“She doesn’t think Alta was the killer?”
“She’s worried it was her grandfather, Sheriff Roy Lishkin,” I said.
CHAPTER 70.
A parade of engines woke me just past noon the next day. I’d slept for only a couple of hours.
I peered out the window. Vans and cars were lining up to park on both sides of the street. The vans belonged to television stations; the cars, I supposed, to print reporters. Benny Fittle was double-parked in the middle of it all. He was going to work off doughnuts, that day.
I supposed they’d come to hear about my being attacked in Sweetie’s penthouse.
I hurried to get dressed, went downstairs, and made coffee. It was only after I’d gulped half of my first cup that someone banged on my door. Banged on my sensibilities, too, as I realized that for all the ruckus outside, no one else had banged on my door. Nor had anyone called. The press hadn’t come for me. They were gathering for something else.
I opened the door. Jenny stepped quickly inside. “I’ve only got a minute,” she said. Her face was flushed beneath her television makeup.
“What’s the rumpus?”
She looked at me, saw I was serious. “You haven’t noticed the press outside?”
“They just woke me up.”
“You didn’t see my report on last night’s broadcast, or see this morning’s papers?”
“I was out.”
“I broke a corruption story about your city hall last night. You’ve got citizens’ committees that contain no citizens. They’re used as conduits to funnel benefits-hospitalization; life insurance; use of city-owned vehicles; and the biggie, travel expenses abroad, supposedly to study how other cities do things-to the committee members.”
“The recipients of this largesse are the lizards?”
“In a nutshell.”
“Is that nutshell going to be cracked open more?”
“Eventually, but that’s not why I stopped by. Tonight I lead with another exclusive. Plinnit is going to issue warrants for Sweetie Fairbairn. She’s being charged with murder, fraud, theft, flight to avoid prosecution, and probably a dozen other things.”
“Heavy heat on Plinnit.”
“Not just him. The state’s attorney and the U.S. attorney are feeling it, too. This case has thick tentacles. Plinnit’s got to sling warrants to show activity.”
“Heater case, for sure.”
“Plinnit might have one with your name on it, as well.”
“Might?”
“Does. He’s going to arrest you to squeeze you.”
“For what?”
“Obstruction, most likely.” She looked away, which meant most certainly. Plinnit was keeping her informed.
“Because I wouldn’t say it was Sweetie Fairbairn who attacked me in the penthouse?”
She barely nodded.
“He’s saying his DNA analysis showed conclusively Sweetie was up there?”
“I heard Plinnit wasn’t happy with what he got. I know somebody at Cook County. He heard the DNA showed a mitochondrial relationship-”
“A what?”
“Mitochondrial. Maternal. Like two sisters who have the same mother.”
“I’ve heard of that. Usable in court?”
“Usable for warrants, for now.”
I gave her a shrug. It was lying. It was not the time to tell her that Alta Taylor was not in the ground in Hadlow.
She smiled then, a Jennifer Gale television smile, fast and efficient. “I’ve got to get over to city hall for a one o’clock news conference. My citizens’ committee story, remember? News at noon, six, and nine?”
Her high flush had returned. Excitement. Opportunity. I’d seen that kind of flush on Amanda, not that many months before, when she first started imagining doing big things with big donations. Right now, Jennifer Gale had big opportunities.
I opened the door.
“One more thing,” she said. “Darlene Taylor was buried yesterday.”
I nodded. It was noncommittal.
“I heard you were the only one there, besides the minister, and that you paid for the funeral expenses.”
Plinnit must have put a man behind a tree. “I wanted to make sure they didn’t drop the coffin.”
“Not just the coffin, Dek. You also paid for the cemetery plot, a stone, and that minister. For someone who is broke, all that must have been a reach.”
“You’re going to use this?”
“Personal interest only.”
“Darlene was a victim. Maybe most of all.”
She gave that a half-shake of her head, and turned to look out the open door. Newspeople seemed to be everywhere, including several who’d surrounded Benny Fittle.
She stepped outside. “Be careful of Plinnit.”
“Personal interest question of my own?” I asked, if only to delay for a moment more. “Who put Elvis up to that damned-fool salad oil scheme?”
It hadn’t been by magic that Jennifer Gale learned of citizens’ committees. Elvis was slinking around, offering the Feds something else to make his salad oil problem go away-and he was talking about all of it to Jennifer Gale.
She smiled, shook her head. “Good luck,” she said, starting off for city hall.
It sounded like a good-bye.
“Good luck to you, as well,” I called back.
As I watched her walk away, I had the thought that I’d like to follow her, at least as far as city hall. The lizards were sure to be frantic, dodging for cover behind whatever spokesman they were about to push out in front of the press. It was something I’d hoped for, since the day I’d moved into the turret.
I’d had enough of public news. I’d had enough of being the news. I went upstairs to my computer, thinking it was better to stay inside, surrounded by thick limestone walls. I pushed my head into the Internet, to find out what I’d missed while I was off invading graves.
Both of Chicago’s major newspapers offered recaps of Jennifer’s committee corruption story. They’d come late to the story, and details were sketchy. Sketchy or not, I took comfort in the short reports. Broad coverage of corrupt committees, following so closely on the heels of Elvis’s oily adventures, offered hope that brighter lights would begin to shine on Rivertown.
Both Web sites also carried updates on the firestorm that followed the news that Sweetie never had any right to give away Silas’s millions. So many people were claiming to be blood kin to Silas Fairbairn that law firms throughout the country had begun demanding to see birth certificates, death certificates, and other proof of family lineage before they’d consider taking cases against the recipients of Sweetie’s largesse. More than fifty-five lawsuits had been filed in Chicago so far, and many more were expected in the days to come.
After finishing with the major news sites, I moved down to the brackish water of the Argus-Observer. Immediately, I wished that I hadn’t. They’d run a short piece on Amanda and me, making her out to be a flaky former debutante, working for her father because she could do little else. I was portrayed as an impoverished lunatic, hunkering down in an unheated turret because I couldn’t afford to live anyplace else. In my case, I supposed it was accurate.
I called Amanda’s office. She was in, and she was furious. “I saw the damned thing. Five sets of lawyers, representing a dozen of Silas Fairbairn’s third cousins, are now demanding we escrow Sweetie’s gift, claiming she was unduly influenced by you to make the contribution to me. That will shut down everything we planned to do, for years.”
“I didn’t see this coming.” As soon as the words came out, I realized that could have been the mantra for everything I’d encountered with Sweetie Fairbairn: I’d seen nothing coming.
“Maybe you should have,” she snapped.
She stopped and took a breath. Then the old Amanda said, “Shall we have that date?”
“You mean at our trattoria?”
“Sure.” Hesitancy, though, had come into her voice, a sort of sighing, and I realized that neither of us believed the trattoria would ever be ours again.