Security officer Lafayette Wyatt appeared, as promised, half-an-hour before his shift. Rep guessed his age at twenty-five or so. Short-cropped black hair bristling above his dark brown skin seemed to emphasize his youth. His shoes weren’t just shined but polished to a high gloss, and his equipment belt gleamed. From a gold chain around his neck dangled a plain gold cross and a red numeral one—whether in tribute to Jesus or the First Infantry Division Rep wasn’t sure.
“I’d noticed the lady hanging around outside for a good half-hour before Mr. Damon came back down,” he said after Klimchock had gotten him into the topic. “And that’s not your everyday thing, o’ course, a lady like that by herself after midnight on the sidewalk in downtown Kansas City. I mean, at first I was thinkin’—well, you know what I was thinkin’—but a coupla guys passed her by, and she didn’t make a move.”
“What did she look like?” Rep asked.
“Well,” Wyatt said earnestly, “she looked like a girl from a shampoo commercial, is what she looked like. She had this blond hair, not like hair you usually see on women just walking around, sorta live and swingy, and the one time she smiled she had, like, this flash that really grabbed you. And she seemed kind of underweight, but with real big, you know, and like these long, tan legs, and fu—uh, that is, real sassy kinda shoes.”
“So then Mr. Damon came down,” Klimchock prompted.
“Right. And he signed out and we said good night, and I could tell he noticed the lady. Kinda glanced over at her and did a double-take, you know? Then he walked on out. Now it was hot and sticky, so I had the outside sliding window on the guard cubicle about halfway open and I could hear what she said to him as soon as he hit the sidewalk. She didn’t waste any time at all.”
“And what did she say to him?” Klimchock asked, giving precisely equal emphasis to each syllable.
“Oh, she was all, ‘I’m visiting from outta town and I met some friends for dinner and drinks and then we all started to take a walk and they peeled off one by one and all of a sudden I was by myself and I realized I’d gotten lost like the ditz I am’—she shook her hair when she said that part, an’ I’ll tell you, one look at that girl an’ I could tell she’d never walked more’n three blocks before at one time in her life. Anyway, could Mr. Damon get her back to her hotel? And he says yes, and they walked off to where he’d parked his car on the street.”
Melissa and Linda exchanged glances. There was only one male over fourteen that either of them knew who could possibly have fallen for that story.
“Thank you very much, Laf,” Klimchock said.
“Glad to help out.”
“Well,” Linda said to Melissa, Rep, and Klimchock as Wyatt headed for the break room, “it must have been an excruciatingly long day for you three, and I don’t think we can accomplish anything else until tomorrow morning. Should we call it a night, get me back home in case Peter calls or comes by?”
“I most certainly do not think we should call it a night,” Klimchock said. “There is work to be done yet, leads to track down, loose ends to tie up. I should say we have miles to go before we sleep.”
Melissa had to hide a scowl, for what she’d wanted most since she’d hit the freeway ninety minutes ago was time alone with Linda.
“Well,” she said dubiously as the quartet began moving toward the elevator, “we have the medals to finish up, and General Rawlins, but they shouldn’t take long.”
“Don’t forget Anita Lay, or whoever she really is,” Linda said.
“Anita Lay?” Rep asked.
“That was the name on the registration card at the Palm Gardens Hometel,” Melissa explained with the hint of a sigh. “I can’t fit her in with Jedidiah Trevelyan or Red Pendleton or anything else we’ve learned, but after the story we just heard I guess we can’t ignore her.”
“If it’s a phony name, though,” Klimchock said, “how can we find anything out about her tonight? Whom do we know who could fill us in on what I’m guessing is a very shady call girl from out of town?”
Without turning her head, Melissa shifted her eyes toward Rep. He met the stealthy gaze. They were thinking the same thing: Mom.
“Actually,” Rep said, clearing his throat in an unsuccessful attempt to sound casual, “if you can show me to a land-line telephone where I can make and receive long-distance calls, I might be able to take a stab at it.”
