Share

The Count

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-06-18 22:00:10

Saoirse POV

He said: “Seventeen, publicly. Twenty in fact.”

He said it the way he had said the other things — directly, without preamble, with the small specific clarity of a man who had decided that the woman across the table was owed the numbers in their actual sequence and not in the version of the sequence that softened them for her.

I held the numbers.

I want to tell you what holding them was like, because I have thought about it and the truest thing I can say is that holding them was an act of small physical labor. The numbers had weight. *Seventeen.* I had read that number in a tabloid on the F train two years ago and had not stayed with it for longer than the article required. *Twenty.* That number had not, until that night, existed in the world I had access to. The three-number gap between them was a fact about him that the public version of him did not contain, and the gap was, in that front room with the lamp light and the water and the green runner outside the door, mine to hold for the first time.

I held them.

I did not say anything for a while.

He did not, in that while, push. He sat on the sofa with his hands on his knees and he let the silence do what the silence needed to do, and I want to tell you, because it matters: in the entire silence, he did not look away from me, and he did not perform the silence as a thing he was bearing. He simply sat. He had told me a thing he had not told another person before, and he was waiting, without weight, for me to be done holding it.

That was a kindness too.

I noted, in the second half of the silence, that this was a man whose kindnesses were going to be a thing I would have to learn to recognize. They did not look the way other people’s kindnesses looked. They looked like a man not performing the difficulty of his own confession in front of a woman who needed the moment to absorb it.

After some time, I said: “The three.”

He understood me.

He said: “The three the public does not have. Two of them were in 2021. One was in 2022. The press has never connected those three to the seventeen. They are real, and they were mine, and they are the difference between the number you knew in your interior of me and the number that is actually true.”

I said: “And Derek.”

He said: “Derek would be the twenty-first.”

I held that too.

Twenty-one. I was, sitting in the armchair of a man’s front room in Brooklyn Heights, the wife of the twenty-first man this man had killed. The wife of the most recent count.

I noted, with the small honest precision I had been learning from my own autumn, that the number had landed in me without producing horror.

I noted, also, that the absence of the horror was itself a piece of information.

The horror was not absent because I had not understood what twenty meant. The horror was absent because I had already, somewhere underneath the conscious work of these two months, integrated the truth that the man who had walked into my living room at nine forty-seven on a Tuesday in November was a man whose practice included a number, and the number was the number, and the question of *how high* the number was had not been a question whose answer was going to change what I had already, without language for it, decided.

I had decided, on the kitchen floor of my Ditmas Park apartment at two AM the night I moved in, that the man who had saved me was also the man who had violated me, and that I could carry both.

The number was now also a thing I was carrying.

Three things at once.

A person can carry three things.

──

I looked at him.

I said: “Marcus.”

I had not, before that moment, said his name aloud.

I had received it, in his own voice, half an hour earlier across the same table, and I had stored it the way I store names I am going to need, and I had not yet had a reason to use it. The reason had arrived. I needed to say something to him that did not have *the Verdict Killer* in front of it, because the next sentence was a sentence I needed to say to him as a person, and a person needed a name.

He looked at me.

Something moved in his face when I used the name. I do not have a clean way to describe it. The closest I have come, in subsequent thinking, is that he looked the way a man looks when he has not, for a very long time, been called by his name in a room with a person who was not afraid of him. He did not soften. He did not visibly react. The movement was the smallest possible movement of a man whose interior had received an event.

I said: “Do you have a plan for Eddie Doyle.”

──

He said: “Yes.”

I said: “Tell me.”

He told me.

He told me, in the same direct unhurried voice he had used for the rest of the confession, that he had identified Doyle as the most competent investigator who would ever be on this case, and that he had decided weeks ago that he would not remove Doyle, because removing Doyle would create a pattern an Eastern District federal prosecutor named Elena Park was already assembling and which had been waiting for the disappearance of a Calloway-adjacent investigator the way a tripwire waits for a foot. He told me that he had, instead, made himself a variable in Doyle’s investigation — had stood on the sidewalk of my building two nights ago and let Doyle photograph him — and that he was, this week, going to do one more thing about Doyle that I would, when he explained it, have to decide whether to permit him to do.

I said: “Which is.”

He said: “I am going to invite Eddie Doyle to lunch.”

I looked at him for a long moment.

He said: “Doyle is a man who can be reasoned with. Doyle does not want to put a tech CEO in federal court — Doyle wants to know what happened to Derek Calloway. If I give Doyle a version of the truth he can close his case on, and if I do so in a way that protects you and your friend Priya and the architecture of Arbitr’s legitimate harm-reductive work, Doyle will close. Doyle is not an evangelist. He is a closer. I am going to give him a thing to close, and the giving of it will be the most exposed I have ever been in my life.”

I said: “And if it doesn’t work.”

He said: “Then Doyle goes to Elena Park, and Elena Park has me arrested. I have, since Saturday night, been signing succession documents at the company to ensure that the legitimate platform survives and that the team is protected. I will not, in either scenario, take the company down with me. I will, in either scenario, take down with me only myself.”

I said: “And me.”

He said: “No, Saoirse. Not you. The three sentences you have been deploying are sentences a competent defense attorney can hold up against any prosecutor in the country, and I will, before any of this becomes public, have already paid the retainer for the defense attorney who is going to hold them up for you. You will not lose your freedom because of what I have done. I will lose mine. You will be fine.”

I said: “You have planned this.”

“Yes.”

“For how long.”

He looked at me.

He said: “Since the morning I closed the Calloway file.”

──

I did not say anything for a long time.

