“Hit her,” the governor said, head still in hands.
“What?”
The governor stood up and walked slowly to the windows. “He hit her. Several times.”
Fletch said, “I see.”
“I had friends in the Pentagon. Well, I had pull. Enough pull to get him out of there quick, get him home, get him assigned to some statistical job in Washington. To keep the incident off his record. I guess I shouldn’t have.”
“There was so much at stake, Caxton,” Doris Wheeler said.
“Yes,” the governor said. “There was a lot at stake.”
Cautiously Fletch asked: “Did you suspect Walsh? Were you protecting him by refusing to permit an investigation?”
There was a long moment before the governor answered. “It was a dreadful thought. I didn’t really let myself think about it. It was inconceivable.”
“But you did conceive of it,” Fletch said.
Another long moment before the governor said, barely audibly: “Yes.” He turned around. Even with the light behind him from the windows, tears were visible on the governor’s cheeks. “He really went
berserk when he beat up that major overseas,” he said. “So the witnesses said.”
“He had been under pressure then, too,” Fletch commented. “More pressure than a man should bear.”
“There is no such thing,” Doris Wheeler said, “as ‘more pressure than a man can bear.’”
Fletch ignored her.
He said to the governor: “I thought you might have been protecting Flash.”
“Flash?” The governor shrugged. “Never thought of him, to tell the truth. Oh, I guess the idea did cross my mind. You know, I’ve watched that man harvest nuts for squirrels and chipmunks.” The governor smiled. He wiped the tears off his big face.
“The primary election system,” Fletch said. “It’s too much pressure for everybody. It’s too long. It goes on for six, eight months. It’s crazy. Even one of the reporters, Bill Dieckmann, is in the hospital this morning with some kind of a nervous disorder. What’s it all supposed to prove?”
“Just that,” the governor said easily. “That one can take the pressure. It seems strange for me to say it this morning, but the system is good. If the candidate, and his family, and his team, can’t take the pressure, it’s better that it show up on the campaign trail than on Pennsylvania Avenue.” He had gone to a sideboard. He picked up some papers beside an open briefcase. He dropped them into a waste-basket. “I must say, though: I think I was beginning to say some interesting things. Even if I didn’t win, I was beginning to voice some interesting questions.”
On the divan, Doris Wheeler shifted uncomfortably. She held a wet handkerchief to her face. “Oh, Caxton, can’t we go on? Isn’t there some way …?”
“I will resign the governorship. I plan to be with Walsh through this. Try to see he gets whatever treatment he needs to make him whole again, in hospital, in prison, whatever, now and forever, I guess.” The governor’s voice was low, but strong. “I’ll do anything I can to try to make restitution to the families and loved ones of those women….”
On the divan, Doris Wheeler sobbed into her handkerchief.
There was a kind of an animal noise from the governor’s throat, or his chest.
Fletch said: “There isn’t much of anything you can do for Walsh right now. The judge who was on the platform with you last night did the unusual thing of opening his court at three o’clock this morning. To avoid a three-ring circus, he said. He sent Walsh away for thirty days psychiatric observation. Walsh has already gone.”
“Psychiatric observation,” the governor repeated from across the room. “Walsh …” When he turned around, fresh tears glistened on his cheeks.
There was a tap on the door.
Flash entered the little hall. In one hand he carried his own suitcases and his black topcoat.
In the other hand he carried a sheaf of yellow telegram sheets.
“I still can’t figure out precisely what I’m doing here,” Fletch said. “I can’t figure out whether Walsh asked me to join the campaign to protect him—you know, when the first crime writer, Freddie Arbuthnot, showed up? Or whether, way deep in his mind somewhere, he had the idea I might rescue him again.”
Doris Wheeler stood up. “Either way,” she said, “you didn’t do a very good job, did you?”
Flash said to the governor, “I’ve got a car. A comfortable car. I rented it myself. I figured we wouldn’t want to go through any airports.”
“That’s right, Flash,” the governor said.
Flash held out the telegrams. “These are from the President, the other candidates …”
The governor pointed at the wastebasket. “Put them in there, Flash.”
Flash dropped the telegrams in the wastebasket.
Caxton Wheeler took his wife’s arm.
“Come on, Mother,” he said. “It’s time we went home.”
