Dev Conrad - 03 - Blindside (13 page)

Read Dev Conrad - 03 - Blindside Online

Authors: Ed Gorman

Tags: #Mystery

‘And you knew Waters?'

‘Slightly. Not very well.'

She managed to get a long cigarette going and took a deep diva-like drag on it. She dispersed it with those rich, erotic lips. ‘All right, you saw me taking his picture. And that's supposed to mean what exactly?'

‘That's what I'm curious about. Why you'd be taking photos of Waters, especially since somebody killed him later that night.'

If any of this was intimidating her, she managed to disguise it with her irritated glances and tone.

We listened to the red and gold and brown leaves skitter like forlorn little creatures across the asphalt of the parking lot. Finally I said, ‘I haven't gone to the police. Not yet.'

‘I want to see some ID.' The salon seductress suddenly sounded like a cop.

‘If I show you, you'll know who I am.'

‘Oh, right, I suppose you're somebody famous.'

‘My name is Dev Conrad. I work for Jeff Ward.'

‘You bastard!' Her cigarette went flying as she lunged for me, shoving me back into the rear of a parked car.

She wasn't as strong as I'd thought. ‘I need to figure out if you were just doing some campaign dirty tricks or if you have something to do with Jim Waters' murder. Since you're unwilling to help me, maybe your husband can bring me up to date on all this.'

‘Leave my husband alone. He's got enough problems.'

Odd thing for somebody to say. Her candidate had come from behind to lead us by three points. I wondered what she was talking about.

She smiled. She had lovely teeth and a deceitful smile. It said
aw, shucks
and I didn't believe any of it. ‘You caught me.'

‘I did?'

‘I was taking photos of Waters because I was going to send one of our girls to ‘accidentally' meet him in a bar and get him drunk and see if he'd tell her anything.'

‘A spy operation.'

‘Exactly.'

It was bullshit. Given her fantastic presence I resented her for not being better at the game. ‘Pretty clever.'

‘So you see it's no big deal. I hope that satisfies you.'

It didn't, but she was going to stick to her silly story no matter what I said. Detective Fogarty and I could agree on one thing anyway. Something was going on here and so far none of us had a clue except me. I had that DVD. I knew what I'd seen but so far the only clue I had to its meaning was Jeff Ward's admission that he was being blackmailed.

‘That was the easy part, Mrs Burkhart.'

‘What're you talking about?'

‘You're lying and we both know it. I'm guessing you're involved in something pretty bad – and you're too scared to think straight.'

I have to admit that her scornful laugh sounded pretty damned confident. ‘Do I look scared? Do I sound scared? The only reason I was leery of you when you started chasing me inside was because I didn't know who you were. There're a lot of freaks who hang around political campaigns. I thought you might be one of them.'

The triumph in her voice – the princess of the realm to the commoner – only increased when the side door opened and a woman called out, ‘Mrs Burkhart. We need you inside.'

Her smirk was one of jubilation. ‘I'll be right there.' Then: ‘I need to go inside and I'd advise against trying to stop me. I'd hate to call the police and tell them that somebody from the Ward campaign was accosting me.'

‘This isn't over.'

‘I wouldn't bet on that. My husband is a very powerful man.'

The woman held the door open for her. Waiting.

‘Tell her you need a few more minutes out here.'

‘I will not.'

I slipped my cell phone from my jacket pocket. ‘You don't have to call the police. I will. I'm going to take this cell phone and call Detective Fogarty at the police station. She'll be very interested when I mention that you were taking photos of Jim Waters the day he died. You'll have to do a lot better with your story than you did with me.'

She gritted her teeth. ‘I'm so sick of threats.'

One more word to add to my Burkhart vocabulary. Problems, threats.

‘I'm also sick of men. Men fuck up everything.'

Somehow I didn't think she was speaking in the feminist sense. She'd probably run up against a man or men who wouldn't let her have her narcissistic way. She was an expensive toy for men who could afford her.

‘Are you going to tell me what's going on, Mrs Burkhart?'

