âThey're playing blackjack in the kitchen. Ben has lost two hundred dollars.'
Blackjack was Robert's favorite card game. When there were two players you changed dealers every ten hands. I'd lost maybe a couple of grand to him over the years.
Ben saw me when I was one footstep inside the kitchen and roared: âYou got it? Is it finished? C'mon, get over here!'
âI got to remember to bring the tranquilizer gun I used on that bear that time,' I said, walking to the nook.
âVery funny,' he said.
I'd printed three copies so we could all peruse my brilliance at the same time.
As they started to read, Ben said, âI'm not crazy about the first sentence.'
âI don't like the second one much better,' Robert said.
Nothing new here, not with these two. They couldn't get their engines started without grinding you up a little at the start, then they generally settled down and got serious. I've never known what they expected to find in the first five hundred words. Opening remarks that surpassed the Gettysburg Address?
I sat next to Robert. Mrs Weiderman slipped me a cup of her elixir-like coffee and I sat there quietly waiting for them to read it through a couple of times. I watched a squirrel next to a tree digging up some goodies to store for impending winter. He or she was putting in an honest day's work the way all of nature's animals do except the human animal. While a good share of humanity works hard with its hands and minds in clean, productive and honest ways, there is another segment, growing larger every year, that sits behind desks and contrives ways to bamboozle and coerce all those whose work is clean and productive into submission.
Ben said, âI like it. A few tweaks but I like it.'
Robert said, âI like it, too. A few tweaks but nothing serious. I knew you'd come through for us, Dev. You always do.'
Ben said, âNow we head to Channel Four. We're way behind schedule. We can still hit the network news.' He was out of the booth and going somewhere. When he hit the door he said, âI left my coat in the den. C'mon, you two. Hurry up.'
âShit,' Robert said, âI'd better run an electric razor over my face again.'
âBring it along. You can do it in the car.'
âI'll grab a shirt and tie and jacket and be ready in two minutes.'
âI really appreciate the job you did, Dev. I really do.'
I followed him out of the kitchen. I went to the hallway and he went to the den.
I was just taking my jacket down from the coat tree when my cell phone rang.
The voice on the other end stabbed into my ear with three words: âThey're gone, Dev.'
Not panic, not hysteria. But stunned disbelief.
âWho's gone?'
âRuskin and Sarah,' Jane said. âThey drugged Guild's coffee with something so he'd pass out and then they picked up all their things and ran out. Guild just called me now when he woke up. I want to get him to the ER to make sure he's all right since we don't know what they put in him.'
âDoes he remember what time it was when he passed out?'
âThe last thing he remembers it was an hour and ten minutes ago.'
âWhat was going on then?'
âHe said that everything had gone fine until this Michael Hawkins showed up and started asking Ruskin some questions. Guild said that Hawkins asked him to leave so that he could interview Ruskin and Sarah but that he didn't want to leave until he'd talked to you. He finally agreed to wait in the hall for twenty minutes.'
âAnd then what?'
âHawkins came out exactly twenty minutes later and thanked him, and then rolled his eyes and made a joke about Ruskin and Sarah. Something about how he hoped his own kids never turned out like them. Then he apologized for leaning on Guild in the first place. The trouble came when he went back inside.'
Robert and Ben walked quickly toward me. Seeing me on my cell phone, Ben shot his right sleeve and pointed to his watch. He then stepped past me and opened the door and the two of them went through it. I followed them, still on the phone.
Jane continued her story. âWhen he got inside he needed to visit the bathroom. When he came out he said Ruskin and Sarah had a cup of coffee ready for him. He thanked them. As he drank it he started noticing how agitated both of them looked. He said Ruskin was up and wearing shoes. His Glock was jammed down the front of his pants. He asked them if something was wrong. Sarah blurted out that they didn't want to talk to any federal agent you hadn't approved of in advance. They didn't trust anybody.'
