"Suppose I tell you to whack one of those guys you were seen talking to?"
"I would say Gaspar Blanco lives two blocks from here."
Pete said, "Kill him."Pete cruised Niggertown--for the pure time-marking fuck of it. The radio ran election news exclusively.
Nixon conceded. Frau Nixon pitched some boo-hoo. Bad-Back Jack thanked his staff and announced that Frau Bad-Back was pregnant.
Nigger junkies were cliqued up by a shine stand. Fulo and Ramon drove up to service them. Chuck was trading bindles for signed-over welfare checks.
Jack talked up the New Frontier. Fulo dropped off a fat load of shit with the shoeshine man.
A local bulletin flashed on.
Shots fired outside Coral Gables bodega! Police ID dead man as one Gaspar Ramon Blanco!
Pete smiled. November 8, 1960, was an all-time classic day.He stopped at Tiger Kab after lunch. Teo Paez had a parking-lot sale going: hot TVs for twenty scoots a pop. - The sets were hooked up to a battery pack. Jack the K beamed out of two dozen screens.
Pete mingled with potential buyers. Jimmy Hoffa popped out of the crowd, popping sweat on a nice cool day.
"Hi, Jimmy."
"Don't gloat. I know you and Boyd wanted that cunt-lapping faggot to win."
"Don't worry. He'll put his kid brother on a tight leash."
"As if that's my only worry."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean Jules Schiffrin's dead. His place in Lake Geneva got clouted for some priceless fucking paintings, and some priceless fucking paperwork got lost in the process. Jules had a heart attack, and now our shit has probably been torched in some burglar's fucking basement."
LITTELL. 100% certifiably insane.
Pete started laughing.
Hoffa said, "What's so fucking funny?"
Pete roared.
Hoffa said, "Stop laughing, you frog fuck."
Pete couldn't stop. Hoffa pulled a piece and shot Jack the Haircut six TV screens across.
56
(Washington, D.C., 11/13/60)
T The mailman brought a special-delivery letter. It was postmarked Chicago and sent without a return address.
Kemper opened the envelope. The one page inside was neatly typed.
I have the books. They are fail-safed against my death or disappearance in a dozen different ways. I will release them only to Robert Kennedy, if I am given a Kennedy Administration appointment within the next three months. The books are safely hidden. Hidden with them is an 83-page deposition, detailing my knowledge of your McClellan Committee--Kennedy incursion. I will destroy that deposition only if I am given a Kennedy Administration appointment. I remain fond of you, and am grateful for the lessons you taught me. At times, you acted with uncharacteristic selflessness and risked exposure of your many duplicitous relationships in an effort to help me achieve what I must fatuously describe as my manhood. That said, I will also state that I do not trust your motives regarding the books. I still consider you a friend, but I do not trust you one iota.
Kemper jotted a note to Pete Bondurant.
Forget about the Teamster books. Littell finessed us, and I'm beginning to rue the day I taught him some things. I made some discreet queries with the Wisconsin State Police, who are franidy baffled. I'll supply forensic details the next time we talk. I think you'll be grudgingly impressed. Enough pissing and moaning. Let's depose Fidel Castro.
57
(Chicago, 12/8/60)
W Wind rocked the car. Littell turned up the heat and pushed his seat back to stretch out.
His stakeout was strictly cosmetic. He might join the party himself--Mal would get a huge kick out of it.
It was a Bust the Blacklist bash. The Chicago Board of Ed had hired Mal Chamales to teach remedial math.
Guests walked up to the house. Littell recognized leftists with Red Squad sheets half a mile long.
A few waved to him. Mal said he might send his wife out with coffee and cookies.
Littell watched the house. Mal turned his Christmas lights on-- the tree by the porch bloomed all blue and yellow.
He'd stay until 9:30. He'd write the bash up as a routine holiday soiree. Leahy would accept his assessment pro forma--their stalemate precluded direct confrontations.
His door-kicking episode and Lake Geneva time went unquestioned. He had thirty-nine days to go until his retirement. The Bureau's no-confrontation policy would hold and see him through to civilian life.
He had the Fund books stashed in a bank vault in Duluth. He had two dozen cryptography texts at home. He had seventeen days logged in without an ounce of liquor.
He could send the Fund books to Bobby on a moment's notice. He could delete Joe Kennedy's name with a few swipes of a pencil.
Dead leaves strafed the windshield. Littell got out of the car and stretched his legs.
He saw men running up Mal's driveway. He heard metal-on-metal pump-shotgun-slide noise.
He heard footsteps behind him. Hands slammed him across the hood and ripped off his gunbelt.
He gouged his face on a sharp strip of chrome. He saw Chick Leahy and Court Meade kick Mal's door down.
Big men in suits and overcoats swarmed him. His glasses fell off. Everything went claustrophobic and blurry.
