Share

The Lunch

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-06-24 04:24:02

Marcus POV

Eddie Doyle was already at the table when I arrived.

He had chosen, of the several tables the restaurant had available at one PM on a Monday, the one in the back corner with its back to the wall and a clear sightline to the door the table a man chooses when he has spent thirty-one years making sure he sees who comes in before they see him. He had a cup of coffee in front of him. He had no notebook, no folder, no phone on the table. He had his hands folded on the table in front of the coffee, and he watched me cross the room to him with the unhurried completeness I had read about in the trial transcripts and had now, for the second time, the experience of being on the receiving end of.

I sat down across from him.

I did not offer my hand. He did not offer his. We had, two nights ago on a sidewalk in Ditmas Park, already exchanged the only greeting our relationship was going to be built on, which was a man letting another man photograph him.

Doyle said: “Mr. Reed.”

I said: “Mr. Doyle.”

He said: “You know my name.”

I said: “I know a great deal about you. I knew your name before you photographed me. I knew your closure rate, your conviction rate, the year you retired, and the fact that you do not take notes. I have known these things for some weeks.”

Doyle nodded slowly, as if I had confirmed something he had already assumed.

He said: “And I know yours. Took me a day and a half after the sidewalk. Marcus Reed. Arbitr AI. The man on the magazine covers about the ethics of catching bad men with computers.” He turned the coffee cup a quarter-turn on the table. “That’s a hell of a thing to be on the cover of, given the rest of it.”

“Yes,” I said. “It is.”

──

I had planned the lunch the way I planned things.

The plan had been to give Doyle a version of the truth he could close his case on a version in which Derek Calloway had been a man with private debts and private enemies, a man whose disappearance was best explained by the kind of trouble men like Derek got into, a version that pointed away from me and away from Saoirse and away from anything that touched Arbitr. I had built the version carefully. I had supporting material. I had been prepared to spend the lunch installing it in Doyle’s mind with the same patience I had installed the Hudson story with.

I did not get to install it.

Because Doyle, before I could begin, said: “Don’t.”

I stopped.

He said: “Whatever you came here to feed me don’t. I drove to Hudson on a Saturday and looked at a horse property with a deed in the name of a woman who doesn’t exist, and I want you to understand that I knew she didn’t exist before I got out of the car, because I have been doing this for thirty-one years and I can smell a manufactured woman from the Saw Mill Parkway. So whatever the lunch version is, the cleaner one, the one with the gambling debts or the second family or whatever you’ve got keep it. I’m too old to be managed by a man half my age, even a smart one. Especially a smart one.”

I closed the version.

I want to tell you that I felt something, closing it, that I had not expected to feel. I felt relief. I had spent two months managing the people around this case Reyes, the family, Doyle himself with the Hudson story and I was tired, in a way I had not let myself register until a sixty-three-year-old man in a brown jacket told me to keep my manufactured woman, of being the man who managed everyone.

I said: “Then what do you want, Mr. Doyle.”

──

Doyle was quiet for a moment.

Then he said a thing I had not modeled.

He said: “In 2009 I caught a case in Brooklyn South. Woman named Anneke Vos. Husband put her in the hospital four times in two years. We could never make anything stick she wouldn’t testify, the DA wouldn’t move without her, the husband had a lawyer who knew exactly how thin the line was. Standard. You know the shape of it. You probably know it better than I do, given your line of work.”

“I know the shape of it,” I said.

“The fifth time he put her in the hospital, she didn’t come out. He got eight years. Manslaughter. Served five.” Doyle turned the cup another quarter-turn. “I sat across from Anneke Vos four times in two years and I knew the way you know things in this job, the way that doesn’t hold up in a courtroom I knew that man was going to kill her, and I could not do one goddamn thing about it, because the system I worked for needed her to do something she was too terrified to do before it would lift a finger. She died waiting for the system I gave my life to.”

He looked at me.

He said: “So I want you to understand that I am not sitting across from you because I think what you do is wrong. I have spent fifteen years thinking about Anneke Vos. I have spent fifteen years knowing that if some thing had taken her husband off the board in year one, she’d have raised her kids. I am not here to tell you that you are a monster, Mr. Reed. I have buried too many Annekes to tell you that with a straight face.”

──

I did not say anything for a moment.

This was the residual.

I had modeled Doyle as an instinct-driven closer who wanted to solve the case. I had not modeled Doyle as a man carrying his own Anneke Vos a man whose entire pursuit of me was not, it turned out, about catching me, but about something older and more complicated that he had been carrying since 2009.

I had built Doyle a story to chase.

I had not understood that Doyle was already inside a story of his own, and that my case had walked into the middle of it.

I said: “Then I will ask you again. What do you want.”

Doyle said: “I want to know if you’re careful.”

I said: “What do you mean.”

