Joe found Chuck Coon in the hallway where he’d been observing the interview from a stool.
“Can I borrow a legal pad or something from you?” Joe asked. “I filled up my notebook.”
“I’ve never heard him talk so much,” Coon said, shaking his head. “You’re actually pretty good at this.”
“He’s proud of his achievements,” Joe said. “He wants someone to know about them. He’s kind of a twisted genius in his way and he’s done a lot, and it frustrates him that all anyone asks him about is the Ponzi scheme that brought him down.”
“Are you getting what you need?”
Joe rubbed his temples with the tips of his fingers. “More than I bargained for,” he said.
“This Earl Alden he keeps talking about,” Coon said. “He’s your murdered father-in-law?”
Joe nodded.
“I heard about that. Man, he really hated that guy.”
“Nearly as much as the secretary of state,” Joe said. “Were you aware of what he was saying, that it used to be legal in Wyoming to register companies by the dozen?”
Coon nodded. “Yeah. That’s how Orin Smith got on our radar in the first place a few years ago. We kicked it over to the state since it was a state issue, but, yeah, we were aware of it.”
Joe whistled. “This is going a direction I didn’t anticipate.”
“I take it you know this Bud Longbrake fellow?”
“My ex-father-in-law.”
“Quite a family you’ve got.” Coon whistled. “Let me get you a pad. But keep in mind Smith has a hearing this afternoon. You’ll need to wrap it up after lunch. Speaking of . . .”
“Thanks,” Joe growled, “but I’m not hungry.”
“Okay,” Joe said, reentering the interrogation room with a fresh yellow legal pad. “You were starting to tell me about your connection with the wind turbine remanufacturer in Texas.”
At first, Joe didn’t pay any attention to the rapping at the interrogation room door. He was busy scribbling, and trying to process what he was being told by Orin Smith. Finally, Smith quit talking and chinned behind Joe.
Coon and a U.S. marshal stood there. The marshal said, “Mr. Smith has an appointment upstairs before the judge.”
“I think I’m through with him,” Joe said. He thanked Coon for the opportunity and shook hands with Orin Smith as the marshal escorted him out of the room.
“I appreciate your cooperation,” Joe said.
Smith nodded. “Just make sure to put in that good word—and to let Gov Spence know.”
“I will.”
As Smith left the room, he paused and turned. To Joe, he said, “If you get the son-of-a-bitch who did it, give him a big wet kiss from me.”
Joe nodded that he understood.
Joe sat in his pickup outside the Federal Building and flipped through page after page of notes, rereading his shorthand and committing names, dates, and the players to memory. He shook his head and absently stared at his cell phone display. Marybeth had called twice but hadn’t left messages. Her single text read, “Is everything all right? Call when you’re able.”
She answered on the second ring. He could tell from the hush in her voice that she was working behind the desk at the library and couldn’t talk long.
“Joe—what’s going on?”
“It’s complicated,” he said. “I’m sorting it all out in my mind and it’ll take a while to get it straight. But I hope you’re sitting down.”
“I am. Just tell me one thing. Do you know who killed The Earl?”
“No,” Joe said. “But the list of people who wanted him dead just got real, real long. That’s if we can trust what this guy Orin Smith just told me.”
He filled her in and she listened without comment. When he was through, she said, “Earl was a real son-of-a-bitch, wasn’t he?”
“Seems like it. And if all this is true, everybody needs to rethink this whole trial.”
Marybeth said, “Do you think Dulcie will drop the charges?”
“I doubt it,” Joe said. “That would be too much to ask at this point. But she may want to ask for a delay in the trial so she can investigate this.”
“My mother . . .” Marybeth said with a sigh. “She’s going to be rewarded for her bad behavior. Again.”
“Let’s not get ahead of ourselves,” Joe said. “Nothing may work out like we think it will. For the time being, we need to let everyone know what Orin Smith claims. If you’ll call Marcus Hand and tell him what I found out, I’ll call Dulcie Schalk.”
Marybeth paused. “Why both sides?”
Joe said, “Because, don’t forget—I’m an officer of the law. I took an oath. I stretch it from time to time, but there’s no way we can’t inform both parties what we know.”
“Is it that?” Marybeth asked. “Or are you playing both sides against the middle?”
“Maybe a little of that, too,” Joe admitted.
“Are you on your way back home now?” she asked.
“Nope.”
“Where are you going?”
“Believe it or not,” Joe said, “Orin Smith claimed he knew where I could find Bud Longbrake Sr.”
32
Laurie Talich pulled her Audi Q7 into the shaded lot of the dance studio in Oak Park, shifted into park so she could keep the motor running and the air on, raised her large sunglasses to the top of her hair, and turned in her seat to address her two girls. Melissa was twelve years old and Aimee ten. Both wore black leotards over pink tights and clutched their shoe bags. Melissa had dark hair and olive skin like her, and Aimee was fairer but had her father’s light cruel eyes, if not his temperament, thank God.
She said, “I’ll be back here in two hours. Don’t dawdle this time. I don’t know why it takes you two so long to change from your ballet shoes, but you need to hustle this time.”
Melissa said, “It’s Aimee.”
“Is not!”
“It’s Aimee,” Melissa said, nodding her heard.
“I don’t care whose fault it is. I don’t want to have to come in and get you this time. I’ll be right here.”
Aimee was in Contemporary Ballet I, and Melissa Contemporary Ballet II. Neither was very good yet, and neither had shown any passion for dance, although Laurie held out hope for Aimee.
“Can we go to McDonald’s for dinner?” Melissa asked.
“We’ll see,” Laurie said. It was always a hassle to drive home and start dinner after dance practice because the girls were starved and grouchy, so they usually went out. “It depends if you two hustle out here.”
Laurie valued the two hours she got to herself while her daughters were at dance. She usually drove to a coffee shop and knitted or read while keeping an eye on the clock.
“Tell her,” Melissa said, jabbing her little sister with a finger in the ribs.
“Ow! She’s hurting me!” Aimee cried out.
“I barely touched her,” Melissa said in defense.
“Girls!” Laurie said. “Go!”
The two unbuckled their seat belts as Melissa pushed the door open. Hot and humid air filled the Audi.
Laurie said, “Have a good practice, girls. Give me a kiss.”
Melissa did a drive-by kiss because she saw her friend Sarah getting out of her father’s car and she wanted to join her. Aimee kissed her mother good-bye, and said, “Melissa is the late one. She’s always talking.”
“Don’t tell on your sister,” Laurie said. “Now go. See you in two hours. And shut the door. You’re letting all the hot air in.”
She sat in the car to make sure both her girls went safely inside. It was a good neighborhood: leafy and prosperous. The children of the city’s elite families attended the same dance school, and it was hard to get in. She wished her girls were better dancers and would stand out, but . . .