by Jan Burke
YEAGER BROTHER TRIAL BEGINS TODAY
58
THE STORY TOLD OF THE OPENING OF THE TRIAL OF MITCHELL YEAGER, the twenty-one-year-old brother of Adam Yeager, who had been convicted earlier that year of receiving stolen goods, the biggest charge local officials seemed to be able to bring against him. He was currently serving time, it said, in San Quentin. Mitch Yeager had been arrested on a bribery charge in connection with his brother’s arrest. Apparently, he had made his offer to the wrong official. Corrigan also noted that the defense in Mitch Yeager’s trial had asked for a continuance, due to the illness of the defendant’s brother. The motion was denied.
Illness. I had imagined a prison fight or escape attempt.
I watched for mention of Adam’s death as I scrolled on, and kept reading. I wasn’t surprised to see that Mitch Yeager’s first trial was declared a mistrial, given what I had read of O’Connor’s account of what he had seen in the courtroom. Yeager, who had previously been granted bail, had his bail revoked and was taken into custody pending a trial on charges of jury tampering. A new trial on the bribery charges was also ordered by the judge.
I learned from Corrigan’s accounts that the charges of jury tampering were later dismissed. No one could prove that Yeager had ordered a man everyone knew to be his lackey to intimidate the juror. Deep in the story, in a last paragraph more than a page in, Corrigan noted that Adam Yeager, the defendant’s brother, had recently died of tuberculosis. I was surprised, and wondered if there had been other complications or if he had been denied treatment.
I used a terminal in the morgue and looked up the history of tuberculosis treatment on the Internet. Effective anti-TB drugs were not in use until after 1944. Adam Yeager became ill eight years too soon.
The second bribery trial resulted in a conviction, but the conviction was later overturned. Mitch Yeager was free.
The large and sympathetic — to Yeager — article on the overturning of the conviction was not written by Jack Corrigan. I didn’t recognize the name of the reporter. The story seemed to go out of its way to quote Yeager on his own innocence. I noted the dates so that I could cross-check the story in the News.
I asked Hailey if she’d like to help me out with some stories about old crimes that might be solved thanks to DNA technologies, and she jumped at the chance.
“Here’s the deal,” I said. “First, I’ve got to clear it with John and Lydia. Second, you have to promise me you’ll keep your files and notes secure — especially from Ethan.” We talked for a while about how she could do that — codes, using paper instead of the computer when possible, frequently changing passwords, clearing her Web browser’s history files, keeping her notes with her — I think the espionage aspects interested her more than the story itself.
I reviewed the stories from 1958, distracted by memories of looking at these same reels in 1978, and working with O’Connor.
At ten o’clock, the librarian wanted to lock up, and I decided to call it a day. Hailey had left some time before.
I thought I’d make another stab at patching things up with Lydia. She was gone, as was almost everyone else. The paper had obviously gone to bed. Only a handful of people were still around. John Walters was one of them. He had just come back from the press room, where he had been checking the “firstoffs” — the first papers off the press. “Got a minute?” I asked him.
“To settle a catfight? Hell, no.”
“Since no one asked you to do that, no need to let the very thought of women disagreeing cause you to pucker up.”
“Okay, what’s the problem, then?”
I looked over my shoulder at the four or five people still in the newsroom, all of them pretending too hard to be busy with things that kept them within earshot. “How about holding this discussion in your office?”
I could see that he was tired and not happy with the idea of a private chat, which he probably assumed would be about the “catfight” after all, but he studied me for a moment, made a grunting noise, and waved to me to follow him to his office.
He sat down at his desk with a sigh and said, “At my age, if I sit down at this time of night, I damned well might not be able to get to my feet again.”
I suddenly forgot everything that was on my mind, because it was clear to me that something was weighing on him, that he had some big worry.
“What is it, Kelly?” he said impatiently.
“Is something wrong?”
“Yes, I’m here on a rainy night long past the time when I wanted to go home. You wanted to talk to me, remember?”
I let him in on everything I had been researching down in the morgue, and told him that I wanted Hailey to work with me.
“Kelly, you told me this wasn’t about the catfight.”
“Well, not directly.”
“You want that little greenling cut loose to help you, though.”
“Yes, as much as possible. And quietly.”
Another grunting sound. “If you don’t mind my asking, just what the hell is the new part of this news?”
After swearing him to confidentiality, which insulted him, I said, “Four or five weeks from now, a question will be decided once and for all — the question of whether or not the person known as Max Ducane is also the actual missing heir.” I told him about the possible DNA tests, although I didn’t mention a word about Warren Ducane. I had John’s intense interest, so I added that if Max was the kidnapped baby, other questions would arise. “It means the child Mitch Yeager supposedly adopted in November 1957 was still living with his birth parents in January 1958. Mitch Yeager will have a hell of a lot to explain. The Express should be ready to talk about the events of 1958 and 1978 again if need be. Which reminds me — his offshore nephews could still be tried for murder.”
