The Borzoi Killings

The Borzoi Killings by Paul Batista Page B

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Authors: Paul Batista
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to the prayers she recited. She was raised as a Catholic and had remained one—a fact that she didn’t usually disclose in the world in which she now lived—and believed in the will of God. She was convinced she’d been given a second life, that she’d lived two lives in one. As in the lines in Luke that described the Prodigal Son— For this thy brother was dead and is alive again .
    Since her first meeting with Juan, she was fascinated by him and the place where his life had brought him. She was also fascinated by the incessant attention focused on him and the murder of an immensely wealthy man. It was as though Juan were accused of killing Mother Teresa. There were endless news reports dwelling on how the mysterious alien had managed to win the affection and confidence of one of the wealthiest and most philanthropic couples in the world, Brad and Joan Richardson. The New York Post carried stories about the “rat” who had insidiously worked his way into the Richardsons’ storied lives and then betrayed them. The articles mentioned that the Richardsons also cared generously for the rat’s “undocumented” wife and children, who had disappeared, probably with cash stolen from the Richardsons’ estate, on the same day Juan was arrested “after leading the police on a wild run through the woods as he tried to escape.”
    When Raquel had announced that she was taking over the defense of Juan Suarez, the publicity ratcheted up yet another notch.The press conference took place on the sidewalk at 57th Street and Park Avenue, near the lobby of her office building. It was a clear, chilly fall day. The crisp sunlight fell on Raquel’s taut, beautifully structured, Sicilian-dark face as she spoke. “As more is revealed in this painful case,” she had said, “we’ll learn that the arrest of Juan Suarez was not the result of a thorough professional investigation, but a symptom of some of our worst instincts as a nation. Juan Suarez is not a blade. He is not a knife. He is not an alien. And he is not an insidious rat. He is part of an invisible, much-scorned population whose presence we as a society don’t want to acknowledge, although we take advantage of it. We treat these people as invisible, but they are our nannies, maids, gardeners. We are demonizing the most vulnerable people among us. Juan Suarez had no motive to commit this crime. He had no reason to commit it. And he did not do it.”
    Images of Raquel speaking in the clear fall air, with flowers still in bloom behind her on the colorful median dividing Park Avenue’s uptown and downtown traffic, were broadcast around the world. On the day after the press conference, the headline in the Times read: Famed Celebrity Lawyer Takes Over Defense in Hamptons Murder .
     
    Raquel Rematti was tall and imposing, and she was surprised that Juan was four inches taller than she was. When they first met, Juan’s size and vitality surprised her, just as Joan Richardson had been surprised months earlier by how vibrant Juan’s presence was. Raquel had grown used to seeing the small, cowed men who were steadily appearing on the East End of Long Island. She genuinely wanted to believe she had no race or other prejudices, but the difference between Juan and the other Mexican, Nicaraguan, and Ecuadorian men she saw along the roadsides and in the yards of Southampton, East Hampton, and Montauk was too striking forher to deny. Where did he really come from? she wondered. To her, he looked like a Spanish aristocrat, not an immigrant day laborer. She was disappointed with herself that she made these comparisons, but she did.
    They always met in a small room with plastic, childlike chairs and desk, all pink. The guards, one of them a very heavy black woman with a tattoo of a flower on her neck, insisted that the door stay open. The guards had pistols. Juan Suarez was an important prisoner, almost certainly the best-known ever held in the Suffolk County Correctional

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