Read The Shut Mouth Society Online
Authors: James D. Best
Tags: #Suspense, #Historical, #Thriller, #Mystery
Evarts turned to Baldwin. “Nothing puts us together except forensic evidence in Boston, so I asked him about the shooting, and he knew too much.” Evarts looked out the window again. “You’ve seen the television coverage. Barely mentioned. Why would a Santa Barbara cop know about a Boston gang shooting?”
“
You need to hire a better class of subordinates.”
Evarts laughed, but he didn’t feel happy. “Civil Service regs. What’s a fella gonna do?”
“
What
is
a fella gonna do?”
“
Thinking about it.” He did. “I’m inclined to open a channel with Detective Standish but keep Clark on the line. He could prove useful if we want to feed the union misinformation.”
“
And when you get back, promote Detective Standish to Lieutenant Clarks’ job. I liked her.”
“
I forgot. She interviewed you at the Douglass house.”
“
Yeah, she won’t sell you out.” Baldwin winked. “She likes you.”
Chapter 42
After dinner they sprinted across the parking lot to their room. They got as drenched as if they had stood for five minutes in a full-throttle shower. When they got inside the room, Baldwin started cursing that she had been dumb not to change before the rain.
“
Let’s put on something dry, and we’ll take these clothes to the dry cleaners tomorrow,” Evarts suggested.
“
They’re ruined!” she shouted. “At least mine are. Since you don’t care about your appearance, yours are probably fine.”
He checked a sharp retort. “Why don’t you go into the bathroom and change? You’ll feel better after you’re dry.”
“
I’ll feel better after we get out of this mess. We didn’t find anything useful today. Goddamn it, I don’t—”
Just then a clap of thunder shook the room so hard that Evarts glanced out the window, expecting to see a tree incinerated. He heard another goddamn and turned around to see the bathroom door slam behind Baldwin.
He changed into a pair of shorts and tee shirt and hung his own clothes up to dry in the metal rack that served as a closet. The rack hung outside the bathroom door, and he heard Baldwin crying. When she finally opened the door, she was dressed in the beach gear he had bought her. She held the new clothes they had bought the day before in a wad and tossed them on the floor under the clothing rack.
“
I’m sorry,” she said. “You didn’t deserve that.”
He thought she looked forlorn. “What’s wrong?”
“
It’s just such a letdown.”
“
It’s the weather. It would depress anyone.”
“
This was our big hope. Since the beginning, we thought the Evarts documents would give us a weapon. Now—” She plopped onto the bed.
“
I only scanned them. We’ll study them more thoroughly in the morning.” Hoping that talking about history would brighten her mood, he asked, “How do you think Evarts got hold of those Lincoln documents?”
“
He probably found them in the White House basement or a closet after Johnson took control of the Executive Mansion.” Her voice still had an edge, but she seemed calmer.
“
That stuff about Seward was fascinating. Did you learn anything else today?”
“
Learn?” He saw her mentally flip through the pages again. “Small details, confirmation of suppositions, but mostly behind the scenes maneuvering of public events already recorded by the press of the day.”
“
Any specific event?” Evarts saw that the diversion had worked.
“
The 1860 race that elected Lincoln president. The files contained only letters from his political operatives, not his responses.”
“
Where would his responses be?”
“
Lost, I suppose. The people who managed his campaign never passed them on to us. It would be like Lincoln to issue instructions that they be destroyed.”
“
A shut mouth man.”
“
Exactly. He always pretended that things happened accidentally or required very little effort on his part. He actually took meticulous care to orchestrate events. Lincoln agonized over speeches and then helped propagate the myth that he scratched them out on the back of an envelope. He also sought advice from everyone on his major addresses and then allowed each one of them to think they had contributed far more than they actually did.”
She got up from the bed and went over to the tiny faux wood table by the window. “Caspar Weinberger once said it was amazing how much a person could accomplish in Washington if they didn’t care who got the credit.”
“
But you found no more startling revelations?”
“
Only that Lincoln knew his operatives’ plans, but no historian believed him innocent of political maneuvering. The first step in Lincoln’s plan was to convince his party that they had to win Illinois to gain enough electoral votes to take the White House. After he accomplished this, he persuaded them to hold the Republican convention in Chicago to help win the state. Once he gained that concession, he used local advantage to manipulate the convention to his ends. His strategy was to appear as if he wasn’t running prior to the convention and to court delegates only as an alternative if the convention deadlocked. Then he engineered a deadlock, packed the galleries with loud partisans using forged tickets, and bought support by aggressively using patronage.” Baldwin took a deep breath. “He suckered them onto his turf, quietly built a superb campaign team while he pretended to be a harmless hick, and then bribed his way past all the front-runners.”
“
So he captured the nomination,” Evarts said. “What about the presidential race?”
“
The convention
was
the race. Lincoln and every savvy politico knew that Douglas would split the Democrats, and whoever won the Republican nomination would win the White House. Lincoln only won forty percent of the popular vote to become our first minority president. The other sixty percent got split between Douglas and a proslavery Southern Democrat.”
“
I thought Douglas was proslavery.”
“
So did the northern abolitionists but not Southern Democrats. Douglas wanted to be president, so he curried favor with the South by engineering the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Later he tried to straddle the slave issue. Slaveholders on a roll would brook no wavering—none. So they convened a second convention, and two Democrats ran against Lincoln.”