“No double jeopardy, because it was a mistrial, right?”
“Right.”
“And someone ought to be talking to Lillian Linworth now — try to find out what made her hesitate. You’d think she’d be the one asking for the test.”
I smiled. I had him, and we both knew it.
He rubbed his face. “Damn, you are a pain in the ass.”
“You say that whenever I get you to change your mind about something.”
“Hmm. You better work all this out with Mark Baker, too. And Kelly, if any little bit of this comes near the police department, or even speaks of what it did in the past, you are not writing that part of the story.”
“Absolutely not. Same rules apply.”
After another moment of brooding, he said, “You don’t like Ethan much, do you?”
“No.”
“I hear rumors about password problems on your computer.”
I narrowed my gaze.
“No one in the newsroom told me,” he said, understanding that look perfectly. “I was contacted by computer services. Which, I might add, is a damnable thing, because I would think a certain reporter would know enough to come in here and talk to me about it.”
“Would you? If I didn’t have any proof?”
“No,” he admitted grudgingly. After a long moment, he sighed and said, “Wrigley thinks we’re all getting too old. At first I thought he just wanted young women to sexually harass, since that’s a favorite pastime of his. But he thinks the world of Ethan — thinks of him as the bright new hope of the Express.”
“That’s because Ethan could be his own long-lost son. His moral twin, anyway.”
John smiled. “Maybe. Maybe. Sometimes I look at what Wrigley wants the paper to become, and I’m not sure I want to be a part of that … vision, shall we say? But then I ask myself what the hell else an old newspaperman like me could do with himself.”
“Nothing else anytime soon, I hope. You have the faith of the staff and the board, John. You know the board will oust him if need be. And if I’m wrong and they let him lead us to disaster and the whole paper is sold, then, well, we’ll leave together. I guess we can take up jumping off bridges, or something else that will pro
vide the same adrenaline rush.”
He didn’t say anything.
“Shit,” I said, sitting down. “The board is seriously talking about selling it.”
“Shut up, Kelly. It doesn’t do either of us any good to talk about it, or the newsroom any good to worry about it. Although knowing this bunch, they’ll know about it soon enough. It’s impossible to keep a secret in the newsroom.”
“They won’t hear it from me.”
“I know.”
I looked out beyond his office, back into the newsroom. Most of the lights were out, large areas of the room lit only by the glow of one or two terminals not set to “sleep mode.” At its busiest, the newsroom was never the noisy one I had first worked in, but this quiet, abandoned space was eerily still, even by current standards. I thought of all the men and women who had worked hard as hell for low pay and little thanks, worked to pull thousands of words together to describe the day in Las Piernas, who had done that day after day for more than a century. Who would tell the story of those days if the paper wasn’t here?
I heard and felt the thrum-thrum-thrum of the presses.
Only sleeping, that’s all. The paper had gone to bed, the newsroom was asleep. In a few hours, the early staffers would arrive, and it would start all over again.
“John,” I said. “Let’s make a pact.”
I turned to see that he had been watching me all the while.
He said, “Why do I think I’d be safer making a deal with the devil?”
“I say, no surrender.”
“We both know it may not be up to us.”
“When it comes to that, fine. Not until then.”
He reached out a big paw and we shook on it.
I went through the darkened newsroom to my desk. My voice mail light was blinking, so I checked my messages. I had one from Max, saying he was sorry he missed me. He sounded happy. While I listened to it, John waved to me as he left.
The next five were the usual messages from people who held local political offices, hoping I’d give them some ink.
The last caller didn’t leave his name, and I didn’t recognize his voice. He had called at seven-fifteen. The message was brief.
“I haven’t forgotten you.”
I slammed the receiver into the cradle and backed away from the desk, as if the phone itself were the menace. I was shaking. I told myself I had had dozens and dozens of similar ones over the years. Maybe Wrigley was right, and I was getting too old for this work. I wasn’t as sure as I used to be that no harm would come to me. Harm had come to me over the years, and although I had survived it, I didn’t feel the need to welcome another visit.
The phone rang. I took a deep breath and lifted the receiver.
“Irene?”
“Frank! Oh — I’m just getting ready to leave.”
“What’s the matter?” he asked. “You sound upset.”
I never can fool him. That didn’t stop me from trying.
“Nothing, nothing. In fact, it’s the stupid sort of thing that never used to bother me at all. A crank call on my voice mail, that’s all.”
“Threatening?”
“No threats.” I told him what the caller had said.
“Did you save it?”
“No,” I said. “Sorry, I know that irritates you.”
“Just keep any others, okay?”
“How fun that will be. Where are you?”
“Just outside the front door of the Express. I’ve got the dogs with me in the car. We got tired of sitting around the house.”
“Oh?”
“Okay, I worry about you being downtown alone this late at night, and you know it. It’s a nasty night out, too.”
“To be honest, I’m really relieved you’re here. I’ll come out to where you are and you can take me around to my car.”