Hands dragged him into the street. Hands cuffed and shackled him.
A midnight-blue limo pulled up.
Hands grappled him in. Hands shoved him face-to-face with J. Edgar Hoover.
Hands slapped tape across his mouth.
The limo pulled out. Hoover said, "Mal Chamales is being arrested for sedition and advocating the violent overthrow of the United States of America. Your FBI service is terminated as of this day, your pension has been revoked, and a detailed profile of you as a Communist sympathizer has been sent to the Justice Department, the bar associations of all fifty states and the deans of every university law school in the Continental U.S. Should you go public with information pertaining to Kemper Boyd's clandestine activities, I will guarantee you that your daughter, Susan, and Helen Agee will never practice law, and guarantee that the interesting coincidence of your three-week absence and the destruction of Jules Schiffrin's Lake Geneva estate will be mentioned to key organized-crime figures who might find that coincidence intriguing. In keeping with your leftist sympathies and bleeding-heart concern for the fmancially wretched and morally impaired, you will now be deposited into a venue where your instincts for selfabnegatiqn, self-flagellation and pinko vicissitudes will be fully appreciated. Driver, stop the car."
The limo decelerated. Hands uncuffed him and unshackled him.
Hands dragged him out the door. Hands dumped him into a South Side gutter.
Colored piss bums walked up and checked him out. Say what, white man?
DOCUMENT INSERT: 12/18/60. Personal note: Kemper Boyd to Attorney General Designate Robert F. Kennedy.
Dear Bob,Congratulations, first of all. You'll make a splendid Attorney General, and I can envision Jimmy Hoffa and certain others swinging from yardarms already.
Hoffa makes for a good segue point. The purpose of this letter is to recommend former Special Agent Ward J. Littell for a Justice Department counselship. Littell (the Chicago Phantom who has worked for us sub-rosa since early 1959) is a 1940 Bumma Cum Laude Notre Dame Law grad, Federal-Bar licensed. He is considered brilliant in the field of Federal Deportation Statutes and will be bringing with him a good deal of recently accrued anti-Mob, anti-Teamster evidence.
I realize that Littell, in his anonymous capacity, has been out of touch with you for some time, and hope that that fact will not dampen your enthusiasm for him. He is a splendid attorney and a dedicated crimefighter.Yours, Kemper DOCUMENT INSERT: 12/21/60. Personal note: Robert F. Kennedy to Kemper Boyd.
Dear Kemper,Per Ward Littell, my answer is emphatically "No." I have received a report from Mr. Hoover that, though perhaps biased, persuasively paints a portrait of Littell as an alcoholic with ultra left-wing tendencies. Mr. Hoover also included evidence that indicates that Litteli was receiving bribes from Chicago Mob members. This, to me, negates the viability of his alleged anti-Mob, anti-Teamster evidence.
I realize that Littell is your friend, and that he did work hard for us at one time. Frank]y, though, we cannot afford even the slightest taint on our new appointees.
Let's consider the Littell matter closed. The question of your Kennedy Administration employment remains, and I think you'll be pleased with what the President-elect and I have come up with.Best, Bob DOCUMENT INSERT: 1 / 17/61. Personal letter: J. Edgar Hoover to Kemper Boyd.
Dear Kemper,Three-fold congratulations.
One, your recent evasion tactics were superbly efficacious. Two, your Marilyn Monroe aside had me going for quite some time. What a myth you have created! With luck, it will enter what Hush-Hush would call the "Peephole Pantheon!"
Thirdly, bravo for your appointment as roving Justice Department counsel. My contacts tell me you'll be concentrating on voting rights abuse in the south. How fitting! Now you'll be able to champion left-inclined negroes with the same tenacity that you embrace right-wing Cubans!
I think you've found your metier. I would be hardpressed to conceive of work more suitable for a man with such a lenient code of loyalty. I hope we'll get the chance to be colleagues again.As always, JEH
58
(New York City, 1/20/61)
S She'd been crying. Tear streaks had ruined her makeup.
Kemper stepped into the foyer. Laura cinched her robe and stepped away from him.
He held out a small bouquet. "I'm going down to the Inaugural. I'll be back in a few days."
She ignored the flowers. "I figured that out. I didn't think you put on that tuxedo to impress me."
"Laura..."
"I wasn't invited. Some neighbors of mine were, though. They donated ten thousand dollars to Jack's campaign."
Her mascara was running. Her whole face looked off-kilter.
"I'll be back in a few days. We'll talk things over then."
Laura pointed to an armoire. "There's a check for three million dollars in the top drawer. It's mine, if I never contact the family again."
"You could rip it up."
"Would you?"
"I can't answer that question."
Her fingers were cigarette-stained. She'd left overflowing ashtrays out in plain sight.
Laura said, "Them or me?"
Kemper said, "Them."