Evarts loved it when she got passionate about history. Her head bounced, her emerald eyes flitted to and fro, and her gestures became lively. Evarts must have smiled, because she said, “What?”
“
You’re beautiful when you’re excited.”
“
I’m not beautiful.” She took off her glasses and blushed. “Cute maybe, but not beautiful.”
He leaned across the table and gave her a gentle kiss on the lips. As a reward, he received one of her wicked smiles. Evarts never thought history could be an aphrodisiac, but she grabbed his hand and drew him toward the bed. They made love for the first time since Des Moines. The thunder, lightning, deafening rain, and other dangers that lurked outside made the bleak room seem cozy. They felt protected and alone together. Instead of wild abandon, their caressing and quiet lovemaking drew them together in an emotional bond that fixed the evening in his memory forever.
Chapter 43
In the morning, Evarts went out and brought back coffee and pastries. They decided to work in the room on the material they had copied. The summer storm had cleaned the skies and streets but hadn’t reduced the humidity. It would be a good day to stay indoors with air-conditioning.
Baldwin was already sitting at the little table when he came into the room. He handed her a cup of coffee and said, “I need to go to a bookstore and buy a copy of
The
Tempest
.”
“
Already have it. I downloaded an electronic copy onto my computer.”
“
The whole play? I didn’t know you could do that.”
“
Shakespeare’s copyright expired centuries ago.” She turned the laptop toward him so he could see.
Evarts sat down and sipped his coffee as he leafed through the encoded pages. Of the pages he had copied yesterday, one had two sets of numbers separated by white space. He suspected that the set of numbers at the bottom of the page were written in a different hand, so he wanted to start with that sheet. He found it and pulled the laptop toward him.
While he used the computer, Baldwin read the copies of the William Evarts documents. Translating the numbers on the bottom of the page took him two hours. By the time he finished, he was sure that he had gotten the message right. Now he knew for sure that the notes at the bottom of this page had been added recently.
He had made notes in a word processing file, and now he hit Save and stared at the screen a moment. He had found one more clue in an unending string of clues, but he wasn’t thinking about unraveling the next level. He had to figure out how to tell Baldwin what he had discovered and in what sequence. He walked to the telephone, where he picked up a tiny tablet, and then returned to the table to make some notations. When he finished, he closed his work file and snapped the lid shut.
He stood again, stuffed the tablet in his back pocket, and stretched. “I’m going for more coffee. Want some?”
She had her head buried in one of the documents and just nodded.
Just as he was about to open the door, her voice stopped him. “Greg?”
“
Yeah?”
“
Did you read this document?”
He came over and looked down at it. “Probably not. I only scanned most of them. Why?”
“
This puts a different slant on the supposed William Evarts deal. It offers an acquittal in the Johnson impeachment in exchange for dropping the treason charges against Jefferson Davis. A president for a president, so to speak. The document also talks about a cessation of plundering, but it appears at the bottom, almost like an afterthought.”
“
Doesn’t that fly in the face of a grand conspiracy between a bunch of rich New Yorkers and aristocratic plantation owners?”
“
Why do you say that?”
“
Well, a bunch of Yankees wouldn’t care about Davis, would they?”
“
You’d think not, but Horace Greeley and Cornelius Vanderbilt were the moneymen behind the Davis defense. When the courts consented to bail, each of them contributed twenty-five thousand dollars—a huge sum in those days.”
She seemed to puzzle that over for a bit. “If Davis escaped treason, then the rest of the rebellion leaders would probably receive pardons and get their plantations back. That would provide them the wherewithal to repay their New York debts.” She swiveled around in her chair and looked up at him. “I’ll bet Evarts and his advisors thought that if the Southern part of the coalition reclaimed their legitimate wealth, they’d quit stealing other people’s money. It sure makes more sense than just getting an empty promise from them to quit stealing.”
“
But how could they pull off a deal like that? Wouldn’t it take a lot of people in the know?”
“
Not as many as you might think. Lincoln appointed the Radical Republican Salmon Chase as chief justice of the Supreme Court because he didn’t want him as an opponent in the 1864 presidential race. Chase had been his secretary of the treasury and a royal pain in the ass because of his outsized presidential ambitions. The man would do anything to gain New York backing.” Baldwin paused dramatically. “Chief Justice Chase presided over both the Johnson impeachment and the Davis treason trial.” Then she waited another couple beats and added, “And William Maxwell Evarts defended Johnson and prosecuted Jefferson Davis.”
“
You mean Evarts was the one to let Davis go?”
“
He pleaded nolle prosequi, or unwilling to pursue. But yeah, probably with the approval of Johnson and others, your great-great-grandfather was the one to give Jefferson Davis his get-out-of-jail-free card.”
Evarts pointed at the paper in her hand. “And that document says it was a quid pro quo for Johnson?”
“
Yes.”
“
Do you think the Shut Mouth Society got it wrong?”
“
No, but they got outsmarted. The union predecessors got the plantations returned, freed their figurehead, crippled Johnson, and then continued to plunder to their heart’s content—at least through the Grant administrations.”
Evarts left the room deep in thought. He didn’t know what to think about this new development. Up to now, he had thought his ancestor had been a crafty player in the highest political arena. Now Baldwin had intimated that these cagey union conspirators had gotten the upper hand on the Shut Mouth people right out of the gate.
He wanted more than coffee. He wanted to call his police department. When the dispatcher answered, he got put through immediately to Deputy Chief Damon.