‘Just wait a minute.'

‘For what? This is getting us nowhere.'

‘I need some time.'

‘That's up to you, Mrs Burkhart. I thought maybe I could help you out a little. That's why I stopped by. But I can see you don't want any help, do you?'

She had a harsh Gucci laugh. ‘How can you say that with a straight face? My God – you stopped by to help me out a little. You stopped by because you want to get my husband in trouble.'

‘If that's the way you choose to look at it, Mrs Burkhart, that's up to you. Now please get out of my way. I've got things to do.'

She clutched my sport coat. She wasn't restraining me as much as she was pleading with me. I doubted she played the supplicant very often.

‘Give me until tonight before you do anything, including the police. I have to make some decisions. I'll give you my cell number. Then we can talk.'

She dug in her purse and extracted a business card. ‘Turn around.'

This was the Mrs Burkhart I'd come to know and love. Barking orders. As she scribbled her cell number on the card she had pressed to my back she kept up a stream of whispered curses. I had the feeling they were aimed as much at herself as at me.

‘There. You can turn around again.'

‘Thank you, Your Highness.'

‘You know, I really don't like you.'

I took the card. ‘You wouldn't be surprised if I said the feeling is mutual, would you?'

But she was done with me. ‘I expect you to keep your word.'

I hadn't given my word but she was so used to getting her way she just assumed I'd pledged undying loyalty to her throne.

By the time I'd backed out and started for the street, she was rushing through the side door and into the maelstrom of the campaign.

THIRTEEN

I
bought a grilled cheese sandwich and a Caesar salad and a beer in the hotel café and took them up to my room. I worked while I ate. In addition to interviews the DVD held names of people and places. I needed to verify that these actually existed. In the age of photoshopping you had to check and recheck everything.

The first two names checked out. I found them in the white pages online.

I finished my food. I still had half my beer. I worked on the bottle as I punched in phone numbers. Three rings, four rings.

‘Hello.' Female. Wary.

‘Mrs Hayes?'

Silence.

‘Mrs Hayes?'

‘Who is this?'

‘My name is Dev Conrad. You don't know me, but I'd like to set up an appointment to see you.'

Long pause. ‘Those days are behind me. Now leave me alone.'

She slammed the phone with a fury that told me how much she wanted to forget her past and resented – despised – anybody who'd bring it up.

The second number I dialed yielded only an automatic message voice, one of those robots who will someday be our masters. The robot wouldn't even part with the name of who owned this particular phone number. I left no message.

I called Ward headquarters and asked for Lucy.

‘I was getting worried about you. We hadn't heard anything from you. Jimmy's murder has really freaked me out. And I haven't said “freaked me out” since college.' I could feel her smile over the phone, a fresh, appealing young woman who just happened to be smart as hell.

‘I'm fine. Just busy. I wanted to ask you about your newspaper contacts. Do you know anybody friendly on the
Winthrop Times
?'

‘I do, as a matter of fact. Why?'

‘I'm doing a background check on something. I just need to talk to somebody from the area who won't mind answering some questions.'

‘This sounds mysterious.'

‘Not really. I'm trying to check on some brochures that are circulating down there claiming that Jeff's family managed to get two DUI charges expunged from police records in Winthrop.'

‘Wow. When did this come up?'

It came up as I spoke the words. Sometimes my facility with lies amused me; other times it depressed me. After a few too many drinks I liked to think of myself as a noble knight fighting an honorable war. After a certain amount of liquor you can rationalize any number of sins.

‘Somebody in my home office picked it up from one of our ops and then they phoned me with it. But please don't share this with anybody on the staff, all right? No need to worry about it until I can verify it. So far nobody's actually seen one of these brochures.'

Urban legends prosper in campaigns on both sides. Did somebody accuse my opponent of being a horse-fucking, grave-robbing child murderer? Gosh, I just can't imagine how a story like that got started (after your minions had been whispering it for weeks).

‘That's so ridiculous. If that was true we would have heard about it a long time ago.'