He said: “I mean I have read about your company. I know what the public product does. I know it flags the high-risk ones. And I have spent the last week wondering whether a man who built a machine to find the worst husbands in New York might also have built himself a way to act on what the machine finds. And if he did, I want to know if he is careful. I want to know if the men who come off the board are the men who actually earned it, or whether you are a man who has started to enjoy the deciding. Because those are two very different men, Mr. Reed, and I have met both, and only one of them can be allowed to keep going.”

──

I understood, then, the conversation I was actually in.

Doyle was not interviewing me about Derek Calloway.

Doyle was interviewing me about whether I was a man worth letting continue.

And I understood, with the small cold clarity that had not left me since the night, that I was not going to lie to him. Not because lying would not have worked it might have but because the man across the table had spent fifteen years carrying a dead woman the system failed, and he was, in his way, the closest thing to a colleague I had ever had in the actual work, and I was not going to insult what he was carrying by managing him.

I said: “Twenty. The real number is twenty. The press has seventeen. Every one of the twenty met two conditions: the public model flagged them at the highest tier, and the legal system had a structurally near-zero probability of stopping them before they killed. I reviewed every one alone. I have never been wrong about one. I have declined more than I have acted on there is a folder of men I investigated and did not touch, because the model said high-risk and my own review said the man was salvageable or the risk was containable by other means. I have never enjoyed it. I do not enjoy it now. I built it because I watched the system fail the exact women your Anneke Vos was, and I decided I was not going to be one more man who knew and did nothing.”

Doyle held my eyes through all of it.

When I finished, he was quiet for a long time.

Then he said: “Derek Calloway. Was he one of the careful ones.”

I said: “Derek Calloway broke his wife’s wrist thirty-seven minutes before I arrived. He had been escalating for three years. The model flagged him at the highest tier. The legal system had not been given anything to act on because his wife was, like Anneke Vos, too managed and too afraid to give it to them. Yes, Mr. Doyle. He was one of the careful ones. He was, if anything, the clearest case of the twenty.”

──

Doyle sat back.

He looked out the window of the restaurant at the Manhattan Bridge for a while.

Then he said: “Here’s where we are. There’s a compliance inquiry started last week at the Kings County DA’s office some advocate asked in writing why the high-risk cases keep closing in your queue. You probably don’t know about it. I only know about it because I still have friends in that building who tell me things.”

He had known.

Of course he had known. Doyle did not take notes because Doyle kept everything in the one place a subpoena could not reach, which was a sixty-three-year-old head full of thirty-one years of people who told him things.

He said: “That inquiry is going to reach a federal prosecutor. Maybe weeks, maybe a couple months, but it’s going to get there, because that’s what compliance inquiries do they roll downhill into the lap of whoever’s already looking, and somebody’s already looking, I can smell it. When it gets there, you’re done. The careful won’t matter. The twenty being the right twenty won’t matter. A federal courtroom does not have a setting for *he was right.*”

He leaned forward.

He said: “So here is what I am going to give you, Mr. Reed, and I am giving it to you for Anneke Vos and not for you. You have a window. Before that inquiry reaches the wrong desk, you have a chance to decide how this ends on your terms, with your company protected and the women who depend on the real product protected, and the wife protected, instead of having it decided for you in a way that takes all of them down with you. You are a man who likes to control the board. This is the last time you’re going to be able to.”

He stood up. He put a ten-dollar bill on the table for his coffee.

He said: “You’ve got till the end of the month. After that I make a call to a woman I know at the Eastern District, because I am not going to let the careful version and the not-careful version stay blurred together long enough for some future not-careful man to hide behind what you built. Clean it up yourself, or I clean it up for you. Either way it gets clean.”

He put on his brown jacket.

He said: “Thank you for lunch.”

He walked out of the restaurant into the Monday, and I sat alone at the back table with his cold coffee and his ten-dollar bill, and I understood that I had been given, by the one man my model had never been able to predict, the exact thing I had not known I was going to need: a deadline, a reason, and the dignity of being allowed to end it myself.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Lunch

    Marcus POV Eddie Doyle was already at the table when I arrived.He had chosen, of the several tables the restaurant had available at one PM on a Monday, the one in the back corner with its back to the wall and a clear sightline to the door the table a man chooses when he has spent thirty-one years making sure he sees who comes in before they see him. He had a cup of coffee in front of him. He had no notebook, no folder, no phone on the table. He had his hands folded on the table in front of the coffee, and he watched me cross the room to him with the unhurried completeness I had read about in the trial transcripts and had now, for the second time, the experience of being on the receiving end of.I sat down across from him.I did not offer my hand. He did not offer his. We had, two nights ago on a sidewalk in Ditmas Park, already exchanged the only greeting our relationship was going to be built on, which was a man letting another man photograph him.Doyle said: “Mr. Reed.”I said: “M

