Part 2 (1/2)

”I spent three months getting every bearing on that engine purring in unison.

I'm not surprised you wrecked your Trans Am. You don't know how to look after a car.”

”Luke, forget that for a minute. I want a private lab to inspect my car and certify that it didn't hit a person. I'm not asking you to work on it today, just to tell me the name of a good private lab.”

”Everyone thinks they come first, Warshawski. You gotta wait in line along with all the working stiffs.”

I tried not to scream. ”Luke, I need a civilian lab before the police get to my car. I ran into a fire hydrant swerving to miss an accident victim, and some cop is taking the lazy way out instead of running an investigation. I want to have a lab report to wave in his face in case he doesn't do the rest of his homework.”

”Police after you, huh? About time someone called you on your reckless driving.

Just kidding you. Calm down and I'll help you out. Cheviot is the lab you want, out in Hoffman Estates. They're pricey but they got a rocksolid rap in court. I and my friends have used 'em a couple of times-I can call for you and set it up if you want. Tell me where your baby is and I'll send Freddie out with the truck, get him to take the Trans Am out to Cheviot. He sees a cop, should he run over him?”

Luke being funny is harder to take than his depression. I pretended to laugh and hung up. Mr. Contreras, watching with bright anxious eyes, told me I'd done the right thing but wanted me to do more.

I didn't think there was much else I could do except call Mary Louise. She was trying to dress one of Emily's young brothers, who was protesting loudly. When she realized what I was saying she let the kid go and gave me her full attention.

”I don't know anyone named Lemour, but I'll ask Terry,” she promised. ”I read that report last night before I signed it, and it made crystal clear the fact that we had not hit that poor creature. There shouldn't be a problem. I'll certainly tell them that when they come around here. I have to get Nathan to day camp, but I'll call Terry as soon as I get back.”

Mary Louise could make that phone call more easily than I. Terry Finchley, her commanding officer her last four years on the force, was a rising star in the violent crimes unit. When Mary Louise resigned, she was careful to do it in a way that left him on her side.

I'd actually met Mary Louise on cases where Terry Finchley and I had crossed paths. I'd always liked him, but since the end of Conrad's and my affair he's been rather stiff with me. He and Conrad are pretty close; even though it was Conrad who broke things off, Terry thinks I treated his friend shabbily. Still, he's too honest a person to extend his stiffness to Mary Louise simply because she works for me.

”You gonna call the lieutenant and make a complaint?” Mr. Contreras asked, meaning my father's old friend Bobby Mallory.

”I don't think so.” Bobby was much more likely to chew me out for interfering with a police investigation than he was to phone the Rogers Park station and complain about Lemour. He would probably say, if I wanted to play cops and robbers, I'd have to be ready to take the heat that comes with it.

4.

Searching for Wheels ”So whatcha going to do next, doll?” Mr. Contreras asked.

I frowned. ”I'd like to find out who that woman is, so I can try to understand why the cops are so eager to find someone to take the fall for hitting her. In the meantime, I need to get hold of a car. Who knows how long it'll be before the Trans Am is fit to drive again, especially if it ends up as police exhibit A.”

I called my insurance company, but they were useless. The Trans Am was ten years old; the only value it had to them was as sc.r.a.p. They wouldn't help me with a tow, the repairs, or a loaner. I snarled at the agent, who only said blandly that I shouldn't carry property damage on such an old car.

I slammed down the phone. What was I doing sending good money to this idiot and the company of thieves he represented? I checked a few rental places, but if the Trans Am were tied up for weeks I'd be sh.e.l.ling out hundreds, maybe even a thousand, to rent something I'd have no equity in.

”Perhaps I should sc.r.a.pe together a few grand and buy something used. Something good enough that I could resell it when my car comes out of the shop. Or a motorcycle-you know-we'll see the world from my Harley!”