By now we were outside. Robert was getting into Ben's bronze rental Buick. Ben shouted to me, âSee you at Channel Four!'
I waved back.
âGuild said he tried to calm them down but that they acted “crazy.” His word. He said whatever they'd put in his coffee hit him around this time. He was kind of woozy for a few minutes and then he passed out entirely. That was when they escaped. He's really embarrassed, Dev. He plans to apologize as soon as he sees you. He says he should've been suspicious when she had a cup of coffee ready to hand him right away since he sensed that they were acting strange. He couldn't see why they were so agitated when it had been clear that Hawkins had just been interviewing them the way any kind of government investigator would have. He said their paranoia should have alerted him.'
âTell him he doesn't have anything to apologize for. We're dealing with two very unstable people here. Now I need to find them all over again before they do something really stupid. The idea of Ruskin toting that Glock around bothers me more than anything.'
âIsn't his arm broken? How could he shoot?'
âUnfortunately his “shooting arm,” as he calls it, is fine. But right now I need to go. Robert's going to make a statement on TV.'
âI'll be watching. Be sure to call me when you get a chance.'
âI will. It helps me just to hear your voice.'
âYou say the nicest things.'
âCome to think of it, I do, don't I?'
C
hannel 4 was housed in a refurbished two-story red brick building on the edge of a recently built collection of business buildings. I knew they were recent because they all had the same awkward science fiction look architects seem to prefer these days. A lot of glass and a lot of metal creating sharp edges and a zoo-like peek into the daily lives of their bustling workers. Now in an early dusk of mauve and salmon, in the stingy light of a half-moon, with the lower floors splashed with the headlights of cars rushing to get out of the parking lot and back to places where the overlords couldn't get to them â not yet, anyway â the sense of frantic escape was unmistakable. Who could blame them?
As we approached the station, I could see a group of maybe thirty reporters and camera people packed in front of the Channel 4 doors. Ben's arm shot out from the driver's side of the Buick. He waved me on. We'd keep going right past them. I assumed â and was proven correct â that we'd go around the block and try the back door.
When we reached the rear lot a half-dozen reporters and four camera people bolted toward our cars. I needed to do what I could to make it safe for Robert and Ben.
I whipped my car into a spot on the back edge of the small lot and then waited for them to lurch toward me.
âThe senator is on his way into the station to make a statement. Right now that's all I'm at liberty to say.'
Only two pairs of them tore after Robert and Ben. The rest of them stayed with me.
âIs he going to resign?'
âIs he going to admit that he killed her?'
âIs he going to resign?'
âIs he going to admit he killed her?'
The shouted mantra kept going as I rushed to the door. The otherwise dark lot was now being attacked by the alien eyes of the cameras and the unsettling bellers in the relative quiet. I guess they had to get something on tape so my retreating back was as good as anything. I could write the copy for Empire News: âSenator Logan's political consultant refused to talk to the press but instead raced to the door, giving the impression â the same impression the senator has been giving since Tracy Cabot's murder was first announced â that he's hiding something.'
A man inside the building had been watching for me and opened the door so I could run inside with the pack of reporters only a few feet behind me. Safely inside, I would have turned and given them the finger except, as you might expect, I was far too mature to do something that juvenile. And I didn't want to give the supermarket tabloids a juicy side story. âKiller Senator's Consultant Flips Off Hard-Working Reporters Convincing Some That Murdering Senator May Have More Victims Buried Elsewhere! Aliens Involved?'
The man said, âYou ever get sick of them?'
âNever. They're like family to me.'
He was slow to realize that I was joking but when he got it a grin broke his moon face in half. âIf they're anything like the ones here they're pretty hard to take. But you didn't hear me say that, of course.' He was probably in his fifties, gone to flesh and weary humor. He wore one of those fish pins marking him as a born-again Christian. Despite that he seemed likable. âC'mon. I'll take you to the senator.'