“Going my way?” Fletch asked the girl with the honey-colored hair and the brown eyes, standing next to her blue suitcase in the airport terminal.
“No,” she answered. “I’m on my way up.”
“I’m glad to see you,” he said.
He set down his own luggage.
After seeing Doris and Caxton Wheeler off in the dark, rented sedan, Flash driving away at a funereal pace, Fletch had returned to his room at Melville’s First Hotel and slept well beyond checkout time. His sleep was troubled. The hard edges of Walsh’s eyes when he first turned and saw Fletch in the auditorium basement penetrated every corner of his sleep. The pained crawl of the dark sedan carrying the Wheelers back across midland America weighted Fletch’s sleep with sadness.
Awaking, he ordered steak and eggs and orange juice and milk and coffee, made his travel arrangements by phone, then settled his hotel bill with the cashier, paying for his extra few hours use of the room himself.
“Yeah,” Fletch said to Freddie Arbuthnot in the airport terminal. “I lost my job again.”
“You’re good at that.”
“I think it’s what I do best.”
“Fletch,” she said, “I’m sorry about your friend. I’m sorry about Walsh.”
“I’m sorry about everything,” he said. “The women. Caxton Wheeler.”
A large group of people were waiting just outside one of the arrival gates. Some of them wore UPTON FOR PRESIDENT badges.
On the fringes of the welcoming group were Roy Filby, Tony Rice, Stella Kirchner. Andrew Esty stood separate from the others, his nose pointed at the arrival gate, wearing more the expression of a judge than a reporter. His heavy overcoat buttoned tightly around him, Boris Solov leaned against a car rental counter. His eyes were closed.
“Did you get your story?” Fletch asked Freddie.
“Yeah. Thanks for tipping me off to be at the courts at three
A.M.
There are some stories I’d rather not write.” She smiled at him. “But if a story has to be written, I don’t mind scooping the world with it.”
“I appreciate this story’s being written fairly and accurately,” Fletch said.
“Poor Michael J. Hanrahan.” Freddie did not succeed in restraining a laugh. “He didn’t get to file any story at all, did he?”
“Michael J. Hanrahan,” Fletch said, “is in jail. For striking a fireman. For interfering with an official performing his duty. For being drunk and disorderly in a public place.”
“Poor Michael J. Hanrahan,” Freddie giggled.
“I’m very grateful to him. I tried to arrange bail for him while I was at the police station, but the local police seemed to think he needed a few days’ rest. He was shouting from the cell, ‘Doesn’t anyone around here read
Newsbill?’
He was in no condition to be put back on the street.”
“Mr. Bad News missed his biggest bad news story.”
“At least Mary Rice wrote the story for
Newsbill
as the tragedy it is.”
Across the terminal, the welcoming committee was beginning to stir, bunch up at the arrival gates. Television lights were switching on.
Wordlessly, Fletch and Freddie Arbuthnot watched the arrival of
Senator Simon Upton in Melville, just a day before that state’s primary election.
The tall, tanned, graying man stopped in the center of the television lights. Hands behind his back, he said a few words into the microphones held out to him. Fletch and Freddie could not hear what he was saying. Either of them could have written the words: “… this great, personal tragedy that has befallen Caxton Wheeler, his wife, family, staff, friends, the murdered women, everyone involved. A great human tragedy …”
Then the candidate, a man who, reached for hands to shake. Gracefully he moved across the terminal, smiling and waving. His staff and welcoming committee streamed after him. The members of the press traveling with him straggled along at the rear of the procession, carrying their own luggage, looking bedraggled.
The other side of the terminal’s big windows, a campaign bus, a press bus, a couple of television vans, the odd cars of volunteers awaited the candidate and his party.
“I’ll have to come back here,” Freddie said. “To cover the trial.”
“Of course.”
“And you’ll have to be here for the trial, Fletch. I was just thinking that.”
“Yes.”
“We’ll just keep bumping into each other, I guess.”
“I guess.”
After a moment, she said, “I’m on the flight to Chicago. It’s all booked up.”
“Oh.”
“Then on to Springfield,” she sighed. “To interview a woman just being released from prison after forty years.”
“Me too,” Fletch said. “I’m going to Springfield.”
“You are not.”
“I’m not?”
“No.”
“How do you know?”
“Because you think I’m going to Springfield, Illinois, don’t you?”