“Great,” he said.
I thought of the presses, then said, “Do you think the dogs would be okay in the car by themselves for a few minutes?”
“Sure, I’ll crack the windows for them and hope the seats don’t get soaked.”
“Come inside, then. I’ll meet you at the security desk.”
As I came down the stairs, I saw Frank talking to the night security guard. Frank is about six foot four, lean and muscular. He was dressed in jeans and a sweater. His hair was damp from the rain. He looked damn fine. Best of all, although I am sure that after my long day I looked completely bedraggled, he looked up at me in a way that made me wish the security guard would have to go put out a fire somewhere or something.
The guard, Leonard, is one of Frank’s biggest fans, and it was all I could do to free my husband from the clutches of that applicant to the police academy.
“Frank,” I asked, “have you ever watched the presses run?”
He shook his head. I took his hand and led him into the basement.
Danny Coburn, a pressman who used to work days, had recently moved to the night shift. He saw us and brought over earmuffs that were hearing protectors. I shouted an introduction, and Frank and I donned the heavily padded headsets.
They were running full bore at that point. I watched Frank’s fascination with the overhead wires and rollers, the presses themselves, the movement of paper as it unspooled from giant rolls and was printed and cut and divided and folded.
We walked through a maze of small offices to look above us and see finished sections flying toward machines that would bundle them for distribution to the delivery trucks.
I realized after a moment that Frank had guided me out of the sight of the security cameras. He cornered me against a wall, an absolutely wicked grin on his face. The vibration from the presses was so strong here, I felt it all the way through my body.
He pulled one earmuff a little away and said, “I never thought I’d meet a girl who looked sexy in earmuffs.”
“Frank, I don’t think—”
He kissed me, earmuffs and all.
After a few minutes of that, I lifted his earmuff and said, “I am so tempted to give the crew down here something to tease me about forever, and to try to forget the dogs, and Cody, and all of the world.”
He laughed. “Come on, I’ll take you home. I guess I’ll just have to take you into the garage and turn the washing machine on to the spin cycle.”
“Deal. I think I even have a pair of earmuffs somewhere.”
59
ON TUESDAY MORNING, I WAS SURPRISED TO GET A CALL FROM HELEN Swan.
“Irene, I need your help.”
“Whatever I can do, Helen.”
“I need someone to take me over to Lillian’s as soon as possible.”
“All right, I think I can manage that.” I told her I’d be right over.
The morning was chilly and overcast, the kind of dull weather that saves itself for the weekend, when it can really make you miserable. Helen was bundled into a coat that probably fit her once, but she seemed lost in it now. She complained that the Kelly women’s cars were either too high or too low as I helped her into the Jeep.
She seemed extremely agitated, but after an attempt to get her to tell me what was on her mind was met with a polite but firm rebuff, I stayed quiet.
She noticed and said, “Tell me about your search through the storage unit. Anything interesting?”
“A great deal.” I told her about going through O’Connor’s early diaries, but given her mood, decided not to tell her of his first impressions of her. Instead I generally described some of the things I had found so far. I wasn’t entirely sure she was listening to me. We spent the last few minutes of the ride in silence.
When we reached Lillian’s house and pulled into the big circular drive, she said, “This won’t take long.” Then she paused and said, “I’ve been rude, and you’ve been so kind. I’m sorry.”
“Don’t worry about it. I’m fine.”
“That’s my girl!” she said.
“Need help getting out?”
“No,” she said, and jumped down, scaring the hel
l out of me.
I saw her walk up to the house — apparently uninjured — and knock on the door. I waited.
She rang the bell. I waited.
She knocked again. I got out of the car.
“Was Lillian expecting you?” I asked.
“Of course she was.” She turned toward the house and shouted, “That’s why she’s not answering the damned door!”
“Did you call her?”
“She has that obnoxious thingamajig that allows a person to screen calls.”
“An answering machine?”
“No! I’ve got an answering machine. She’s got — oh, what do they call it?”
“Caller ID?”
“Yes! That’s it! Incredibly rude.”
“Are you telling me she got a call from you and refused to answer when she saw your number?”
“Yes.”
“And you came over here, anyway.”
“If you have somewhere else to be, you needn’t wait for me. I’ll stay here until she” — turning toward the house again — “opens the damned door!”
I took my cell phone out of my purse. “What’s Lillian’s phone number?”
Her eyes lit up in appreciation. She gave me the number.
Lillian answered on the second ring.
“Hello, Irene.”
“Lillian, I’m on your front porch. Helen’s here, too. Please don’t make her stand out here. I’m afraid she’ll get a chill, and even if that doesn’t kill her, the guilt will kill me.”
“That stubborn old woman!”
“Please, Lillian.”
“All right, all right. Might as well get this over and done with.”
A pale, thin housekeeper, who must have been just on the other side of the door — the damned door, Helen would have said — opened it and asked us to come in.