”Don't go buying a Harley,” Mr. Contreras begged. ”One of my buddies, before your time, old Carmen Brioni, he used to ride a big old Honda 650 around town, thought he was a teenager all over again, until a semi run him off 55 down by Lockport. After that he never talked again, lived like an eggplant for seven years before the good Lord was kind enough to pull the plug.”

We studied the ads in the paper together, which left me more discouraged: anything roadworthy seemed to run three or four thousand. And would take a good day out of my life to hunt down.

”Why don't you leave carhunting to me?” Mr. Contreras said. ”I sold mine when I moved here because I figured I couldn't afford all that extra for insurance and whatnot on my pension. In fact, you know that's why I moved out of the old neighborhood when Clara died, besides, most of my friends had got scared and left the city, so it wasn't like I was missing my pals. Here I figured I'd be close by the L and walking distance to the stores. And of course it saves me all that parking aggravation, but I still can tell whether an engine runs good or not. What do you have in mind?”

”A Jaguar XJ12,” I said promptly. ”There's one here for only thirtysix thousand. Standard s.h.i.+ft, convertible, the old body before the Ford engineers got their hands on it.”

”That ain't practical. Those ragtops don't have any backseat to speak of, and where would the dogs sit?” He startled me into laughing, which made him beam with pride.

”Oh, yeah, the dogs,” I said. ”You know, it's going to have to be a beater.

Unless I decide to junk the Trans Am. But I only want to buy something if it's a reasonable alternative to renting.”

He started running a black fingernail down the page, whispering the words under his breath as he read, his eyes bright with interest. He has his own friends, and he tends a garden in our tiny backyard with painstaking care, but he doesn't really have enough stimulation in his life-it's why he gets over involved in my affairs.

I skimmed the news sections, trying to see if our accident victim had made the morning edition, while Mr. Contreras worked the ad pages. Commonwealth Edison's inability to provide the city with power got a tiny mention, as did wildfires in Florida, but Global's television debut took up most of the front page.

Murray had a byline, describing his interview with Lacey Dowell. It was the first time he'd been on the front page in ten months. First time in the paper in three. ”Just haven't been covering the right stories until now, Murray,” I muttered. First the paper spends four days hyping Global's new television network. Then the network makes its debut. Then they write up what they showed on television. It made a neat loop, but was it news?

Even Regine Mauger's column had been moved to a prominent spot because she was covering the television launch. Teddy Trant was glowing last night, and not only from the soft lights of Sal Barthele's original Tiffany lamps, she cooed. With House Speaker JeanClaude Poilevy on one side and Lacey Dowell on the other he has every right to be pleased with the impression he's making on Chicago.

Regine went on to describe the other players, including members of the Illinois Commerce Commission, the mayor and his wife, whom I'd missed in the throng, and of course the denizens of the town's TV studios, whose feelings get hurt if they're overlooked.

Murray Ryerson, whose trademark red beard disappeared for the occasion, took to the camera like a duck to water. His chosen escort-or did she choose him?-was Alexandra Fisher from Global's front office, stunning in an Armani evening ensemble. But don't let that cleavage fool you: when she puts on her power suits she's as invincible as d.i.c.k Butkus.

Of course some problems always erupt at occasions like this. A bird tells us that Lucian Frenada, from Lacey's old neighborhood, finagled an invitation in the hopes of holding Lacey to a boygirl romance, but Officer Mooney, on loan from Chicago's finest, muscled him outside before he could make a fullscale scene. Lacey had no comment, but Alex Fisher says the star is troubled by the misunderstanding. Other hangerson, like Chicago investigator V. I. Warshawski, who used to be an item with Ryerson, probably were hoping for crumbs to drop from one of the richest tables to be set in town for years.

That last sentence jolted me out of my chair so fast that Peppy barked a warning. d.a.m.ned scrawny b.i.t.c.h with her fifty facelifts, annoyed because I'd tripped on her Chanel trousers. Me, hoping for crumbs from a Hollywood table?

And still pining for Murray? I didn't know which suggestion offended me more.

