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"This is helpful background," Merlo said. "What was Whitehall working on lately, do you know?"

"He was organizing the food terminal, in the wake of our ouster of Harry Gibson, who was Big Jim and Little Jim's man. Hey! That's a thought…"

"What is?"

"There was a machine-gunning of a farmer's vehicle at the food market. Sort of a grand-gesture scare tactic, not unlike the Gordon's restaurant shooting. Gibson himself did it, apparently, though we never could quite get a witness to swear to that."

"Maybe Gibson did the Gordon's shooting."

Ness poked Merlo knowingly in the chest. "Maybe he did this one, too."

"Do we have shell casings or spent slugs or anything from the food-terminal shooting? If we could match 'em with what we have here…"

Ness sighed. "Unfortunately, no. Vandalism sites aren't generally treated as crime scenes. I checked on that already, after what happened at Gordon's."

"But do we have any casings or slugs from Gordon's? Was that treated as a crime scene?"

"It wasn't," Ness said, "but I picked up casings and slugs myself, there."

Merlo smiled and nodded. "You're a good detective, Mr. Ness. Great instincts."

The two men smiled at each other, a bit awkwardly, and Ness said, "You take it from here, Sergeant. We'll talk tomorrow."

"Yes we will," Merlo said, and headed back inside.

Ness joined Wild on the sidewalk.

"What did Mrs. Whitehall want?" the reporter asked, pitching a spent Lucky Strike into the darkness.

"To slap me."

"Oh, Christ. I'm sorry, Eliot."

"Maybe I had it coming. Maybe I got her husband killed."

"Bullshit. That idealistic roughneck knew exactly what risks he was taking, and why."

Ness sighed. "You may be right."

"You know I'm right. Besides, I don't think his working for you is necessarily what got him killed."

"Oh?"

"Who knew about it but the three of us?"

"We can't know if Jack kept it to himself."

"I'd bet my ass on him keeping it to himself. Who the hell in his circles could he tell he was in bed with the likes of you? Cops are poison to guys like Whitehall. They'd've thrown him out of his union post if they knew he was keeping company as lousy as you."

Ness managed to smile a little. "You know how to build up a fella's confidence."

"Well, it's true. But I think Big Jim and Little Jim were behind it, just the same."

Ness nodded. "Because Jack was organizing the food terminal. Because he was stepping in and taking over while they were indisposed."

"Exactly."

"Well, that's just another way it's my fault, Sam. I opened that door for Jack."

"Well what in the hell do you intend to do about it?"

"What I told his widow I'd do. Find the sons of bitches responsible."

Wild snorted. "Well, you know who that is."

"Yeah. The two Jims. And I'd bet a year's pay that Harry Gibson, their out-of-work one-man goon squad from the food terminal, is wielding that tommy gun for "em."

Wild lit up another Lucky. "Jack Whitehall would probably have taken a baseball bat and beat their brains out. Or blown 'em up with a bomb or something. What will you do?"

"All I can do is put them in jail," Ness said, digging his hands in his topcoat pockets. "Or hope they resist arrest when I come to pick them up."

"So you have a reason to kill them?"

Ness smiled faintly. "I already have a reason," he said. "It's an excuse I'm looking for."

TWO

November 7-December 20, 1937

CHAPTER 16

Just a few months ago he had been in another funeral home, in Cleveland, at the wake of Jack Whitehall. He hadn't been able to stay long-Whitehall's widow remained bitter toward him-but he'd paid his respects. Said good-bye to an old friend, an old co-worker.

Now, on this dreary Sunday afternoon, Eliot Ness was in Chicago, in Doty's funeral home on 115th Street, back in his old Roseland neighborhood, just a few blocks from the frame house where he'd been raised. He was saying good-bye to his mother, dead of a heart attack at seventy-three; five years ago, his father had gone the same way.

But he was also saying good-bye to Roseland. Driving over here from the lavishly lawned Hotel Florence, across from the Pullman plant where he'd worked, going past Palmer Park where he'd played, he felt tugs from his past, felt his last real tie with his youth slip away. He would never live here again. He would rarely visit-only his schoolteacher sister Effie still lived in Roseland; his other two sisters, Clara and Nora, and his brother Charles, had all moved away. The family business, his father's bakery, had been sold years ago.

Effie was the only one of his siblings present in the long, narrow parlor, a very Protestant room, with its dark wood and small stained-glass windows. His brother and his other two sisters would be coming in by train later today. Now, suffering the too-sweet smell of funereal flowers, he stood making meaningless conversation with faces both familiar and foreign, reaching into his memory for the names of these men and women his age who had stayed in Roseland. The men, most of them, worked in the Pullman plant where Ness had briefly toiled as a young man, dipping radiators. The women looked much older than they should, with lined faces and clinging children. Among the older folks paying their respects was the now-retired Pullman office manager who had told Ness's mother that her son could always count on a job anytime he wanted it.

That had made his mother proud. She'd been a little too proud of him, he was afraid; not so long ago she had given an embarrassing interview to Sam Wild, damn him, in which she revealed that her youngest son "was so terribly good as a boy, he never got a spanking… I never saw a baby like him." Even worse, Sam had coaxed her into saying that she wasn't the least bit surprised that her youngest child had "the country's attention focused on his work on rebuilding a major city's crime prevention and law enforcement activities."

He'd been surprised that even Sam Wild could wheedle such admissions out of Mama ("I always expected Eliot to do outstanding things"); she was too quiet, too reserved for such remarks. On the other hand, her high opinion of him was no secret to him. He knew he was the favorite, and his sisters and brother didn't even seem to mind; they had fussed over the freckle-faced baby, too.

He knew that he'd been somewhat spoiled as a child; ten years younger than his nearest sibling, he'd been doted over, no denying it. Childhoods didn't come much better. He and his papa would hop a streetcar and take in a game at White Sox park; or grab the I.C. to Soldier Field for a football game. His mother would read aloud to him, and had taught him to read before he entered kindergarten. When other kids were reading Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, if they could read at all, young Ness was consuming Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes tales and the plays of William Shakespeare.

Nonetheless, his parents had encouraged him to be independent, and there had been no pressure to go into the family business. In fact, his mother and father had urged him to go to college, so he could get a top white collar job; they'd been disappointed, but not disapproving, when he went to work at Pullman instead.

The day he came home with a new suit and suitcase, to tell his mother he had enrolled in the University of Chicago, she had said only, "It's like you to enroll first, then tell us." But there had been no disapproval in that. If anything, the opposite. And his father had only nodded, said, "Good," and gone back to puffing his pipe and reading his evening paper.

Now they were both gone. Actually, his mother was still here-in that coffin, across the room. She truly looked peaceful; like she was sleeping. Yes. But Eliot Ness, who had seen more corpses than the undertaker who ran this place, who had seen bodies riddled with bullets, who had seen stiffs knife-slashed from head to foot, had never seen a dead body that disturbed him more.