“I do?”
“I’m going to Springfield, Massachusetts. The flight to Chicago is booked, and there are only fifteen minutes in Chicago between
flights.” She laughed. “Oh, Fletch! Caught you this time. Thought you were clever, did you? Now you know where I’m going, but it’s too late for you to sneak around and get tickets for yourself.”
“I just happen to be going to Springfield, Massachusetts,” Fletch said. “It’s pretty there, this time of year.”
She stopped laughing at him. She searched his face to see if he was serious. Then she blinked. “Are you on my flight to Chicago?”
Fletch took his tickets out of his jacket pocket and showed them to her. “Melville to Chicago to Boston to Springfield,” he said. “Massachusetts.”
She studied the tickets. “These are my flights.”
“Mine, actually. You mean to tell me, you are going my way?”
She looked up from the tickets at him. “How did you do that?”
“Do what?”
“Know where I’m going and arrange identical tickets for yourself?”
Outside, Senator Simon Upton’s campaign bus was pulling away from the curb.
“Gee, Freddie.” He took the tickets away from her and shoved them into his own pocket. “Why do you want to make a mystery out of everything?”
Once an investigative reporter of questionable methods, Fletch hasn’t been a practicing journalist for years, but when agents Eggers and Fabens approach him with too much information about himself and an invitation to the American Journalism Alliance convention, how could he refuse? So he finds himself enlisted as a spy among his peers. But before he can even set up his surveillance, there’s a murder. And almost everybody’s a suspect.
Crime Fiction/0-375-71355-7
Fletch is finally getting hitched, and somebody delivered a letter from his father—whom Fletch has never met—with an invitation for the couple to visit him in Nairobi for the honeymoon. But as soon as they land, the chaos begins. There’s a murder at the airport, reports of the old man’s incarceration, and the hospitality (and evasiveness) offered by Pop’s best friend, who flies them across the continent, just a step or two behind—or maybe ahead of—the old rascal.
Crime Fiction/0-375-71353-0
Fletch’s trip to Brazil wasn’t exactly planned. But he has plenty of money, thanks to a little arrangement made stateside. And it took him no time to hook up with the luscious Laura Soares. Fletch is beginning to relax, just a little. But between the American widow who seems to be following him and the Brazilian widow who’s convinced that he’s her long-dead husband, Fletch suddenly doesn’t have much time to enjoy the present.
Crime Fiction/0-375-71347-6
It might have been an accident that brought down the Boeing 707 over Boston Harbor. But it seems unlikely, with so many potential targets on board: the heavily insured Federal judge; the has-been British actor; the middleweight champ; the Middle Eastern finance minister—and it’s up to good inspector Flynn to get to the bottom of it.
Crime Fiction/0-375-71357-3
Someone is giving away hundreds of millions of dollars, and Flynn has to find out who in a hurry. As he races from Texas to Las Vegas, from Massachusetts to Russia, Flynn quickly discovers that this is neither the pastime of an eccentric billionaire nor a nefarious counterfeiting scheme. Someone is trying to wreck the nation’s economy and, bizarrely enough, is spending a lot of money to do it.
Crime Fiction/0-375-71360-3
Flynn is no stranger to the bizarre, the perverse, or the ridiculous. But when he is suddenly summoned by the Police Commissioner D’Esopo to a secret wilderness compound far outside their jurisdiction, he is a little surprised to find himself the hostage of a secret club of the nation’s most powerful and peculiar and forced to conduct a clandestine murder investigation. But before one murder is even solved, membership at the Rod and Gun club continues to drop.
Crime Fiction/0-375-71361-1
When Flynn’s barely adolescent daughter asks him to rescue her friend from the cemetery, where he’s been fastened to a tree by a nail through his earlobe, Flynn is pretty sure there’s something more behind what seems like a bully’s prank. And he’s convinced there is more than mischief involved in the threats against the Harvard professor Louis Loveson. If that weren’t enough, Lieutenant John Kurt’s impressive arrest record follows some very disturbing patterns.
Crime Fiction/0-375-71358-1
Fletch
, 0-375-71354-9
Confess, Fletch
, 0-375-71348-4
Fletch Won
, 0-375-71352-2
Fletch and the Widow Bradley
, 0-375-71351-4
VINTAGE CRIME/BLACK LIZARD
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