“Aces!” Klimchock said. “You can use the phone in the acquisition head’s office. Computer too. She’s over budget anyway, so it won’t matter.”
Microfilm readers, vertical files, and heavily laden shelves crowded the third floor, but Klimchock navigated its dark expanse with serene confidence. She led Melissa and Rep into a small office, knew the password necessary to boot up the computer, and punched a complex billing code into the phone.
“There you are,” she said to Rep as a dial tone sounded over the receiver she handed to him. “Nine-one-area code and off you go.” Then, taking Linda literally in hand, Klimchock headed toward her own office.
Rep had long since stopped blushing at the recorded message on his mother’s answering machine—if you’ve been naughty…if you require an attitude adjustment…leave a number….—but he still waited with visible impatience for the phrases to end and the beep to sound.
“This is Spoiled Sibling,” he said, using a pseudonym she’d suggested, in case she didn’t recognize his voice. “I’m interested in someone who might use the name Anita Lay, blond, mid-twenties, California Girl look, recently out of town. You can call me back at this number for the next ninety minutes.”
“Well,” Melissa said as she mouse-clicked two feet away, “that’s done.”
“What are you working on?” he asked.
“General Rawlins,” she said. “While it’s printing I’ll pop Peter’s disk in and you can look over my shoulder and see if you can make anything out of the battlefield maps.”
Rep gazed dutifully at the screen while Melissa clicked through the images. He frowned in concentration and bafflement.
“Spottsylvania…Cold Harbor…Petersburg…Jubal Early’s Valley campaign…Fisher’s Hill…Cedar Creek,” Rep murmured thoughtfully. “Kind of a mixed bag. Well known battles that were bloody but indecisive, and then a couple I can barely remember at all.”
“Do you see any kind of pattern?”
“They were all fought in 1864, fairly close to Washington. Maybe I’ll be able to make something out of this after I sleep on it. What did you find about General Rawlins?”
“Hi,” said Linda, who picked that moment to appear in the doorway with a handful of paper. “Diane told me to bring these down to you. They’re print-outs of the medals that looked like they might match Rep’s description. Now Rep can look at them and see if one of them does.”
“Didn’t you get the picture of the medal that I sent to you?” Rep asked Melissa as he accepted the sheets.
“What I got, actually,” Melissa said, “was a picture of what looked like a junior accountant at Enron being taken on a perp walk. I couldn’t help wondering why you’d passed it on.”
“Nuts,” Rep said. “And I was so proud of myself. I was thinking of ordering my next martini shaken and not stirred. He’s not a junior accountant at Enron, by the way, but he was being taken on a perp walk.”
“Who was he?” Melissa asked.
“A member of the French Resistance executed by the Nazis,” Rep said. “What did Lawrence say his name was? Give me a second. Brassilach, that’s it. Robert Brassilach.”
“What?” Melissa yelped.
“Robert Brassilach,” Rep repeated. “Lawrence said he was an outstanding poet, novelist, and critic.”
“He was right,” Melissa said.
“And that he was shot by a firing squad in France during World War II.”
“Also true,” Melissa said.
“He said he was shot essentially for editing a newspaper.”
“Right again,” Melissa said. “Except he wasn’t shot by the Nazis. He was executed by the French. The newspaper he edited was a collaborationist sheet called Je Suis Partout—I Am Everywhere. One of the more charming things he wrote was, ‘ We have to separate ourselves from the Jews as a whole, and not keep the little ones.’ At his trial he said he just wanted mothers and children to stay together.”
“The French shot him for that?” Rep asked. “Didn’t think they had it in them. But how do you happen to know about it?”
“Among literary academics the Brassilach case is a famous study in the conflict between freedom of expression and the moral responsibility of intellectuals for what they write. Alice Kaplan described his trial in a book called The Collaborator. You can get a pretty good argument at your average academic conference that, no matter how reprehensible his words were, Brassilach shouldn’t have been executed for publishing them, even in wartime.”
