Access to Power (29 page)

Read Access to Power Online

Authors: Robert Ellis

On the drive back to Washington Frank remembered telling Woody that they could have been killed. Woody laughed and cracked open another beer from the six-pack they’d bought on the way out of town. He was saying something like we could have been dead, but we weren’t. This time it was the mayor who was going down. It was all a front, Frank knew. Woody had been just as nervous as he was.

Still, Woody’s prediction proved to be true. The mayor’s campaign for reelection ended the moment the man noticed the camera and looked at the lens. He had done nothing wrong, but the image came off like he was doing everything wrong. The fear in his eyes read like guilt. The moment of indecision, as if he were running away from a crime with everyone watching TV as his witness. When election day finally came, the mayor went down in a landslide, never to be heard from again.

Frank placed the picture back on the writing table, wondering why he hadn’t understood it before. What had happened in Trenton should have been something he considered. A sign on the road that he never should have missed.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 64

 

 

Raymond saw the mall ahead and turned into the parking structure. He looked around for the level designation and spotted the letter
C
stenciled on a concrete post beside an image of a cat. Even though it was late on a Monday afternoon and the mall didn’t appear busy, shopping for a car on the ground level would be too risky.

He found the ramp and cruised down to the next floor, noting the
B
stenciled on the wall beside an icon of a bear. Then his eyes moved to the first row of cars, coasting by them slowly. The car would have to be big, he decided. Big and heavy enough to absorb a collision and remain roadworthy for a mile or two. As he turned down the next aisle he found just what he was looking for. A Ford LTD wagon at least thirty years old. It looked like a battering ram on wheels. The body had been sprayed with a dull coat of primer and would be hard to spot at night. He particularly liked the darkened windows in back. Any cargo he might be carrying would be hidden from view.

Marveling at his good fortune, Raymond continued around the exit ramp until he found a space visible from the entrance to the mall. As he parked, he noticed the light overhead. He knew the percentages with auto theft and wanted his Honda to be here when he returned later that night. This was a safe spot, as good as any on the floor.

He reached for the canvas tote bag on the backseat and took an inventory of its contents. On his way over he had stopped by the long-term parking lot at the airport. The set of plates that he’d pulled off a BMW were on top. Pushing them aside, he checked the charge on his power screwdriver and made sure that his hand tools were easily accessible. He doubted that the LTD had an alarm system. Once he got the plates changed and the door open, he’d be on the road in less than two minutes.

A car blinked its lights and tapped its horn at him. Raymond turned and saw a teenage girl waiting for his space. He shook his head at her and the car moved on. When it vanished around the corner, Raymond got out of his car with the tote bag and locked the door.

He slipped into a pair of latex gloves. Passing the entrance to the mall, he made a mental note of the time it took until he cleared the exit ramp and the LTD came into view. Fifteen seconds. If someone entered the garage, he would hear the doors and have plenty of warning.

Raymond moved down the aisle, reaching into the bag for his power screwdriver as he glanced around. He was alone. Ready. He started with the back plate, then moved to the front. Within a few minutes, he’d made the switch and was headed for the driver’s door. There wasn’t an alarm. The door wasn’t even locked. Raymond guessed that the owner didn’t feel the need to lock up because the car had
shit-wagon
written all over it.

Raymond popped open the ignition, drawing out the wires and reconnecting them. When he’d finished, the engine turned over and the LTD began to sputter and shake itself awake. Clouds of black smoke spewed from the exhaust pipe. Raymond slammed the door shut and backed out of the space. As he passed his Honda, he waved good-bye and rumbled up the exit ramp. The steering was loose, but he could feel the car’s weight. They used steel back then, he thought to himself, the heavier the better. Tonight would be a memorable occasion and he smiled. He couldn’t help it. There really was an art to it, just like the author of his audio book always said.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 65

 

 

By the time Frank pulled into the lot at his office it was already half past seven. He’d searched every room in Woody’s house. He’d worked slowly, methodically, trying to ignore anything of emotional value that stirred up memories. It hadn’t worked, especially as he went through Woody’s desk in the study. Still, he hadn’t found the photographs that he’d been looking for. The snapshots. Mel Merdock under the sheets with his sugar baby in Georgetown.

As Frank swung the office door open and locked it from the other side, he remembered Merdock’s press conference. By now it would have been over, the results broadcast on the evening news. He tried not to think about it, trudging up the steps into the war room. Woody’s desk light was on and he could hear someone inside the office shuffling papers. When he stopped in the doorway, he found Linda seated on the floor searching through a file on her lap. She must have been at it for hours, looking for the photos just as he had. Discarded files had been stacked four feet high and pushed against the wall. What files remained were on the carpet beside her crossed legs.

“Nothing?” he asked.

She shook her head without looking at him.

“Me either,” he said.

A long moment passed. Frank entered the room and sat down on the couch.

“Merdock held his press conference,” she whispered finally. “The president was with him and said the right things. The worst things. They said that you stopped Merdock’s media buy with five days to go. They passed out copies of the receipts as proof. Then the phones started ringing. Most of your clients called.”

“Most?”

“Everyone except Helen Pryor.”

Frank thought it over, his clients running for cover. Everyone of them except Helen.

“Then I’m out of business,” he said.

Linda nodded with a heavy look in her eyes. She picked up a manila envelope and handed it to him.

“Mario had prints made of Stewart Brown outside RAVE’s office.”

Frank opened the envelope, sifting through the photos. “They’re close ups,” he said. “They don’t tie him to the building.”

Linda didn’t say anything. Frank returned them to the envelope and fastened the metal clasp. He’d lost his business for turning against his own client. He’d been caught sabotaging Merdock’s campaign and it had been made public. No one would ever trust him again. No one would believe his story. He saw Linda turn away, wiping a tear away from her cheek. He wanted to hold her, comfort her, even though he knew that he couldn’t because he’d lost her, too.