  • The Killer Who Found Me    Sunday

    Saoirse POV I drove to Brooklyn Heights on Sunday at seven thirty PM, the way I had told him I would, and I did not, on the drive over, rehearse the gentle version of the evening I had imagined on Friday.On Friday I had imagined Sunday as a soft thing. I had imagined arriving at his house and being given tea and sitting in the front room and letting the two of us begin, slowly, the work of being two people who were choosing each other with both sets of eyes open. I had imagined the quiet. I had earned the quiet, I had thought, and so had he.That version of Sunday had died on Saturday night, at my kitchen table, when Priya told me about the compliance question.I drove over with the dead version of the evening in the passenger seat and the live version the one where I walked into his house and detonated the careful architecture he had spent two months building in my hands on the wheel.Faraz opened the door before I knocked.He had, I understood, been watching for the van. He looked

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Good Curry

    Saoirse POVPriya arrived at seven with two bags and the good curry.The good curry came from the Thai place on Church Avenue that she had been getting it from for the eight years we had been doing this the panang she liked and the drunken noodles I liked and the spring rolls neither of us admitted to ordering for ourselves and both of us ate. She came in out of the November cold with the bags and her cheeks pink and her scarf still on, and she put the bags on my kitchen counter, and she turned around and she looked at me, and the first thing she said was not about the curry.The first thing she said was: “You said you wanted to talk to me about something.”I had forgotten, in the four hours since I sent the text, that I had announced the conversation in advance. Priya had not forgotten. Priya had carried the sentence on the train from her apartment, and she had walked in the door holding it, and she was not going to let the curry happen on top of it.I said: “Let’s eat first.”She lo

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Quiet Day

    Saoirse POV Saturday I did what I had told myself on Friday I was going to do.I bought the book on Friday afternoon walked into the store on Cortelyou, went to the back, took it off the shelf at the Cs, and carried it to the counter and paid for it like a woman buying a book, which is a small ordinary act I had not performed in three years. The girl at the register put it in a paper bag. I carried it home. I put it on my own shelf, in my own apartment, in the spot I had cleared for it.I did not open it Friday night.I had decided the book was for Saturday.On Saturday I took it to the café.──I want to tell you about the reading, because the reading was the entire point of the day, and the day was the last fully quiet day I was going to have for a long time, though I did not know that yet.I sat at the window seat at the café on Cortelyou my window seat, the one I had been sitting in on Saturdays, the one I had been sitting in when his attention had come in behind me two weeks ago

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Message Goes Out

    Marcus POVI sent the message to Doyle at seven oh-three AM.I had set the timer the night before. The message was already composed, encrypted, queued in a routing system that would deliver it through a sequence of services that did not require my hand on a keyboard at the moment of sending. I had wanted, in advance, to remove the small superstitious pleasure of being able to second-guess myself between waking and the act of sending. The act of sending was already done before I got out of bed.I made coffee. I checked the message had gone through. It had.I dressed.I went down to the kitchen. Faraz was already there. He had, I understood, been there since six — had let himself in with the key he had kept for seven years, had started the coffee in the small machine I had stopped using in favor of the French press, and had been sitting at the kitchen island with the *New York Times* opened to the business section.He had not, in seven years, made coffee in my kitchen before I came down

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The First Morning

    Saoirse POVI woke at six twelve AM on Friday morning with the name in my mouth.Not in any literal sense the name was not the first word I said, because the first word a person says on waking is usually a word the body produces without consulting the conscious mind, and the word my body produced that morning was the same neutral *oh* it had been producing on waking for some time but in the small, present, located way a name lives in a person’s mouth when she has, the night before, used it on the man it belongs to and not yet decided how often she is going to use it again.*Marcus.*I said it once, into the pillow.I noted, lying in my own bed in my apartment with the trees outside the window, that the name had a different weight in my mouth than the names of the people I had known across the rest of my life. It was not a heavy weight. It was the weight of a word I was, even now, in some small fundamental way, still deciding whether to fully accept.I got up.I made coffee in the Fren

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Distance He Kept

    Marcus POV Eleven days after I closed the Calloway file, the folder on my personal machine had nine entries in it.I am going to list them, because the list is the most honest description of my condition that I am able to produce.One: she bought herself white tulips at a bodega on Day Three.Two:

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The First Day After

    Marcus POVFaraz dropped me at the house at six-forty-one AM.I had not slept. I do not, in operational windows, sleep I have a body trained, across four years and twenty kills, to absorb a single night of deep concentration without immediate consequence and to compensate the next night with a long

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Clean Up

    I texted him a single word.Up.I had developed this protocol early in my life as a man who did this work. One character, no punctuation, sent from a burner phone to a burner phone, received on a dedicated device Faraz kept in the glove compartment of the SUV and had never, in seven years, mentione

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Night His POV Part II

    She opened it.I will not describe what I saw. Because what I saw was not the object. What I saw was a woman’s face, in the lamp light of her own living room, watching a man who had broken her door down take in a piece of her interior life, and not ruin it.I had here is the sentence I did not let

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status