It's true Murray and I once had a fling, but that was history so ancient there weren't even any archaeological remains to look through. Far from pining over him, I'd realized after a few weeks that going to bed with someone that compet.i.tive had been a colossal mistake. Who the h.e.l.l had even cared enough to tell Regine Mauger? Murray, out of spite toward me for not being enthusiastic enough about his debut? ”Took to the camera like fleas to a dog,” I said savagely.

The story reminded me that Alexandra Fisher said she'd gone to law school with me. While Mr. Contreras continued his slow study of the ads, I went to the hall closet and pulled out the trunk where I keep bits and pieces of my past. On top, wrapped in cotton sheeting, was my mother's concert gown. I couldn't resist taking a moment to pull back the sheet and finger the silver lace panels, the soft black silk. The fabric brought her to me as intensely as if she were in the next room. She wanted me to be independent, my mother, not to make the compromises she did for safety, but holding her gown I longed to have her with me, guarding me against the great and little blows the world inflicts.

I resolutely put the dress to one side and rummaged through the trunk until I found my lawschool cla.s.s directory. We'd had a Michael Fisher and a Claud, but no Alexandra. I was snapping the booklet shut when I saw the name above Claud's: Sandra Fishbein.

The photograph showed a petulant, widemouthed face with a mop of wild curls a good six inches thick. She'd been number two in our cla.s.s and what the faculty called a rabblerouser. I remembered her chewing me out for not joining her proposed sitin over women's bathrooms at the law school.

You're a bluecollar girl, she harangued me with a speech she'd used before, you should know better than to let the establishment stand on your face. I remembered the scene vividly-she came from the kind of family where children got European travel as highschool graduation presents. For some reason the fact that I was a bluecollar girl, maybe the only one in my cla.s.s, made her feel she needed my support or approval or respect, I was never sure which.

It's your establishment, and your face, I'd replied on that occasion, which only wound her up tighter. If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem, she'd snapped. Oh, all that oldtime rhetoric. She'd applauded my going to the public defender, while she went off to clerk for a judge on the tony Sixth Circuit.

Well, well. Girl radical had gone to Hollywood, cut her halo of wild hair close to her head, changed her name-and conducted surgery on her politics. No wonder she'd given me that challenging stare last night.

I put away the directory. Emphysema had forced my father onto longterm disability when I was in law school. His illness affected everything about me then, from my decision to marry in the hopes I'd produce a grandchild for him before he died to my lack of interest in campus politics. I'd taken the public defender's job so I could stay in Chicago and be with him. He died two years later. My marriage hadn't survived much longer. I'd never had a child.

The dogs were pacing restlessly, a sign that they badly needed a walk. I carefully rewrapped the silk dress and pushed the trunk back into the closet. I promised the dogs I'd be with them as soon as I checked my appointments on my Palm Pilot. I had a one o'clock with one of my few really important clients-translate that to read big retainer, big billing, prompt payment. Thanks to Lemour and the ruckus he'd stirred up, it was after eleven now. I barely had time to run the dogs and get something to eat. Since my refrigerator held only an orange besides the stale bread, I leashed up the dogs and went out with my backpack to forage for food.

A cool spring had given way overnight to the oppressive mugginess of midsummer.

There aren't any parks close to our building, but I couldn't make the dogs do three miles to the lake and back in air that covered us like a sock. By the time we reached the grocery store, even Mitch had stopped pulling at the leash and was glad to rest in the shade of the building. I pulled a collapsible drinking bowl out of my pack and bought a bottle of water for them before buying my own food, along with a cappuccino from the coffee bar across the street.

As we ambled home in the heat, I kept wondering about the woman in the road. In the dark street I couldn't tell what had happened to her, but that humerus sticking up like a branch from a swamp told some terrible tale of violence. The tall stolid detective had let out that the woman was sent to Beth Israel. That was fortunate, because Max Loewenthal, the executive director, was the lover of one of my oldest friends. With dogs in one hand and coffee in the other, I couldn't very well whip out my cell phone to call the hospital. I urged the dogs to a trot, bribing them with some bread.