“‘ Should I shoot the poor boy who deserts the colors, and leave unmolested the editor whose words caused him to run away?’ ” Rep said.
“Who said that, DeGaulle?”
“Abraham Lincoln, concerning the arrest of a copperhead newspaper editor during the Civil War.”
“You’re showing off again,” Melissa said.
“It must be contagious.”
“Linda,” Melissa said, “forget about those medal pictures you have. Dig the book out again and see if it has any entries for Vichy.”
“What are we saying?” Linda asked. “That Lawrence is a crypto-Nazi?”
“I think that might be a bit of a leap from one odd picture,” Rep said.
“I don’t know about crypto-Nazi, but we have more than a picture to suggest pathological anti-semite,” Melissa said as she grabbed a page from her computer’s printer. “Look at this. Missouri isn’t the only place that had a famous General Order Number 11. General Grant also issued one that was signed by his chief of staff, General John Rawlins.”
Linda and Rep pressed around Melissa to read the page she held:
The Jews, as a class violating every regulation of trade established by the Treasury Department and also department orders, are hereby expelled from the [D]epartment [of the Tennessee] within twenty-four hours from the receipt of this order. Post commanders will see to it that all of this class of people be furnished passes and required to leave, and any one returning after such notification will be arrested and held in confinement until an opportunity occurs of sending them out as prisoners, unless furnished with permit from headquarters. No passes will be given these people to visit headquarters for the purpose of making personal application of trade permits.
“According to the note on this website,” Melissa said, “the Department of the Tennessee included Tennessee, Kentucky, and Mississippi. So Grant’s General Order Number 11 exiled all the Jews in three states under military occupation. Lincoln made Grant rescind the order a few weeks later.”
“Maybe we’re going too fast,” Linda said. “Mr. Lawrence is cultured, sophisticated, literate, generous, and well-mannered.”
“So was Brassilach,” Melissa said. “And he sat serenely in his office and called for Jewish children to be rounded up and sent to death camps.”
“Well,” Rep said, “I’m duly taken aback. I think we’ve peaked. Tonight isn’t likely to generate any further information quite as dramatic as this.”
The phone rang.
Rep answered it with a simple “Hello.” No name or place. That was the way fate had decreed he would talk on the phone to his own mother. The caller dispensed with preliminaries as well.
“I’ve seen the name Anita Lay in the credits for so-called quality adult films, but I suspect it’s generic, not the screen name of a particular actress.”
“‘Quality’ adult film as opposed to what kind?” Rep couldn’t help asking.
“As opposed to quickies for specialty tastes, like my clients have, which are basically infomercials, and garden variety skin-flicks that just get right down to it. Quality are longer running, with actual story lines, dialogue—even multiple camera angles. Some actors and actresses get famous starring in movies like that. They have regular screen names, and they use them in movie after movie. Others, though, are just paying the rent while they wait for Quentin Tarantino to cast them in something legitimate. They show up in the credits under generic names that are usually lame puns—like Anita Lay. The actresses change, but the names stay the same.”
“What’s ‘Anita Lay’ a pun for?” Rep asked. “Oh. Never mind.”
“Right.”
“So, in other words, the particular woman we’re wondering about could be any blonde in her early twenties.”
“Well, not just any blonde. She’s almost certainly an aspiring actress living in southern California.”
“Why do you say that?” Rep asked. “Why couldn’t she just have picked the name up from watching some, er, quality adult films?”
“Oh come on. These aren’t exactly chick-flicks, are they? And even the guys who watch them couldn’t tell you any name in the credits after the second line. GET YOUR NOSE BACK IN THAT CORNER THIS SECOND, YOUNG MAN! YOU’RE BEING PUNISHED AND YOU’RE IN DISGRACE! Sorry, that last part wasn’t directed at you. I have a client here.”
