart.
He told Maso in the mess hall. He hadn't intended to; he hadn't guessed it would come up. He thought he'd have time. During meals, Joe sat with members of the Pescatore crew, but not with the ones at the first table who sat with Maso himself. Joe sat at the next one over with guys like Rico Gastemeyer, who ran the daily number, and Larry Kahn, who made toilet gin in the basement of the guards' quarters. He came back from his meeting with his father and took a seat across from Rico and Ernie Rowland, a counterfeiter from Saugus, but they were pushed down the bench by Hippo Fasini, one of the soldiers closest to Maso, and Joe was left looking across the table at Maso himself, flanked on one side by Naldo Aliente and on the other by Hippo Fasini.
"So when will it happen?" Maso asked.
"Sir?"
Maso looked frustrated, as he always did when asked to repeat himself. "Joseph."
Joe felt his chest and throat clench around his answer. "He won't do it."
Naldo Aliente chuckled softly and shook his head.
Maso said, "He refused?"
Joe nodded.
Maso looked at Naldo, then at Hippo Fasini. No one said anything for some time. Joe looked down at his food, aware that it was growing cold, aware he should eat it because if you skipped a meal in here, you'd grow weak very fast.
"Joseph, look at me."
Joe looked across the table. The face staring back at him seemed amused and curious, like a wolf who'd come upon a nest of newborn chicks where he'd least expected.
"Why weren't you more convincing with your father?"
Joe said, "Mr. Pescatore, I tried."
Maso looked back and forth between his men. "He tried."
When Naldo Aliente smiled he exposed a row of teeth that looked like bats