PART TWO
SIX

That night I had a highly erotic dream of a silver car and a license plate number. I was following the sleek machine on a narrow asphalt road through a dense forest in dangerous rain. I would speed up to eighty, once even to ninety, but I could never get close enough to catch her. The dream became a sweaty nightmare when my car plunged off a cliff, accompanied, all the way down, by the almost melodious sound of a woman laughing with great perfumed pleasure.

In the morning, my clock displaying 6:47, I called Kathy’s number. She was yawning but awake.

‘I apologize for this, Kathy.’

‘Sure you do. I can hear it in your voice.’

I smiled. ‘Actually, I do. Unfortunately, I need some help and that kind of takes precedence over everything else right now.’

‘You’re not even close to the record. At one of the places I worked, the boss would call me at six to tell me he was picking me up for breakfast at six fifteen.’ Another yawn. ‘So what’s going on?’

‘Do you have any contact with the local police?’

‘There’s a detective I used to date when I’d come back here from Washington. It was never a big thing but he was always a lot of fun. I’ve asked him for a few favors from time to time.’

‘Good. I need a license number registration checked as soon as possible.’

I could tell she was smiling now, too. ‘Can I at least wait until eight thirty when he gets in?’

‘Hell, no. Call him right now. Even if he’s in the shower.’

A sweet, girly laugh. ‘Probably not a good idea. He got married six months ago. I doubt his wife would appreciate a call from one of his old lovers, especially before seven in the morning. So what’s the license number?’

After putting some coffee on, I picked up my cell phone and started going through the messages I hadn’t responded to yesterday. The first one was the one I wanted least. Better to get it over with. I jabbed the right numbers.

Helen Ward answered. ‘He’s been waiting to hear from you. Can you believe all this? Just a minute.’

I hadn’t said hello and neither had she. The old-time consultants had wives who acted like the wives of senators and congressmen. They were just as ready for battle as their spouses. She hadn’t been unfriendly just now but all that mattered to her was that her son’s campaign was in serious trouble. No other subject was allowed to enter her conscious mind.

Tom came on. ‘I didn’t sleep for shit last night. We got the news just before midnight.’

‘Join the club. Jeff didn’t leave my hotel room until two o’clock.’

‘He’s ducking me, the little prick. He doesn’t want any advice from the old man.’

‘I don’t have anything new to report, Tom. But I told you I’d check in.’

‘Helen’s climbing the walls.’

‘I don’t blame her.’

‘Where’s David Nolan in all this? He’s handled things for Jeff all their lives. I hate to say this but I trust his judgment more than I do my own son’s.’

So he didn’t know about Jeff and David’s wife. He was seventy-four years old. He was overweight and drank a lot. He also kept the tobacco industry rich. He still smoked those small Chesterfields that had killed Bogie among many other millions. He’d had a stroke a few years ago. He knew about the murder. But he didn’t know about the adultery. Or the blackmail. I wondered how much was too much to put on a man like him.

‘Yeah. I got to talk to him. Real steady as she goes. Jeff’s lucky to have him.’

‘Just a sec.’ He cupped the phone. I heard an angry voice. Helen. When he came back on, he said, ‘Helen heard me say that about trusting David’s judgment more than Jeff’s. I thought she was upstairs. It always pisses her off when I say that. She says I’m being disloyal. To me I’m just being realistic. Our boy has a lot of good qualities.’

At the moment I couldn’t think of any but theoretically I suppose he did. I mean if I really thought hard about it I could probably think of a few. Maybe.

‘Burkhart’s probably been jacking off all night,’ Tom said.

‘I’d imagine so.’

‘You see those photos of him at the Creationist Museum? Little kids riding that animatronic dinosaur. The Europeans have always regarded us as hillbillies and by God maybe they’re right. Riding dinosaurs, for God’s sake. You think they really believe that shit happened?’

‘Oh, yeah.’

‘I don’t know what the hell’s going to happen to this country.’

‘It’s already happened, Tom. That’s the hell of it.’

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