The makeup room was larger than I expected. There were three small tables with mirrors and bottles of makeup. The room was pungent with the sharp scent of hairspray. A fortyish woman so thin and gaunt I wondered if she'd been sick was daubing Robert up then standing back to appraise her work. Ben had fitted himself into a far corner and was talking low into his cell phone.
âAre they putting your golden words on the Teleprompter?' Robert said.
âYes, they are. I just hope there's time for your country-western song, too,' I said.
The makeup lady's head swung around to me. âHe's going to
sing
?'
âDon't pay any attention to him,' Robert said. âHe thinks he'll keep my spirits up by making these stupid jokes.'
She touched a bony hand to her chest. The fragility of the motion and the hand made me feel sorry for her. But the smile was full on and she looked appreciative that I'd made her happy. âGosh, I was thinking how important this is for you, Senator. I voted for you, by the way, and I don't believe any of this stuff. But when he said you were going to singâ' She laughed. To me, she said, âI have an older brother like you. I was supposed to be the smart one but he'd tell me these stories and I'd always believe them. It was just the way he told them. Real low-key, the way you did.' She shook her head then picked up a long black comb from the table and went to work on Robert's hair. In the round mirror encircled in small light bulbs he'd begun to look TV ready.
When she finished, she stood back for a final time and said, âYou look very nice, Senator. Very nice. And I've already said a few prayers for you.'
âI really appreciate that, Angela.'
âNow I need to get out of here so you can change clothes.'
When we were alone, Robert said, âI should've taken some Pepto. My stomach and my bowels are in bad shape.'
âI'll spare you the stupid jokes.' Though I was laughing.
âI actually appreciate them. They remind me of my life before I became a vicious killer.' He got up and started changing into his blue button-down shirt, red-and-blue rep tie and blue tweed sport coat. He left his jeans on. âYou know, I really don't give a shit if I lose. All I care about is getting out of this mess. And Elise would be delighted if we went to our house in the Hamptons and said goodbye to all this. Does that surprise you?'
âThat giving up your seat looks good to you now? Of course not, Robert. I'd be thinking the same thing you are. You've been working the press for sixteen years and now they're working you. But I believe that everything you're feeling is temporary. We'll find the killer and then in a day or two you'll wake up and think how good it would be to be back in Washington. You like the game the same as I do. And buried somewhere inside the game are one or two actual ideals you've held on to while peddling your ass to survive. You care about average people, Robert. You've got a good understanding of how they live and what they need and how to appeal to the good parts of their nature. There aren't many on either side who can say that.'
âHell.' Sad smile. âThat was so eloquent I'd vote for myself.'
Ben retreated from the wall. âSorry. Chicago business. I'll have to fly back there tomorrow morning to be in court in the afternoon.' He raised blocky fists. Then dropped to a boxer's crouch and swung hard and fast at an invisible opponent. âYou ready, Senator? We're going to kick some ass, right?'
âI'll try.' He nodded to me. âDev says it's all right if I say “fuck” twice.'
Ben picked up the line easily. âThat's right, two fucks but only one cocksucker.'
âGot it,' Robert said. But the fun in his voice was waning, waning just as the knock came. âSenator, we need to get going. Are you about ready?'
âWe're ready now,' I said as I made my way to the door.
The same guy who didn't think much of the Channel 4 Action News Team (I was waiting for the
In
Action News Team to show up somewhere) waited for us to file out and then we followed him down a corridor to a door marked Studio B.
In small cities, Studio B's, or whatever they're called, always look the same. You have a desk with a picture of something on the wall behind the person in the chair â here we had a nature shot â and cheap bookcases filled with hardcover books brought from the homes of various Channel 4 employees.
When the young woman came into the studio, talking to somebody on her headset, I signaled that I wanted to talk to her. Her tight red blouse and tight jeans loved her overweight body a bit too much, but the face was intelligent and pleasant. When she finished talking on her headset she came over to me. âI'm Mary O'Brien.'