‘We're in a tight race and running out of time. Anything goes now.'

‘Oh, I met that Detective Fogarty. She was just here. She's pretty cool. She said she talked to you.'

I had to give Fogarty her relentlessness. This was the sort of case that would get a detective noticed in the press.

‘Well, I'll be there in a while, Lucy. Now how about the name of that reporter in Winthrop?'

‘Oh, sure.'

She told me. I entered name and phone and e-mail into my Mac laptop. ‘I appreciate it, Lucy.'

Nan Talbot was in a meeting but was expected back in fifteen minutes or so. Would I like to call back then?

In twenty minutes I called again. I used Lucy's name more often than I probably needed to, but given the kind of questions I was about to ask she needed to trust me. And every time I used it, Nan Talbot said something flattering. ‘She's one of the few political press people I like. Very straightforward. A lot of them are just flacks. They don't do anything but brag about their candidate and if you ask them anything serious about an issue they can't give you a coherent answer. Lucy can do it all – and talk and write and really walk you through any issue you have questions about.'

‘Well, she said you might be able to help me.'

‘I'll sure try but I have to warn you that I need to leave on a story in about fifteen minutes.'

‘I keep thinking of the right way to bring this up—'

‘Boy, this should be good—'

‘I need to know about a house of ill repute you had in Winthrop about five years ago.'

She laughed. ‘A popular subject. I'm from Des Moines. I've only been here for two years or so, but last winter a private investigator asked me pretty much the same thing and I had to go ask the people who'd been here a long time.'

‘A private investigator?'

‘Yes. He wanted the background on the house and where he might find Vanessa La Rouche. The first thing I told him was that was her – I don't know what you'd call it – stage name, I guess. Her real name was Sandy Bowers. She was the madam of the place. Then I had to tell him that I had no idea where she went after the state shut her down. She operated for four years here, two terms of the same mayor. He protected her. Some said she had something on him and some said it was a straight payoff. Whatever, when the mayor got voted out she didn't last long.'

‘Has anybody ever heard from her?'

‘Not that I know of.'

‘How about that private investigator? Would you happen to remember his name?'

‘No. But it's somewhere on my computer. I'll look it up when I get a chance. You have an e-mail address?'

I gave it to her.

‘What happened to the girls?'

‘That's what made her place so special. That's why she got so many important people going there. Winthrop's economy went down the tube in 2005. Three big manufacturing plants went under and so did a bank. The feds closed it. Sandy or Vanessa was smart. She used only housewives. You know what MILFs means?'

‘Mothers I'd Like to Fuck?'

‘Exactly. Really attractive, clean, bright women whose husbands were suddenly on unemployment insurance. Very discreet. Appointments only, because not all of them could work every night. Juggling the hours was the most difficult part, I assume. They had families. Hard to know if the husbands really knew or not. But she raked it in and the people here said that the housewives made good money, too.'

‘Any scandals?'

‘None that left that house. Of course, there were always rumors.'

‘Such as?'

‘Well, seems a certain well-known lawyer from Galesburg liked to argue about the kind of money he had to pay Vanessa, so he threatened to go to the local news media. I don't know who Vanessa called but she had an angel somewhere. Everybody figures it was the mob. They kneecapped the lawyer and then started sending him photographs of his kids just to remind him how vulnerable he was.'

‘Doesn't sound like the kind of lawyer I'd hire. If he dumped on the house he'd be admitting he was not only a client but that the reason he was doing it was because he was too cheap to pay the going rate. He'd look pretty bad.'

‘Well, if you knew the guy you'd understand. He's all bluster, very pompous and very loud. Really obnoxious.'

‘But even that isn't much of a scandal. He didn't go to the press after all.'

‘Vanessa or somebody knew what they were doing. As I said, everything stayed in the house. Hey – I need to go.'

‘Thanks. And I appreciate you sending me that investigator's name.'

‘It'll be a little later today. Say hello to Lucy for me. Tell her my boyfriend's got a guy she should meet. He thinks they'll really hit it off.'

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