She cleared her throat and turned back to him. “Mario called a half-hour ago,” she whispered. “Eddie’s missing.”

“Did he call the cops?”

She nodded. “He said he’d call back when he had news.”

 

 

 

 

Chapter 66

 

 

The LTD pulled away from the curb at Frank’s house, rolling down the street and requiring an extra wide berth. The press had packed up and gone. From the calls Raymond had heard on the talk radio stations, he imagined that Frank was in agony right now. Probably still at his office on the phone trying to save his sinking ship. Putting him down would be an act of mercy, no different than shooting a horse with a broken leg.

Raymond cruised through Georgetown, ignoring the smug looks he got when he stopped at red lights. In spite of the heavy fog, there were plenty of people on the sidewalks giving him dirty looks as they waited to get into the restaurants and bars. The LTD’s timing was off. With every stop, Raymond had to keep the idle goosed in order to prevent a stall.

People could be so selfish, so fucking rude.

Raymond worked his way toward the Hill, keeping an eye out for cops and passing the White House without incident. The sound of the LTD seemed to be getting louder. It had an energy to it—a force like thunder—pulling him through the night toward his mark.

Frank’s office was just ahead. Backing his foot off the gas, he peered through the fog into the parking lot as he coasted by. The office windows were lighted, but a black Explorer obstructed most of his view. Raymond circled the block and stopped on the other side of the street. He must have just missed them. Now the building was dark, the Explorer gone. The lot was empty except for Woody’s abandoned car.

But then something caught Raymond’s eye. When he turned, he saw a car vanishing around the corner.

Metallic blue.

Raymond gunned the engine, the LTD rocketing forward. As he made the turn, he spotted the Chevy two blocks ahead and slowed down. He needed to be patient. This wasn’t the place and it didn’t look like Frank was in much of a hurry to get home. When the Chevy reached 7th Street, the car turned right, heading south. Then Frank made another right onto Constitution Avenue. It occurred to Raymond that Frank wasn’t on his way home. Instead, it looked like he was driving toward the monuments.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 67

 

 

Frank looked up the steps at the memorial. There was a momentary break in the fog and he could see Abraham Lincoln sitting in his chair for maybe a second or two. The stone-faced president was staring at him, or so it seemed, before the hazy cloud rolled back in again.

Frank shivered and turned away. Then he noticed a figure walking toward him in the gloom. He recognized him before his face took on any detail. It wasn’t Mario this time. Instead, it was Lou Kay, and they shook hands.

“You’re going to lose,” Frank said evenly. “It’s gonna be a landslide, Lou.”

When Kay shrugged it off like he still might have a chance, Frank handed him the photos of Stewart Brown tossing an answering machine into the trunk of his Mercedes. Kay sat down on the steps and held them to the light. Frank took a seat beside him, briefing him on what his consultant had done and who he was doing it with. Kay had put his life in Brown’s hands, his future. They’d worked side by side for most of the last year. Stunned by the betrayal, Kay mumbled Brown’s name a few times as it sank in. Juliana Merdock had used her body to get to Brown and Brown wasn’t about to let go.

“What about the law?” Kay said more clearly. “There’s got to be a law.”

“If you took Brown to court, you’d lose. You’d never be able to prove what he’s done to you. As long as the names stay buried with the money, everything’s legal.”

“Legal?” Kay said. “What about my family? My daughter?”

“The closest you’re gonna get is a review of your own media buy,” Frank said. “I’ll bet Brown rotated your spots so often, no ad played for more than a day or two. I only saw them because I was looking for them. But no one else did. No one outside the business. Call the stations and get the receipts. But even if he did bury your ads, it proves as much as these pictures do. Nothing.”

Reaching into his pocket, Frank dug his cigarettes out and lit one. He’d been wiped out, too. Kay stood up, rubbing the back of his neck and thinking it over.

“I thought this kind of thing ended with Watergate, Frank.”

“That’s not where it ended,” he said. “That’s where it started. One party going after the other, Lou. Watergate was basic training. These people want the seat and they’re gonna take it. If you want to dig, all you’ll find is mirrors. But I can tell you how it’s done.”

Kay turned and looked at him. Frank lowered his eyes, staring into the fog.

“You’d start with background checks,” he said. “People make mistakes, like you said at the debate. You’d look for their mistakes, Lou. An illegitimate child. A bitter ex-wife. Then you’d threaten them with exposure and watch their campaign nose dive until it hits the ground.”

Kay looked down at the pavement, shaking his head at what had happened to him.

“If you couldn’t find a mistake,” Frank said after a moment. “You’d use greed. The president pays your opponent off with a great job offer to get him out of the race. A local TV reporter takes cash to hammer your opponent every night on the news. That ex-wife stages a press conference on the courthouse steps and lies in front of the cameras for a big payday.”

Frank wasn’t seeing the fog anymore. He was standing in the void. The black.

“If none of that works, you’d make things up,” he said in a quieter voice. “You’d find a third party candidate and get him on the ballot so he steals votes away from your opponent. You’d get creative, Lou. Your opponent owns a chain of restaurants. One day they’d be overrun with rats. Or how’s this? You blanket a liberal district with a fake newsletter claiming that your opponent’s just been endorsed by the NRA. You time the newsletter to hit the day before the election so that your opponent doesn’t have time to get out the truth. Or even better, Lou. The gold ring. You see your opponent looking for his runaway niece outside a porno theater and a strip bar. You shoot it and run the ad, leaving the niece out of the story and destroying your opponent’s life.”

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