“Understood,” Rep said. “I see your point. Still, ‘aspiring actress living in southern California’ doesn’t narrow it down very much.”
“I’ll tell you one thing,” the caller said. “Any wannabe starlet who leaves LA for KC in June is looking for a fat payday.”
“Where would the payday come from?”
“A sugar daddy who’d have a limo meet her at the airport, put her up in the best suite in the best hotel in town, and plan on spending a weekend worth of quality time with her.”
“Doesn’t fit,” Rep said. “Unless there are sugar daddies with a taste for date-rape drugs.”
“What did you just say? This chick was feeding ropes to johns?”
“If ‘ropes’ means Rohypnol, that super German sleeping pill that guys sometimes slip into cocktails, then that’s what she was doing.”
“That’s what ‘ropes’ means. Well, that makes it obvious, doesn’t it?”
“To half of us, apparently,” Rep said.
“She wanted to get a guy into what we used to blushingly call a compromising position. Find someone in Kansas City who could be blackmailed into tucking a billion-dollar tax-break into a budget bill or quashing a drug investigation, and I’ll bet you’ve found Anita Lay’s target.”
“How about someone who could sell ten million copies of Star magazine by being shown on the cover with his pants down?” Rep asked.
“Bingo.”
“Thanks.” Rep hung up and summarized his mother’s well-informed conclusions for Linda and Melissa.
“You mean whoever she was, she came here just to set up a phony picture of Peter committing adultery?” Linda asked.
“Sure,” Rep said. “Peter became an instant, mini-celebrity for turning down a proposition on television. You can bet some scandal sheet would pay middle five figures for pictures that it could headline ‘REALITY CHECK’S “GOOD” HUSBAND CAUGHT IN LOVE NEST.’ ”
“That’s why Peter thought he’d done something terrible,” Linda sniffled, near tears again but this time from happiness. “Not because he’d killed Quinlan. Because of the drug he couldn’t remember exactly what happened, but he remembered enough to think he’d been unfaithful to me.”
“I’d bet that way,” Melissa said. “But she presumably got her pictures, so you two are going to have to brace for a couple of weeks worth of ugly ink.”
“Well,” Rep said modestly, “the intellectual property bar might have something to say about that.”
“You mean threaten to sue them for libel?” Melissa asked skeptically.
“No, I mean threaten to libel them.”
“You’re being opaque again, dear.”
“I have the e-mail address of the general counsel for every tabloid in the country,” Rep said.
“Do they all owe you favors?” Linda asked.
“They’ll think they do after I pass on a hot tip that police in Kansas City are looking into charges of second degree sexual assault involving the drug-assisted rape of Peter Damon by a self-proclaimed starlet who let slip that she was working for their papers.”
“But only one of them is guilty,” Melissa said.
“That’s what makes it libel. The ones that aren’t guilty will start chasing down the story. The paper that actually gave that bimbo an advance will know that its rivals will crucify it if it runs the story. Which it wouldn’t anyway, once its lawyers told it about accessory before the fact, aiding and abetting, criminal conspiracy, and extradition. It might not work, but it’s sure worth a shot.”
Melissa saw Linda’s face come alive with a gently radiant glow. She loves deeply and fiercely, Melissa thought. She could have killed for that love. But Melissa banished all thought of cross-examining Linda or checking the VW’s odometer. Sometime in the last twenty minutes, she’d made a decision. I love justice, Camus had said, but I’d defend my mother in court. Guilty or innocent, Linda was her friend. Guilty or innocent, she needed Melissa’s unqualified and unconditional support, and guilty or innocent she’d have it. If Linda had killed Quinlan, someone else was going to have to prove it.
For the first time since she’d realized Tuttle was going to slap her, Melissa’s shoulders relaxed. They stayed relaxed for almost five seconds. Until the scream.