I understood, sitting in the armchair across the coffee table from him, that this man had spent the two months I had been rebuilding my life building, in parallel and without my knowledge, an architecture in which the worst outcomes for everyone he had implicated in his work — me, Priya, the company, the staff — had been mitigated against in advance. He had been doing it the way he did everything, which was carefully, alone, and without expectation of being thanked. He had not, in the entire confession, made one gesture toward the moral credit he was due for any of it.

I drank the water.

I set the glass back down on the table.

I said: “I am going to go home now.”

He nodded. He did not protest. He did not, in any visible way, ask me to stay.

I said: “I am coming back on Sunday.”

He looked at me, and the same small movement that had crossed his face when I had used his name crossed it again, and he said: “I will be here.”

I stood up. I crossed the front room. I went down the hall. Faraz was at the door. He had my coat. He helped me into it.

Faraz said, low: “Drive carefully, Ms. Boyle.”

I said: “Saoirse, Faraz.”

He smiled, very slightly. It was the first time I had seen him smile.

He said: “Saoirse.”

He opened the door.

I went down the steps of a brownstone in Brooklyn Heights into a November Thursday at ten oh-four PM, and I got into my van, and I drove home to my apartment in Ditmas Park, and I locked the door, and I did not check it again, and I sat at my kitchen table with the slip of paper still in the pocket of my coat on the chair beside me, and I said his name once, quietly, to the empty room, just to hear what it sounded like in my own voice.

*Marcus.*

The room did not answer.

I went to bed.

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

Latest chapter

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Prosecutor

    Third POV Elena Park kept the spreadsheet on a personal laptop that never connected to the Eastern District’s network.She had started it twenty-six months earlier, on a Sunday, after a third case had crossed her desk in eighteen months that had the same wrong shape a man with a documented history of intimate-partner violence, a man whom the system had failed to convict or contain, a man who had then simply, cleanly, completely disappeared. Not fled. Not surfaced elsewhere under another name. Disappeared, in the specific way that left a digital trail just convincing enough to close a missing-persons file and just convenient enough to make a careful person’s skin prickle.Three, twenty-six months ago.Eleven, now.Elena had built the spreadsheet the way she built everything quietly, without telling anyone, on her own time, against the day when the pattern would either dissolve into coincidence or harden into a case. Eleven disappeared men. Eleven documented abusers. Eleven digital tra

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Hand Off

    Marcus POV I gave the machine three days, and on the fourth I gave it Lena.The three days compressed into a kind of work I had not done in years sustained, total, uninterrupted, the work of a man assembling a thing whose deadline was real and whose specification was unforgiving. The statement reached its final form: eighteen pages, every sentence routing culpability to me and away from everyone else. The evidence package neared completion the records of the twenty, sourced individually, structured so that a prosecutor receiving them would have a complete case requiring no further investigation, and therefore no subpoenas, and therefore no threads pulled through Priya’s compliance question or Saoirse’s three sentences or the data of a company that was about to belong to someone else.Saoirse worked beside me for most of it. Not on the package the package was mine, the twenty were mine, and I was not going to let her hands touch the record of them but in the room, at the second desk,

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Shorten Clock

    Marcus POV Saoirse came back from Priya’s at eleven forty PM.I had been at the desk in the study with the statement, which was now eleven pages and most of the way to complete. I heard the van. I heard Faraz let her in. I heard her come up the stairs, and I turned in the chair, and I read her face, and her face told me two things before she said either of them.The first thing her face told me was that she had done it. She had told Priya everything. The telling had cost her something, and the cost was visible in the specific exhaustion of a woman who has spent an evening handing the worst truth of her life to the person she loves most.The second thing her face told me was that something had changed about the timeline.I said: “Sit down. Tell me.”She sat. She told me.──She told me that Priya now knew all of it. The night, the count, my name, the second queue, the fact that her own escalation fourteen months ago had been the first link in the chain.She told me what Priya had said

  • The Killer Who Found Me    Everything

    Saoirse POVI went to Priya’s apartment on Tuesday night.I did not bring curry. I did not bring wine. I brought nothing, because I had understood, lying awake on Monday night beside the man who was writing his own confession in the next room, that what I was going to do at Priya’s apartment on Tuesday was not a thing you brought food to. I drove to her place in Kensington and I climbed the stairs to the third floor and I knocked, and when she opened the door I said, before I was even inside: “I’m going to tell you the whole thing. The thing I couldn’t tell you Saturday. I need you to let me get all the way through it before you say anything.”Priya looked at me for a long moment in her doorway.Then she stepped back and let me in, and she said: “Okay.”──We sat at her kitchen table.And I told her.I told her about the night. The door coming off its hinges. The man in the silver mask. Derek on the kitchen floor. I told her what I had asked the man for not to kill Derek, not at first

  • The Killer Who Found Me    The Board, Cleared

    Marcus POV Saoirse was at the house when I got back from the lunch.She had not gone home after Sunday. She had, on Monday morning, driven to a job in Red Hook and then come back to Brooklyn Heights rather than to Ditmas Park, and Faraz had let her in, and when I came through the door at two forty PM she was in the front room with the book her book, the one she had bought open on her knee, not reading it, waiting.She looked up when I came in.She read my face the way she had learned to read my face.She said: “He didn’t take the story.”“No,” I said. “He didn’t take the story.”I sat down across from her. I told her the lunch. I told her about Anneke Vos the woman Doyle had buried in 2009, the case the system failed, the fifteen years Doyle had been carrying her. I told her that Doyle was not, it turned out, trying to catch me, but was trying to determine whether I was a man who deserved to be allowed to stop on his own terms. I told her what I had told Doyle, which was the whole tr

  • 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 bei

  • 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

  • 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 ord

  • 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

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